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Passive Response (passive + response)
Selected AbstractsInterannual variability of the tropical Atlantic independent of and associated with ENSO: Part I. The North Tropical AtlanticINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 14 2006Itsuki C. Handoh Abstract The interannual variability of the tropical Atlantic ocean,atmosphere system is examined using 50 years of sea-surface temperature (SST) and re-analysis data, and satellite data when available. A singular value decomposition analysis of 12- to 72-month bandpass filtered SST and zonal wind stress reveals two dominant modes of interannual variability. The SST anomalies are confined to the North Tropical Atlantic (NTA) in the first mode and extend over the equatorial and South Tropical Atlantic in the second mode. No evidence is found for an Atlantic SST dipole. The structure of the first (NTA) mode is examined in detail here, while the second mode has been described in a companion paper. In particular, the relationship of the NTA mode with El Niño,Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is investigated. There are 12 NTA events (seven warm and five cold) that are associated with ENSO, and 18 NTA events (seven warm and 11 cold) that are independent of ENSO. The ENSO-associated NTA events appear to be a passive response to remote ENSO forcing, mainly via a Pacific-North America (PNA)-like wave train that induces SST anomalies over the NTA through changes in the surface wind and latent heat flux. The NTA anomalies peak four months after ENSO. There does not appear to be an atmospheric response to the NTA SST anomalies as convection over the Atlantic is suppressed by the anomalous Walker circulation due to ENSO. The ENSO-independent NTA events also appear to be induced by an extratropical wave train from the Pacific sector (but one that is independent of Pacific SST), and forcing by the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) also contributes. As the event matures, the atmosphere does respond to the NTA SST anomalies, with enhanced convection over the Caribbean and a wave train that propagates northeastward to Europe. Copyright © 2006 Royal Meteorological Society [source] Glucocorticoid levels in free ranging resident mantled howlers: a study of coping strategiesAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 8 2007Jurgi Cristóbal-azkarate Abstract A growing amount of data shows that a preference for passive-nonaggressive over active-aggressive problem solving is associated with higher levels of glucocorticoids (GC). For mantled howlers, the arrival of an adult male in a new group is a potential source of psychological stress for both resident males and females. Resident mantled howler males take an active stand and aggressively repel the entrance of solitary males, while females take a passive-nonaggressive stand. In order to study whether the relationship between coping strategies and the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis observed in other species applies to the response of resident mantled howlers to the presence of solitary males, we examine the relationship between different group and subpopulation variables and the GC levels measured in feces collected from 10 groups living in six forest fragments, in Los Tuxtlas, Mexico. The results of our study suggest that the resident mantled howler females' passive response to the presence of solitary males is accompanied by the activation of the HPA axis, whereas resident males' aggressive response is not accompanied by any changes in the HPA axis. In contrast, a previous study suggests that resident male howlers respond by increasing their testosterone levels to the presence of solitary males (Cristobal-Azkarate et al., Hormones and Behavior 2006;49 261,267). These different behavioral and hormonal responses coincide with the active and passive coping styles described for other species. The conditions in which howlers live in our study area may be favoring the interaction between solitary and resident howlers, and inducing chronically high GC levels, which in turn could negatively affect the fitness of these subpopulations. Am. J. Primatol. 69:866,876, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Observations of atmosphere-ocean coupling in the North AtlanticTHE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, Issue 576 2001Arnaud Czaja Abstract Anindex of sea surface temperature (SST) variability, ,T, is introduced that measures the difference in SST across the separated Gulf Stream in late winter. By analysing a long observational record of SST and sea-level pressure (SLP), it is shown that ,T exhibits damped oscillations of decadal period, and covaries with the strength of a dipolar SLP anomaly reminiscent of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Analysis in the frequency domain shows a broad-band ,peak' at 10,20 years in ,T, with a continuous decrease of power on longer time-scales. Similar spectral signatures are found in the northern part of the SLP dipole (the Greenland-Icelandic Low region) but not in its southern part (the subtropical High region), whose power increases on long time-scales. The observations are interpreted in the framework of a delayed-oscillator model in which the ocean circulation introduces the delay, and modulates ,T on decadal time-scales. The decrease of power seen on long time-scales (>25 years) in the ,T index is captured by a model including wind-driven ocean circulation, and arises primarily as a passive response of the latter to the NAO forcing. Variability of the ocean's meridional overturning circulation could also play a role in modulating ,T on decadal time-scales. If a small feedback of ,T on the NAO pattern is introduced, the simple model can also reproduce the spectral structures seen in the SLP anomaly in the Greenland-Iceland region. [source] Optimizing the Response From a Passively Controlled Biventricular Assist DeviceARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 5 2010Nicholas Richard Gaddum Abstract Recent studies into rotary biventricular support have indicated that inadequate left/right flow balancing may lead to vascular congestion and/or ventricular suckdown. The implementation of a passive controller that automatically adjusts left/right flow during total and partial cardiac support would improve physiological interaction. This has encouraged the development of a biventricular assist device (BiVAD) prototype that achieves passive control of the two rotary pumps' hydraulic output by way of a nonrotating double pressure plate configuration, the hub, suspended between the ventricular assist device (VAD) impellers. Fluctuations in either the VAD's inlet or outlet pressure will cause the hub to translate, and in doing so, affect each pump's hydraulic outputs. In order to achieve partial support, the floating assembly needed to respond to pathologic blood pressure signals while being insensitive to residual ventricular function. An incorporated mechanical spring,mass,damper assembly affects the passive response to optimize the dynamic interaction between the prototype and the supported cardiovascular system. It was found that increasing the damping from a medium to a high level was effective in filtering out the higher frequency ventricular pressure signals, reducing a modified amplitude ratio by up to 72%. A spring response was also identified as being inherent in the passive response and was characterized as being highly nonlinear at the extremes of the floating assembly's translation range. The results from this study introduce a new means of BiVAD control as well as the characterization of a fully passive mechanical physiological controller. [source] Autoregulation in the choroidACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2009S ORGUL Purpose To compare subfoveal choroidal blood flow (ChBF) in sitting and supine position in normal volunteers. Methods ChBF was measured with laser Doppler flowmetry in 22 healthy volunteers (mean age ± SD: 24 ± 5 years). Six independent measurements of choroidal blood flow were obtained in one randomly selected eye of each subject. Subsequently, the subjects assumed a supine position for 30 minutes and a new series of 6 measurements was obtained. Parallel hereto, systemic blood pressure and intraocular pressure were measured. Ocular perfusion pressure (OPP) was calculated based on formulas derived from ophthalmodynamometric studies. The influence of changing OPP on the change in ChBF was assessed in a linear regression analysis. Results The coefficient of variation for ChBF was 10.28% and 9.58% in the sitting and the supine position respectively. ChBF decreased by 6.6% (p=0.0017) in the supine position. The estimate for ophthalmic blood pressure in the supine position was adjusted to obtain a result of no change in OPP for no change in ChBF, yielding an average decrease for the estimate of OPP of 6.7% (p=0.0002). Change in OPP correlated significantly with change in ChBF (R2: 0.20; p=0.036) with a slope for the regression line of 1.04. Conclusion The comparable degree of change in ChBF and OPP and the linear relationship between the two parameters suggest a passive response of the choroidal circulation to the posture change. In contrast, the OPP estimates suggest a marked buffering of the change in perfusion pressure by the carotid system, compatible with a close control of the gradient in perfusion pressure between the heart and its branches within the carotid system. [source] Temperature Effects on Anti-Predator Behaviour in Rhabdophis tigrinus, a Snake with Toxic Nuchal GlandsETHOLOGY, Issue 9 2001Akira Mori Many contextual factors affect the anti-predator behaviour of animals. In ectotherms, in which most physiological activities depend on body temperature, ambient temperature is one of the most important of these factors. We examined the effects of temperature on the anti-predator behaviour of an ectotherm, the Japanese grass snake (Rhabdophis tigrinus). This species has a large repertoire of anti-predator behavioural responses. Among these responses are several anti-predator displays that appear to be unique to this species and perhaps others in a small group of closely related species possessing nuchal glands containing toxic secretions that may be derived from their toxic toad diet. Snakes were tested at room temperatures of 14, 22 and 30°C with order of temperatures balanced. A long wand modified to simulate initial contact by a predator was used as the stimulus. Snakes exhibited rather passive responses (neck flatten, body flatten, neck arch and immobile) more frequently at low temperatures, and fled more frequently at high temperatures. The dorsal facing posture, a characteristic posture directed against the stimulus, was observed more frequently at low temperatures. Threatening, assertive responses such as strike were rarely observed. These results showed that R. tigrinus shifts its anti-predator behaviour from multiple passive responses to active flight responses with increasing temperature. This snake species thus appears to rely more on its nuchal glands as a predator deterrent at low ambient temperatures. Consistent individual variation was also observed, and its adaptive and causal bases are discussed. [source] Intraspecific seed trait variations and competition: passive or adaptive response?FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2009Cyrille Violle Summary 1The phenotype of offspring depends on the abiotic and biotic environment in which the parents developed. However, the direct effects of competition experienced by parent plants on single-seed traits are poorly documented despite their impact on plant fitness. 2We hypothesize that single-seed traits can differentially respond to the resource deficiencies of parent plants due to competition: seed quality may decrease as seed number does, magnifying the negative effects of competition for offspring (,passive response' hypothesis), or increase and then enhance offspring fitness to offset the reduction in offspring number (,adaptive response' hypothesis). Here we tested these hypotheses for four single-seed traits. We assessed the sensibility of their responses to changes in competition intensity due to species with different competitive effects and to contrasting soil nitrogen conditions. 3In a common-garden experiment, four single-seed traits related to fitness , seed mass, seed nitrogen concentration (SNC), germinability and the timing of germination , were measured on a phytometer species transplanted in 14 different neighbours grown in monoculture with and without soil nitrogen limitation. 4Under nitrogen-limiting conditions, the responses of SNC and of the timing of germination were passive and mainly related to the effects of neighbours on soil nitrogen availability, as shown by the increase in SNC with N-fixing neighbours. Within-individual seed mass variability decreased with increasing competition intensity, as an adaptive response to counterbalance the reduction in seed production. With nitrogen supplementation, competitors had no detectable effect on single-seed traits despite an overall increase in SNC and germination rate, confirming their nitrogen-dependent passive responses to competition. Germinability did not change among treatments. 5The impact of competition on single-seed traits depends on both phytometer trait identity and resource modulation by neighbours. The passive response of seed chemical composition to competitors may magnify the competitive effects on offspring. By contrast, the adaptive response of seed size variability may offset these competitive effects. As a consequence, experiments looking at the fitness consequences of competition should not only consider the effects on fitness parameters of a target plant but also on the offspring. [source] |