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Terms modified by Synchronous Selected AbstractsTHE END-PERMIAN MASS EXTINCTION WAS SYNCHRONOUS COINCIDED WITH THE EVOLUTION OF TOXIC ALGAEJOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 2001Article first published online: 24 SEP 200 Lee, R. E.1 & Kugrens, P.2 1Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523; 2Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Co 80523 USA The cause of the end-Permian mass extinction, the greatest of all mass extinctions, is one of the most intriguing mysteries in the history of life. The end-Permian mass extinction was primarily a marine event, resulting principally in the elimination of sessile filter-feeding organisms. Based on two methods, molecular clocks and correlation with ancient atmospheric CO2, the algae derived from secondary endosymbioses are believed to have originated in the middle to late Permian. All of the toxic marine algae in today's oceans are derived from secondary endosymbioses. Therefore it appears likely that the end-Permian extinction was due to the evolution of toxic algae in the phytoplankton of late-Permian seas. Sieving of the toxic algae in the phytoplankton likely resulted in the decline and eventual elimination of a large portion of the Paleozoic fauna during the end-Permian mass extinction. [source] Graduate Business Students Performance with Synchronous and Asynchronous Interaction e-Learning MethodsDECISION SCIENCES JOURNAL OF INNOVATIVE EDUCATION, Issue 2 2003Shawn F. Clouse ABSTRACT The effects of synchronous and asynchronous lectures and interaction formats were examined with graduate business students in on-campus and off-campus MBA programs. The dependent variables were scores on exams questions and learning styles and cognitive styles were used as covariates. The results indicated significant differences for discussion and lecture format and for on-campus and off-campus students. The results were discussed relative to learning in electronic environments. [source] Synchronous and multiple transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder and urachal cystINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 6 2008Vinka Maletic Abstract: Incomplete involution of the allantoic duct can result in different pathological forms of urachus which can give rise to inflammation or late malignant changes. Among urachal tumors, adenocarcinoma is most frequent, although other histological types can also be found. The synchronous presentation of a urachal transitional cell tumor, along with recurrent superficial bladder tumors has not been reported previously. We are reporting a 49-year-old male patient in whom transitional cell carcinoma of a urachal cyst was found with recurrent, multiple bladder tumors. The diagnosis of urachal cyst tumor was established according to ultrasonography and computed tomography. Most of the bladder tumors were resected transurethrally while open surgical excision of the urachal cyst with en bloc resection of the bladder dome was performed. Recurrent bladder tumors were afterwards treated with Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) instillations. A year after surgery the patient has no signs of local recurrence or distant metastases of transitional cell carcinoma. [source] Humic acid,cetyltrimethylammonium bromide interaction: a fluorimetric studyLUMINESCENCE: THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL LUMINESCENCE, Issue 2 2009Deepa Subbiah Abstract Synchronous and excitation emission matrix fluorescence (EEMF) characteristics of humic acid,surfactant interaction have been studied. The variation of synchronous and EEMF spectral maxima and intensities with humic acid (HA),cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) composition sensitively reflects the extent of flocculation of HA. It was found that the concentration range for co-precipitation of HA,CTAB was similar for all concentrations (60 p.p.m., 80 p.p.m. and 100 p.p.m.) of humic acid studied. In the concentration range 60,150 p.p.m. of humic acid, the EEMF maximum is found at 460/540 nm, indicating the presence of ligneous materials. Fluorescence intensity measurement at this contour excitation/emission wavelength (460/540 nm) is suggested as a convenient and a sensitive method for studying the physical state of humic acid in the presence of cationic surfactants. No significant interaction of HA with sodium dodecylsulphate (SDS) and TX-100 was found. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The Effect of Synchronous and Asynchronous CMC on Oral Performance in GermanMODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, Issue 2 2003Zsuzsanna Ittzes Abrams It has been frequently suggested that computer,mediated,communication (CMC) can help learners improve their oral proficiency. This study tested that suggestion by comparing the performance of 3 groups of learners (a control group, a synchronous CMC group, and an asynchronous CMC group) on 3 oral discussions tasks during the course of 1 semester. The number of idea units and words, the lexical richness and diversity, and the syntactic complexity of learner language served as dependent variables. Although this study confirmed a previously reported increase in quantity of language produced by students in the synchronous CMC group compared to the other two groups, the asynchronous CMC group did not outperform the control group. Furthermore, analyses of the quality of language indicated no significant differences among the 3 groups either lexically or syntactically. [source] Alternatives to the Conference Status Quo: Summary Recommendations from the 2008 CORD Academic Assembly Conference Alternatives WorkgroupACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 2009Annie T. Sadosty MD Abstract Objective:, A panel of Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors (CORD) members was asked to examine and make recommendations regarding the existing Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) EM Program Requirements pertaining to educational conferences, identified best practices, and recommended revisions as appropriate. Methods:, Using quasi-Delphi technique, 30 emergency medicine (EM) residency program directors and faculty examined existing requirements. Findings were presented to the CORD members attending the 2008 CORD Academic Assembly, and disseminated to the broader membership through the CORD e-mail list server. Results:, The following four ACGME EM Program Requirements were examined, and recommendations made: 1The 5 hours/week conference requirement: For fully accredited programs in good standing, outcomes should be driving how programs allocate and mandate educational time. Maintain the 5 hours/week conference requirement for new programs, programs with provisional accreditation, programs in difficult political environs, and those with short accreditation cycles. If the program requirements must retain a minimum hours/week reference, future requirements should take into account varying program lengths (3 versus 4 years). 2The 70% attendance requirement: Develop a new requirement that allows programs more flexibility to customize according to local resources, individual residency needs, and individual resident needs. 3The requirement for synchronous versus asynchronous learning: Synchronous and asynchronous learning activities have advantages and disadvantages. The ideal curriculum capitalizes on the strengths of each through a deliberate mixture of each. 4Educationally justified innovations: Transition from process-based program requirements to outcomes-based requirements. Conclusions:, The conference requirements that were logical and helpful years ago may not be logical or helpful now. Technologies available to educators have changed, the amount of material to cover has grown, and online on-demand education has grown even more. We believe that flexibility is needed to customize EM education to suit individual resident and individual program needs, to capitalize on regional and national resources when local resources are limited, to innovate, and to analyze and evaluate interventions with an eye toward outcomes. [source] Consistency of a Shared Versioned Model for Distributed CooperationCOMPUTER-AIDED CIVIL AND INFRASTRUCTURE ENGINEERING, Issue 6 2005B. Firmenich As a rule the ultimate solution needs many iteration steps. Available CAD-systems support synchronous and distributed work on a document base. Therefore, cooperation between the engineers can be obtained only by the exchange of documents. It is generally known that an overall consistency of the planning material is not adequately addressed by this approach. In this article a solution approach focused upon consistency of the shared planning material in a distributed CAD environment is presented. Because of the nature of the planning process, version management is applied on an object basis. Project data are stored as object versions and relationships. The operations for the distributed cooperation are identified and their impact on the project data is described formally, using logical expressions and set theory. A formulation based upon an algebra of sets is presented. [source] Towards virtualized desktop environmentCONCURRENCY AND COMPUTATION: PRACTICE & EXPERIENCE, Issue 4 2010Xiaofei Liao Abstract Virtualization is being widely used now as an emerging trend. Rapid improvements in network bandwidth, ubiquitous security hazards and high total cost of ownership of personal computers have created a growing market for desktop virtualization. Much like server virtualization, virtualizing desktops involves separating the physical location of a client device from its logical interface. But, the performance and usability of some traditional desktop frameworks do not satisfy end-users. Other solutions, including WebOS, which needs to rebuild all daily-used applications into Client/Server mode, cannot be easily accepted by people in a short time. We present LVD, a system that combines the virtualization technology and inexpensive personal computers (PCs) to realize a lightweight virtual desktop system. Comparing to the previous desktop systems, LVD builds an integrated novel desktop environment, which can support the backup, mobility, suspending and resuming of per-user's working environment, and support synchronous using of incompatible applications on different platforms and achieves great saving in power consumption. We have implemented LVD in a cluster with Xen and compared its performance against widely used commercial approaches, including Microsoft RDP, Citrix MetaFrameXP and Sun Ray. Experimental results demonstrate that LVD is effective in performing the functions while imposing little overhead. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Graduate Business Students Performance with Synchronous and Asynchronous Interaction e-Learning MethodsDECISION SCIENCES JOURNAL OF INNOVATIVE EDUCATION, Issue 2 2003Shawn F. Clouse ABSTRACT The effects of synchronous and asynchronous lectures and interaction formats were examined with graduate business students in on-campus and off-campus MBA programs. The dependent variables were scores on exams questions and learning styles and cognitive styles were used as covariates. The results indicated significant differences for discussion and lecture format and for on-campus and off-campus students. The results were discussed relative to learning in electronic environments. [source] Numerical and dietary responses of a predator community in a temperate zone of EuropeECOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2009Gilles Dupuy The generalist predation hypothesis predicts that the functional responses of generalist predator species should be quicker than those of specialist predators and have a regulating effect on vole populations. New interpretations of their role in temperate ecosystems have, however, reactivated a debate suggesting generalist predators may have a destabilizing effect under certain conditions (e.g. landscape homogeneity, low prey diversity, temporary dominance of 1 prey species associated with a high degree of dietary specialization). We studied a rich predator community dominated by generalist carnivores (Martes spp., Vulpes vulpes, Felis catus) over a 6 yr period in farmland and woodland in France. The most frequent prey were small rodents (mostly Microtus arvalis, a grassland species, and Apodemus spp., a woodland species). Alternative prey were diverse and dominated by lagomorphs (Oryctolagus cuniculus, Lepus europeus). We detected a numerical response among specialist carnivores but not among generalist predators. The dietary responses of generalist predators were fairly complex and most often dependent on variation in density of at least 1 prey species. These results support the generalist predation hypothesis. We document a switch to alternative prey, an increase of diet diversity, and a decrease of diet overlap between small and medium-sized generalists during the low density phase of M. arvalis. In this ecosystem, the high density phases of small mammal species are synchronous and cause a temporary specializing of several generalist predator species. This rapid functional response may indicate the predominant role of generalists in low amplitude population cycles of voles observed in some temperate areas. [source] How do plants know when other plants are flowering?ECOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 11 2009Resource depletion, mast-seeding in a perennial wildflower, pollen limitation Abstract Mast-seeding is the synchronous and periodic reproduction by plant populations. This phenomenon has been widely studied from a community-level perspective, but we know extremely little about how plants are able to synchronize reproduction. Here, we present the first experimental test of proximate mechanisms of mast-seeding, by preventing reproduction in an iteroparous, mast-seeding wildflower. Through a series of experiments, we show that mobile carbohydrate stores (NSC) control alternate-year flowering by individual plants; seed set depletes NSC which prevents flowering the following year. Plants are synchronized by density-dependent pollen limitation; when plants flower asynchronously, they set fewer seeds, which prevents NSC depletion. Therefore, these individual plants flower in subsequent years and become synchronized. Because mast-seeding is a consequence of physiological controls of reproduction, differences in plant resource acquisition and allocation could dramatically change patterns of seed production, and changes in plant consumers and pollinators could change selection on physiological and developmental pathways. [source] Movements of Murray cod (Maccullochella peelii peelii) in a large Australian lowland riverECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH, Issue 4 2009J. D. Koehn Abstract,,, This study of Murray cod (Maccullochella peelii peelii) movements in a large lowland river in south-eastern Australia indicated that the species was not sedentary, but undertook complex movements that followed a seasonal pattern. While there were sedentary periods with limited home ranges and high site fidelity, Murray cod also under took larger movements for considerable portions of the year coinciding with its spawning schedule. This generally comprised movements (up to 130 km) from a home location in late winter and early spring to a new upstream position, followed by a rapid downstream migration typically back to the same river reach. Timing of movements was not synchronous amongst individuals and variation in the scale of movements was observed between individuals, fish size, original location and years. [source] Monoamine variability in the chronic model of atypical absence seizuresEPILEPSIA, Issue 4 2009Eduard Bercovici Summary Purpose:, We studied the variability of the slow-spike-and-wave discharges (SSWDs) derived from AY-9944 (AY) treatment during brain development of Long-Evans hooded (LEh) rats. Methods:, Although all LEh rats received the standard dose of AY (7.5 mg/kg), we have observed an intersubject variability of the total SSWD duration at postnatal day (P) 55. Therefore, we set out to investigate the underlying brain levels of norepinephrine (NE), dopamine (DA), and serotonin (5-HT) and its metabolite (5-HIAA), as determined by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analyses from four different brain regions: thalamus (Th), frontoparietal cortex (Cx), hippocampus (Hp), and brainstem (Bs). Results:, All brains were obtained after two baseline electrocorticographic (ECoG) recordings with characteristic chronic, recurrent, bilaterally synchronous 4,6 Hz SSWD, at P 55 (336.25 ± 97.23 s/h) and P60 (494.50 ± 150.36 s) (r = 0.951, r2 = 0.904, p < 0.005, Pearson product). The thalamic NE levels and the brainstem NE, DA, and 5HT levels were all significantly correlated with baseline SSWD duration at P55 and P60 (p < 0.01, Pearson product). Conclusion:, Our data indicate that brain monoamine levels may determine the intersubject variability of SSWD duration in AY rats with chronic atypical absence seizures. [source] Polygenic Control of Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Phenotypes in the Genetic Absence Rats from Strasbourg (GAERS)EPILEPSIA, Issue 4 2004Gabrielle Rudolf Summary: Purpose: Generalized nonconvulsive absence seizures are characterized by the occurrence of synchronous and bilateral spike-and-wave discharges (SWDs) on electroencephalographic recordings, concomitant with behavioral arrest. The GAERS (genetic absence rats from Strasbourg) strain, a well-characterized inbred model for idiopathic generalized epilepsy, spontaneously develops EEG paroxysms that resemble those of typical absence seizures. The purpose of this study was to investigate the genetic control of SWD variables by using a combination of genetic analyses and electrophysiological measurements in an experimental cross derived from GAERS and Brown Norway (BN) rats. Methods: SWD subphenotypes were quantified on EEG recordings performed at both 3 and 6 months in a cohort of 118 GAERS × BN F2 animals. A genome-wide scan of the F2 progenies was carried out with 146 microsatellite markers that were used to test each marker locus for evidence of genetic linkage to the SWD quantitative traits. Results: We identified three quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in chromosomes 4, 7, and 8 controlling specific SWD variables in the cross, including frequency, amplitude, and severity of SWDs. Age was a major factor influencing the detection of genetic linkage to the various components of the SWDs. Conclusions: The identification of these QTLs demonstrates the polygenic control of SWDs in the GAERS strain. Genetic linkages to specific SWD features underline the complex mechanisms contributing to SWD development in idiopathic generalized epilepsy. [source] Case report of bilateral inflammatory breast cancerEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE, Issue 4 2010Y.A. MASANNAT mrcsi, mrcsed, research fellow breast surgery MASANNAT Y.A., PETER M., TURTON P. & SHAABAN A.M. (2010) European Journal of Cancer Care Case report of bilateral inflammatory breast cancer Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare entity that makes up 1,3% of breast cancers. As the diagnosis of IBC is mainly clinical, for the inexperienced the clinical appearance can mimic mastitis leading to diagnostic delay and it is often associated with a poor prognosis. Very few cases of bilateral IBC are reported in the literature, all of which have been synchronous. We report an unusual case of bilateral metachronous IBC each with complete clinico-pathological response after treatment with neoadjuvant chemotherapy and surgery on both occasions. [source] NMR Study of L-Shaped (Quinoxaline)platinum(II) Complexes , Crystal Structure of [Pt(DMeDPQ)(bipy)](PF6)2EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 23 2004Enrico Rotondo Abstract A 1H and 13C NMR study of nine PtII complexes of DMeDPQ [6,7-dimethyl-2,3-bis(2-pyridyl)quinoxaline] and BDPQ [2,3-bis(2-pyridyl)benzo[g]quinoxaline], and the crystal structure of one of them, are reported. The results are consistent with Cs symmetry of "L-shaped square-planar complexes". The rigid seven-membered chelated quinoxaline ligand holds the fused aromatic rings nearly perpendicular to the PtII coordination plane, generating the peculiar L-shaped structure. Ancillary ligands in the residual coordination sites are: a) bidentate flexible-planar 2,2,-bipyridine (bipy; complexes 1 and 2); b) bidentate rigid-planar dipyrido[3,2- a:2,3,- c]phenazine (dppz) or benzo[b]dipyrido[3,2- h:2,,3,- j]phenazine (bdppz; complexes 3,6); or c) 3-substituted monodentate pyridines (3-Rpy; complexes 7,9). The L-shaped geometry has been exploited to gain insight into the steric and dynamic features that regulate the noncovalent interactions of these square-planar complexes with DNA. We have shown previously, for [Pt(bipy)(n -Rpy)2]2+, that bipy twisting can be frozen out on the NMR timescale below 260 K. Preservation of the Cs symmetry at low temperature indicates a lack of bipy fluxionality within these L-shaped structures. The static butterfly-like symmetric orientation of the quinoxaline pyridyl rings accounts for the hampered twisting of Pt(bipy), which is otherwise assisted by the synchronous "windscreen wiper" conrotatory rocking of the ancillary pyridine rings. The L-geometry can also be used to monitor the ancillary n -Rpy rotation by NMR spectroscopy. The quasi-vertical quinoxaline pyridyl rings alignment leave room in the coordination plane for the crossing of the opposite pyridine rings, thereby reducing their rotational barriers about the Pt,N bond. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2004) [source] The patterns of spontaneous Ca2+ signals generated by ventral spinal neurons in vitro show time-dependent refinementEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 8 2009Sara Sibilla Abstract Embryonic spinal neurons maintained in organotypic slice culture are known to mimic certain maturation-dependent signalling changes. With such a model we investigated, in embryonic mouse spinal segments, the age-dependent spatio-temporal control of intracellular Ca2+ signalling generated by neuronal populations in ventral circuits and its relation with electrical activity. We used Ca2+ imaging to monitor areas located within the ventral spinal horn at 1 and 2 weeks of in vitro growth. Primitive patterns of spontaneous neuronal Ca2+ transients (detected at 1 week) were typically synchronous. Remarkably, such transients originated from widespread propagating waves that became organized into large-scale rhythmic bursts. These activities were associated with the generation of synaptically mediated inward currents under whole-cell patch-clamp. Such patterns disappeared during longer culture of spinal segments: at 2 weeks in culture, only a subset of ventral neurons displayed spontaneous, asynchronous and repetitive Ca2+ oscillations dissociated from background synaptic activity. We observed that the emergence of oscillations was a restricted phenomenon arising together with the transformation of ventral network electrophysiological bursting into asynchronous synaptic discharges. This change was accompanied by the appearance of discrete calbindin immunoreactivity against an unchanged background of calretinin-positive cells. It is attractive to assume that periodic oscillations of Ca2+ confer a summative ability to these cells to shape the plasticity of local circuits through different changes (phasic or tonic) in intracellular Ca2+. [source] Bilaterally synchronous complex spike Purkinje cell activity in the mammalian cerebellumEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2001Tomoya Yamamoto Abstract Complex spike activity was simultaneously recorded from 96 Purkinje cells in the rat cerebellar cortex. Rostrocaudal complex spike synchronicity bands were studied in crus I, IIa and IIb and in vermal lobule 6c. Detailed analysis in crus IIa revealed that complex spike activity was staggered sequentially with a 20,50 cm/sec ,propagation velocity' in the mediolateral direction, and that such activity was bilaterally synchronous. The ,propagation' of complex spike activity was symmetrical between right and left crus IIa. Temporally, the neurons that aligned in the rostrocaudal direction typically generated complex spikes close to simultaneously. The correlation of complex spike firing was high between crus IIa and crus IIb, moderate between crus IIa and vermis 6c, and relatively low between Purkinje cells in crus I and crus IIa. These results indicate that, whilst discrete boarders exist between different isochronicity bands, these bands do communicate with each other in the mediolateral direction via slow ,propagation waves' that loosely bind their activity. The results indicate that the olivocerebellar system is organized, bilaterally, to take advantage of the timing signals generated at the inferior olive nucleus. [source] High-speed-range enhancement of switched reluctance motor with continuous mode for automotive applicationsEUROPEAN TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRICAL POWER, Issue 7 2008M. Rekik Abstract This paper describes an original method for the elaboration of control laws for the Switched Reluctance Motor (SRM) for high-speed operation. In this case, the control optimisation relies on the choice of optimal turn-on and turn-off angles to ensure, in general, high global efficiency, in classical supply mode with full-wave voltage. Then, after showing the influence of number of turns, a new supply mode called the continuous mode is described. This mode, used with a higher number of turns, allows to reduce the inverter current rating and hence silicon requirements without compromising performance at high speed. This makes the SRM competitive compared to other technologies (synchronous and induction motors). The simulation results for a 12/8 SRM are presented and compared to those for an induction motor. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Dynamic COI-tracking concept for the control of generators in multi-machine power systemsEUROPEAN TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRICAL POWER, Issue 1 2008Zhou Lan Abstract In the conventional excitation control concept, the power angle and frequency of a generator are driven to a pre-designed operation point after the fault occurs. It is named as Constant Point Stabilization (CPS) concept in this paper. A novel concept, called dynamic Center of Inertia (COI)-tracking concept is proposed in this paper. In the concept, the power angle and frequency of each generator track the dynamic COI of the power system. Compared to CPS concept, a salient feature the suggested dynamic COI-tracking concept has is that the generators are not restricted to constant angle point or frequency any longer but track the dynamic COI trajectory of the system to keep synchronous in rotor angle and frequency. Wide area measurement system (WAMS) will be used to transform COI signals to each generator. The time delay within a certain limit of WAMS signals is permitted. To make comparison between the two concepts, the control system models based on the two concepts are first established. Then, using the back-stepping method, two robust controllers are designed to achieve the control objectives of the two concepts. At last, dynamic simulations are carried out based on a 2-area-4-machine test power system, and the control effects of the two controllers, together with that of the conventional AVR,+,PSS excitation system, are compared. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] In vitro expansion of DNA triplet repeats with bulge binders and different DNA polymerasesFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 18 2008Di Ouyang The expansion of DNA repeat sequences is associated with many genetic diseases in humans. Simple bulge DNA structures have been implicated as intermediates in DNA slippage within the DNA repeat regions. To probe the possible role of bulged structures in DNA slippage, we designed and synthesized a pair of simple chiral spirocyclic compounds [Xi Z, Ouyang D & Mu HT (2006) Bioorg Med Chem Lett16, 1180,1184], DDI-1A and DDI-1B, which mimic the molecular architecture of the enediyne antitumor antibiotic neocarzinostatin chromophore. Both compounds strongly stimulated slippage in various DNA repeats in vitro. Enhanced slippage synthesis was found to be synchronous for primer and template. CD spectra and UV thermal stability studies supported the idea that DDI-1A and DDI-1B exhibited selective binding to the DNA bulge and induced a significant conformational change in bulge DNA. The proposed mechanism for the observed in vitro expansion of long DNA is discussed. [source] Phosphorus decrease and climate variability: mediators of synchrony in phytoplankton changes among European peri-alpine lakesFRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 10 2005ORLANE ANNEVILLE Summary 1. In an attempt to discern long-term regional patterns in phytoplankton community composition we analysed data from five deep peri-alpine lake basins that have been included in long-term monitoring programmes since the beginning of the 1970s. Local management measures have led to synchronous declines in phosphorus concentrations by more than 50% in all four lakes. Their trophic state now ranges from mesotrophic to oligotrophic. 2. No coherence in phytoplankton biomass was observed among lakes, or any significant decrease in response to phosphorus (P)-reduction (oligotrophication), except in Lakes Constance and Walen. 3. Multivariate analyses identified long-term changes in phytoplankton composition, which occurred coherently in all lakes despite the differing absolute phosphorus concentrations. 4. In all lakes, the phytoplankton species benefiting from oligotrophication included mixotrophic species and/or species indicative of oligo-mesotrophic conditions. 5. A major change in community composition occurred in all lakes at the end of the 1980s. During this period there was also a major shift in climatic conditions during winter and early spring, suggesting an impact of climatic factors. 6. Our results provide evidence that synchronous long-term changes in geographically separated phytoplankton communities may occur even when overall biomass changes are not synchronous. [source] A 3.5 ka record of paleoenvironments and human occupation at Angkor Borei, Mekong Delta, southern CambodiaGEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 3 2003Paul Bishop Microfossil and sedimentological data from a 3.1 m core extracted from a reservoir (baray) at the ancient Cambodian settlement of Angkor Borei in the Mekong Delta have provided a continuous record of sedimentation and paleoenvironments dating from about 2000 cal yr B.C. Palynological data indicate that for much of the cal. 1st and 2nd millennia B.C. mangroves dominated the regional vegetation, while extensively and regularly burnt grasslands dominated the local vegetation. Turbid, nutrient-rich standing water characterized the core locality, perhaps suggesting a connection with rivers in the area. An abrupt change during the cal. 5th to 6th centuries A.D. involved a dramatic reduction in grasslands and the expansion of secondary forest or re-growth taxa. These changes are synchronous with an abrupt decline in the concentration of microscopic charcoal particles in the sediments, and the colonization of the core locality by swamp forest plants. These changes are taken to indicate a shift in land-use strategies or, possibly, a period of land abandonment. The age for the construction of the baray is interpreted to be in the 17th,19th centuries, but this dating remains speculative. Construction of the Angkor Borei baray exploited a preexisting body of standing water, so its construction was fundamentally different from the methods used at the Angkorian capital in northern Cambodia. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] An eastern Tethyan (Tibetan) record of the Early Jurassic (Toarcian) mass extinction eventGEOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2006P. B. WIGNALL ABSTRACT A record of the Early Jurassic mass extinction event is reported from eastern Tethyan (Tibetan) locations for the first time. In the Mount Everest region a thick Lower Jurassic carbonate formation, here named the Yungjia Formation, is developed within the predominantly clastic Triassic,Jurassic succession. Within the formation a sharp transition from peloidal packstones/grainstones to thin-bedded, pyritic micrite-shales interbeds records a sharp pulse of deepening and development of dysoxic bottom waters. Both the lithiotid bivalves and the lituolid foraminifera are important constituents of the lower Yungjia Formation but they disappear at this flooding surface or a short distance below it. This extinction event is comparable to that seen at the base of the Pliensbachian/Toarcian boundary in western Tethyan platform carbonates but the Tibetan events occurred late in the Toarcian Stage as indicated by nannofossil biostratigraphy and C isotope chemostratigraphy. The Early Jurassic extinction event (and the associated spread of oxygen-poor waters) was therefore not synchronous throughout the Tethyan region. [source] TEMPERATURE PROXY RECORDS COVERING THE LAST TWO MILLENNIA: A TABULAR AND VISUAL OVERVIEWGEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES A: PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2009FREDRIK CHARPENTIER LJUNGQVIST ABSTRACT. Proxy data are our only source of knowledge of temperature variability in the period prior to instrumental temperature measurements. Until recently, very few quantitative palaeotemperature records extended back a millennium or more, but the number is now increasing. Here, the first systematic survey is presented, with graphic representations, of most quantitative temperature proxy data records covering the last two millennia that have been published in the peer-reviewed literature. In total, 71 series are presented together with basic essential information on each record. This overview will hopefully assist future palaeoclimatic research by facilitating an orientation among available palaeotemperature records and thus reduce the risk of missing less well-known proxy series. The records show an amplitude between maximum and minimum temperatures during the past two millennia on centennial timescales ranging from c. 0.5 to 4°C and averaging c. 1.5,2°C for both high and low latitudes, although these variations are not always occurring synchronous. Both the Medieval Warm Period, the Little Ice Age and the 20th century warming are clearly visible in most records, whereas the Roman Warm Period and the Dark Age Cold Period are less clearly discernible. [source] From the intra-desert ridges to the marine carbonate island chain: middle to late Permian (Upper Rotliegend,Lower Zechstein) of the Wolsztyn,Pogorzela high, west PolandGEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, Issue 2-3 2010Hubert Kiersnowski Abstract The tectonic Wolsztyn,Pogorzela palaeo-High (WPH) is the south-eastern termination of the Brandenburg,Wolsztyn High (western Poland), which during Late Permian times was an intra-basin ridge surrounded by Upper Rotliegend sedimentary basins within the Southern Permian Basin. The geological history and structural framework of the WPH are complex. The High belongs to the Variscan Externides, consisting at present of strongly folded, faulted and eroded Viséan to Namurian flysch deposits capped by a thick cover of Upper Carboniferous,Lower Permian volcanic rocks. This sedimentary-volcanic complex was strongly fragmented and vertically differentiated by tectonic movements and subsequently eroded, resulting in the deposition of coarse clastics surrounding uplifted tectonic blocks. During late Rotliegend time, arid climatic conditions significantly influenced occurrences of specific facies assemblages: alluvial, fluvial, aeolian and playa. Sedimentological study helped to recognize the interplay of tectonic and palaeoclimatic factors and to understand the phenomenon of aeolian sandstones interbedded with coarse deposits of alluvial cones close to fault scarps. Subsequent tectonic and possible thermal subsidence of the studied area was synchronous with inundation by the Zechstein Sea. The rapid inundation process allowed for the preservation of an almost perfectly protected Uppermost Rotliegend landscape. Based on 3D seismic data from the base Zechstein reflector, a reconstruction of Rotliegend palaeogeomorphology was carried out, which shows examples of tectonic rejuvenation of particular tectonic blocks within the WPH area before inundation by the Zechstein Sea. The inundation led to the deposition of the marine Kupferschiefer Shale followed by the Zechstein Limestone. In the deeper parts of the basin the latter is developed in thin basinal facies: in shallow parts (e.g. uplifted tectonic blocks forming in some cases islands), carbonate buildups were formed. The remarkable thickness of those buildups (bryozoan reefs) is interpreted as due to stable tectonic subsidence together with a rise of sea level. A detailed study of carbonate buildups has showed that their internal structure reflects changes in shallow marine environments and even emersion events, caused by sea-level oscillations and tectonic movements of the reef substrate. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Parallel numerical simulation for the coupled problem of continuous flow electrophoresisINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN FLUIDS, Issue 10 2007M. Chau Abstract The performance of parallel subdomain method with overlapping is analysed in the case of the 3D coupled boundary-value problem of continuous flow electrophoresis which is governed by Navier,Stokes equations coupled with convection,diffusion and potential equations. Convergence of parallel synchronous and asynchronous iterative algorithms is studied. Comparison between implemented explicit and implicit schemes for the transport equation is made using these algorithms and shows that both methods provide similar results and comparable performances. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Nonstationary spatio-temporal small rodent dynamics: evidence from long-term Norwegian fox bounty dataJOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2009John-André Henden Summary 1The geographical pattern in Fennoscandian small rodent population dynamics with a southern noncyclic and a northern cyclic region, and with latitudinal gradients in density-dependent structure, cycle period length and spatial synchrony within the northern cyclic region, has been widely publicized and interpreted in the ecological literature. However, the time-series data on which these inferences have been established are relatively short and originate from a specific time period (mostly around 1970,90). Hence, it can be questioned whether the geographical population dynamics patterns are consistent over time (i.e. whether they are stationary). 2Here we analyse an almost century long (1880,1976) panel of fox bounty time series including 18 counties of Norway, thus spanning the whole range of latitudes of Fennoscandia (i.e. 15 latitudinal degrees). These fox time series mirror the dynamics of their dominant small rodent prey, in particular, with respect to cycle period length and spatial synchrony. 3While we found some evidence consistent with previous analyses showing a clearly patterned dynamics according to latitude, such patterns were not stationary on a longer time-scale. In particular, we observed a shift from an extensively synchronous (i.e. regionalized) 4-year cycle north of 60°N just after the ,Little Ice Age' (1880,1910) to a diversification of cycle period length (3,5 years) and eventually, partial loss of cyclicity and synchronicity in later periods. Incidents of loss of cyclicity appeared to be preceded by changes in cycle period (i.e. period lengthening and shortening). 4These results show that the dynamics of Fennoscandian small rodents, and their associated guild of predators, are more prone to change than previously acknowledged. [source] Spatial variation in population growth rate and community structure affects local and regional dynamicsJOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, Issue 6 2008M. Kurtis Trzcinski Summary 1Theory predicting that populations with high maximum rates of increase (rmax) will be less stable, and that metapopulations with high average rmax will be less synchronous, was tested using a small protist, Bodo, that inhabits pitcher plant leaves (Sarracenia purpurea L.). The effects of predators and resources on these relationships were also determined. 2Abundance data collected for a total of 60 populations of Bodo, over a period of 3 months, at six sites in three bogs in eastern Canada, were used to test these predictions. Mosquitoes were manipulated in half the leaves partway through the season to increase the range of predation rates. 3Dynamics differed greatly among leaves and sites, but most populations exhibited one or more episodes of rapid increase followed by a population crash. Estimates of rmax obtained using a linear mixed-effects model, ranged from 1·5 to 2·7 per day. Resource levels (captured insect) and midge abundances affected rmax. 4Higher rmax was associated with greater temporal variability and lower synchrony as predicted. However, in contrast to expectations, populations with higher rmax also had lower mean abundance and were more suppressed by predators. 5This study demonstrates that the link between rmax and temporal variability is key to understanding the dynamics of populations that spend little time near equilibrium, and to predicting and interpreting the effects of community structure on the dynamics of such populations. [source] Low-temperature-driven early spawning migration of a temperate marine fishJOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2004David W. Sims Summary 1It is often assumed that the timing of annual migrations of marine fish to spawning grounds occurs with very little change over time. However, it is unclear how much migration is influenced by climate change in marine species that spawn at sea but spend most time in estuarine conditions, especially as thermal regimes in estuaries may differ significantly from those in the open sea. 2Migration phenology was studied in a population of flounder, Platichthys flesus (L.) off south-west England using high-temporal resolution trawling data over a 13-year period. 3Flounder migrated from their estuarine habitat to spawning grounds at sea some 1,2 months earlier in years that were up to 2 °C cooler. Flounder arrived on the spawning grounds over a shorter time period (2,6 days) when colder than normal conditions prevailed in the estuary, compared to warmer years (12,15 days). This suggests that they were responding to low temperatures by exhibiting a more synchronous, population-level early migration. 4The timing of migration was earlier when the largest differences in temperatures between near-estuary and offshore environments occurred, differences that were related significantly to cold, negative phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). 5Flounder migration phenology appears to be driven to a large extent by short-term, climate-induced changes in the thermal resources of their overwintering habitat. This suggests that climate fluctuations characterizing the NAO may have significant effects on the timing of the peak abundance of fish populations generally, which, in turn, may have implications for fisheries management. [source] |