21 results on '"BOND, MATTHEW"'
Search Results
2. Plasticity is a locally adapted trait with consequences for ecological dynamics in novel environments.
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Bond, Matthew N., Piertney, Stuart B., Benton, Tim G., and Cameron, Tom C.
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ECOSYSTEM dynamics , *POPULATION dynamics , *PHENOTYPIC plasticity , *PHENOTYPES , *LIFE history theory - Abstract
Phenotypic plasticity is predicted to evolve in more variable environments, conferring an advantage on individual lifetime fitness. It is less clear what the potential consequences of that plasticity will have on ecological population dynamics. Here, we use an invertebrate model system to examine the effects of environmental variation (resource availability) on the evolution of phenotypic plasticity in two life history traits—age and size at maturation—in long‐running, experimental density‐dependent environments. Specifically, we then explore the feedback from evolution of life history plasticity to subsequent ecological dynamics in novel conditions. Plasticity in both traits initially declined in all microcosm environments, but then evolved increased plasticity for age‐at‐maturation, significantly so in more environmentally variable environments. We also demonstrate how plasticity affects ecological dynamics by creating founder populations of different plastic phenotypes into new microcosms that had either familiar or novel environments. Populations originating from periodically variable environments that had evolved greatest plasticity had lowest variability in population size when introduced to novel environments than those from constant or random environments. This suggests that while plasticity may be costly it can confer benefits by reducing the likelihood that offspring will experience low survival through competitive bottlenecks in variable environments. In this study, we demonstrate how plasticity evolves in response to environmental variation and can alter population dynamics—demonstrating an eco‐evolutionary feedback loop in a complex animal moderated by plasticity in growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. Matrix-trapped viruses can prevent invasion of bacterial biofilms by colonizing cells.
- Author
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Bond, Matthew C., Vidakovic, Lucia, Singh, Praveen K., Drescher, Knut, and Nadell, Carey D
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BIOFILMS , *VIRUSES , *ESCHERICHIA coli - Abstract
Bacteriophages can be trapped in the matrix of bacterial biofilms, such that the cells inside them are protected. It is not known whether these phages are still infectious and whether they pose a threat to newly arriving bacteria. Here, we address these questions using Escherichia coli and its lytic phage T7. Prior work has demonstrated that T7 phages are bound in the outermost curli polymer layers of the E. coli biofilm matrix. We show that these phages do remain viable and can kill colonizing cells that are T7-susceptible. If cells colonize a resident biofilm before phages do, we find that they can still be killed by phage exposure if it occurs soon thereafter. However, if colonizing cells are present on the biofilm long enough before phage exposure, they gain phage protection via envelopment within curli-producing clusters of the resident biofilm cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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4. Prestige and homophily predict network structure for social learning of medicinal plant knowledge.
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Bond, Matthew O. and Gaoue, Orou G.
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SOCIAL learning , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL structure , *PRESTIGE , *TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge , *VIRTUAL communities , *RANDOM graphs - Abstract
Human subsistence societies have thrived in environmental extremes while maintaining biodiversity through social learning of ecological knowledge, such as techniques to prepare food and medicine from local resources. However, there is limited understanding of which processes shape social learning patterns and configuration in ecological knowledge networks, or how these processes apply to resource management and biological conservation. In this study, we test the hypothesis that the prestige (rarity or exclusivity) of knowledge shapes social learning networks. In addition, we test whether people tend to select who to learn from based on prestige (knowledge or reputation), and homophily (e.g., people of the same age or gender). We used interviews to assess five types of medicinal plant knowledge and how 303 people share this knowledge across four villages in Solomon Islands. We developed exponential random graph models (ERGMs) to test whether hypothesized patterns of knowledge sharing based on prestige and homophily are more common in the observed network than in randomly simulated networks of the same size. We found that prestige predicts five hypothesized network configurations and all three hypothesized learning patterns, while homophily predicts one of three hypothesized network configurations and five of the seven hypothesized learning patterns. These results compare the strength of different prestige and homophily effects on social learning and show how cultural practices such as intermarriage can affect certain aspects of prestige and homophily. By advancing our understanding of how prestige and homophily affect ecological knowledge networks, we identify which social learning patterns have the largest effects on biocultural conservation of ecological knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Permafrost thaw and implications for the fate and transport of tritium in the Canadian north.
- Author
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Bond, Matthew J. and Carr, Jamie
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PERMAFROST , *TRITIUM , *NUCLEAR weapons testing , *RADIOISOTOPES & the environment , *SEEPAGE - Abstract
Abstract Layers of permafrost developed during the 1950s and 1960s incorporated tritium from the atmosphere that originated from global nuclear weapons testing. In regions underlain by substantial permafrost, this tritium has been effectively trapped in ice since it was deposited and subject to radioactive decay alone, which has substantially lengthened its environmental half-life compared to areas with little or no permafrost where the weapons-test era precipitation has been subject to both decay and hydrodynamic dispersion. The Arctic is warming three times faster than other parts of the world, with northern regions incurring some of the most pronounced effects of climate change, resulting in permafrost degradation. A series of 23 waterbodies across the Canadian sub-Arctic spanning the continuous, discontinuous and isolated patches permafrost zones in northern Manitoba, Northwest Territories and Labrador were sampled. Surface water and groundwater seepage samples were collected from each lake and analyzed for tritium, stable isotopes (δ18O and δ2H) and general water chemistry characteristics. Measured tritium was significantly higher in surface waters (SW) and groundwater seepage (GW) in water bodies located in the sporadic discontinuous (64 ± 15 T U. in SW and 52 ± 9 T U. in GW) and extensive discontinuous (53 ± 7 T U. in SW and 61 ± 7 T U. in GW) permafrost regions of the Northwest Territories than in regions underlain by continuous permafrost in northern Manitoba (<12 T U. in both SW and GW) or those within isolated patches of permafrost in Labrador (16 ± 2 T U. in SW and 21 ± 4 T U. in GW). The greatest tritium enrichment (up to 128 T U.) was observed in lakes near Jean Marie River in the Mackenzie River valley, a region known to be experiencing extensive permafrost degradation. These results demonstrate significant permafrost degradation in the central Mackenzie River basin and show that tritium is becoming increasingly mobile in the sub-Arctic environment—at concentrations higher than expected—as a result of a warming climate. A better understanding of the cycling of tritium in the environment will improve our understanding of Arctic radioecology under changing environmental conditions. Highlights • HTO assessed in surface waters and groundwaters in permafrost zones across Canada. • HTO concentrations are higher in zones of discontinuous permafrost than elsewhere. • Data suggest that lakes enriched in HTO are sourced by melting permafrost. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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6. What works in advocating for food advertising policy change across an english region – a realist evaluation.
- Author
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Sykes, Susie, Watkins, Megan, Bond, Matthew, Jenkins, Catherine, and Wills, Jane
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FOOD advertising , *NUTRITION policy , *OUTDOOR advertising , *PRODUCT advertising , *STAKEHOLDER analysis - Abstract
Background: With increasing recognition of the role of commercial determinants of health, local areas in England have sought to restrict the advertising of products high in fat, salt and sugar (HFSS) on council-owned spaces, as part of wider strategies to reduce obesity. While there is some evidence of the impact of such policy change on behaviour, little is known about what works in the process of implementing this policy change. Methods: Guided by a realist evaluation framework that explores the interaction between context, mechanism and outcomes, this study aims to investigate the factors that influence the restriction of outdoor advertising of HFSS products in one region in England. It refines a programme theory co-produced with stakeholders from 14 local authorities within a region and uses multiple data sources from each area with an in-depth examination of four case study sites. Data sources include longitudinal realist interviews, focus groups and surveys with policy advocates and policy stakeholders. Data were analysed retroductively to understand the causal link between context, mechanism and outcomes. Results: Outcomes were driven by five dominant mechanisms: a strategic and staggered approach to stakeholder engagement, gathering intelligence, identifying policy champions, building relationships, reframing the issue; and two secondary mechanisms of amplifying the issue and increasing public will. These led to varied outcomes with no changes in formal policy position within the evaluation period but draft policy guidance in place and changes in political will demonstrated. Dominant context factors influencing change included having a named and resourced policy advocate in place supported by an external Community of Improvement and having existing aligned local objectives. Organisational complexity and change, financial concerns, lack of local examples, ideological positions and the pandemic were also influencing contextual factors. Conclusion: Effecting policy change in this area requires the commitment of an extended period and the valuing of short-term policy outcomes, such as increasing political will. The importance of a resourced and well-supported policy advocate to lead this work is fundamental and the commercially sensitive nature of this policy change means that a complex interplay of mechanisms is required which may be dominated by a strategically staggered approach to stakeholder engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. BUFFON'S NEEDLE ESTIMATES FOR RATIONAL PRODUCT CANTOR SETS.
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BOND, MATTHEW, ŁABA, IZABELLA, and VOLBERG, ALEXANDER
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CARDINAL numbers , *CANTOR sets , *MATHEMATICS theorems , *POLYNOMIALS , *TRIGONOMETRY , *MATHEMATICAL functions - Abstract
Let S∞ = A∞ x B∞ be a self-similar product Cantor set in the complex plane, defined via S∞ = Uj=1 L Tj (S∞), where Tj: ℂ → ℂ have the form Tj (z) = 1/L z+zj and {z1...,zL} = A +iB for some A, B, ⊂ ℝ with |A|, |B| > 1 and |A||B| = L. Let SN be the L-N -neighborhood of S∞, or equivalently (up to constants), its N -th Cantor iteration. We are interested in the asymptotic behavior as N → ∞ of the Favard length of SN, defined as the average (with respect to direction) length of its 1-dimensional projections. If the sets A and B are rational and have cardinalities at most 6, then the Favard length of SN is bounded from above by C N-p/log log N for some p>0. The same result holds with no restrictions on the size of A and B under certain implicit conditions concerning the generating functions of these sets. This generalizes the earlier results of Nazarov-Perez-Volberg, Łaba-Zhai, and Bond-Volberg. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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8. The Bases of Elite Social Behaviour: Patterns of Club Affiliation among Members of the House of Lords.
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Bond, Matthew
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AFFILIATION (Psychology) , *SOCIOLOGY of clubs , *CLUB membership , *ARISTOCRACY (Social class) , *DATA analysis - Abstract
This article examines the relationship between club affiliations by members of the House of Lords and their political and social backgrounds. The odds of being a club member and the networks of association created by clubs are positively associated with ascriptive, educational, occupational and political variables. The communities created by clubs augment inequalities in Lords’ representativeness. The evidence is incompatible with arguments that the British political elite is unified or that clubs integrate functionally differentiated groupings. The evidence is consistent, however, with clubs offering social unity to elites with vested interests in traditional status structures. A British establishment is still evident in the club community. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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9. How likely is Buffon's ring toss to intersect a planar Cantor set?
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Bond, Matthew
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RING theory , *INTERSECTION theory , *CANTOR sets , *CHARACTERISTIC functions , *LOGICAL prediction , *OPERATOR theory - Abstract
Abstract: In Bateman and Volberg (2008) , it was shown that the n-th partial 1/4 Cantor in the plane set decays in Favard length no faster than . In Bond and Volberg (2008) , the so-called circular Favard length of the same set is studied, and the same estimate is shown to persist when the circle has radius . By considering characteristic functions, the result of Bond and Volberg (2008) naturally leads to a conjecture which (if true) would imply the sharpness of the boundedness of the circular maximal operator proved by Seeger, Tao and Wright (2005) . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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10. Buffon needle lands in ϵ-neighborhood of a 1-dimensional Sierpinski Gasket with probability at most
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Bond, Matthew and Volberg, Alexander
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FRACTALS , *GRAPHICAL projection , *MATHEMATICAL functions , *SELF-similar processes , *CANTOR sets , *PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
Abstract: In recent years, relatively sharp quantitative results in the spirit of the Besicovitch projection theorem have been obtained for self-similar sets by studying the norms of the “projection multiplicity” functions, , where is the number of connected components of the partial fractal set that orthogonally project in the θ direction to cover x. In Nazarov et al. (2008) , it was shown that n-th partial 4-corner Cantor set with self-similar scaling factor 1/4 decays in Favard length at least as fast as , for . In Bond and Volberg (2009) , this same estimate was proved for the 1-dimensional Sierpinski gasket for some . A few observations were needed to adapt the approach of Nazarov et al. (2008) to the gasket: we sketch them here. We also formulate a result about all self-similar sets of dimension 1. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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11. The political mobilization of corporate directors: socio-economic correlates of affiliation to European pressure groups.
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Bond, Matthew, Glouharova, Siana, and Harrigan, Nicholas
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CORPORATE directors , *PRESSURE groups , *EXECUTIVES , *SOCIOLOGICAL research , *BUSINESS & politics , *POLITICAL participation - Abstract
Business has played a central role in the debate over Britain's place in the European Union. This paper examines the socio-economic characteristics of directors of Britain's largest corporations who affiliated either to Business for Sterling or Britain in Europe. It reports associations between directors' social backgrounds and their probabilities of affiliation. Elite university education, club membership, wealth and multiple directorships were all associated with higher propensities to affiliate. The associations are consistent with the idea that directors' social resources allow them to overcome collective action problems as well as supplying them with the motivations to affiliate. They also indicated that directors form a privileged group in that they have a number of very powerful actors who can take unilateral political actions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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12. Elite Social Relations and Corporate Political Donations in Britain.
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Bond, Matthew
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POLITICAL participation , *ELITE (Social sciences) , *PRESSURE groups , *POLITICAL science , *CHARITABLE uses, trusts, & foundations - Abstract
Elite theory critiques of corporate political action rest on the claim that it advances the political interests of elite status groups. This article examines that claim by investigating the relationship between a British corporation's propensity to make donations to the Conservative party and its directors' educational backgrounds and social club affiliations. Using a structural equivalence blockmodel, it is shown that among the largest 250 British corporations in 1995 there was a set with directors who came from elite educational backgrounds and were members of elite social clubs. These corporations made a disproportionate number of donations. I argue that these results support the elite theory critique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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13. Social influences on corporate political donations in Britain.
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Bond, Matthew
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POLITICAL sociology , *POLITICAL science , *POLITICAL participation , *POWER (Social sciences) , *CORPORATE political activity , *BUSINESS & politics , *SOCIAL influence - Abstract
It is argued that institutional features of the British state create collective action problems for the mobilization of corporations as donors to the Conservative Party. Social factors are necessary for overcoming these problems. Using social network analyses, the effect that interlocking directorates have on 250 large British corporations' decisions to donate are analysed. Instead of the central mobilizing factor being diffuse inner circle mechanisms positively influencing the decision to make a donation, the results show that more particularistic mechanisms such as information bias and control are equally important. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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14. Modest Attempt at a Vast Topic.
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Bond, Matthew
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SCIENCE fiction , *NONFICTION , *RELIGION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "Religion and Science Fiction" edited by James F. McGrath.
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- 2012
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15. Uninterrupted thermoelectric energy harvesting using temperature-sensor-based maximum power point tracking system.
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Jae-Do Park, Hohyun Lee, and Bond, Matthew
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THERMOELECTRIC power , *ENERGY harvesting , *MAXIMUM power point trackers , *ALGORITHMS , *PHOTOVOLTAIC cells , *STEADY state conduction - Abstract
In this paper, a thermoelectric generator (TEG) energy harvesting system with a temperature-sensor-based maximum power point tracking (MPPT) method is presented. Conventional MPPT algorithms for photovoltaic cells may not be suitable for thermoelectric power generation because a significant amount of time is required for TEG systems to reach a steady state. Moreover, complexity and additional power consumption in conventional circuits and periodic disconnection of power source are not desirable for low-power energy harvesting applications. The proposed system can track the varying maximum power point (MPP) with a simple and inexpensive temperature-sensor-based circuit without instantaneous power measurement or TEG disconnection. This system uses TEG's open circuit voltage (OCV) characteristic with respect to temperature gradient to generate a proper reference voltage signal, i.e., half of the TEG's OCV. The power converter controller maintains the TEG output voltage at the reference level so that the maximum power can be extracted for the given temperature condition. This feedforward MPPT scheme is inherently stable and can be implemented without any complex microcontroller circuit. The proposed system has been validated analytically and experimentally, and shows a maximum power tracking error of 1.15%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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16. Methodological advances for hypothesis‐driven ethnobiology.
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Gaoue, Orou G., Moutouama, Jacob K., Coe, Michael A., Bond, Matthew O., Green, Elizabeth, Sero, Nadejda B., Bezeng, Bezeng S., and Yessoufou, Kowiyou
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ETHNOBIOLOGY , *BIOLOGICAL networks , *SOCIAL network analysis , *LEAST squares , *SPECIES distribution , *STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Ethnobiology as a discipline has evolved increasingly to embrace theory‐inspired and hypothesis‐driven approaches to study why and how local people choose plants and animals they interact with and use for their livelihood. However, testing complex hypotheses or a network of ethnobiological hypotheses is challenging, particularly for data sets with non‐independent observations due to species phylogenetic relatedness or socio‐relational links between participants. Further, to account fully for the dynamics of local ecological knowledge, it is important to include the spatially explicit distribution of knowledge, changes in knowledge, and knowledge transmission and use. To promote the use of advanced statistical modelling approaches that address these limitations, we synthesize methodological advances for hypothesis‐driven research in ethnobiology while highlighting the need for more figures than tables and more tables than text in ethnobiological literature. We present the ethnobiological motivations for conducting generalized linear mixed‐effect modelling, structural equation modelling, phylogenetic generalized least squares, social network analysis, species distribution modelling, and predictive modelling. For each element of the proposed ethnobiologists quantitative toolbox, we present practical applications along with scripts for a widespread implementation. Because these statistical modelling approaches are rarely taught in most ethnobiological programs but are essential for careers in academia or industry, it is critical to promote workshops and short courses focused on these advanced methods. By embracing these quantitative modelling techniques without sacrificing qualitative approaches which provide essential context, ethnobiology will progress further towards an expansive interaction with other disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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17. Age‐ and sex‐related bias in the management of heart disease in a district general hospital.
- Author
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DUDLEY, NIGEL J., BOWLING, ANN, BOND, MATTHEW, McKEE, DOROTHY, SCOTT, MARIE McCLAY, BANNING, ADRIAN, ELDER, ANDREW T., MARTIN, A. TONY, and BLACKMAN, IVA
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HEART diseases , *THERAPEUTICS , *CARDIAC patients , *HOSPITALS , *HUMAN sexuality , *HEALTH equity , *SEX discrimination in medicine - Abstract
Objective: to investigate the clinical management of heart disease and determine whether there was age‐ and sex‐related bias in the use of investigations and interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2002
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18. Intergenerational effects of CO2‐induced stream acidification in the Trinidadian guppy (Poecilia reticulata).
- Author
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George, Hartley C. P. H., Miles, George, Bemrose, James, White, Amelia, Bond, Matthew N., and Cameron, Tom C.
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GUPPIES , *ATMOSPHERIC carbon dioxide , *ACIDIFICATION , *AQUATIC animals , *STUNTED growth , *MATERNAL age - Abstract
Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are driving decreases in aquatic pH. As a result, there has been a surge in the number of studies examining the impact of acidification on aquatic fauna over the past decade. Thus far, both positive and negative impacts on the growth of fish have been reported, creating a disparity in results. Food availability and single‐generation exposure have been proposed as some of the reasons for these variable results, where unrealistically high food treatments lead to fish overcoming the energetic costs associated with acclimating to decreased pH. Likewise, exposure of fish to lower pH for only one generation may not capture the likely ecological response to acidification that wild populations might experience over two or more generations. Here we compare somatic growth rates of laboratory populations of the Trinidadian guppy (Poecilia reticulata) exposed to pH levels that represent the average and lowest levels observed in streams in its native range. Specifically, we test the role of maternal acclimation and resource availability on the response of freshwater fishes to acidification. Acidification had a negative impact on growth at more natural, low food treatments. With high food availability, fish whose mothers were acclimated to the acidified treatment showed no reduction in growth, compared to controls. Compensatory growth was observed in both control–acidified (maternal–natal environment) and acidified–control groups, where fish that did not experience intergenerational effects achieved the same size in response to acidification as those that did, after an initial period of stunted growth. These results suggest that future studies on the effects of shifting mean of aquatic pH on fishes should take account of intergenerational effects and compensatory growth, as otherwise effects of acidification may be overestimated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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19. Painted Cakes Do Not Satisfy.
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Bond, Matthew J.
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POPULAR culture , *NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "The Postmodern Sacred: Popular Culture Spirituality in the Science Fiction, Fantasy and Urban Fantasy Genres" by Emily McAvan.
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- 2013
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20. Sr-90 soil to plant transfer factor reduction using calcium and polymer soil amendments.
- Author
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Lapointe, Marie-Claude, Stuart, Marilyne, Bond, Matthew J., Hickling, Nora, Gosselin, Isabelle, Chen, Hui Qun, and Festarini, Amy
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PLANT-soil relationships , *CALCIUM , *EDIBLE plants , *PEAS , *POLYMERS , *SOIL amendments - Abstract
Introducing calcium into soils can inhibit Sr-90 uptake by plants. To test the efficacy of calcium amendments on the inhibition of Sr-90 uptake by edible plants, a number of different calcium applications, including calcium nitrate, calcium thiosulfate and a mixture of both liquid solutions, were used in this study. Pea plants (Pisum sativum 'Sabre') grown in Sr-90 contaminated soil from seeds to maturity were watered with these calcium solutions. Two different polymers, one inert and one nutrient enriched, were incorporated into the contaminated soil where pea seeds were sowed to ascertain a continuous supply of calcium and essential nutrients. Results show that the heterogeneity of Sr-90 distribution in soil translated to disparate Sr-90 contents in plant tissues. However, on average, irrigation with calcium solutions in conjunction with the usage of polymers consistently yielded a reduction in Sr-90 uptake by the plants. The lowest soil-to-plant transfer factor (TF) values were measured in the edible pea part of the plant, followed by the flowers, roots, stems, pea shells and then leaves. TF values for pea shells were between 4.9 and 20.9, and between 0.3 and 2.8 for the peas. Results do not allow the identification of one particular chemical solution that would systematically be the best choice to minimize Sr-90 uptake. • Various calcium-based amendments were tested for their efficacy in reducing Sr-90 uptake by peas. • Calcium-based foliar spray did not reduce the uptake of Sr-90 by pea plants. • Calcium amendments by irrigation water did reduce Sr-90 uptake in peas. • In all cases, soil-to-pea TFs were higher without amendment than the peas irrigated with calcium. • Calcium application was an effective method to reduce the pea plant uptake of Sr-90. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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21. Book Reviews.
- Author
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McDonnell, Duncan, O'Malley, Eoin, Fernandes, Jorge Miguel, Duchesne, Sophie, Muftuler-Bac, Meltem, Rhodes, Martin, Todd, Jennifer, Novick, Natalie, Bond, Matthew, and Parau, Cristina
- Subjects
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NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews several books including "New Parties in Government: In Power for the First Time" edited by Kris Deschouwer, "A Community of Europeans? Transnational Identities and Public Spheres" by Thomas Risse, and "Parties, Gender Quotas and Candidate Selection in France" by Rainbow Murray.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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