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- Creator:
- Mathis, Jeremy T., Pickart, Robert S., Byrne, Robert H., McNeil, Craig L., Moore, G. W. K., Juranek, Laurie W., Liu, Xuewu, Ma, Jian, Easley, Regina A., Elliot, Matthew M., Cross, Jessica N., Reisdorph, Stacey C., Bahr, Frank, Morison, Jamie, and Lichendorf, Trina
- Abstract:
- The carbon system of the western Arctic Ocean is undergoing a rapid transition as sea ice extent and thickness decline. These processes are dynamically forcing the region, with unknown consequences for CO2 fluxes and carbonate mineral saturation states, particularly in the coastal regions where sensitive ecosystems are already under threat...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- . Juranek,6 Xuewu Liu,3 Jian Ma,3 Regina A. Easley,3 MatthewM. Elliot,3 Jessica N. Cross,1 Stacey C
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- Creator:
- Puccetti, Jessica N.
- Abstract:
- Mycoplasma haemolamae is associated with mild to marked anemia in stressed, immune-suppressed, and debilitated animals, and may be found in low numbers in healthy animals. The continued presence of the organism, detectable by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based assay, may be associated with an underlying problem, such as stress or immune-suppression...
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- Llamas Use of Artemisinin to Treat Mycoplasma haemolamae Infection in Llamas Jessica Puccetti
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- Creator:
- Puccetti, Jessica N.
- Abstract:
- Mycoplasma haemolamae is associated with mild to marked anemia in stressed, immune-suppressed, and debilitated animals, and may be found in low numbers in healthy animals. The continued presence of the organism, detectable by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based assay, may be associated with an underlying problem, such as stress or immune-suppression...
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- AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Jessica N. Puccetti for
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- Creator:
- Reimer, Jessica N.
- Abstract:
- Dislodged macroalgae and seagrasses, also known as marine wrack, frequently wash into coastal ecosystems from the ocean and are potentially important ecological resources for biological communities. These!nutrient and organic matter subsidies may be especially important on sandy beaches, where little in situ primary productivity exists for higher trophic levels. To...
- Resource Type:
- Masters Thesis
- Full Text:
- of the Pacific Northwest coast, U.S.A. ! AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF! ! ! Jessica N. Reimer for
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- Creator:
- Kibler, Jessica N.
- Abstract:
- This creative nonfiction thesis is an attempt to create a conversation between personal and collective truths. All four of the essays share the subject of music: one focusing on a band’s strange performance, another on an artist and his album, another on a cover band’s live show, and the last...
- Resource Type:
- Honors College Thesis
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- Attuned: Essays by Jessica N. Kibler A
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- Creator:
- Puccetti, Jessica N.
- Abstract:
- Mycoplasma haemolamae is associated with mild to marked anemia in stressed, immune-suppressed, and debilitated animals, and may be found in low numbers in healthy animals. The continued presence of the organism, detectable by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based assay, may be associated with an underlying problem, such as stress or immune-suppression...
- Resource Type:
- Honors College Thesis
- Full Text:
- AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Jessica N. Puccetti for
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- Creator:
- Puccetti, Jessica N.
- Abstract:
- Mycoplasma haemolamae is associated with mild to marked anemia in stressed, immune-suppressed, and debilitated animals, and may be found in low numbers in healthy animals. The continued presence of the organism, detectable by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based assay, may be associated with an underlying problem, such as stress or immune-suppression...
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
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- Creator:
- Burt, J. G., Brown, Kenneth N., Cross, Timothy L., and Oregon State University. Extension Service
- Abstract:
- Published February 1987. Facts and recommendations in this publication may no longer be valid. Please look for up-to-date information in the OSU Extension Catalog: http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog
- Resource Type:
- Technical Report
- Full Text:
- in the Mid-Willamette Valley J.G. Burt K.N. Brown T.L. Cross Background This study estimates the
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- Creator:
- Reimer, Jessica N., Hacker, Sally D., Menge, Bruce A., and Ruggiero, Peter
- Abstract:
- Marine macrophyte wrack (macroalgae and seagrasses) frequently washes onto beaches but little is known about the factors controlling its biogeographic variability. We report on a large-scale study of macrophyte wrack deposition patterns on the US Pacific Northwest coast. We measured macrophyte wrack on 12 sandy beach sites from southern Washington...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Courtot, Karen N., Roby, Daniel D., Kerr, Lauren H., Lyons, Donald E., and Adkins, Jessica Y.
- Abstract:
- Capturing breeding adults of colonially nesting species can entail risks of nest failure and even colony abandonment, especially in species that react strongly to human disturbance. A low-disturbance technique for capturing specific adult Double-crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) at a ground-nesting colony was developed to reduce these risks and is described...
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- Article
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- Double-crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) Karen n. Courtot1,3, Daniel D. roby2, lauren H. Kerr1
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- Creator:
- Dalziel, Benjamin D., Bjørnstad, Ottar N., van Panhuis, Willem G., Burke, Donald S., Metcalf, C. Jessica E., and Grenfell, Bryan T.
- Abstract:
- Epidemics of infectious diseases often occur in predictable limit cycles. Theory suggests these cycles can be disrupted by high amplitude seasonal fluctuations in transmission rates, resulting in deterministic chaos. However, persistent deterministic chaos has never been observed, in part because sufficiently large oscillations in transmission rates are uncommon. Where they...
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- Creator:
- Dalziel, Benjamin D., Bjørnstad, Ottar N., van Panhuis, Willem G., Burke, Donald S., Metcalf, C. Jessica E., and Grenfell, Bryan T.
- Abstract:
- Epidemics of infectious diseases often occur in predictable limit cycles. Theory suggests these cycles can be disrupted by high amplitude seasonal fluctuations in transmission rates, resulting in deterministic chaos. However, persistent deterministic chaos has never been observed, in part because sufficiently large oscillations in transmission rates are uncommon. Where they...
- Full Text:
- Transmission Patterns Benjamin D. Dalziel1¤, Ottar N. Bjørnstad2, Willem G. van Panhuis3, Donald S. Burke4, C
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- Creator:
- Dalziel, Benjamin D., Bjørnstad, Ottar N., van Panhuis, Willem G., Burke, Donald S., Metcalf, C. Jessica E., and Grenfell, Bryan T.
- Abstract:
- Epidemics of infectious diseases often occur in predictable limit cycles. Theory suggests these cycles can be disrupted by high amplitude seasonal fluctuations in transmission rates, resulting in deterministic chaos. However, persistent deterministic chaos has never been observed, in part because sufficiently large oscillations in transmission rates are uncommon. Where they...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Courtot, Karen N., Roby, Daniel D., Adkins, Jessica Y., Lyons, Donald E., King, D. Tommy, and Larsen, R. Scott
- Abstract:
- To reduce conflicts with fish resources, other colonial waterbirds, and damage to habitats, double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) are currently controlled (lethally and non-lethally) throughout much of their range. Concerns are growing over the Pacific Coast's largest double-crested cormorant colony at East Sand Island (ESI), Oregon near the mouth of the...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Largest Colony KAREN N. COURTOT,1,2 Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Oregon State
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- Creator:
- Adkins, Jessica Y., Roby, Daniel D., Lyons, Donald E., Courtot, Karen N., Collis, Ken, Carter, Harry R., Shuford, W. David, and Capitolo, Phillip J.
- Abstract:
- The status of the double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) in western North America was last evaluated during 1987–2003. In the interim, concern has grown over the potential impact of predation by double-crested cormorants on juvenile salmonids (Oncorhynchus spp.), particularly in the Columbia Basin and along the Pacific coast where some salmonids...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- ., Lyons, D. E., Courtot, K. N., Collis, K., Carter, H. R., Shuford, W. D., & Capitolo, P. J. (2014
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- Creator:
- Oregon State University. Extension Service, Hosty, Maureen, Engeldinger, Joan, Livesay, Maggie, Allen, N. (Nancy), Wieske, Susan, Leatherwood, Mary, White, David J., Fisher, Jessica, Albert, Lisa, Galloway, Robin, Herron, Amy, Schmidt, Mary Ann, and Bourdeau, Virginia D.
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- ac he r Sc ho ol (A dm in is tr at io n) Time commitment Attend a minimum of 24 hours of
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- Creator:
- Wilson, Samuel T., Barone, Benedetto, Ascani, Francois, Bidigare, Robert R., Church, Matthew J., del Valle, Daniela A., Dyhrman, Sonya T., Ferrón, Sara, Fitzsimmons, Jessica N., Juranek, Laurie W., Kolber, Zbigniew S., Letelier, Ricardo M., Martínez‐García, Sandra, Nicholson, David P., Richards, Kelvin J., Rii, Yoshimi M., Rouco, Mónica, Viviani, Donn A., White, Angelicque E., Zehr, Jonathan P., and Karl, David M.
- Abstract:
- Time-series observations are critical to understand the structure, function, and dynamics of marine ecosystems. The Hawaii Ocean Time-series program has maintained near-monthly sampling at Station ALOHA (22°45′N, 158°00′W) in the oligotrophic North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (NPSG) since 1988 and has identified ecosystem variability over seasonal to interannual timescales. To further...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Piacenza, Susan E., Barner, Allison K., Benkwitt, Cassandra E., Boersma, Kate S., Cerny-Chipman, Elizabeth B., Ingeman, Kurt E., Kindinger, Tye L., Lee, Jonathan D., Lindsley, Amy J., Reimer, Jessica N., Rowe, Jennifer C., Shen, Chenchen, Thompson, Kevin A., Thurman, Lindsey L., and Heppell, Selina S.
- Abstract:
- While there is a persistent inverse relationship between latitude and species diversity across many taxa and ecosystems, deviations from this norm offer an opportunity to understand the conditions that contribute to large-scale diversity patterns. Marine systems, in particular, provide such an opportunity, as marine diversity does not always follow a...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- . Cerny-Chipman2☯, Kurt E. Ingeman2☯, Tye L. Kindinger2☯, Jonathan D. Lee3, Amy J. Lindsley1☯, Jessica N
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- Creator:
- Piacenza, Susan E., Thurman, Lindsey L., Barner, Allison K., Benkwitt, Cassandra E., Boersma, Kate S., Cerny-Chipman, Elizabeth B., Ingeman, Kurt E., Kindinger, Tye L., Lindsley, Amy J., Nelson, Jake, Reimer, Jessica N., Rowe, Jennifer C., Shen, Chenchen, Thompson, Kevin A., and Heppell, Selina S.
- Abstract:
- With the ongoing crisis of biodiversity loss and limited resources for conservation, the concept of biodiversity hotspots has been useful in determining conservation priority areas. However, there has been limited research into how temporal variability in biodiversity may influence conservation area prioritization. To address this information gap, we present an...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- . Cerny-Chipman2‡, Kurt E. Ingeman2‡, Tye L. Kindinger2‡, Amy J. Lindsley1‡, Jake Nelson3,5‡, Jessica N
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- Creator:
- Clark, Martyn P., Nijssen, Bart, Lundquist, Jessica D., Kavetski, Dmitri, Rupp, David E., Woods, Ross A., Freer, Jim E., Gutmann, Ethan D., Wood, Andrew W., Gochis, David J., Rasmussen, Roy M., Tarboton, David G., Mahat, Vinod, Flerchinger, Gerald N., and Marks, Danny G.
- Abstract:
- This work advances a unified approach to process-based hydrologic modeling, which we term the ‘‘Structure for Unifying Multiple Modeling Alternatives (SUMMA).’’ The modeling framework, introduced in the companion paper, uses a general set of conservation equations with flexibility in the choice of process parameterizations (closure relationships) and spatial architecture. This...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- hydrologic modeling: 2. Model implementation and case studies Martyn P. Clark1, Bart Nijssen2, Jessica D
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- Creator:
- Laurance, William F., Useche, D. Carolina, Rendeiro, Julio, Kalka, Margareta, Bradshaw, Corey J. A., Sloan, Sean P., Laurance, Susan G., Campbell, Mason, Abernethy, Kate, Alvarez, Patricia, Arroyo-Rodriguez, Victor, Ashton, Peter, Benitez-Malvido, Julieta, Blom, Allard, Bobo, Kadiri S., Cannon, Charles H., Cao, Min, Carroll, Richard, Chapman, Colin, Coates, Rosamond, Cords, Marina, Danielsen, Finn, De Dijn, Bart, Dinerstein, Eric, Donnelly, Maureen A., Edwards, David, Edwards, Felicity, Farwig, Nina, Fashing, Peter, Forget, Pierre-Michel, Foster, Mercedes, Gale, George, Harris, David, Harrison, Rhett, Hart, John, Karpanty, Sarah, Kress, W. John, Krishnaswamy, Jagdish, Logsdon, Willis, Lovett, Jon, Magnusson, William, Maisels, Fiona, Marshall, Andrew R., McClearn, Deedra, Mudappa, Divya, Nielsen, Martin R., Pearson, Richard, Pitman, Nigel, van der Ploeg, Jan, Plumptre, Andrew, Poulsen, John, Quesada, Mauricio, Rainey, Hugo, Robinson, Douglas, Roetgers, Christiane, Rovero, Francesco, Scatena, Frederick, Schulze, Christian, Sheil, Douglas, Struhsaker, Thomas, Terborgh, John, Thomas, Duncan, Timm, Robert, Urbina-Cardona, J. Nicolas, Vasudevan, Karthikeyan, Wright, S. Joseph, Arias-G, Juan Carlos, Arroyo, Luzmila, Ashton, Mark, Auzel, Philippe, Babaasa, Dennis, Babweteera, Fred, Baker, Patrick, Banki, Olaf, Bass, Margot, Bila-Isia, Inogwabini, Blake, Stephen, Brockelman, Warren, Brokaw, Nicholas, Bruehl, Carsten A., Bunyavejchewin, Sarayudh, Chao, Jung-Tai, Chave, Jerome, Chellam, Ravi, Clark, Connie J., Clavijo, Jose, Congdon, Robert, Corlett, Richard, Dattaraja, H. S., Dave, Chittaranjan, Davies, Glyn, Beisiegel, Beatriz de Mello, da Silva, Rosa de Nazarepaes, Di Fiore, Anthony, Diesmos, Arvin, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Doran-Sheehy, Diane, Eaton, Mitchell, Emmons, Louise, Estrada, Alejandro, Ewango, Corneille, Fedigan, Linda, Feer, Francois, Fruth, Barbara, Willis, Jacalyn Giacalone, Goodale, Uromi, Goodman, Steven, Guix, Juan C., Guthiga, Paul, Haber, William, Hamer, Keith, Herbinger, Ilka, Hill, Jane, Huang, Zhongliang, Sun, I. Fang, Ickes, Kalan, Itoh, Akira, Ivanauskas, Natalia, Jackes, Betsy, Janovec, John, Janzen, Daniel, Jiangming, Mo, Jin, Chen, Jones, Trevor, Justiniano, Hermes, Kalko, Elisabeth, Kasangaki, Aventino, Killeen, Timothy, King, Hen-biau, Klop, Erik, Knott, Cheryl, Kone, Inza, Kudavidanage, Enoka, Ribeiro, Jose Lahoz da Silva, Lattke, John, Laval, Richard, Lawton, Robert, Leal, Miguel, Leighton, Mark, Lentino, Miguel, Leonel, Cristiane, Lindsell, Jeremy, Ling-Ling, Lee, Linsenmair, K. Eduard, Losos, Elizabeth, Lugo, Ariel, Lwanga, Jeremiah, Mack, Andrew L., Martins, Marlucia, McGraw, W. Scott, McNab, Roan, Montag, Luciano, Thompson, Jo Myers, Nabe-Nielsen, Jacob, Nakagawa, Michiko, Nepal, Sanjay, Norconk, Marilyn, Novotny, Vojtech, O'Donnell, Sean, Opiang, Muse, Ouboter, Paul, Parker, Kenneth, Parthasarathy, N., Pisciotta, Katia, Prawiradilaga, Dewi, Pringle, Catherine, Rajathurai, Subaraj, Reichard, Ulrich, Reinartz, Gay, Renton, Katherine, Reynolds, Glen, Reynolds, Vernon, Riley, Erin, Roedel, Mark-Oliver, Rothman, Jessica, Round, Philip, Sakai, Shoko, Sanaiotti, Tania, Savini, Tommaso, Schaab, Gertrud, Seidensticker, John, Siaka, Alhaji, Silman, Miles R., Smith, Thomas B., de Almeida, Samuel Soares, Sodhi, Navjot, Stanford, Craig, Stewart, Kristine, Stokes, Emma, Stoner, Kathryn E., Sukumar, Raman, Surbeck, Martin, Tobler, Mathias, Tscharntke, Teja, Turkalo, Andrea, Umapathy, Govindaswamy, van Weerd, Merlijn, Rivera, Jorge Vega, Venkataraman, Meena, Venn, Linda, Verea, Carlos, de Castilho, Carolina Volkmer, Waltert, Matthias, Wang, Benjamin, Watts, David, Weber, William, West, Paige, Whitacre, David, Whitney, Ken, Wilkie, David, Williams, Stephen, Wright, Debra D., Wright, Patricia, Xiankai, Lu, Yonzon, Pralad, and Zamzani, Franky
- Abstract:
- The rapid disruption of tropical forests probably imperils global biodiversity more than any other contemporary phenomenon¹⁻³. With deforestation advancing quickly, protected areas are increasingly becoming final refuges for threatened species and natural ecosystem processes. However, many protected areas in the tropics are themselves vulnerable to human encroachment and other environmental...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Light-loving butterflies Human diseases 2 9 0 | N A T U R E | V O L 4 8 9 | 1 3 S E P T E M B E R 2 0 1