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- Creator:
- Xiong, Yijia, Ford, Nicole R., Hecht, Karen A., Roesijadi, Guritno, and Squier, Thomas C.
- Abstract:
- Self-assembly of recombinant proteins within the biosilica of living diatoms represents a means to construct functional materials in a reproducible and scalable manner that will enable applications that harness the inherent specificities of proteins to sense and respond to environmental cues. Here we describe the use of a silaffin-derived lysine-rich...
- Full Text:
- Xiong,† Nicole R. Ford,‡ Karen A. Hecht,‡ Guritno Roesijadi,‡, § and Thomas C. Squier
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- Creator:
- Xiong, Yijia, Ford, Nicole R., Hecht, Karen A., Roesijadi, Guritno, and Squier, Thomas C.
- Abstract:
- Self-assembly of recombinant proteins within the biosilica of living diatoms represents a means to construct functional materials in a reproducible and scalable manner that will enable applications that harness the inherent specificities of proteins to sense and respond to environmental cues. Here we describe the use of a silaffin-derived lysine-rich...
- Full Text:
- Engineered Diatom Biosilica Matrices Yijia Xiong,† Nicole R. Ford,‡ Karen A. Hecht,‡ Guritno Roesijadi
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- Creator:
- Xiong, Yijia, Ford, Nicole R., Hecht, Karen A., Roesijadi, Guritno, and Squier, Thomas C.
- Abstract:
- Self-assembly of recombinant proteins within the biosilica of living diatoms represents a means to construct functional materials in a reproducible and scalable manner that will enable applications that harness the inherent specificities of proteins to sense and respond to environmental cues. Here we describe the use of a silaffin-derived lysine-rich...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Ford, Nicole R., Hecht, Karen A., Hu, DeHong, Orr, Galya, Xiong, Yijia, Squier, Thomas C., Rorrer, Gregory L., and Roesijadi, Guritno
- Abstract:
- The diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana was genetically modified to express biosilica-targeted fusion proteins comprising either enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) or single chain antibodies engineered with a tetracysteine tagging sequence. Of interest were the site specific binding of (1) the fluorescent biarsenical probe AsCy3 and AsCy3e to the tetracysteine tagged fusion...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Biosilica-Immobilized Fusion Proteins Expressed in Diatoms Nicole R. Ford,† Karen A. Hecht,† DeHong Hu
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- Creator:
- Martin, Nicole R.
- Abstract:
- The present study examined involuntary attentional bias toward facial emotion expression. Particularly, the study examined two different attentional components for emotional processing, namely, orienting vs. disengagement. A cueing paradigm using two cue presentation times (250ms and 350ms) was used to determine if attention would be involuntarily captured by an irrelevant...
- Resource Type:
- Masters Thesis
- Full Text:
- AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Nicole Martin for the
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- Creator:
- Zhen, Le, Ford, Nicole, Gale, Debra K., Roesijadi, Guritno, and Rorrer, Gregory L.
- Abstract:
- A selective and label-free biosensor for detection of the explosive compound 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) in aqueous solution was developed based on the principle of photoluminescence quenching of upon immunocomplex formation with antibody-functionalized diatom frustule biosilica. The diatom frustule is an intricately nanostructured, highly porous biogenic silica material derived from the shells...
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- an anti-TNT monoclonal antibody fragment Le Zhena, Nicole Fordb, Debra K. Galea, Guritno
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- Creator:
- Zhen, Le, Ford, Nicole, Gale, Debra K., Roesijadi, Guritno, and Rorrer, Gregory L.
- Abstract:
- A selective and label-free biosensor for detection of the explosive compound 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) in aqueous solution was developed based on the principle of photoluminescence quenching of upon immunocomplex formation with antibody-functionalized diatom frustule biosilica. The diatom frustule is an intricately nanostructured, highly porous biogenic silica material derived from the shells...
- Full Text:
- biosilica functionalized with an anti-TNT monoclonal antibody fragment Le Zhen a, Nicole Ford b, Debra K
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- Creator:
- Zhen, Le, Ford, Nicole, Gale, Debra K., Roesijadi, Guritno, and Rorrer, Gregory L.
- Abstract:
- A selective and label-free biosensor for detection of the explosive compound 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) in aqueous solution was developed based on the principle of photoluminescence quenching of upon immunocomplex formation with antibody-functionalized diatom frustule biosilica. The diatom frustule is an intricately nanostructured, highly porous biogenic silica material derived from the shells...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Christie, Mark R., Ford, Michael J., and Blouin, Michael S.
- Abstract:
- Large numbers of hatchery salmon spawn in wild populations each year. Hatchery fish with multiple generations of hatchery ancestry often have heritably lower reproductive success than wild fish and may reduce the fitness of an entire population. Whether this reduced fitness also occurs for hatchery fish created with local- and...
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- ; Ford et al. 2013). Males that never went out to sea (or at least those that did not pass below the
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- Creator:
- Christie, Mark R., Ford, Michael J., and Blouin, Michael S.
- Abstract:
- Large numbers of hatchery salmon spawn in wild populations each year. Hatchery fish with multiple generations of hatchery ancestry often have heritably lower reproductive success than wild fish and may reduce the fitness of an entire population. Whether this reduced fitness also occurs for hatchery fish created with local- and...
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- Christie, M. R., Ford, M. J. and Blouin, M. S. (2014). On the reproductive success of early-generation
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- Creator:
- Christie, Mark R., Ford, Michael J., and Blouin, Michael S.
- Abstract:
- Large numbers of hatchery salmon spawn in wild populations each year. Hatchery fish with multiple generations of hatchery ancestry often have heritably lower reproductive success than wild fish and may reduce the fitness of an entire population. Whether this reduced fitness also occurs for hatchery fish created with local- and...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Dorey, Nicole R., Conover, Alicia M., and Udell, Monique A. R.
- Abstract:
- The ability of many domesticated animals to follow human pointing gestures to locate hidden food has led to scientific debate on the relative importance of domestication and individual experience on the origins and development of this capacity. To further explore this question we examined the influence of different prior training...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Nicole R. Dorey and Alicia M. Hall University of Florida Monique A. R. Udell Oregon State
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- Creator:
- Udell, Monique A. R., Ewald, Margaret, Dorey, Nicole R., and Wynne, Clive D.
- Abstract:
- Domestic dogs’, Canis familiaris, responsiveness to human action has been a topic of scientific interest for almost two decades. However, are all breeds of domestic dog equally prepared to succeed on humanguided object-choice tasks? In the current study we compared three breeds of dog with distinct predatory motor pattern sequences...
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- Article
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- performance on human-guided tasks? Monique A. R. Udell1, 2, Margaret Ewald 2, Nicole R. Dorey2, Clive D
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- Creator:
- Rosa, Nicole M., Bogart, Kathleen R., Bonnett, Amy K., Estill, Mariah C., and Colton, Cassandra E.
- Abstract:
- Historically, Psychology education about disability focused narrowly on psychiatric and cognitive disabilities. Furthermore, disability tends to be viewed from the medical model, rather than the social model endorsed by disability scholars, which describes disability as primarily socially constructed. Course offerings for the Psychology departments of 98 top-ranked undergraduate programs in...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- Psychology Programs Nicole M. Rosa1 Kathleen R. Bogart2 Amy K. Bonnett2 Mariah C. Estill2
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- Creator:
- Bartz, Krista K., Ford, Michael J., Beechie, Timothy J., Fresh, Kurt L., Pess, George R., Kennedy, Robert E., Rowse, Melinda L., and Sheer, Mindi
- Abstract:
- For widely distributed species at risk, such as Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.), habitat monitoring is both essential and challenging. Only recently have widespread monitoring programs been implemented for salmon habitat in the Pacific Northwest. Remote sensing data, such as Landsat images, are therefore a useful way to evaluate trends prior...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- Threatened Salmon in Puget Sound, Washington, U.S.A. Bartz, K. K., Ford, M. J., Beechie, T. J., Fresh, K. L
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- Creator:
- O’Halloran, Lydia R., Chu, Chengjin, Bakker, Jonathan D., Davies, Kendi F., Du, Guozhen, Firn, Jennifer, Hagenah, Nicole, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Knops, Johannes M. H., Li, Wei, Melbourne, Brett A., Borer, Elizabeth T., Morgan, John W., Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Stevens, Carly J., Seabloom, Eric W., MacDougall, Andrew S., Cleland, Elsa E., McCulley, Rebecca L., Hobbie, Sarah, Harpole, W. Stan, and DeCrappeo, Nicole M.
- Abstract:
- Based on regional-scale studies, aboveground production and litter decomposition are thought to positively covary, because they are driven by shared biotic and climatic factors. Until now we have been unable to test whether production and decomposition are generally coupled across climatically dissimilar regions, because we lacked replicated data collected within...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- between Aboveground Biomass and Litter in the World’s Grasslands Lydia R. O’Halloran1*, Elizabeth T
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- Creator:
- Baker, C. Scott, Steel, Debbie, Calambokidis, John, Falcone, Erin, González-Peral, Ursula, Barlow, Jay, Burdin, Alexander M., Clapham, Phillip J., Ford, John K. B., Gabriele, Christine M., Mattila, David, Rojas-Bracho, Lorenzo, Straley, Janice M., Taylor, Barbara L., Urbán, Jorge, Wade, Paul R., Weller, David, Witteveen, Briana H., and Yamaguchi, Manami
- Abstract:
- We quantified the relative influence of maternal fidelity to feeding grounds and natal fidelity to breeding grounds on the population structure of humpback whales Megaptera novae-angliae based on an ocean-wide survey of mitochondrial (mt) DNA diversity in the North Pacific. For 2193 biopsy samples collected from whales in 10 feeding...
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- , Jorge Urbán.3, Paul R. Wade6, David Weller4, Briana H.Witteveen12, Manami Yamaguchi13 1Marine Mammal
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- Creator:
- Baker, C. Scott, Steel, Debbie, Calambokidis, John, Falcone, Erin, González-Peral, Ursula, Barlow, Jay, Burdin, Alexander M., Clapham, Phillip J., Ford, John K. B., Gabriele, Christine M., Mattila, David, Rojas-Bracho, Lorenzo, Straley, Janice M., Taylor, Barbara L., Urbán, Jorge, Wade, Paul R., Weller, David, Witteveen, Briana H., and Yamaguchi, Manami
- Abstract:
- We quantified the relative influence of maternal fidelity to feeding grounds and natal fidelity to breeding grounds on the population structure of humpback whales Megaptera novae-angliae based on an ocean-wide survey of mitochondrial (mt) DNA diversity in the North Pacific. For 2193 biopsy samples collected from whales in 10 feeding...
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- Mattila9, Lorenzo Rojas-Bracho10, Janice M. Straley11, Barbara L. Taylor4, Jorge Urbán3, Paul R. Wade6
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- Creator:
- Baker, C. Scott, Steel, Debbie, Calambokidis, John, Falcone, Erin, González-Peral, Ursula, Barlow, Jay, Burdin, Alexander M., Clapham, Phillip J., Ford, John K. B., Gabriele, Christine M., Mattila, David, Rojas-Bracho, Lorenzo, Straley, Janice M., Taylor, Barbara L., Urbán, Jorge, Wade, Paul R., Weller, David, Witteveen, Briana H., and Yamaguchi, Manami
- Abstract:
- We quantified the relative influence of maternal fidelity to feeding grounds and natal fidelity to breeding grounds on the population structure of humpback whales Megaptera novae-angliae based on an ocean-wide survey of mitochondrial (mt) DNA diversity in the North Pacific. For 2193 biopsy samples collected from whales in 10 feeding...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Jones, Julia A., Creed, Irena F., Hatcher, Kendra L., Warren, Robert J., Adams, Mary Beth, Benson, Melinda H., Boose, Emery, Brown, Warren A., Campbell, John L., Covich, Alan, Clow, David W., Dahm, Clifford N., Elder, Kelly, Ford, Chelcy R., Grimm, Nancy B., Henshaw, Donald L., Larson, Kelli L., Miles, Evan S., Miles, Kathleen M., Sebestyen, Stephen D., Spargo, Adam T., Stone, Asa B., Vose, James M., and Williams, Mark W.
- Abstract:
- Analyses of long-term records at 35 headwater basins in the United States and Canada indicate that climate change effects on streamflow are not as clear as might be expected, perhaps because of ecosystem processes and human influences. Evapotranspiration was higher than was predicted by temperature in water-surplus ecosystems and lower...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- , CLIFFORD N. DAHM, KELLY ELDER, CHELCY R. FORD, NANCY B. GRIMM, DONALD L. HENSHAW, KELLI L. LARSON, EVAN S
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- Creator:
- Grace, James B., Adler, Peter B., Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Hillebrand, Helmut, Hautier, Yann, Hector, Andy, Harpole, W. Stanley, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Brown, Cynthia S., Buckley, Yvonne M., Collins, Scott L., Cottingham, Kathryn L., Crawley, Michael J., Damschen, Ellen I., Davies, Kendi F., DeCrappeo, Nicole M., Fay, Philip A., Firn, Jennifer, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Jin, Virginia L., Kirkman, Kevin P., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Lambrinos, John G., Melbourne, Brett A., Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John W., Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Stevens, Carly J., Wragg, Peter D., and Yang, Louie H.
- Abstract:
- Pan et al. claim that our results actually support a strong linear positive relationship between productivity and richness, whereas Fridley et al. contend that the data support a strong humped relationship. These responses illustrate how preoccupation with bivariate patterns distracts from a deeper understanding of the multivariate mechanisms that control...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- Harpole,7 Lydia R. O'Halloran,8 T. Michael Anderson,9 Jonathan D. Bakker,10 Cynthia S. Brown,11 Yvonne M
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- Creator:
- Alderman, S. C., Anderson, Nicole, Cating, R. A., Chastain, T. G., Dung, J. K. S., Elias, S. G., Flowers, Michael, Frost, K. E., Garbacik, C. J., Hamm, P. B., Hulting, Andrew, Kaur, N., Lestari, A. S., Mueller-Warrant, G. W., Oregon State University. Department of Crop Science, Rao, S., Rondon, Silvia I., Salisbury, S. E., Sullivan, Clare, Trippe, K. M., United States. Agricultural Research Service, Walenta, Darrin, and Whittaker, G. W.
- Resource Type:
- Other
- Full Text:
- USDA-ARS COOPERATING Edited by Nicole Anderson, Andrew Hulting, Darrin Walenta, Michael Flowers
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- Creator:
- Soranno, Patricia A., Bissell, Edward G., Cheruvelil, Kendra S., Christel, Samuel T., Collins, Sarah M., Fergus, C. Emi, Filstrup, Christopher T., Lapierre, Jean-Francois, Lottig, Noah R., Oliver, Samantha K., Scott, Caren E., Smith, Nicole J., Stopyak, Scott, Yuan, Shuai, Bremigan, Mary Tate, Downing, John A., Gries, Corinna, Henry, Emily N., Skaff, Nick K., Stanley, Emily H., Stow, Craig A., Tan, Pang-Ning, Wagner, Tyler, and Webster, Katherine E.
- Abstract:
- Although there are considerable site-based data for individual or groups of ecosystems, these datasets are widely scattered, have different data formats and conventions, and often have limited accessibility. At the broader scale, national datasets exist for a large number of geospatial features of land, water, and air that are needed...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- . Christel2, Sarah M. Collins1, C. Emi Fergus1, Christopher T. Filstrup3, Jean-Francois Lapierre1, Noah R
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- Creator:
- Hu, Zhiwei, Brooks, Samira A., Dormoy, Valérian, Hsu, Chia-Wen, Hsu, Hsue-Yin, Lin, Liang-Tzung, Massfelder, Thierry, Rathmell, W. Kimryn, Xia, Menghang, Al-Mulla, Fahd, Al-Temaimi, Rabeah, Amedei, Amedeo, Brown, Dustin G., Prudhomme, Kalan R., Colacci, Annamaria, Hamid, Roslida A., Mondello, Chiara, Raju, Jayadev, Ryan, Elizabeth P., Woodrick, Jordan, Scovassi, A. Ivana, Singh, Neetu, Vaccari, Monica, Roy, Rabindra, Forte, Stefano, Memeo, Lorenzo, Salem, Hosni K., Lowe, Leroy, Jensen, Lasse, Bisson, William H., and Kleinstreuer, Nicole
- Abstract:
- One of the important ‘hallmarks’ of cancer is angiogenesis, which is the process of formation of new blood vessels that are necessary for tumor expansion, invasion and metastasis. Under normal physiological conditions, angiogenesis is well balanced and controlled by endogenous proangiogenic factors and antiangiogenic factors. However, factors produced by cancer...
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- Article
- Full Text:
- Memeo17, Hosni K.Salem18, Leroy Lowe19, Lasse Jensen20, William H.Bisson10 and Nicole Kleinstreuer21
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- Creator:
- Manga, Michael, Hornbach, Matthew J., Le Friant, Anne, Ishizuka, Osamu, Stroncik, Nicole, Adachi, Tatsuya, Aljahdali, Mohammed, Boudon, Georges, Breitkreuz, Christoph, Fraass, Andrew, Fujinawa, Akihiko, Hatfield, Robert, Jutzeler, Martin, Kataoka, Kyoko, Lafuerza, Sara, Maeno, Fukashi, Martinez-Colon, Michael, McCanta, Molly, Morgan, Sally, Palmer, Martin R., Saito, Takeshi, Slagle, Angela, Stinton, Adam J., Subramanyam, K. S. V., Tamura, Yoshihiko, Talling, Peter J., Villemant, Benoit, Wall-Palmer, Deborah, and Wang, Fei
- Abstract:
- Using temperature gradients measured in 10 holes at 6 sites, we generate the first high fidelity heat flow measurements from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program drill holes across the northern and central Lesser Antilles arc and back arc Grenada basin. The implied heat flow, after correcting for bathymetry and sedimentation effects,...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- -8567, Japan (o-ishizuka@aist.go.jp) Nicole Stroncik Integrated Ocean Drilling Program, Texas A&M
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- Creator:
- Bhattacharya, Debashish, Agrawal, Shobhit, Aranda, Manuel, Baumgarten, Sebastian, Belcaid, Mahdi, Drake, Jeana L., Erwin, Douglas, Foret, Sylvian, Gates, Ruth D., Gruber, David F., Kamel, Bishoy, Lesser, Michael P., Levy, Oren, Liew, Yi Jin, MacManes, Matthew, Mass, Tali, Medina, Monica, Mehr, Shaadi, Meyer, Eli, Price, Dana C., Putnam, Hollie M., Qiu, Huan, Shinzato, Chuya, Shoguchi, Eiichi, Stokes, Alexander J., Tambutté, Sylvie, Tchernov, Dan, Voolstra, Christian R., Wagner, Nicole, Walker, Charles W., Weber, Andreas P. M., Weis, Virginia M., Zelzion, Ehud, Zoccola, Didier, and Falkowski, Paul G.
- Abstract:
- Transcriptome and genome data from twenty stony coral species and a selection of reference bilaterians were studied to elucidate coral evolutionary history. We identified genes that encode the proteins responsible for the precipitation and aggregation of the aragonite skeleton on which the organisms live, and revealed a network of environmental...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Tchernov15, Christian R Voolstra3, Nicole Wagner1, Charles W Walker14, Andreas PM Weber23, Virginia Weis17
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- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne, Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi, Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric, Macdougall, Andrew, Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter, Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Caldeira, Maria, Chu, Chengjin, Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., D'Antonio, Carla M., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Dickman, Chris R., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andrew, Helm, Aveliina, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Iribarne, Oscar, Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura M., Lambrinos, John G., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Mcculley, Rebecca, Melbourne, Brett, Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Paertel, Meelis, Pascual, Jesus, Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Salguero-Gomez, Roberto, Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda, Stevens, Carly, Sullivan, Lauren, Wardle, Glenda M., Wolkovich, Elizabeth M., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Invasions have increased the size of regional species pools, but are typically assumed to reduce native diversity. However, global-scale tests of this assumption have been elusive because of the focus on exotic species richness, rather than relative abundance. This is problematic because low invader richness can indicate invasion resistance by...
- Full Text:
- Nicole M. DeCrappeo X Chris R. Dickman X Guozhen Du X Philip A Fay
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- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne, Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi, Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric, Macdougall, Andrew, Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter, Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Caldeira, Maria, Chu, Chengjin, Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., D'Antonio, Carla M., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Dickman, Chris R., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andrew, Helm, Aveliina, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Iribarne, Oscar, Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura M., Lambrinos, John G., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Mcculley, Rebecca, Melbourne, Brett, Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Paertel, Meelis, Pascual, Jesus, Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Salguero-Gomez, Roberto, Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda, Stevens, Carly, Sullivan, Lauren, Wardle, Glenda M., Wolkovich, Elizabeth M., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Invasions have increased the size of regional species pools, but are typically assumed to reduce native diversity. However, global-scale tests of this assumption have been elusive because of the focus on exotic species richness, rather than relative abundance. This is problematic because low invader richness can indicate invasion resistance by...
- Full Text:
- HAUT IER 1 , 7 , E R IC L IND 1 , ANDREW MACDOUGALL 8 , JOHN L . ORROCK 9 , SUZANNE M . PROBER 1 0 , P
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Predicting invasion in grassland ecosystems: is exotic dominance the real embarrassment of richness?
- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne, Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi, Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric, Macdougall, Andrew, Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter, Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Caldeira, Maria, Chu, Chengjin, Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., D'Antonio, Carla M., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Dickman, Chris R., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andrew, Helm, Aveliina, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Iribarne, Oscar, Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura M., Lambrinos, John G., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Mcculley, Rebecca, Melbourne, Brett, Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Paertel, Meelis, Pascual, Jesus, Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Salguero-Gomez, Roberto, Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda, Stevens, Carly, Sullivan, Lauren, Wardle, Glenda M., Wolkovich, Elizabeth M., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Invasions have increased the size of regional species pools, but are typically assumed to reduce native diversity. However, global-scale tests of this assumption have been elusive because of the focus on exotic species richness, rather than relative abundance. This is problematic because low invader richness can indicate invasion resistance by...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne M., Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi F., Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric M., MacDougall, Andrew S., Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter B., Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana M., Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Cadotte, Marc, Chu, Chengjin, Cottingham, Kathryn L., Crawley, Michael J., Damschen, Ellen I., Dantonio, Carla M., DeCrappeo, Nicole M., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andy, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura, Lambrinos, John G., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Marushia, Robin, McCulley, Rebecca L., Melbourne, Brett A., Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda D., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren, Wolkovich, Elizabeth, Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Exotic species dominate many communities; however the functional significance of species’ biogeographic origin remains highly contentious. This debate is fuelled in part by the lack of globally replicated, systematic data assessing the relationship between species provenance, function and response to perturbations. We examined the abundance of native and exotic plant...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Borer, Elizabeth T., Seabloom, Eric W., Gruner, Daniel S., O'Halloran, Lydia R., Gruner, Daniel S., Harpole, W. Stanley, Hillebrand, Helmut, Lind, Eric M., Alder, Peter B., Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori, Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Buckley, Yvonne M., Cadotte, Marc, Chu, Chengjin, Cleland, Elsa E., Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., Davies, Kendi F., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Du, Guozhen, Firn, Jennifer, Hautier, Yann, Heckman, Robert W., Hector, Andy, HelleRisLambers, Janneke, Iribarne, Oscar, Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimbery J., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Wei, MacDougall, Andrew S., McCulley, Rebecca L., Melbourne, Brett A., Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Mortensen, Brent, Orrock, John L., Pascual, Jesus, Prober, Suzanne M., Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Schuetz, Martin, Smith, Melinda D., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren L., Williams, Ryan J., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin P., and Yang, Louie H.
- Abstract:
- Human alterations to nutrient cycles[superscript 1,2] and herbivore communities³⁻⁷ are affecting global biodiversity dramatically². Ecological theory predicts these changes should be strongly counteractive: nutrient addition drives plant species loss through intensified competition for light, whereas herbivores prevent competitive exclusion by increasing ground-level light, particularly in productive systems[superscript 8,9]. Here we...
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- Article
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- . Crawley17, Pedro Daleo6, Ellen I. Damschen18, Kendi F. Davies19, Nicole M. DeCrappeo20, Guozhen Du15
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- Creator:
- Goodson, William H., III, Lowe, Leroy, Carpenter, David O., Gilbertson, Michael, Manaf Ali, Abdul, Lopez de Cerain Salsamendi, Adela, Lasfar, Ahmed, Carnero, Amancio, Azqueta, Amaya, Amedei, Amedeo, Charles, Amelia K., Collins, Andrew R., Ward, Andrew, Salzberg, Anna C., Colacci, Annamaria, Olsen, Ann-Karin, Berg, Arthur, Barclay, Barry J., Zhou, Binhua P., Blanco-Aparicio, Carmen, Baglole, Carolyn J., Dong, Chenfang, Mondello, Chiara, Hsu, Chia-Wen, Naus, Christian C., Yedjou, Clement, Curran, Colleen S., Laird, Dale W., Koch, Daniel C., Carlin, Danielle J., Felsher, Dean W., Roy, Debasish, Brown, Dustin G., Ratovitski, Edward, Ryan, Elizabeth P., Corsini, Emanuela, Rojas, Emilio, Moon, Eun-Yi, Laconi, Ezio, Marongiu, Fabio, Al-Mulla, Fahd, Chiaradonna, Ferdinando, Darroudi, Firouz, Martin, Francis L., Van Schooten, Frederik J., Goldberg, Gary S., Wagemaker, Gerard, Nangami, Gladys N., Calaf, Gloria M., Williams, Graeme P., Wolf, Gregory T., Koppen, Gudrun, Brunborg, Gunnar, Lyerly, H. Kim, Krishnan, Harini, Ab Hamid, Hasiah, Yasaei, Hemad, Sone, Hideko, Kondoh, Hiroshi, Salem, Hosni K., Hsu, Hsue-Yin, Park, Hyun Ho, Koturbash, Igor, Miousse, Isabelle R., Scovassi, A.Ivana, Klaunig, James E., Vondráček, Jan, Raju, Jayadev, Roman, Jesse, Wise, John P., Sr., Whitfield, Jonathan R., Woodrick, Jordan, Christopher, Joseph A., Ochieng, Josiah, Martinez-Leal, Juan F., Weisz, Judith, Kravchenko, Julia, Sun, Jun, Prudhomme, Kalan R., Narayanan, Kannan B., Cohen-Solal, Karine A., Moorwood, Kim, Gonzalez, Laetitia, Soucek, Laura, Jian, Le, D’Abronzo, Leandro S., Lin, Liang-Tzung, Li, Lin, Gulliver, Linda, McCawley, Lisa J., Memeo, Lorenzo, Vermeulen, Louis, Leyns, Luc, Zhang, Luoping, Valverde, Mahara, Khatami, Mahin, Romano, Maria F., Chapellier, Marion, Williams, Marc A., Wade, Mark, Manjili, Masoud H., Lleonart, Matilde E., Xia, Menghang, Gonzalez Guzman, Michael J., Karamouzis, Michalis V., Kirsch-Volders, Micheline, Vaccari, Monica, Kuemmerle, Nancy B., Singh, Neetu, Cruickshanks, Nichola, Kleinstreuer, Nicole, van Larebeke, Nik, Ahmed, Nuzhat, Ogunkua, Olugbemiga, Krishnakumar, P. K., Vadgama, Pankaj, Marignani, Paola A., Ghosh, Paramita M., Ostrosky-Wegman, Patricia, Thompson, Patricia A., Dent, Paul, Heneberg, Petr, Darbre, Philippa, Leung, Po Sing, Nangia-Makker, Pratima, Cheng, Qiang, Robey, R. Brooks, Al-Temaimi, Rabeah, Roy, Rabindra, Andrade-Vieira, Rafaela, Sinha, Ranjeet K., Mehta, Rekha, Vento, Renza, Di Fiore, Riccardo, Ponce-Cusi, Richard, Dornetshuber-Fleiss, Rita, Nahta, Rita, Castellino, Robert C., Palorini, Roberta, Hamid, Roslida A., Langie, Sabine A. S., Eltom, Sakina E., Brooks, Samira A., Ryeom, Sandra, Wise, Sandra S., Bay, Sarah N., Harris, Shelley A., Papagerakis, Silvana, Romano, Simona, Pavanello, Sofia, Eriksson, Staffan, Forte, Stefano, Casey, Stephanie C., Luanpitpong, Sudjit, Lee, Tae-Jin, Otsuki, Takemi, Chen, Tao, Massfelder, Thierry, Sanderson, Thomas, Guarnieri, Tiziana, Hultman, Tove, Dormoy, Valérian, Odero-Marah, Valerie, Sabbisetti, Venkata, Maguer-Satta, Veronique, Rathmell, W. Kimryn, Engström, Wilhelm, Decker, William K., Bisson, William H., Rojanasakul, Yon, Luqmani, Yunus, Chen, Zhenbang, and Hu, Zhiwei
- Abstract:
- Lifestyle factors are responsible for a considerable portion of cancer incidence worldwide, but credible estimates from the World Health Organization and the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) suggest that the fraction of cancers attributable to toxic environmental exposures is between 7% and 19%. To explore the hypothesis that...
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- Article
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- Vaccari14, Nancy B.Kuemmerle93,94, Neetu Singh95, Nichola Cruickshanks96, Nicole Kleinstreuer97, Nik van