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Institution

Macquarie University

EducationSydney, New South Wales, Australia
About: Macquarie University is a education organization based out in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 14075 authors who have published 47673 publications receiving 1416184 citations. The organization is also known as: Macquarie uni.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Compared levels of genetic variation and fitness in island and mainland populations of the black‐footed rock‐wallaby (Petrogale lateralis) are compared, results indicate that the Barrow Island population of P. lateralis has unprecedented low levels of Genetic variation and suffers from inbreeding depression.
Abstract: It has been argued that demographic and environmental factors will cause small, isolated populations to become extinct before genetic factors have a significant negative impact Islands provide an ideal opportunity to test this hypothesis because they often support small, isolated populations that are highly vulnerable to extinction. To assess the potential negative impact of isolation and small population size, we compared levels of genetic variation and fitness in island and mainland populations of the black-footed rock-wallaby (Petrogale lateralis [Marsupialia: Macropodidae]). Our results indicate that the Barrow Island population of P. lateralis has unprecedented low levels of genetic variation (H-e = 0.053, from 10 microsatellite loci) and suffers from inbreeding depression (reduced female fecundity, skewed sex ratio increased levels of fluctuating asymmetry). Despite a long period of isolation (similar to 1600 generations) and small effective population size (N-e similar to 15), demographic and environmental factors have not yet driven this population to extinction. Nevertheless, it has been affected significantly by genetic factors It has lost most of its genetic variation and become highly inbred (F-e = 0.91), and it exhibits reduced fitness. Because several other island populations of P. lateralis also exhibit exceptionally low levels of genetic variation, this phenomenon may be widespread Inbreeding in these populations is at a level associated with high rates of extinction in populations of domestic and laboratory species. Genetic factors cannot then be excluded as contributing to the extinction proneness of small, isolated populations.

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Aridity in Australia has generally been associated with glacial intervals of the last few glacial cycles as mentioned in this paper, and the causes and nature of aridity varied from north to south over the continent.

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
04 Mar 2005-Science
TL;DR: After local disinhibition of the superior colliculus in anesthetized rats, DA neurons became visually responsive, whereas disin inhibition of the visual cortex was ineffective, suggesting that the limited processing capacities of the colliculi may constrain the visual information content of phasic DA responses.
Abstract: Unexpected, biologically salient stimuli elicit a short-latency, phasic response in midbrain dopaminergic (DA) neurons. Although this signal is important for reinforcement learning, the information it conveys to forebrain target structures remains uncertain. One way to decode the phasic DA signal would be to determine the perceptual properties of sensory inputs to DA neurons. After local disinhibition of the superior colliculus in anesthetized rats, DA neurons became visually responsive, whereas disinhibition of the visual cortex was ineffective. As the primary source of visual afferents, the limited processing capacities of the colliculus may constrain the visual information content of phasic DA responses.

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Oct 1982-Lithos
TL;DR: In this paper, the FeMg exchange reaction between coexisting garnet and phengite has been studied by reacting a natural Phengite ( mg = 67 ) in the presence of quartz and water at pressures of 20-35 kb and temperatures of 800-1000°C.

287 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ability of 59‐base elements of different length and sequence to act as sites for recombination catalysed by the integron‐encoded DNA integrase is demonstrated, confirming that elements of this family have a common function.
Abstract: From examination of published DNA sequences of genes found inserted at a specific site in integrons, all genes are shown to be associated, at their 3' ends, with a short imperfect inverted repeat sequence, a 59-base element or relative of this element. The similarity of the arrangement of gene inserts in the integron and in the Tn7 transposon family is described. A refined consensus for the 59-base element is reported. Members of this family are highly diverged and the relationship of a group of longer elements to the 59-base elements is demonstrated. The ability of 59-base elements of different length and sequence to act as sites for recombination catalysed by the integron-encoded DNA integrase is demonstrated, confirming that elements of this family have a common function. The ability of elements located between gene pairs to act as recombination sites has also been demonstrated. The recombination cross-over point has been localized to the GTT triplet which is conserved in the core sites, GTTRRRY, found at the 3' end of 59-base elements. Recombination at the core site found in inverse orientation at the 5' end of the 59-base elements was not detected, and the sequences responsible for orientation of the recombination event appear to reside within the 59-base element. A model for site-specific insertion of genes into integrons and Tn7-like transposons is proposed. Circular units consisting of a gene associated with a 59-base element are inserted into an ancestral element which contains neither a gene nor a 59-base element.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

286 citations


Authors

Showing all 14346 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yang Yang1712644153049
Peter B. Reich159790110377
Nicholas J. Talley158157190197
John R. Hodges14981282709
Thomas J. Smith1401775113919
Andrew G. Clark140823123333
Joss Bland-Hawthorn136111477593
John F. Thompson132142095894
Xin Wang121150364930
William L. Griffin11786261494
Richard Shine115109656544
Ian T. Paulsen11235469460
Jianjun Liu112104071032
Douglas R. MacFarlane11086454236
Richard A. Bryant10976943971
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023110
2022463
20214,106
20204,009
20193,549
20183,119