Institution
Sewanee: The University of the South
Education•Sewanee, Tennessee, United States•
About: Sewanee: The University of the South is a education organization based out in Sewanee, Tennessee, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Species richness. The organization has 8995 authors who have published 14790 publications receiving 320138 citations. The organization is also known as: Sewanee & The University of the South.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the properties of S-PC and S-CFRC with different silica-fume contents, i.e., 5, 10, 15% and 20% by cement mass.
97 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the most important processing technologies used for fish and their effect on the product quality are reviewed, including smoking, salting, drying and their combinations as well as marinating.
Abstract: The most important processing technologies used for fish and their effect on the product quality are reviewed. Among the traditional processes are smoking, salting, drying and their combinations as well as marinating. Canning, sous-vide cooking, preparation of surimi and ready-to-eat products belong to the technologies of modern times. In addition, also the effects of the preparation of fish at home and some specialties like fermented and graved fish are included. It is stressed that the quality of fish products will be influenced by each action during processing and preparation. It is important to adapt the processes to the special requirements that easily spoiled products as fish have. If processing techniques are applied in an innovative way, quality products with high nutritional value will be achieved. Dialogue with the industry and the consumers is needed to assure a high nutritional value and quality of the final fish products.
96 citations
••
TL;DR: A highly interconnected food web with several modules, in which similarly sized predators from the same microhabitat are likely to compete strongly for resources in the field, implies that ontogenetic diet shifts are common in predatory aquatic insects, although it is observed higher diet overlaps than previously reported.
Abstract: Predatory aquatic insects are a diverse group comprising top predators in small fishless water bodies. Knowledge of their diet composition is fragmentary, which hinders the understanding of mechanisms maintaining their high local diversity and of their impacts on local food web structure and dynamics. We conducted multiple-choice predation experiments using nine common species of predatory aquatic insects, including adult and larval Coleoptera, adult Heteroptera and larval Odonata, and complemented them with literature survey of similar experiments. All predators in our experiments fed selectively on the seven prey species offered, and vulnerability to predation varied strongly between the prey. The predators most often preferred dipteran larvae; previous studies further reported preferences for cladocerans. Diet overlaps between all predator pairs and predator overlaps between all prey pairs were non-zero. Modularity analysis separated all primarily nectonic predator and prey species from two groups of large and small benthic predators and their prey. These results, together with limited evidence from the literature, suggest a highly interconnected food web with several modules, in which similarly sized predators from the same microhabitat are likely to compete strongly for resources in the field (observed Pianka’s diet overlap indices >0.85). Our experiments further imply that ontogenetic diet shifts are common in predatory aquatic insects, although we observed higher diet overlaps than previously reported. Hence, individuals may or may not shift between food web modules during ontogeny.
96 citations
••
TL;DR: Individual protein phylogenies together with analyses of concatenated alignments show that the new species, here named Paratrypanosoma confusum n.
96 citations
••
TL;DR: Five patients who were treated with BV developed progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), a frequently fatal JC virus‐induced central nervous system infection, including 2 immunocompetent patients, in the current study.
Abstract: Purpose
Brentuxiumab vedotin (BV) is an anti-CD30 monoclonal antibody-drug conjugate approved in 2011 for treating anaplastic large cell and Hodgkin lymphomas. The product label indicates that three BV-treated patients developed progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), a frequently fatal JC-virus induced central nervous system infection. Prior immunosuppressive therapy and compromised immune systems were postulated risk factors. We report 5 patients who developed BV-associated PML, including two immunocompetent patients.
96 citations
Authors
Showing all 9016 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Marc Humbert | 149 | 1184 | 100577 |
Vladimir N. Uversky | 131 | 959 | 75342 |
Edward L. Deci | 130 | 284 | 206930 |
Andrew J.S. Coats | 127 | 820 | 94490 |
Paul M. Vanhoutte | 127 | 868 | 62177 |
Yusuf A. Hannun | 126 | 589 | 62729 |
Anthony Howell | 120 | 714 | 55075 |
David C. Baulcombe | 110 | 287 | 50828 |
Petr Pyšek | 110 | 523 | 54926 |
Allen N. Berger | 106 | 382 | 65596 |
Mark S. George | 106 | 592 | 39480 |
John C. Avise | 105 | 413 | 53088 |
Peter Riederer | 104 | 565 | 42472 |
Xiaodong Li | 104 | 1300 | 49024 |
Stuart J. H. Biddle | 102 | 484 | 41251 |