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Institution

University of Guelph

EducationGuelph, Ontario, Canada
About: University of Guelph is a education organization based out in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 26542 authors who have published 50553 publications receiving 1715255 citations. The organization is also known as: U of G & Guelph University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Current data indicate a pivotal role for FAT/CD36 in the regulation ofLCFA utilization in heart and skeletal muscle under normal conditions as well as during the altered LCFA utilization observed in obesity and insulin resistance.

232 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a high-resolution, accurately dated, time-since-fire map for a large (3461 km2) contiguous area is used to produce the landscape survivorship distribution in which both spatial and temporal changes in fire cycle are statistically tested.
Abstract: One approach to ecosystem management is to emulate the effects of natural disturbance in producing landscape patterns; this approach requires a spatial analysis of the pattern and an understanding of the processes producing the pattern. Forested landscapes exhibit mosaic patterns of both stand types and ages. This study investigates the spatial mosaic of stand ages produced by high-intensity stand-replacing fires in the mixed-wood boreal forest of western Canada. A high-resolution, accurately dated, time-since-fire map for a large (3461 km2) contiguous area is used to produce the landscape survivorship distribution in which both spatial and temporal changes in fire cycle are statistically tested. Spatial multivariate analysis of the time-since-fire map is also used to investigate the spatial assembly of the age mosaic. Significant changes in fire cycle can be explained by climatic change as well as land use change in the surrounding area. The shift from a short (15 yr) fire cycle to a longer (75 yr) cycle after 1890 in the northern half of the study area coincides with climatic change at the end of the Little Ice Age. In the southern half of the study area, the short fire cycle continues after 1890 due to the spread of human-caused fires from the adjacent area which was settled and cleared for agriculture during the first half of the 20th century. Upon completion of settlement in 1945, the fire cycle becomes significantly longer due to the fragmentation of the once continuous forest that surrounded the study area and from which the majority of large fires propagated in the past. The different fire cycle histories of the two parts of the study area also explain the spatial mosaic pattern of stand ages, sizes, and shapes. The extended period of the short fire cycle through the first half of this century in the southern region results in it being dominated by younger, larger, oblong-shaped polygons with irregular edges: characteristics that describe the shapes of large burns. The northern region has generally older and smaller, more circular, compact polygons that are the remnants of larger much earlier burns that have since been overburned. The polygons in the northern region are more similar in size and shape but less similar in age to adjacent polygons than are those in the southern region. Thus, this study shows how spatial heterogeneity in the landscape mosaic pattern can be characterized and related to the disturbance history of an area. Furthermore, it provides evidence of the impacts on the age mosaic due to forest fragmentation in surrounding areas.

232 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A microfluidic model to examine the effects of antimicrobial therapy on biofilms formed by organisms associated with wound infections in companion animals is developed, although it is acknowledged that in this model the test organisms may be more recalcitrant to antimicrobials than in other published systems.
Abstract: Background Current methods for testing treatments for veterinary surgical site infections can successfully emulate elements of a chronic wound, but these are time consuming and costly, requiring specialized laboratory equipment and considerable space to house study animals. Microfluidic devices however, can be coated with collagen and maintained at basal body temperature, providing a more cost-effective and space-saving model of a chronic wound. Our study assesses the applicability of a new microfluidic model by testing the activity of DispersinB against biofilms of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus pseudintermedius (MRSP); DispersinB has been shown to prevent biofilm growth of Staphylococcus epidermidis, another prominent wound colonizer.

231 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Four coexisting morphs or arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus (L.), occur in the lake Thingvallavatn, Iceland, and laboratory-rearing experiments indicate that these morphological differences have a genetic basis with a significant maternal effect and support the suggestion that there are three populations of arcticcharr in theLake Thingvallsvatn.
Abstract: Four coexisting morphs or arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus (L.), occur in the lake Thingvallavatn, Iceland. They can be identified by their head morphology, which appears to he related to feeding habits, benthivorous or planktivorous-piscivorous. Laboratory-rearing experiments indicate that these morphological differences have a genetic basis with a significant maternal effect and support the suggestion that there are three populations of arctic charr in the lake. The ontogenetic mechanism of these differences most readily explained as development heterochrony, that is the heterochrony that shape reflects embryonic phenotypic characteristics while the planktivorous-piscivorous head shape is more differentiated from the embroyonic phenotype.

231 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a study of the interaction between groundwater and surface water was undertaken within a small agricultural watershed in southern Ontario, Canada, where groundwater contributions to streamflow were measured along a section of stream during baseflow conditions and during rainfall events.

231 citations


Authors

Showing all 26778 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Dirk Inzé14964774468
Norbert Perrimon13861073505
Bobby Samir Acharya1331121100545
Eduardo Marbán12957949586
Benoît Roux12049362215
Fereidoon Shahidi11995157796
Stephen Safe11678460588
Mark A. Tarnopolsky11564442501
Robert C. Haddon11257752712
Milton H. Saier11170754496
Hans J. Vogel111126062846
Paul D. N. Hebert11153766288
Peter T. Katzmarzyk11061856484
John Campbell107115056067
Linda F. Nazar10631852092
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202368
2022391
20212,574
20202,547
20192,264
20182,155