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Showing papers by "University of Hawaii at Manoa published in 2004"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of case studies that quantify the ecological effects of harvesting wild non-timber forest products (NTFP) from plant species were reviewed, with the aims of assessing the current state of knowledge and drawing lessons that can provide guidelines for management as well as better directing future ecological research in this area.
Abstract: Summary 1 The harvest of wild non-timber forest products (NTFP) represents an important source of income to millions of people world-wide. Despite growing concern over the conservation of these species, as well as their potential to foster forest conservation, information on the ecological implications of harvest is available only in disparate case studies. 2 Seventy studies that quantify the ecological effects of harvesting NTFP from plant species were reviewed, with the aims of assessing the current state of knowledge and drawing lessons that can provide guidelines for management as well as better directing future ecological research in this area. 3 The case studies illustrated that NTFP harvest can affect ecological processes at many levels, from individual and population to community and ecosystem. However, the majority of research was focused at a population level and on a limited subset of plant parts that are harvested. 4 Tolerance to harvest varies according to life history and the part of plant that is harvested. Moreover, the effects of harvest for any one species are mediated by variation in environmental conditions over space and time, and by human management practices. 5 In order to withstand heavy harvest, specific management practices in addition to gathering are necessary for many NTFP species. Management practices can be carried out at different spatial scales and some are highly effective in fostering population persistence. 6 Synthesis and applications. Substantial advances have been made towards identifying the ecological impacts of NTFP harvest. However, there is a need for longer-term studies that focus on multiple ecological levels (ranging from genes to ecosystems), that assess the mechanisms underlying impacts and that validate current models. Researchers and forest managers need to work with local harvesters in designing and evaluating management practices that can mitigate the negative effects of harvest.

683 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the phase relationship between the received signal and the local oscillator has a significant effect on the demodulation sensitivity, and the null points can be avoided with a quadrature (I/Q) receiver.
Abstract: Direct-conversion microwave Doppler-radar transceivers have been fully integrated in 0.25-/spl mu/m silicon CMOS and BiCMOS technologies. These chips, operating at 1.6 and 2.4 GHz, have detected movement due to heartbeat and respiration 50 cm from the subject, which may be useful in infant and adult apnea monitoring. The range-correlation effect on residual phase noise is a critical factor when detecting small phase fluctuations with a high-phase-noise on-chip oscillator. Phase-noise reduction due to range correlation was experimentally evaluated, and the measured residual phase noise was within 5 dB of predicted values on average. In a direct-conversion receiver, the phase relationship between the received signal and the local oscillator has a significant effect on the demodulation sensitivity, and the null points can be avoided with a quadrature (I/Q) receiver. In this paper, measurements that highlight the performance benefits of an I/Q receiver are presented. While the accuracy of the heart rate measured with the single-channel chip ranges from 40% to 100%, depending on positioning, the quadrature chip accuracy is always better than 80%.

636 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a large sample of very red objects from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and known dwarfs from the SDSS and the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) is presented.
Abstract: We present new JHK photometry on the MKO-NIR system and JHK spectroscopy for a large sample of L and T dwarfs. Photometry has been obtained for 71 dwarfs, and spectroscopy for 56. The sample comprises newly identified very red objects from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and known dwarfs from the SDSS and the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS). Spectral classification has been carried out using four previously defined indices from Geballe et al. that measure the strengths of the near infrared water and methane bands. We identify nine new L8?9.5 dwarfs and 14 new T dwarfs from SDSS, including the latest yet found by SDSS, the T7 dwarf SDSS J175805.46+463311.9. We classify 2MASS J04151954-0935066 as T9, the latest and coolest dwarf found to date. We combine the new results with our previously published data to produce a sample of 59 L dwarfs and 42 T dwarfs with imaging data on a single photometric system and with uniform spectroscopic classification. We compare the near-infrared colors and absolute magnitudes of brown dwarfs near the L?T transition with predictions made by models of the distribution and evolution of photospheric condensates. There is some scatter in the Geballe et al. spectral indices for L dwarfs, suggesting that these indices are probing different levels of the atmosphere and are affected by the location of the condensate cloud layer. The near-infrared colors of the L dwarfs also show scatter within a given spectral type, which is likely due to variations in the altitudes, spatial distributions, and thicknesses of the clouds. We have identified a small group of late-L dwarfs that are relatively blue for their spectral type and that have enhanced FeH, H2O, and K I absorption, possibly due to an unusually small amount of condensates. The scatter seen in the H-K color for late-T dwarfs can be reproduced by models with a range in surface gravity. The variation is probably due to the effect on the K-band flux of pressure-induced H2 opacity. The correlation of H-K color with gravity is supported by the observed strengths of the J-band K I doublet. Gravity is closely related to mass for field T dwarfs with ages greater than108 yr and the gravities implied by the H-K colors indicate that the T dwarfs in our sample have masses in the range 15?75MJupiter. One of the SDSS dwarfs, SDSS J111010.01+011613.1, is possibly a very low mass object, with log g ~ 4.2?4.5 and mass ~ 10?15MJupiter.

613 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Since connexin43 (Cx43) is widely expressed in tissues and cell lines, it is understood the most about how it is regulated, and thus, con Nexin43 phosphorylation is a major focus of this review.

590 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the photometry of 63 single and binary M, L, and T dwarfs obtained at the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope using the Mauna Kea Observatory filter set is presented.
Abstract: We have compiled L' (3.4-4.1 microns) and M' (4.6- 4.8 microns) photometry of 63 single and binary M, L, and T dwarfs obtained at the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope using the Mauna Kea Observatory filter set. This compilation includes new L' measurements of eight L dwarfs and 13 T dwarfs and new M' measurements of seven L dwarfs, five T dwarfs, and the M1 dwarf Gl 229A. These new data increase by factors of 0. 6 and 1.6, respectively, the numbers of ultracool dwarfs T (sub eff)

576 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the relative influences of the ENSO and Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) events on the Indian summer rainfall were studied using observational data and an atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM).
Abstract: The relative influences of the ENSO and Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) events on the Indian summer rainfall were studied using observational data and an atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM). The composite analysis of rainfall anomalies demonstrates that the IOD, while significantly influencing the Indian summer monsoon rainfall, also significantly reduces the impact of ENSO on the Indian summer rainfall whenever these events with the same phase co-occur. The AGCM experiments have shown that during an El Nino event, the Walker circulation over the tropical Indo-Pacific region is modulated; a low-level anomalous divergence center over the western Pacific and an anomalous convergence zone over the equatorial Indian Ocean are induced. Furthermore, an anomalous zone of convergence over the Myanmar and south China regions is induced during an El Nino event. These zones of anomalous convergence are complemented by anomalous divergence over the Indian region, causing anomalous subsidence and weakened rainfall. When a strong positive IOD event simultaneously occurs with El Nino, the latter's influence on the Indian monsoon is reduced by both poles of the IOD through the following mechanism: an anomalous divergence center, as compared to the summers when an El Nino alone occurs, is introduced in the eastern tropical Indian Ocean. From this center, the anomalous divergent flow crosses the equator, and this air, while weakening the El Nino-induced divergence over the western Pacific, also leads to convergence over the Indian monsoon region. This results in the reduction of the ENSO-induced subsidence and the related rainfall deficit over the eastern flank of the Indian monsoon trough region and adjoining regions to the east. On the other hand, over the western part of the tropical Indian Ocean sector, part of the anomalous ascending motion from the warm pole of the positive IOD event subsides just to the north of the equator, moves northward, ascends, and causes surplus rainfall. This reduces the ENSO-induced rainfall deficit over western India, the western part of the monsoon trough, and parts of Pakistan. The AGCM experiments also demonstrate that positive IOD events amplify the ENSO-induced dryness over the Indonesian region.

561 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial and temporal structures of the northward-propagating boreal summer intraseasonal oscillation (BSISO) are revealed based on the analysis of both the ECHAM4 model simulation and the NCEP-NCAR reanalysis.
Abstract: The spatial and temporal structures of the northward-propagating boreal summer intraseasonal oscillation (BSISO) are revealed based on the analysis of both the ECHAM4 model simulation and the NCEP–NCAR reanalysis. The BSISO structure and evolution characteristics simulated by the model bear many similarities to those derived from the NCEP–NCAR reanalysis. The most notable features are the remarkable meridional asymmetries, relative to the BSISO convection, in the vorticity and specific humidity fields. A positive vorticity perturbation with an equivalent barotropic structure appears a few latitude degrees north of the convection center. The maximum specific humidity also shows a clear northward shift in the lower troposphere. Two internal atmospheric dynamics mechanisms are proposed to understand the cause of the northward propagation of the BSISO. The first is the vertical shear mechanism. The key process associated with this mechanism is the generation of barotropic vorticity due to the couplin...

497 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These guidelines were formulated to assist physicians and other health care professionals with various aspects of the administration of outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT).
Abstract: These guidelines were formulated to assist physicians and other health care professionals with various aspects of the administration of outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT). Although there are many reassuring retrospective studies on the efficacy and safety of OPAT, few prospective studies have been conducted to compare the risks and outcomes for patients who receive treatment as outpatients rather than as inpatients. Because truly evidence-based studies are lacking, the present guidelines are formulated from the collective experience of the committee members and advisors from related organizations.

492 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This term was originally used to describe a place—a single source of all medical information about a patient—the term now refers to a partnership approach with families to provide primary health care that is accessible, family centered, coordinated, comprehensive, continuous, compassionate, and culturally effective.
Abstract: “Every child deserves a medical home” is one of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ (AAP) essential child health outcomes for the 21st century. With increasing health care costs, technology, survivorship, specialization, and fragmentation of care, the medical home is steadily gaining interest and standing in the public eye. Today’s policy makers, those who are involved with children, and parents are increasingly using the term to describe the concept as the form of high-quality health care. With so much attention focused on this concept as the standard of care for all infants, children, adolescents, young adults, and particularly children with special health care needs (CSHCN), it is important to define this term and how its definition has evolved. Whereas the term was originally used to describe a place—a single source of all medical information about a patient—the term now refers to a partnership approach with families to provide primary health care that is accessible, family centered, coordinated, comprehensive, continuous, compassionate, and culturally effective.1 The first known documentation of the term “medical home” appeared in Standards of Child Health Care, a book published by the AAP in 1967 and written by the AAP Council on Pediatric Practice (COPP). The book defines a medical home as one central source of a child’s pediatric records and emphasizes the importance of centralized medical records to CSHCN. “For children with chronic diseases or disabling conditions, the lack of a complete record and a ‘medical home’ is a major deterrent to adequate health supervision. Wherever the child is cared for, the question should be asked, ‘Where is the child’s medical home?’ and any pertinent information should be transmitted to that place” (pp 77–79).2 The COPP, noting that care for CSHCN is often provided by many different practitioners who work in disparate locations independent of each … Reprint requests to (C.S.) 656 Paikau St, Honolulu, HI 96816-4406. E-mail: Calsia{at}pol.net

443 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the nonlinearity of ENSO by measuring the maximum potential intensity (MPI) index and the non-linear dynamic heating (NDH) index.
Abstract: El Nino events (warm) are often stronger than La Nina events (cold). This asymmetry is an intrinsic nonlinear characteristic of the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon. In order to measure the nonlinearity of ENSO, the maximum potential intensity (MPI) index and the nonlinear dynamic heating (NDH) of ENSO are proposed as qualitative and quantitative measures. The 1997/98 El Nino that was recorded as the strongest event in the past century and another strong El Nino event in 1982/83 nearly reached the MPI. During these superwarming events, the normal climatological conditions of the ocean and atmosphere were collapsed com- pletely. The huge bursts of ENSO activity manifested in these events are attributable to the nonlinear dynamic processes. Through a heat budget analysis of the ocean mixed layer it is found that throughout much of the ENSO episodes of 1982/83 and 1997/98, the NDH strengthened these warm events and weakened subsequent La Nina events. This led to the warm-cold asymmetry. It is also found that the eastward-propagating feature in these two El Nino events provided a favorable phase relationship between temperature and current that resulted in the strong nonlinear dynamical warming. For the westward-propagating El Nino events prior to the late 1970s (e.g., 1957/58 and 1972/73 ENSOs) the phase relationships between zonal temperature gradient and current and between the surface and subsurface temperature anomalies are unfavorable for nonlinear dynamic heating, and thereby the ENSO events are not strong.

442 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the latest progress in regional climate modeling studies, including RCM development, applications of RCMs to dynamical downscaling for climate change assessment, seasonal climate predictions and climate process studies, and the study of regional climate predictability.
Abstract: Regional climate modeling with regional climate models (RCMs) has matured over the past decade and allows for meaningful utilization in a broad spectrum of applications. In this paper, latest progresses in regional climate modeling studies are reviewed, including RCM development, applications of RCMs to dynamical downscaling for climate change assessment, seasonal climate predictions and climate process studies, and the study of regional climate predictability. Challenges and potential directions of future research in this important area are discussed, with the focus on those to which less attention has been given previously, such as the importance of ensemble simulations, further development and improvement of regional climate modeling approach, modeling extreme climate events and sub-daily variation of clouds and precipitation, model evaluation and diagnostics, applications of RCMs to climate process studies and seasonal predictions, and development of regional earth system models. It is believed that with both the demonstrated credibility of RCMs’ capability in reproducing not only monthly to seasonal mean climate and interannual variability but also the extreme climate events when driven by good quality reanalysis and the continuous improvements in the skill of global general circulation models (GCMs) in simulating large-scale atmospheric circulation, regional climate modeling will remain an important dynamicalmore » downscaling tool for providing the needed information for assessing climate change impacts and seasonal climate predictions, and a powerful tool for improving our understanding of regional climate processes. An internationally coordinated effort can be developed with different focuses by different groups to advance regional climate modeling studies. It is also recognized that since the final quality of the results from nested RCMs depends in part on the realism of the large-scale forcing provided by GCMs, the reduction of errors and improvement in physics parameterizations in both GCMs and RCMs remain a priority for climate modeling community.« less

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The factors responsible for this resurgence of yellow fever in Africa, and of dengue worldwide, are discussed, as are current options for prevention and control.
Abstract: Yellow fever and dengue are old diseases, having caused major epidemics in centuries past. Both were effectively controlled in the mid 1900s, yellow fever in Francophone Africa by vaccination and yellow fever and dengue in the Americas by effective control of the principal urban vector of both viruses, Aedes aegypti. In the last 25 years of the 20th century, however, there was a resurgence of yellow fever in Africa, and of dengue worldwide. The factors responsible for this resurgence are discussed, as are current options for prevention and control.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Older age is associated with increased HAD in this HIV-1 cohort and underlying mechanisms are unclear but do not appear related to duration of HIV- 1 infection.
Abstract: Background: Antiretroviral therapy has improved survival for HIV-1-infected individuals. The neuroepidemiologic implications of HIV-1 in an aging population are not well known, particularly the prevalence of HIV-associated dementia (HAD). Methods: The authors report a baseline cross-sectional analysis of 202 HIV-1-seropositive individuals enrolled into one of two groups of the Hawaii Aging with HIV Cohort: older (50 or more years old, n = 106) and younger (20 to 39 years old, n = 96). Neuropsychological, neurologic, medical, and laboratory data were obtained at enrollment. Participant cognitive status was classified (research case definitions) using American Academy of Neurology (1991) criteria in a consensus conference of physicians and neuropsychologists. Results: HAD was more frequent in older (25.2%) compared to younger (13.7%) individuals ( p = 0.041) corresponding to an OR of 2.13 (95% CI: 1.02 to 4.44) for the older compared to the younger group. After adjusting for education, race, substance dependence, antiretroviral medication status, viral load, CD4 lymphocyte count, and Beck Depression Inventory score, the odds of having HAD among individuals in the older group was 3.26 (1.32 to 8.07) times that of the younger group. Conclusions: Older age is associated with increased HAD in this HIV-1 cohort. Underlying mechanisms are unclear but do not appear related to duration of HIV-1 infection.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the dry size distribution of Asian aerosols, their state of mixing, and the optical properties of dust, black carbon (BC) and other aerosol constituents in combustion and/or dust plumes.
Abstract: [1] During Transport and Chemical Evolution over the Pacific (TRACE-P) and Asian Aerosol Characterization Experiment (ACE-Asia) we measured the dry size distribution of Asian aerosols, their state of mixing, and the optical properties of dust, black carbon (BC) and other aerosol constituents in combustion and/or dust plumes. Optical particle sizing in association with thermal heating extracted volatile components and resolved sizes for dust and refractory soot that usually dominated light absorption. BC was internally mixed with volatile aerosol in � 85% of accumulation mode particles and constituted � 5–15% of their mass. These optically effective sizes constrained the soot and dust size distributions and the imaginary part of the dust refractive index, k, to 0.0006 ± 0.0001. This implies a single-scatter albedo, v (550 nm), for dust ranging from 0.99+ for Dp <1 m mt o� 0.90 at Dp =1 0mm and a size-integrated campaign average near 0.97 ± 0.01. The typical mass scattering efficiency for the dust was � 0.3 m 2 g � 1 , and the mass absorption efficiency (MAE) was 0.009 m 2 g � 1 . Less dust south of 25� N and stronger biomass burning signatures resulted in lower values for v of � 0.82 in plumes aloft. Chemically inferred elemental carbon was moderately correlated with BC light absorption (R 2 = 0.40), while refractory soot volume between 0.1 and 0.5 mm was highly correlated (R 2 = 0.79) with absorption. However, both approaches yield an MAE for BC mixtures of � 7±2m 2 g � 1 and higher than calculated MAE values for BC of 5 m 2 g � 1 . The increase in the mass fraction of soot and BC in pollution aerosol in the presence of elevated dust appears to be due to uptake of the volatile components onto the coarse dust. This predictably lowered v for the accumulation mode from 0.84 in typical pollution to � 0.74 in high-dust events. A chemical transport model revealed good agreement between model and observed BC absorption for most of SE Asia and in biomass plumes but underestimated BC for combustion sources north of 25� N by a factor of � 3. INDEX TERMS: 0305 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Aerosols and particles (0345, 4801); 0350 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Pressure, density, and temperature; 0360 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Transmission and scattering of radiation; 0365 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere—composition and chemistry; 0368 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere— constituent transport and chemistry; KEYWORDS: dust, black carbon, absorption, single scatter albedo

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recent studies in cell culture and gene knockout models support a function for selenoprotein P in delivery of selenium to the brain, reported to possess antioxidant activities and the ability to promote neuronal cell survival.
Abstract: Over the past three decades, selenium has been intensively investigated as an antioxidant trace element. It is widely distributed throughout the body, but is particularly well maintained in the brain, even upon prolonged dietary selenium deficiency. Changes in selenium concentration in blood and brain have been reported in Alzheimer's disease and brain tumors. The functions of selenium are believed to be carried out by selenoproteins, in which selenium is specifically incorporated as the amino acid, selenocysteine. Several selenoproteins are expressed in brain, but many questions remain about their roles in neuronal function. Glutathione peroxidase has been localized in glial cells, and its expression is increased surrounding the damaged area in Parkinson's disease and occlusive cerebrovascular disease, consistent with its protective role against oxidative damage. Selenoprotein P has been reported to possess antioxidant activities and the ability to promote neuronal cell survival. Recent studies in cell culture and gene knockout models support a function for selenoprotein P in delivery of selenium to the brain. mRNAs for other selenoproteins, including selenoprotein W, thioredoxin reductases, 15-kDa selenoprotein and type 2 iodothyronine deiodinase, are also detected in the brain. Future research directions will surely unravel the important functions of this class of proteins in the brain.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the decadal change in the spring snow depth over the Tibetan Plateau and impact on the East Asian summer monsoon using station observations of snow depth data and the NCEP-NCAR reanalysis for 1962-93.
Abstract: The decadal change in the spring snow depth over the Tibetan Plateau and impact on the East Asian summer monsoon are investigated using station observations of snow depth data and the NCEP–NCAR reanalysis for 1962–93. During spring (March–April), both the domain-averaged snow depth index (SDI) and the first principal component of the empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis exhibit a sharp increase in snow depth after the late 1970s, which is accompanied by excessive precipitation and land surface cooling. The correlation between SDI and precipitation shows a coherent remote teleconnection from the Tibetan Plateau–northern India to western Asia. It is found that the increased snow depth over the plateau after the mid-1970s is concurrent with a deeper India–Burma trough, an intensified subtropical westerly jet as well as enhanced ascending motion over the Tibetan Plateau. Additional factors for the excessive snowfall include more moisture supply associated with the intensification of the south...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified the complete carbon budget of developing stands for over six years (a full rotation) in replicated plantations of Eucalyptus saligna near Pepeekeo, Hawaii.
Abstract: The decline in aboveground wood production after canopy closure in even-aged forest stands is a common pattern in forests, but clear evidence for the mechanism causing the decline is lacking. The problem is fundamental to forest biology, commercial forestry (the decline sets the rotation age), and to carbon storage in forests. We tested three hypotheses about mechanisms causing the decline in wood growth by quantifying the complete carbon budget of developing stands for over six years (a full rotation) in replicated plantations of Eucalyptus saligna near Pepeekeo, Hawaii. Our first hypothesis was that gross primary production (GPP) does not decline with stand age, and that the decline in wood growth results from a shifft in partitioning from wood production to respiration (as tree biomass accumulates), total belowground carbon allocation (as a result of declining soil nutrient supply), or some combination of these or other sinks. An alternative hypothesis was that GPP declines with stand age and that the decline in aboveground wood production is proportional to the decline in GPP. A decline in GPP could be driven be reduced canopy leaf area and photosynthetic capacity resulting from increasing nutrient limitation, increased abrasion between tree canopies, lower turgor pressure to drive foliar expansion, or hydraulic limitation of water flux as tree height increases. A final hypothesis was a combination of the first two: GPP declines, but the decline in wood production is disproportionately larger because partitioning shifts as well. We measured the entire annual carbon budget (aboveground production and respiration, total belowground carbon allocation [TBCA], and GPP) from 0.5 years after seedling planting through 6 1/2 years (when trees were ~25m tall). The replicated plots included two densities of trees (1111 trees/ha and 10 000 trees/ha) to vary the ratio of canopy leaf mass to wood mass in the individual trees, and three fertilization regimes (minimal, intensive, and minimal followed by intensive after three years) to assess the role of nutrition in shaping the decline in GPP and aboveground wood production. The forest closed its canopy in 1-2 years, with peak aboveground wood production, coinciding with canopy closure, of 1.2-1.8 kg C.m-2yr-1. Aboveground wood production declined from 1.4 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 2 to 0.60 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 6. Hypothesis 1 failed: GPP declined from 5.0 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 2 to 3.2 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 6. Aboveground woody respiration declined from 0.66 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 2 to 0.22 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 6 and TBCA declined from 1.9 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 2 to 1.4 kg C.m-2yr-1 at age 6. Our data supported hypothesis 3: the decline in aboveground wood production (42% of peak) was proportionally greater than the decline in canopy photosynthesis (64% of peak). The fraction of GPP partitioned to belowground allocation and foliar respiration increased with stand age and contributed to the decline in aboveground wood production. The decline in GPP was not caused by nutrient limitation, a decline in leaf area or in photsynthetic capacity, or (from a related study on the same site) by hydraulic limitation. Nutrition did interact with the decline in GPP and aboveground wood production, because treatments with high nutritient availablity declined more slowly than did our control treatment, which was fertilized only during stand establishment.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a simple yet effective index, USCS, the 850-hPa zonal winds averaged over the central SCS (58−158N and 1108−1208E), is proposed for objectively defining the SCS monsoon onset.
Abstract: The climatological mean summer monsoon onset in the South China Sea (SCS) is a remarkably abrupt event. However, defining onset dates for individual years is noticeably controversial. The controversies and complications arise primarily from a number of factors: the intermittent southward intrusion of cold fronts into the northern SCS, the bogus onset in late April before the establishment of tropical monsoons over Indochina, and active intraseasonal oscillation. In this paper, a simple yet effective index, USCS, the 850-hPa zonal winds averaged over the central SCS (58‐158N and 1108‐1208E), is proposed for objectively defining the SCS monsoon onset. This onset index depicts not only the sudden establishment of the tropical southwesterly monsoon over the SCS but also the outbreak of the rainy season in the central-northern SCS. In this paper the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) is defined as the broadscale summer monsoon over East Asia and the western North Pacific region (08‐408N, 1008‐1408E). It is shown that the seasonal transition of EASM can be objectively determined by the principal component of the dominant empirical orthogonal mode of the 850-hPa zonal winds, UEOF1. It is found that the local index USCS represents UEOF1 extremely well; thus, it can be used to determine both the SCS onset and the commencement of the broadscale EASM. The result suggests that the SCS summer monsoon onset indeed signifies the beginning of the summer monsoon over East Asia and the adjacent western Pacific Ocean. Evidence is also provided to show the linkage between the two salient phases of EASM: the local onset of the SCS monsoon and the local onset of the mei-yu (the rainy season in the Yangtze River and Huai River basin and southern Japan).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the current understanding of tropical cyclone structure and intensity changes and found that the maximum intensities reached by real TCs in all ocean basins are generally lower than those inferred from the theoretical MPI, indicating that internal dynamics and external forcing from environmental flow prohibit the TC intensification most and limit the TC intensity.
Abstract: Current understanding of tropical cyclone (TC) structure and intensity changes has been reviewed in this article. Recent studies in this area tend to focus on two issues: (1) what factors determine the maximum potential intensity (MPI) that a TC can achieve given the thermodynamic state of the atmosphere and the ocean? and (2) what factors prevent the TCs from reaching their MPIs? Although the MPI theories appear mature, recent studies of the so-called superintensity pose a potential challenge. It is notable that the maximum intensities reached by real TCs in all ocean basins are generally lower than those inferred from the theoretical MPI, indicating that internal dynamics and external forcing from environmental flow prohibit the TC intensification most and limit the TC intensity. It remains to be seen whether such factors can be included in improved MPI approaches.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, ensemble simulations of Asian-Australian monsoon (A-AM) anomalies were evaluated in 11 atmospheric general circulation models for the unprecedented El Nino period of September 1996-August 1998.
Abstract: Ensemble simulations of Asian-Australian monsoon (A-AM) anomalies were evaluated in 11 atmospheric general circulation models for the unprecedented El Nino period of September 1996-August 1998. The models' simulations of anomalous Asian summer rainfall patterns in the A-AM region (308S-308N, 408-1608E) are considerably poorer than in the El Nino region. This is mainly due to a lack of skill over Southeast Asia and the western North Pacific (58-308N, 808-1508E), which is a striking characteristic of all the models. The models' deficiencies result from failing to simulate correctly the relationship between the local summer rainfall and the SST anomalies over the Philippine Sea, the South China Sea, and the Bay of Bengal: the observed rainfall anomalies are negatively correlated with SST anomalies, whereas in nearly all models, the rainfall anomalies are positively correlated with SST anomalies. While the models' physical parameterizations have large uncer- tainties, this problem is primarily attributed to the experimental design in which the atmosphere is forced to respond passively to the specified SSTs, while in nature the SSTs result in part from the atmospheric forcing. Regional monsoon dynamic indices are calculated for the Indian, the western North Pacific, and the Australian monsoons, respectively. Most models can realistically reproduce the western North Pacific and Australian mon- soon, yet fail with the Indian monsoon. To see whether this is generally the case, a suite of five Seoul National University model runs with the same observed lower boundary forcing (and differing only in their initial conditions) was examined for the period 1950-98. The skill in the 49-yr ensemble simulations of the Indian monsoon is significantly higher than the skill for the period 1996-98. In other words for the unprecedented 1997/98 El Nino period, the models under study experience unusual difficulties in simulating the Indian monsoon circulation anomalies. Moreover, the observed Webster-Yang index shows a decreasing trend over the last 50 yr, a trend missed by the models' ensemble simulations.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Luzon Strait transport (LST) from the Pacific into the South China Sea (SCS) is examined using results from a high-resolution ocean general circulation model in this article.
Abstract: The Luzon Strait transport (LST) from the Pacific into the South China Sea (SCS) is examined using results from a high-resolution ocean general circulation model. The LST from the model has a mean value of 2.4 Sv (Sv ( 106 m3 s 21) and reaches its seasonal maximum (6.1 Sv westward) in winter and seasonal minimum (0.9 Sv eastward) in summer. Both the annual mean and seasonal variation of LST compare favorably with earlier observations. On an interannual time scale, LST tends to be higher during El Nino years and lower during La Nina years, with its maximum (minimum) leading the mature phase of El Nino (La Nina) by 1 month. The interannual variation of LST appears to be oppositely phased with the Kuroshio transport east of Luzon, indicating a possible nonlinear hysteresis of the Kuroshio as a driving mechanism of LST. For the annual average, water leaving the SCS in the south is of higher temperature than that with LST, thus producing a cooling advection in the upper 405 m equivalent to a surface heat flux of 2 19 Wm 22. Most of this cooling advection is balanced by the atmospheric heating (17 W m22). From late spring to early fall, surface heat flux is the primary heating process; only a small part of the heat content change can be explained by heat advection. But, in winter, heat advection seems to be the only important process responsible for the cooling in the upper layer of the SCS. The interannual variation of the upper-layer heat content has a strong signature of ENSO, cooling in the development of El Nino and warming in the development of La Nina. An oceanic connection is revealed, in which LST seems to be a key process conveying the impact of the Pacific ENSO into the SCS.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate a correlational relationship between both the number of residents per fast food restaurant and the square miles perFast food restaurants with state-level obesity prevalence, and the entire model explained 70% of the total variance in state obesity rates.
Abstract: Purpose. Obesity accounts for approximately 300,000 deaths a year in the United States, and prevalence rates have been increasing over the past decade. The nutrition environment may be contributing to this epidemic. This study examined the relationship between fast food restaurants and obesity on a state-wide basis. Design. A one-time cross-sectional analysis of secondary data was used for this study. Setting. The setting for this study was the United States. Subjects. State-level data were used as the unit of analysis. Alaska was excluded as an outlier, and the District of Columbia was added (N = 50). Measures. Measures included aggregate state-level means for square miles per fast food restaurant, population per fast food restaurant, population density, ethnicity, age, gender, physical inactivity, fruit and vegetable intake, and obesity rates. Data were obtained from the 2002 Behavioral Risk Factor and Surveillance Survey, the 2000 U.S. Census, and the 2002 U.S. Yellow Pages. Results. Multiple ...

Journal ArticleDOI
08 Jan 2004-Nature
TL;DR: Photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN1993J ten years after the explosion detect the unambiguous signature of a massive star: the binary companion to the progenitor.
Abstract: The massive star that underwent a collapse of its core to produce supernova (SN)1993J was subsequently identified as a non-variable red supergiant star in images of the galaxy M81 taken before explosion1,2. It showed an excess in ultraviolet and B-band colours, suggesting either the presence of a hot, massive companion star or that it was embedded in an unresolved young stellar association1. The spectra of SN1993J underwent a remarkable transformation from the signature of a hydrogen-rich type II supernova to one of a helium-rich (hydrogen-deficient) type Ib3,4. The spectral and photometric peculiarities were best explained by models in which the 13–20 solar mass supergiant had lost almost its entire hydrogen envelope to a close binary companion5,6,7, producing a ‘type IIb’ supernova, but the hypothetical massive companion stars for this class of supernovae have so far eluded discovery. Here we report photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN1993J ten years after the explosion. At the position of the fading supernova we detect the unambiguous signature of a massive star: the binary companion to the progenitor.

Journal ArticleDOI
David P. Schmitt1, Lidia Alcalay2, Melissa Allensworth1, Jüri Allik3, Lara Ault4, Ivars Austers5, Kevin Bennett6, Gabriel Bianchi7, Fredrick Boholst8, Mary Ann Borg Cunen9, Johan Braeckman10, Edwin G. Brainerd11, Leo Gerard A. Caral8, Gabrielle Caron, María Martina Casullo12, Michael Cunningham4, Ikuo Daibo13, Charlotte J. S. De Backer10, Eros De Souza14, Rolando Díaz-Loving15, Glaucia Ribeiro Starling Diniz16, Kevin Durkin17, Marcela Echegaray18, Ekin Eremsoy19, Harald A. Euler20, Ruth Falzon9, Maryanne L. Fisher21, Dolores Foley22, Robert Fowler1, Douglas P. Fry23, Sirpa Fry23, M. Arif Ghayur24, Vijai N. Giri25, Debra L. Golden26, Karl Grammer, Liria Grimaldi27, Jamin Halberstadt28, Shamsul Haque29, Dora Herrera18, Janine Hertel30, Amanda Hitchell1, Heather Hoffmann31, Danica Hooper22, Zuzana Hradilekova32, Jasna Hudek-Kene-Evi33, Allen I. Huffcutt1, Jas Laile Suzana Binti Jaafar34, Margarita Jankauskaite35, Heidi Kabangu-Stahel, Igor Kardum33, Brigitte Khoury36, Hayrran Kwon37, Kaia Laidra3, Anton Laireiter38, Dustin Lakerveld39, Ada Lampert, Mary Anne Lauri9, Marguerite Lavallée, Suk-Jae Lee40, Luk Chung Leung41, Kenneth D. Locke42, Vance Locke17, Ivan Lukšík7, Ishmael Magaisa43, Dalia Marcinkeviciene35, André Mata44, Rui Mata44, Barry Mccarthy45, Michael E. Mills46, Nhlanhla Mkhize47, João Manuel Moreira44, Sérgio Moreira44, Miguel Moya48, M. Munyae49, Patricia Noller22, Hmoud Olimat50, Adrian Opre51, Alexia Panayiotou52, Nebojša Petrović53, Karolien Poels10, Miroslav Popper7, Maria Poulimenou54, Volodymyr P'Yatokha, Michel Raymond55, Ulf-Dietrich Reips56, Susan E. Reneau57, Sofía Rivera-Aragón15, Wade C. Rowatt58, Willibald Ruch59, Velko S. Rus60, Marilyn P. Safir61, Sonia Salas62, Fabio Sambataro27, Kenneth Sandnabba23, Rachel Schleeter1, Marion K. Schulmeyer, Astrid Schütz30, Tullio Scrimali27, Todd K. Shackelford63, Mithila B. Sharan25, Phillip R. Shaver64, Francis J Sichona65, Franco Simonetti2, Tilahun Sineshaw66, R. Sookdew47, Tom Speelman10, Spyros Spyrou67, H. Canan Sümer, Nebi Sümer68, Marianna Supekova7, Tomasz Szlendak, Robin Taylor69, Bert Timmermans70, William Tooke71, Ioannis Tsaousis72, F. S.K. Tungaraza65, Ashley Turner1, Griet Vandermassen10, Tim Vanhoomissen73, Frank Van Overwalle73, Ine Vanwesenbeeck, Paul L. Vasey74, João Veríssimo44, Martin Voracek75, Wendy W.N. Wan76, Ta-Wei Wang77, Peter Weiss78, Andik Wijaya, Liesbeth Woertman39, Gahyun Youn79, Agata Zupanèiè60 
Bradley University1, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile2, University of Tartu3, University of Louisville4, University of Latvia5, University of New Mexico6, Slovak Academy of Sciences7, University of San Carlos8, University of Malta9, Ghent University10, Clemson University11, University of Buenos Aires12, Osaka University13, Illinois State University14, National Autonomous University of Mexico15, University of Brasília16, University of Western Australia17, University of Lima18, Boğaziçi University19, University of Kassel20, University of York21, University of Queensland22, Åbo Akademi University23, Al Akhawayn University24, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur25, University of Hawaii at Manoa26, University of Catania27, University of Otago28, University of Dhaka29, Chemnitz University of Technology30, Knox College31, Comenius University in Bratislava32, University of Rijeka33, University of Malaya34, Vilnius University35, American University of Beirut36, Kwangju Health College37, University of Salzburg38, Utrecht University39, National Computerization Agency40, City University of Hong Kong41, University of Idaho42, University of Zimbabwe43, University of Lisbon44, University of Central Lancashire45, Loyola Marymount University46, University of Natal47, University of Granada48, University of Botswana49, University of Jordan50, Babeș-Bolyai University51, University of Cyprus52, University of Belgrade53, KPMG54, University of Montpellier55, University of Zurich56, University of Alabama57, Baylor University58, Queen's University Belfast59, University of Ljubljana60, University of Haifa61, University of La Serena62, Florida Atlantic University63, University of California, Davis64, University of Dar es Salaam65, Ramapo College66, Cyprus College67, Middle East Technical University68, University of the South Pacific69, VU University Amsterdam70, State University of New York System71, University of the Aegean72, Vrije Universiteit Brussel73, University of Lethbridge74, University of Vienna75, University of Hong Kong76, Yuan Ze University77, Charles University in Prague78, Chonnam National University79
TL;DR: In the International Sexuality Description Project, a total of 17,804 participants from 62 cultural regions completed the RelationshipQuestionnaire (RQ), a self-report measure of adult romantic attachment as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: As part of the International Sexuality Description Project, a total of 17,804 participants from 62 cultural regions completedthe RelationshipQuestionnaire(RQ), a self-reportmeasure of adult romanticattachment. Correlational analyses within each culture suggested that the Model of Self and the Model of Other scales of the RQ were psychometrically valid within most cultures. Contrary to expectations, the Model of Self and Model of Other dimensions of the RQ did not underlie the four-category model of attachment in the same way across all cultures. Analyses of specific attachment styles revealed that secure romantic attachment was normative in 79% of cultures and that preoccupied romantic attachment was particularly prevalent in East Asian cultures. Finally, the romantic attachment profiles of individual nations were correlated with sociocultural indicators in ways that supported evolutionary theories of romantic attachment and basic human mating strategies.

Journal ArticleDOI
19 Nov 2004-Science
TL;DR: The molecular inhibition of endogenous TRPM4 in T cells was shown to suppressTRPM4 currents, with a profound influence on receptor-mediated Ca2+ mobilization, with downstream effects on cytokine production in T lymphocytes.
Abstract: TRPM4 has recently been described as a calcium-activated nonselective (CAN) cation channel that mediates membrane depolarization. However, the functional importance of TRPM4 in the context of calcium (Ca 2+ ) signaling and its effect on cellular responses are not known. Here, the molecular inhibition of endogenous TRPM4 in T cells was shown to suppress TRPM4 currents, with a profound influence on receptor-mediated Ca 2+ mobilization. Agonist-mediated oscillations in intracellular Ca 2+ concentration ([Ca 2+ ] i ), which are driven by store-operated Ca 2+ influx, were transformed into a sustained elevation in [Ca 2+ ] i . This increase in Ca 2+ influx enhanced interleukin-2 production. Thus, TRPM4-mediated depolarization modulates Ca 2+ oscillations, with downstream effects on cytokine production in T lymphocytes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Mars Odyssey Gamma-Ray Spectrometer (MOGRS) is a suite of three different instruments, a gamma subsystem (GS), a neutron spectrometer, and a high-energy neutron detector, working together to collect data that will permit the mapping of elemental concentrations on the surface of Mars.
Abstract: The Mars Odyssey Gamma-Ray Spectrometer is a suite of three different instruments, a gamma subsystem (GS), a neutron spectrometer, and a high-energy neutron detector, working together to collect data that will permit the mapping of elemental concentrations on the surface of Mars. The instruments are complimentary in that the neutron instruments have greater sensitivity to low amounts of hydrogen, but their signals saturate as the hydrogen content gets high. The hydrogen signal in the GS, on the other hand, does not saturate at high hydrogen contents and is sensitive to small differences in hydrogen content even when hydrogen is very abundant. The hydrogen signal in the neutron instruments and the GS have a different dependence on depth, and thus by combining both data sets we can infer not only the amount of hydrogen, but constrain its distribution with depth. In addition to hydrogen, the GS determines the abundances of several other elements. The instruments, the basis of the technique, and the data processing requirements are described as are some expected applications of the data to scientific problems.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an equivalent circuit-based battery model capable of simulating charge and discharge behavior of lithium-ion batteries (LiB) is presented. But the model is not suitable for battery charging and discharge.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The diverse functional properties of TRPM channels have a profound effect on the regulation of ion homoeostasis by mediating direct influx of Ca2+, controlling Mg2+ entry, and determining the potential of the cell membrane.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors integrate micropaleontological, sedimentological, geochemical, and paleomagnetic data from Site 1172 (East Tasman Plateau) to identify four distinct phases in the E/O Tasmanian Gateway deepening that are correlative among ODP Leg 189 sites.
Abstract: [1] Tectonic changes that produced a deep Tasmanian Gateway between Australia and Antarctica are widely invoked as the major mechanism for Antarctic cryosphere growth and Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) development during the Eocene/Oligocene (E/O) transition (∼34–33 Ma). Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 189 recovered near-continuous marine sedimentary records across the E/O transition interval at four sites around Tasmania. These records are largely barren of calcareous microfossils but contain a rich record of siliceous- and organic-walled marine microfossils. In this study we integrate micropaleontological, sedimentological, geochemical, and paleomagnetic data from Site 1172 (East Tasman Plateau) to identify four distinct phases (A–D) in the E/O Tasmanian Gateway deepening that are correlative among ODP Leg 189 sites. Phase A, prior to ∼35.5 Ma: minor initial deepening characterized by a shallow marine prodeltaic setting with initial condensation episodes. Phase B, ∼35.5–33.5 Ma: increased deepening marked by the onset of major glauconitic deposition and inception of energetic bottom-water currents. Phase C, ∼33.5–30.2 Ma: further deepening to bathyal depths, with episodic erosion by increasingly energetic bottom-water currents. Phase D, <30.2 Ma: establishment of stable, open-ocean, warm-temperate, oligotrophic settings characterized by siliceous-carbonate ooze deposition. Our combined evidence indicates that this early Oligocene Tasmanian Gateway deepening initially produced an eastward flow of relatively warm surface waters from the Australo-Antarctic Gulf into the southwestern Pacific Ocean. This “proto-Leeuwin” current fundamentally differs from previous regional reconstructions of eastward flowing cool water (e.g., a “proto-ACC”) during the early Oligocene and thereby represents an important new constraint for reconstructing regional- to global-scale dynamics for this major global change event.

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TL;DR: Compared with the control group, children exposed to Meth prenatally exhibit smaller subcortical volumes and associated neurocognitive deficits and preliminary findings suggest prenatal Meth exposure may be neurotoxic to the developing brain.
Abstract: The purpose of this pilot study was to examine possible neurotoxic effects of prenatal methamphetamine (Meth) exposure on the developing brain and on cognition. Meth-exposed children (n=13) and unexposed control subjects (n=15) were evaluated with MRI. Global brain volumes and regional brain structures were quantified. Ten Meth-exposed and nine unexposed children also completed neurocognitive assessments. Meth-exposed children scored lower on measures of visual motor integration, attention, verbal memory and long-term spatial memory. There were no differences among the groups in motor skills, short delay spatial memory or measures of non-verbal intelligence. Despite comparable whole brain volumes in each group, the Meth-exposed children had smaller putamen bilaterally (-17.7%), smaller globus pallidus (left: -27%, right: 30%), smaller hippocampus volumes (left: -19%, right: -20%) and a trend for a smaller caudate bilaterally (-13%). The reduction in these brain structures correlated with poorer performance on sustained attention and delayed verbal memory. No group differences in volumes were noted in the thalamus, midbrain or the cerebellum. In summary, compared with the control group, children exposed to Meth prenatally exhibit smaller subcortical volumes and associated neurocognitive deficits. These preliminary findings suggest prenatal Meth exposure may be neurotoxic to the developing brain.