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Institution

University of Maine

EducationOrono, Maine, United States
About: University of Maine is a education organization based out in Orono, Maine, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Ice sheet. The organization has 8637 authors who have published 16932 publications receiving 590124 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Maine at Orono.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Non-lethal assays of ploidy were made in experimental lots of putative polyploids by flow cytometry by stained cells with DNA-RNA specific fluorescent dye, propidium iodide, and presented to the Ortho Cytofluorograf in liquid suspension.

198 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using nuclear ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer region sequences to generate the first phylogeny of Rubus based on a large, molecular data set indicates that Rubus plus Dalibarda form a strongly supported clade, and D. repens may nest within Rubus.
Abstract: We used nuclear ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer region (ITS 1 2 5.8S 2 ITS 2; ITS) sequences to generate the first phylogeny of Rubus based on a large, molecular data set. We sampled 57 taxa including 20 species of subgenus Rubus (blackberries), one to seven species from each of the remaining 11 subgenera, and the monotypic and closely related Dalibarda .I nRubus, ITS sequences are most informative among subgenera, and variability is low between closely related species. Parsimony analysis indicates that Rubus plus Dalibarda form a strongly supported clade, and D. repens may nest within Rubus. Of the subgenera with more than one species sampled, only subgenus Orobatus appears monophyletic. Three large clades are strongly supported: one contains all sampled species of nine of the 12 subgenera; another includes extreme Southern Hemisphere species of subgenera Comaropsis, Dalibarda, and Lampobatus; and a third clade consists of subgenus Rubus plus R. alpinus of subgenus Lampobatus. Rubus ursinus appears to be a hybrid between a close relative of R. macraei (subgenus Idaeobatus, raspberries) and an unidentified subgenus Rubus species. ITS sequences are generally consistent with biogeography and ploidy, but traditionally important morphological characters, such as stem armature and leaf type, appear to have limited phylogenetic value in Rubus.

198 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a transition from ice-sheet dynamics to ice-shelf dynamics is discussed, and the drift-thinning rate in this region is very sensitive to sea depth; rising sea level causes increased thinning-rates and grounding-line retreat, falling sea-level has the reverse effect.
Abstract: Marine ice sheets rest on land that, for the most part, is below sea-level. Ice that flows across the grounding line, where the ice sheet becomes afloat, either calves into icebergs or forms a floating ice shelf joined to the ice sheet. At the grounding line there is a transition from ice-sheet dynamics to ice-shelf dynamics, and the creep-thinning rate in this region is very sensitive to sea depth; rising sea-level causes increased thinning-rates and grounding-line retreat, falling sea-level has the reverse effect. If the bedrock slopes down towards the centre of the ice sheet there may be only two stable modes: a freely-floating ice shelf or a marine ice sheet that extends to the edge of the continental shelf. Once started, collapse of such an ice sheet to form an ice shelf may take place extremely rapidly. Ice shelves which form in embayments of a marine ice sheet, or which are partially grounded, have a stabilizing influence since ice flowing across the grounding line has to push the ice shelf past its sides. Retreat of the grounding line tends to enlarge the ice shelf, which ultimately may become large enough to prevent excessive outflow from the ice sheet so that a new equilibrium grounding line is established; removal of the ice shelf would allow retreat to continue. During the late-Wisconsin glacial maximum there may have been marine ice sheets in the northern hemisphere but the only current example is the West Antarctic ice sheet. This is buttressed by the Ross and Ronne Ice Shelves, and if climatic warming were to prohibit the existence of these ice shelves then the ice sheet would collapse. Field observations suggest that, at present, the ice sheet may be advancing into parts of the Ross Ice Shelf. Such advance, however, would not ensure the security of the ice sheet since ice streams that drain to the north appear to flow directly into the sea with little or no ice shelf to buttress them. If these ice streams do not flow over a sufficiently high bedrock sill then they provide the most likely avenues for ice-sheet retreat.

197 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that electron transport system (ETS) proteins form coadapted sets of alleles within populations and that disruption of the co Adapted ETS gene complex leads to functional incompatibilities that may lower hybrid fitness.
Abstract: Geographically isolated populations may accumulate alleles that function well on their own genetic backgrounds but poorly on the genetic backgrounds of other populations. Consequently, interpopulation hybridization may produce offspring of low fitness as a result of incompatibilities arising in allopatry. Genes participating in these epistatic incompatibility systems remain largely unknown. In fact, despite the widely recognized importance of epistatic interactions among gene products, few data directly address the functional consequences of such interactions among natural genetic variants. In the marine copepod, Tigriopus californicus, we found that the cytochrome c variants isolated from two different populations each had significantly higher activity with the cytochrome c oxidase derived from their respective source population. Three amino acid substitutions in the cytochrome c protein appear to be sufficient to confer population specificity. These results suggest that electron transport system (ETS) proteins form coadapted sets of alleles within populations and that disruption of the coadapted ETS gene complex leads to functional incompatibilities that may lower hybrid fitness.

197 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article examined the impact of children with autism on their families and found that twenty-one parents who were the primary caregivers were interviewed about the recognition and diagnosis of autism in their children.
Abstract: This study examined the impact of children With autism on their families. TWenty-one parents Who Were the primary caregivers Were intervieWed about (a) recognition and diagnosis of autism in their ...

197 citations


Authors

Showing all 8729 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Clifford J. Rosen11165547881
Juan S. Bonifacino10830346554
John D. Aber10720448500
Surendra P. Shah9971032832
Charles T. Driscoll9755437355
Samuel Madden9538846424
Lihua Xiao9349532721
Patrick G. Hatcher9140127519
Pedro J. J. Alvarez8937834837
George R. Pettit8984831759
James R. Wilson89127137470
Steven Girvin8636638963
Peter Marler8117422070
Garry R. Buettner8030429273
Paul Andrew Mayewski8042029356
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202332
2022134
2021834
2020756
2019738
2018725