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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: In this paper, the authors used the Princeton Ocean Model to study the circulation in the South China Sea (SCS) and its seasonal transition, showing that the onshore Ekman transport due to northeasterly monsoon generates upwelling when moving upslope, and particular distributions of the density and sea level associated with the cross shelf motion supports the SCSWC.
Abstract: [1] The Princeton Ocean Model is used to study the circulation in the South China Sea (SCS) and its seasonal transition. Kuroshio enters (leaves) the SCS through the southern (northern) portion of the Luzon Strait. The annually averaged net volume flux through the Luzon Strait is ∼2 Sv into the SCS with seasonal reversals. The inflow season is from May to January with the maximum intrusion of Kuroshio water reaching the western SCS during fall in compensation of summertime surface offshore transport associated with coastal upwelling. From February to April the net transport reverses from the SCS to the Pacific. The intruded Kuroshio often forms an anticyclonic current loop west of the Luzon Strait. The current loop separates near the Dongsha Islands with the northward branch continuously feeding the South China Sea Warm Current (SCSWC) near the shelf break and the westward branch becoming the South China Sea Branch of Kuroshio on the slope, which is most apparent in the fall. The SCSWC appears from December to February on the seaward side of the shelf break, flowing eastward against the prevailing wind. Diagnosis shows that the onshore Ekman transport due to northeasterly monsoon generates upwelling when moving upslope, and the particular distributions of the density and sea level associated with the cross shelf motion supports the SCSWC.

277 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that late onset of canonical babbling, a factor that can be monitored effectively through an interview with a parent, can predict delay in the onset of speech production.

277 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 2002-Ecology
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used paired logistic regression to model selection of habitat within activity areas in a population of wood turtles in a watershed in western Maine, and found that wood turtles selected activity areas close to streams and rivers with moderate forest cover and little open water.
Abstract: Models of habitat selection have been developed primarily for mobile animals with well-defined home ranges. The assumptions made by traditional techniques about habitat availability are inappropriate for species with low mobility and large home ranges, such as the wood turtle. We used paired logistic regression, typically used in medical case - control studies, to model selection of habitat within activity areas in a population of wood turtles in a watershed in western Maine. We also modeled selection of activity areas within the watershed, using nonpaired logistic regression. Within activity areas, wood turtles selected nonforested locations close to water with low canopy cover. Within the watershed, they selected activity areas close to streams and rivers with moderate forest cover and little open water. The difference between selection at these two scales suggests that wood turtles select forest edges to balance thermoregulatory and feeding needs. The model of selection of activity areas within the watershed correctly classified 84% of activity areas and random areas. This model may be useful for identifying wood turtle habitat across the landscape as part of regional conservation efforts. We suggest that paired logistic regression shows promise for analysis of habitat selection of species with movement patterns that violate the assumptions of traditional habitat selection models.

277 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an acceleration of ice velocity in one of these outlet glaciers, Byrd Glacier, East Antarctica coincides with a large water discharge from two subglacial lakes, allowing direct attribution of the change in glacier dynamics to the water drainage network beneath the ice.
Abstract: Large ice streams and outlet glaciers drain Greenland and Antarctica. An observed acceleration of ice velocity in one of these outlet glaciers, Byrd Glacier, East Antarctica coincides with a large water discharge from two subglacial lakes, allowing direct attribution of the change in glacier dynamics to the water drainage network beneath the ice.

277 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Individual plants of several Amelanchier taxa contain many polymorphic nucleotide sites in the internal transcribed spacers of nuclear ribosomal DNA (nrDNA), which is unusual because it is not recent in origin and thus has resisted homogenization by concerted evolution.
Abstract: Individual plants of several Amelanchier taxa contain many polymorphic nucleotide sites in the internal transcribed spacers (ITS) of nuclear ribosomal DNA (nrDNA). This polymorphism is unusual because it is not recent in origin and thus has resisted homogenization by concerted evolution. Amelanchier ITS sequence polymorphism is hypothesized to be the result of gene flow between two major North American clades resolved by phylogenetic analysis of ITS sequences. Western North American species plus A. humilis and A. sanguinea of eastern North America form one clade (A), and the remaining eastern North American Amelanchier make up clade B. Five eastern North American taxa are polymorphic at many of the nucleotide sites where clades A and B have diverged and are thought to be of hybrid origin, with A. humilis or A. sanguinea as one parent and various members of clade B as the other parent. Morphological evidence suggests that A. humilis is one of the parents of one of the polymorphic taxa, a microspecies that we refer to informally as A. "erecta." Sequences of 21 cloned copies of the ITS1-5.8S gene-ITS2 region from one A. "erecta" individual are identical to A. humilis sequence or to the clade B consensus sequence, or they are apparent recombinants of A. humilis and clade B ITS repeats. Amelanchier "erecta" and another polymorphic taxon are suspected to be relatively old because both grow several hundred kilometers beyond the range of one of their parents. ITS sequence polymorphisms have apparently persisted in these two taxa perhaps because of polyploidy and/or agamospermy (asexual seed production), which are prevalent in the genus.

275 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