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Institution

University of New Hampshire

EducationDurham, New Hampshire, United States
About: University of New Hampshire is a education organization based out in Durham, New Hampshire, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Solar wind. The organization has 9379 authors who have published 24025 publications receiving 1020112 citations. The organization is also known as: UNH.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Second-generation sequencing is used to unmask putatively diverse marine metazoan biodiversity in a Scottish temperate benthic ecosystem and refute currently accepted ecological and taxonomic paradigms of meiofaunal identity, rank abundance and concomitant understanding of trophic dynamics.
Abstract: Biodiversity is of crucial importance for ecosystem functioning, sustainability and resilience, but the magnitude and organization of marine diversity at a range of spatial and taxonomic scales are undefined. In this paper, we use second-generation sequencing to unmask putatively diverse marine metazoan biodiversity in a Scottish temperate benthic ecosystem. We show that remarkable differences in diversity occurred at microgeographical scales and refute currently accepted ecological and taxonomic paradigms of meiofaunal identity, rank abundance and concomitant understanding of trophic dynamics. Richness estimates from the current benchmarked Operational Clustering of Taxonomic Units from Parallel UltraSequencing analyses are broadly aligned with those derived from morphological assessments. However, the slope of taxon rarefaction curves for many phyla remains incomplete, suggesting that the true alpha diversity is likely to exceed current perceptions. The approaches provide a rapid, objective and cost-effective taxonomic framework for exploring links between ecosystem structure and function of all hitherto intractable, but ecologically important, communities.

321 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2003-Geology
TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual model for the Fe isotope composition of the oxic oceans was proposed, which predicts large ranges in Fe redox conditions under conditions of changing aerosol and MOR Fe fluxes, such as during major worldwide glaciation.
Abstract: The Fe isotope composition of Proterozoic to modern clastic sedimentary rocks and aerosols defines a range ind 56 Fe values that is only slightly more variable than the range of Fe isotope com- positions measured in terrestrial igneous rocks, indicating that chemical weathering, sedimentary transport, and diagenesis play only a minor role in producing Fe isotope variations in environ- ments where Fe redox conditions have been controlled by current levels of atmospheric oxygen. In contrast, the Fe isotope composi- tions of hot fluids ( .300 8C) from mid-ocean-ridge (MOR) spread- ing centers define a narrow range that is shifted to lower d 56 Fe values by 0.2‰-0.5‰ as compared to igneous rocks. These new data allow a conceptual model for the Fe isotope composition of the oxic oceans that predicts large ranges in Fe isotope composition under conditions of changing aerosol and MOR Fe fluxes, such as during periods of major worldwide glaciation.

321 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 2006-Ecology
TL;DR: Techniques such as fungal in-growth cores, root branching-order studies, and isotopic analyses could refine the estimates of turnover rates of fine roots, mycorrhizae, and extraradical hyphae and together with ecosystem modeling, such techniques could soon provide good estimates of the relative importance of root vs. fungal allocation in belowground carbon budgets.
Abstract: Ectomycorrhizal fungi form symbioses with most temperate and boreal tree species, but difficulties in measuring carbon allocation to these symbionts have prevented the assessment of their importance in forest ecosystems. Here, I surveyed allocation patterns in 14 culture studies and five field studies of ectomycorrhizal plants. In culture studies, allocation to ectomycorrhizal fungi (NPPf) was linearly related to total belowground net primary production (NPPb) by the equation NPPf 5 41.5% 3 NPPb 2 11.3% (r 2 5 0.55, P , 0.001) and ranged from 1% to 21% of total net primary production. As a percentage of NPP, allocation to ectomycorrhizal fungi was highest at lowest plant growth rates and lowest nutrient availabilities. Because total belowground allocation can be estimated using carbon balance techniques, these relationships should allow ecologists to incorporate my- corrhizal fungi into existing ecosystem models. In field studies, allocation to ectomycor- rhizal fungi ranged from 0% to 22% of total allocation, but wide differences in measurement techniques made intercomparisons difficult. Techniques such as fungal in-growth cores, root branching-order studies, and isotopic analyses could refine our estimates of turnover rates of fine roots, mycorrhizae, and extraradical hyphae. Together with ecosystem modeling, such techniques could soon provide good estimates of the relative importance of root vs. fungal allocation in belowground carbon budgets.

321 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of psychological correlates associated with reactions to disclosure indicates that positive social reactions are associated with more psychological health benefits and fewer negative health symptoms, whereas negative social reactions were associated with increased negative psychological health symptoms.
Abstract: This article presents a review of the published literature to date on rates, experiences, and correlates of victims' disclosure of or help seeking for intimate partner violence to informal social support network members (e.g., friends, family, classmates, and coworkers). Research indicates that the majority of individuals disclose to at least one informal support and that victims' disclosure is associated with a number of demographic (e.g., victims' sex, age, race), intrapersonal (e.g., victims' feelings of shame/embarrassment, perception of control over abuse), and situational (e.g., violence frequency and severity, if abuse is witnessed) factors. Following disclosure, victims experience a wide range of positive (e.g., believing the victim's reports, validating the victim's experiences) and negative (e.g. disbelieving, blaming the victim) social reactions, with positive reactions rated as the most common and most helpful forms of support by victims. Finally, a review of psychological correlates associated with reactions to disclosure indicates that positive social reactions are associated with more psychological health benefits and fewer negative health symptoms, whereas negative social reactions were associated with increased negative psychological health symptoms. Future research methodologies and implications for violence prevention, intervention, and policy are discussed.

321 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of meiofaunal metagenetic analyses, ranging from sample preservation and DNA extraction to PCR, sequencing and the bioinformatic interrogation of multiple, independent samples using 454 Roche sequencing platforms, is provided.
Abstract: Biodiversity assessment is the key to understanding the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, but there is a well-acknowledged biodiversity identification gap related to eukaryotic meiofaunal organisms. Meiofaunal identification is confounded by the small size of taxa, morphological convergence and intraspecific variation. However, the most important restricting factor in meiofaunal ecological research is the mismatch between diversity and the number of taxonomists that are able to simultaneously identify and catalogue meiofaunal diversity. Accordingly, a molecular operational taxonomic unit (MOTU)-based approach has been advocated for en mass meiofaunal biodiversity assessment, but it has been restricted by the lack of throughput afforded by chain termination sequencing. Contemporary pyrosequencing offers a solution to this problem in the form of environmental metagenetic analyses, but this represents a novel field of biodiversity assessment. Here, we provide an overview of meiofaunal metagenetic analyses, ranging from sample preservation and DNA extraction to PCR, sequencing and the bioinformatic interrogation of multiple, independent samples using 454 Roche sequencing platforms. We report two examples of environmental metagenetic nuclear small subunit 18S (nSSU) analyses of marine and tropical rainforest habitats and provide critical appraisals of the level of putative recombinant DNA molecules (chimeras) in metagenetic data sets. Following stringent quality control measures, environmental metagenetic analyses achieve MOTU formation across the eukaryote domain of life at a fraction of the time and cost of traditional approaches. The effectiveness of Roche 454 sequencing brings substantial advantages to studies aiming to elucidate the molecular genetic richness of not only meiofaunal, but also all complex eukaryotic communities.

320 citations


Authors

Showing all 9489 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Derek R. Lovley16858295315
Peter B. Reich159790110377
Jerry M. Melillo13438368894
Katja Klein129149987817
David Finkelhor11738258094
Howard A. Stone114103364855
James O. Hill11353269636
Tadayuki Takahashi11293257501
Howard Eichenbaum10827944172
John D. Aber10720448500
Andrew W. Strong9956342475
Charles T. Driscoll9755437355
Andrew D. Richardson9428232850
Colin A. Chapman9249128217
Nicholas W. Lukacs9136734057
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202351
2022183
20211,148
20201,128
20191,140
20181,089