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Institution

University of North Carolina at Wilmington

EducationWilmington, North Carolina, United States
About: University of North Carolina at Wilmington is a education organization based out in Wilmington, North Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 3329 authors who have published 6797 publications receiving 186308 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evaluation of SMART Board technology for teaching sight word reading to students with moderate intellectual disabilties within a small group arrangment supports use of this tool to teach multiple students at one time and its effects on observational learning of non-target information.
Abstract: The effects of SMART Board technology, an interactive electronic whiteboard, and a 3s constant time delay (CTD) procedure was evaluated for teaching sight word reading to students with moderate intellectual disabilties within a small group arrangment. A multiple probe design across three word sets and replicated with three students was used to evaluate the effectiveness of SMART Board technology on: (a) reading target grocery words; (b) matching grocery item photos to target grocery words; (c) reading other students' target grocery words through observational learning; and (d) matching grocery item photos to observational grocery words. Results support use of this tool to teach multiple students at one time and its effects on observational learning of non-target information.

117 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 1997-Wetlands
TL;DR: In this paper, measurements of sediment deposition, marsh elevation, water level, total suspended solid (TSS) loads, overmarsh current speeds, and vegetative cover were used to determine which of these factors control sediment distribution patterns in a small marsh basin in southeastern North Carolina.
Abstract: Sedimentation on the surface of tidal marshes is a process that is controlled by the interactions of a complex set of variables. To adequately describe the patterns of sediment transport and deposition in any particular system requires extensive sampling of biological, physical, sedimentological, and geomorphological parameters. In this study, measurements of sediment deposition, marsh elevation, water level, total suspended solid (TSS) loads, overmarsh current speeds, and vegetative cover were used to determine which of these factors control sediment distribution patterns in a small marsh basin in southeastern North Carolina. The results of this study suggest that marsh elevation exerted significant control over deposition but that its effects were largely muted by other processes. Creek hydrology, sediment instability associated with areas of new creek development, plant/flow interactions, and tidal creek TSS concentrations also influenced sediment deposition in the study area. Flow patterns, resulting from the interaction between tidal stage and marsh topography, controlled the dispersal of particulate matter across the marsh surface and contributed to significant depositional differences among sampling sites as a function of tidal stage. The results of this study indicate that tidal creek geometry, creek channel position, and tidal stage interact synergistically to control sediment/particulate delivery on the surfaces of tidal wetlands.

117 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that elevated temperatures are more detrimental to coral larvae undergoing the developmentally complex settlement process than to the swimming planula stage, which may bode poorly for Caribbean corals with late summer reproductive seasons.
Abstract: The effect of elevated seawater temperatures, such as those plaguing tropical seas during the summers of anomalously warm years, on early life stages of reef corals remains poorly studied. To redress this situation, survivorship of larvae of the brooding coral, Favia fragum, was studied in the laboratory, using both short term (48 h) and long term (156–191 h) exposures to 28, 29, and 31°C. Ability to settle when presented with induction substrates and survival after settlement, at the same exposure temperature and after reciprocal transfers to the other experimental temperatures, were also measured. No significant effect of temperature on survivorship was detected after 48 h of exposure, but larvae incubated for 156 h at the highest temperature (31°C) exhibited a 13% reduced survivorship compared to larvae at 28°C. Induction of settlement further increased mortality at the highest temperature (31°C); survivorship after settlement at 31°C was 27% lower than when larvae were simply maintained at the elevated temperature. These results indicate that elevated temperatures are more detrimental to coral larvae undergoing the developmentally complex settlement process than to the swimming planula stage. This may bode poorly for Caribbean corals with late summer reproductive seasons.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A final, unexpected observation was that heat flux measurements at the deep blubber surface were significantly higher than that at the superficial surface, a pattern not observed in control materials, suggesting that dolphin integument may function as a phase change material.
Abstract: In Atlantic bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus, both the thickness and lipid content of blubber vary across ontogeny and across individuals of differing reproductive and nutritional status. This study investigates how these changes in blubber morphology and composition influence its thermal properties. Thermal conductivity (W m(-1) deg.(-1), where deg. is degrees C) and thermal insulation (m(2) deg. W(-1)) of dolphin blubber were measured in individuals across an ontogenetic series (fetus through adult, N=36), pregnant females (N=4) and emaciated animals (N=5). These thermal properties were determined by the simultaneous use of two common experimental approaches, the heat flux disc method and the standard material method. Thickness, lipid and water content were measured for each blubber sample. Thermal conductivity and insulation varied significantly across ontogeny. Blubber from fetuses through sub-adults was less conductive (range=0.11-0.13+/-0.02 W m(-1) deg.(-1)) than that of adults (mean=0.18 W m(-1) deg.(-1)). The conductivity of blubber from pregnant females was similar to non-adult categories, while that of emaciated animals was significantly higher (0.24 +/- 0.04 W m deg.(-1)) than all other categories. Blubber from sub-adults and pregnant females had the highest insulation values while fetuses and emaciated animals had the lowest. In nutritionally dependent life history categories, changes in blubber's thermal insulation were characterized by stable blubber quality (i.e. conductivity) and increased blubber quantity (i.e. thickness). In nutritionally independent animals, blubber quantity remained stable while blubber quality varied. A final, unexpected observation was that heat flux measurements at the deep blubber surface were significantly higher than that at the superficial surface, a pattern not observed in control materials. This apparent ability to absorb heat, coupled with blubber's fatty acid composition, suggest that dolphin integument may function as a phase change material.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Overall, data show that dolphins have different vocal and activity patterns at different sites; thus, caution should be used when extrapolating results from one study site to another.
Abstract: Echolocation and whistle production, group sizes, and activities of free-ranging bottlenose dolphins were compared across four regions (Wilmington, NC Intracoastal Waterway [ICW]; Wilmington coastline; Southport, NC coastline; and Sarasota, FL inshore waters). Number of whistles and echolo-cation bouts differed significantly across sites. Dolphins whistled significantly more in Southport than in the other sites, independent of group size. Unlike at the other sites, dolphin vocalizations in Southport did not vary significantly across activities; this difference may be due to the fact that Southport animals were often found behind shrimp-trawling vessels, which may affect their behavior. Resident Sarasota dolphins vocalized significantly less than dolphins at the NC sites. At most sites, echolocation production per dolphin decreased as group size increased, supporting the idea that echolocation information is shared. In the ICW and Sarasota, echolocation production per dolphin was highest while feeding, indicating that echolocation is used in foraging. At all sites but Southport, whistle production per dolphin was highest while socializing, indicating that whistles are used in communication. Overall, these data show that dolphins have different vocal and activity patterns at different sites; thus, caution should be used when extrapolating results from one study site to another.

115 citations


Authors

Showing all 3396 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Henry F. Schaefer111161168695
David P. White9936344403
Christopher J. Cramer9356550075
Robin D. Rogers9043243314
Xuemei Chen7628124252
Thomas C. Baker6733617050
Yang Song6664621184
Kevin E. O'Grady6431613770
Gary L. Miller6330613010
Randall S. Wells6224212142
Frank C. Schroeder582499821
C. Nathan DeWall5717716492
Kevin E. O'Shea5614210881
Joseph R. Pawlik551559290
Jerrold Meinwald5541111344
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202328
2022102
2021464
2020452
2019372
2018332