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Institution

University of Portsmouth

EducationPortsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom
About: University of Portsmouth is a education organization based out in Portsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 5452 authors who have published 14256 publications receiving 424346 citations. The organization is also known as: Portsmouth and Gosport School of Science and Art & Portsmouth and Gosport School of Science and the Arts.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2008-Lithos
TL;DR: A variety of high Ba-Sr granites and syenites is intruded into the Caledonian terrane of the Northern Highlands of Scotland as discussed by the authors, where the parent magmas were derived from a parent parent MAGMA Array (CPMA) that extended from isotopically depleted to significantly enriched compositions.

167 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested here that the correlation between clade species richness and floral specialization is real, but that cladespecies richness is frequently the cause, not the result of floral specialization, and that reproductive character-displacement hypothesis seems likely to be more important for plant groups with less precise pollination systems.
Abstract: It has been proposed frequently, from Darwin’s time onwards, that specialized pollination increases speciation rates and thus the diversity of plant species (i.e. clade species richness). We suggest here that the correlation between clade species richness and floral specialization is real, but that clade species richness is frequently the cause, not the result of floral specialization. We urge a broader, variance-partitioning perspective for assessing the causes of this correlation by suggesting four models of how the diversity-specialization correlation might come about: (1) floral specialization promotes initial reproductive isolation (“Initial-RI” model), (2) floral specialization promotes reinforcement of reproductive isolation upon secondary contact (“Reinforcement” model), (3) floral specialization reduces the extinction rate by promoting tighter species packing (“Extinction” model), (4) floral specialization is the result of high clade species richness, which increases the number of related species in communities, and thus selects for floral character displacement (“Character-Displacement” model). These hypotheses are evaluated by comparing the relationships between species richness, speciation mechanisms, and pollination precision, accuracy, and specialization in the broader literature and, more specifically, in four study systems: Dalechampia (Euphorbiaceae), Collinsia (Plantaginaceae), Burmeistera (Campanulaceae), and Stylidium (Stylidiaceae). These systems provide stronger support for the character-displacement hypothesis, wherein local species diversity drives the evolution of specialized pollination. Although the two reproductive-isolation hypotheses may hold for plants like orchids, with extremely precise pollination systems, the reproductive character-displacement hypothesis seems likely to be more important for plant groups with less precise pollination systems.

167 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the evolution of the galaxy LF over the redshift range 0.002 < z < 0.5 both by using a parametric fit and by measuring binned LFs in redshift slices.
Abstract: Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) is a project to study galaxy formation and evolution, combining imaging data from ultraviolet to radio with spectroscopic data from the AAOmega spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope. Using data from Phase 1 of GAMA, taken over three observing seasons, and correcting for various minor sources of incompleteness, we calculate galaxy luminosity functions (LFs) and their evolution in the ugriz passbands. At low redshift, z < 0.1, we find that blue galaxies, defined according to a magnitude-dependent but non-evolving colour cut, are reasonably well fitted over a range of more than 10 magnitudes by simple Schechter functions in all bands. Red galaxies, and the combined blue plus red sample, require double power-law Schechter functions to fit a dip in their LF faintwards of the characteristic magnitude M* before a steepening faint end. This upturn is at least partly due to dust-reddened disc galaxies. We measure the evolution of the galaxy LF over the redshift range 0.002 < z < 0.5 both by using a parametric fit and by measuring binned LFs in redshift slices. The characteristic luminosity L* is found to increase with redshift in all bands, with red galaxies showing stronger luminosity evolution than blue galaxies. The comoving number density of blue galaxies increases with redshift, while that of red galaxies decreases, consistent with prevailing movement from blue cloud to red sequence. As well as being more numerous at higher redshift, blue galaxies also dominate the overall luminosity density beyond redshifts z≃ 0.2. At lower redshifts, the luminosity density is dominated by red galaxies in the riz bands, and by blue galaxies in u and g.

166 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In patients with CF, an increase in neutrophilic airway inflammation is found that is positively influenced by rhDNase treatment, and this is the first study to investigate the long-term effect of rh DNase on inflammation in patients with mild lung disease.
Abstract: Recombinant human deoxyribonuclease (rhDNase) has been shown to improve lung function and reduce the number of pulmonary exacerbations in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), but its long-term effect on airway inflammation remains unknown. In this study, we used bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) to investigate the long-term effect of rhDNase on inflammation in patients with CF having mild lung disease. A total of 105 patients with CF (> or =5 years of age) having normal lung function were randomized to receive rhDNase (2.5 mg/day) or no rhDNase. Patients with a normal percentage of neutrophils in BAL fluid at baseline were not randomized and served as the control group. The percentage of neutrophils in the pooled BAL sample was similar in both randomized groups at baseline. A significant increase in neutrophils was observed over the 3-year study period in both untreated patients and control subjects, whereas neutrophils remained unchanged in patients treated with rhDNase. Elastase activities and interleukin-8 concentrations also increased in untreated patients and remained stable in patients on rhDNase. We conclude that in patients with CF, an increase in neutrophilic airway inflammation is found that is positively influenced by rhDNase treatment.

166 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The bulk of recent tourism-environment and sustainable tourism development literature can suggest the application of strong sustainability criteria as discussed by the authors, which is shown to be problematic since even such developmental practices may generate various classes of spillover effects that can frustrate genuine attainment of strong sustainable in tourism concentration, dispersal, or small-scale operation.

166 citations


Authors

Showing all 5624 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert C. Nichol187851162994
Gavin Davies1592036149835
Daniel Thomas13484684224
Will J. Percival12947387752
Claudia Maraston10336259178
I. W. Harry9831265338
Timothy Clark95113753665
Kevin Schawinski9537630207
Ashley J. Ross9024846395
Josep Call9045134196
David A. Wake8921446124
L. K. Nuttall8925354834
Stephen Neidle8945732417
Andrew Lundgren8824957347
Rita Tojeiro8722943140
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202363
2022282
2021961
2020976
2019905
2018850