keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38220711/two-new-species-of-leptobrachella-smith-1925-amphibia-megophryidae-from-cao-bang-province-vietnam
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anh Mai Luong, Chung VAN Hoang, Cuong The Pham, Thomas Ziegler, Truong Quang Nguyen
Two new species, Leptobrachella phiaoacensis sp. nov. and Leptobrachella phiadenensis sp. nov., are described from Phia Oac-Phia Den National Park, Cao Bang Province, Vietnam based on genetic divergence and morphological differences. Leptobrachella phiaoacensis sp. nov. is characterized by a combination of the following characters: size medium (27.833.3 mm in five adult males and 31.541.8 mm in five adult females); head longer than wide; tympanum distinct; dorsal skin shagreened with fine tubercles; toes webbing rudimentary, with narrow lateral fringes; supratympanic fold edged by a distinct black line; the presence of a dark brown triangle in interorbital region and a W-shaped marking in scapular region; belly from pinkish white to white with dark brown specking on belly periphery; iris bicolored copper in upper part, fading to silvery grey in lower part...
November 10, 2023: Zootaxa
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38213300/a-model-based-hypothesis-framework-to-define-and-estimate-the-diel-niche-via-the-diel-niche-r-package
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian D Gerber, Kadambari Devarajan, Zach J Farris, Mason Fidino
How animals use the diel period (24-h light-dark cycle) is of fundamental importance to understand their niche. While ecological and evolutionary literature abound with discussion of diel phenotypes (e.g. diurnal, nocturnal, crepuscular, cathemeral), they lack clear and explicit quantitative definitions. As such, inference can be confounded when evaluating hypotheses of animal diel niche switching or plasticity across studies because researchers may be operating under different definitions of diel phenotypes...
January 12, 2024: Journal of Animal Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38156653/influence-of-polarized-light-disruptive-visual-patterns-and-chemical-cues-on-oviposition-in-the-aquatic-midge-chironomus-riparius-diptera-chironomidae
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wesley Walsh, Mitch Duffner, Anna Pasternak, Bekka S Brodie, Kelly S Johnson
Chironomid nonbiting midges are common in many waterbodies, occurring at high densities in sediment and also when flying adults emerge. Although important for food webs and ecosystem processes, the mass emergences of chironomid adults make some species nuisance pests. As part of an effort to develop "push-pull" strategies for managing midge populations, we investigated the importance of visual and chemical cues used by gravid females when selecting sites for oviposition. Field and laboratory oviposition choice tests with Chironomus riparius (Meigen) were used to assess the attractiveness of dark container colors and polarized light for females seeking water for egg laying...
December 29, 2023: Environmental Entomology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38136833/a-new-species-of-the-genus-gekko-squamata-sauria-gekkonidae-from-the-dabie-mountains-china
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caiwen Zhang, Afang Wu, Bo Cai, Lanrong Wang, Dapeng Pang, Haohao Ma, Lei Yu, Xiangyang Li, Hua Huang, Lin Zeng, Li Li, Jie Yan, Peng Li, Baowei Zhang
This study describes a novel species of Gekko (Squamata: Gekkonidae) based on its distinct morphological features and molecular evidence, which was identified in the Dabie Mountains on the border of Anhui and Henan provinces of Central China. Gekko kaiyai sp. nov. could be distinguished from its congeners owing to its morphological characteristics, such as being a medium body sized gecko species (snout-vent length, 56.98-64.99 mm, n = 4, females; 50.03-61.56 mm, n = 11, males); nostrils scale in contact with rostral scale; tubercles on the dorsal and limb, while the upper forelimb is smooth with no tubercles; 22-33 interorbital scales between the anterior corners of the eyes; 157-209 ventral scales between mental and cloacal slit; 90-121 midbody scale rows; 30-43 ventral scale rows; 7-9 sub-digital lamellae on first fingers, 8-13 fourth fingers, 7-9 first toes, and 7-11 fourth toes; free of webbing in the fingers and toes; 9-12 pre-cloacal pores in males, which are absent in females; post-cloacal unilateral tubercles 1 (few 2); and a dorsum that is greyish white to dark brown, with 6-7 brown markings between the nape and sacrum...
December 8, 2023: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38111889/global-research-status-analysis-of-the-association-between-aortic-aneurysm-and-inflammation-a-bibliometric-analysis-from-1999-to-2023
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Qiuguo Wang, Guihuan Chen, Zhen Qi, Yifan Zeng, Ling Tan, Hao Tang
BACKGROUND: Aortic aneurysm is a chronic arterial disease that can lead to aortic rupture, causing severe complications and life-threatening risks for patients, and it is one of the common causes of death among the elderly. Increasing evidence suggests that inflammation plays an important role in the progression of aortic aneurysm. However, there is a lack of literature-based quantitative analysis in this field. METHODS: Up to March 30, 2023, we collected 3,993 articles related to aortic aneurysm and inflammation from the Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC) database for bibliometric analysis...
2023: Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38104444/drug-transactions-and-the-dark-web-public-perceptions-of-the-locational-setting-of-offenders-and-support-for-drug-policy-outcomes
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leanna Ireland, Eric Jardine
BACKGROUND: Both legal and extra-legal factors influence judicial and non-judicial opinions about persons who use drugs. Yet, how the locational setting of drug transactions influences public perceptions of drug control policies remains understudied. In particular, the public's view of drug exchanges on the dark web could directly and indirectly influence drug policy, legal decision making, and spending decisions. The study's aim is to identify whether the location of a drug exchange, specifically the dark web, influences public preferences for drug policy and police resourcing...
December 16, 2023: International Journal on Drug Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38097394/identification-and-characterization-of-illegal-sales-of-cannabis-and-nicotine-delivery-products-on-telegram-messaging-platform
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew C Nali, Vidya Purushothaman, Zhuoran Li, Meng Zhen Larsen, Raphael E Cuomo, Joshua Yang, Tim K Mackey
INTRODUCTION: Unregulated and potentially illegal sales of tobacco, nicotine, and cannabis- products have been detected on various social media platforms, e-commerce sites, online retailers, and the dark web. New end-to-end encrypted messaging services are popular among online users and present opportunities for marketing, trading, and selling of these products. The purpose of this study was to identify and characterize tobacco, nicotine, and cannabis selling activity on the messaging platform Telegram...
December 14, 2023: Nicotine & Tobacco Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38085969/first-report-of-leaf-spots-caused-by-pestalotiopsis-nanjingensis-on-photinia-%C3%A3-fraseri-in-china
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nan Zhang, Shunying Wei, Long Zeng, Chunxi Yang, Chaoyu Cui
Photinia × fraseri Dress, belonging to the Rosaceae family, is widely cultivated as an ornamental plant in China. In July 2022, the leaf spot symptoms were observed on over thirty P. × fraseri plants in an approximately 2-hectare park in Xinjian District, Nanchang City, Jiangxi Province, China (28°43'02″ N, 115°44'01″ E), with a disease incidences of roughly 10% . At first, small, grayish-white lesions appeared on the leaf edges, later expanding into 2 to 10 mm circular or irregular spots...
November 1, 2023: Plant Disease
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38077442/dark-kinase-annotation-mining-and-visualization-using-the-protein-kinase-ontology
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Saber Soleymani, Nathan Gravel, Liang-Chin Huang, Wayland Yeung, Elika Bozorgi, Nathaniel G Bendzunas, Krzysztof J Kochut, Natarajan Kannan
The Protein Kinase Ontology (ProKinO) is an integrated knowledge graph that conceptualizes the complex relationships among protein kinase sequence, structure, function, and disease in a human and machine-readable format. In this study, we have significantly expanded ProKinO by incorporating additional data on expression patterns and drug interactions. Furthermore, we have developed a completely new browser from the ground up to render the knowledge graph visible and interactive on the web. We have enriched ProKinO with new classes and relationships that capture information on kinase ligand binding sites, expression patterns, and functional features...
2023: PeerJ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38041966/discovering-child-sexual-abuse-material-creators-behaviors-and-preferences-on-the-dark-web
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vuong M Ngo, Rahul Gajula, Christina Thorpe, Susan Mckeever
BACKGROUND: Producing, distributing or discussing child sexual abuse materials (CSAM) is often committed through the dark web to stay hidden from search engines and to evade detection by law enforcement agencies. Additionally, on the dark web, the CSAM creators employ various techniques to avoid detection and conceal their activities. The large volume of CSAM on the dark web presents a global social problem and poses a significant challenge for helplines, hotlines and law enforcement agencies...
December 1, 2023: Child Abuse & Neglect
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37998086/detecting-deceptive-dark-pattern-web-advertisements-for-blind-screen-reader-users
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Satwik Ram Kodandaram, Mohan Sunkara, Sampath Jayarathna, Vikas Ashok
Advertisements have become commonplace on modern websites. While ads are typically designed for visual consumption, it is unclear how they affect blind users who interact with the ads using a screen reader. Existing research studies on non-visual web interaction predominantly focus on general web browsing; the specific impact of extraneous ad content on blind users' experience remains largely unexplored. To fill this gap, we conducted an interview study with 18 blind participants; we found that blind users are often deceived by ads that contextually blend in with the surrounding web page content...
November 6, 2023: Journal of Imaging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37984822/flower-production-decreases-with-warmer-and-more-humid-atmospheric-conditions-in-a-western-amazonian-forest
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jason Vleminckx, J Aaron Hogan, Margaret R Metz, Liza S Comita, Simon A Queenborough, S Joseph Wright, Renato Valencia, Milton Zambrano, Nancy C Garwood
Climate models predict that everwet western Amazonian forests will face warmer and wetter atmospheric conditions, and increased cloud cover. It remains unclear how these changes will impact plant reproductive performance, such as flowering, which plays a central role in sustaining food webs and forest regeneration. Warmer and wetter nights may cause reduced flower production, via increased dark respiration rates or alteration in the reliability of flowering cue-based processes. Additionally, more persistent cloud cover should reduce the amounts of solar irradiance, which could limit flower production...
November 20, 2023: New Phytologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37981166/dissolved-organic-carbon-leaching-from-microplastics-and-bioavailability-in-coastal-ecosystems
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
L G Egea, F G Brun, R Jiménez-Ramos
The dissolved organic carbon (DOC) leached from two types of microplastics (polyethylene and polypropylene) frequently found in coastal areas were evaluated in situ. Subsequently, the bioavailability of leached DOC was assessed for microbial inocula from different coastal communities (i.e., estuarine and open-coastal waters, river-mouth waters and seagrass beds). Leached DOC was largely biodegradable (as much as 85 %). However, seagrass beds and river-mouth waters exhibited lower DOC utilization efficiency than estuarine and open-coastal waters, probably because of differences in their microbial communities...
November 17, 2023: Science of the Total Environment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37916826/microbial-biogeography-of-the-eastern-yucat%C3%A3-n-carbonate-aquifer
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Magdalena R Osburn, Matthew J Selensky, Patricia A Beddows, Andrew Jacobson, Karyn DeFranco, Gonzalo Merediz-Alonso
Constraining the spatial distribution of microorganisms and their ecological interactions is crucial for informing biogeochemistry. To that end, we explore horizontal and vertical patterns of microbial biogeography in the eastern Yucatán carbonate aquifer by examining the relative abundance of microbial taxa via 16S rRNA gene sequencing. As one of the largest anchialine groundwater systems on Earth, the density-stratified Yucatán aquifer consists of a meteoric lens overlying saline groundwater. The myriad sinkholes (cenotes) of the eastern peninsula lead into a vast network of subsurface conduits...
November 2, 2023: Applied and Environmental Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37899017/long-term-exposure-to-experimental-light-affects-the-ground-dwelling-invertebrate-community-independent-of-light-spectra
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kamiel Spoelstra, Sven Teurlincx, Matthijs Courbois, Zoë M Hopkins, Marcel E Visser, Therésa M Jones, Gareth R Hopkins
Our planet endures a progressive increase in artificial light at night (ALAN), which affects virtually all species, and thereby biodiversity. Mitigation strategies include reducing its intensity and duration, and the adjustment of light spectrum using modern light emitting diode (LED) light sources. Here, we studied ground-dwelling invertebrate (predominantly insects, arachnids, molluscs, millipedes, woodlice and worms) diversity and community composition after 3 or 4 years of continued nightly exposure (every night from sunset to sunrise) to experimental ALAN with three different spectra (white-, and green- and red-dominated light), as well as for a dark control, in natural forest-edge habitat...
December 18, 2023: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37824093/development-and-evaluation-of-the-dietary-pattern-calculator-dipac-for-personalized-assessment-and-feedback
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mahsa Jessri, Adelia Jacobs, Alena Praneet Ng, Carol Bennett, Alison Quinlan, Charlotte Nutt, Jennifer Brown, Deirdre Hennessy, Douglas G Manuel
This study aimed to develop and validate a diet assessment screener - the Dietary Pattern Calculator (DiPaC). A scoping review identified currently available short diet quality assessment tools. Twenty-one articles covering 19 unique tools were included. The current tools mainly focused on individual nutrients or food groups or were developed for a specific population, and few ascertained overall dietary patterns. The 24-hour dietary recalls from the nationally representative Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS)-Nutrition 2015 ( n  = 13,958) were used to derive and validate a personalized dietary pattern informed by the scoping review using weighted partial least squares...
October 12, 2023: Canadian Journal of Dietetic Practice and Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37805652/spectroscape-enables-real-time-query-and-visualization-of-a-spectral-archive-in-proteomics
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Long Wu, Ayman Hoque, Henry Lam
In proteomics, spectral archives organize the enormous amounts of publicly available peptide tandem mass spectra by similarity, offering opportunities for error correction and novel discoveries. Here we adapt an indexing algorithm developed by Facebook for organizing online multimedia resources to tandem mass spectra and achieve practically instantaneous retrieval and clustering of approximate nearest neighbors in a large spectral archive. An interactive web-based graphical user interface enables the user to view a query spectrum in its clustered neighborhood, which facilitates contextual validation of peptide identifications and exploration of the dark proteome...
October 7, 2023: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37720158/lipid-degradation-and-photosynthetic-traits-after-prolonged-darkness-in-four-antarctic-benthic-diatoms-including-the-newly-described-species-planothidium-wetzelii-sp-nov
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Desirée P Juchem, Katherina Schimani, Andreas Holzinger, Charlotte Permann, Nélida Abarca, Oliver Skibbe, Jonas Zimmermann, Martin Graeve, Ulf Karsten
In polar regions, the microphytobenthos has important ecological functions in shallow-water habitats, such as on top of coastal sediments. This community is dominated by benthic diatoms, which contribute significantly to primary production and biogeochemical cycling while also being an important component of polar food webs. Polar diatoms are able to cope with markedly changing light conditions and prolonged periods of darkness during the polar night in Antarctica. However, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood...
2023: Frontiers in Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37711393/dark-citations-to-federal-resources-and-their-contribution-to-the-public-health-literature
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica M Keralis, Juan Albertorio-Díaz, Travis Hoppe
The term "dark citations," which has been previously used to refer to citations of information products outside of traditional peer-reviewed journal articles, is adapted here to refer to those that are not linked to a known indexed identifier and are effectively invisible to traditional bibliometric analysis. We investigate an unexplored source of citations in the biomedical and public health literature by surveying the extent of dark citations across the U.S. government. We systematically focus on public health, quantify their occurrences across the government, and provide a comprehensive dataset for all dark citations within PubMed...
2023: Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37705279/combating-the-opioid-crisis-and-its-national-security-threat-through-credo-a-multidisciplinary-solution-with-disaster-medicine-implications
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christina Ann Woodward, Fadi Salah Issa, Duane Carl Caneva, Amalia Voskanyan, Raj Arvind Gadhia, Alexander Hart, Attila Julius Hertelendy, David Anthony DiGregorio, Robert Gregory Ciottone, Gregory Robert Ciottone
For the first time in history, the United States surpassed 100,000 overdose-related deaths in a 12-month period, driven by synthetic opioids such as fentanyl. Also for the first time, potential chemical weapons are readily available on the streets and the dark web. Opioids represent a rare trifecta, used for licit pain management, as an illicit drug of abuse, and with potential use as a weapon of terror. Community-based Response to Drug Overdose (CReDO) is an initiative to unite agencies, disciplines, government and private partners in one coordinated opioid emergencies response plan under nationwide standards, and can be integrated into the Disaster Medicine discipline due to the risk of mass casualty incidents involving fentanyl or its derivatives...
September 14, 2023: Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness
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