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"mass mortality"
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Snuff : real death and screen media
\"Brings together scholars from film and media studies for the definitive academic study of 'real death' on screen - from horror cinema, to pornography, to online 'shock videos'\"-- Provided by publisher.
Lasting Effects of Different Scaled Mass Mortality Events on Soil Microbial Communities
by
Wolff, Carter L.
,
Barton, Brandon T.
,
Jordan, Heather R.
in
Animals
,
Bacteria - classification
,
Bacteria - genetics
2025
Death is a natural process present in all ecosystems; however, mass mortality events are instances of larger than average numbers of animals dying in a relatively short period of time. These events are increasing in frequency and magnitude, and the effects of mass mortalities — especially their long-term effects — are understudied. To better understand the long-term effects of mass mortalities in terrestrial ecosystems, we conducted experimental mass mortality events to determine if key ecosystem properties remained affected after 4 years. The experiment crossed three types of input treatments (control, carrion, and nutrient additive) with scavenger access (open plots versus fenced plots). To evaluate how increasing carrion biomass affected the ecosystem, sites were randomly assigned biomass (25, 59, 182, 363, 726 kg total (20m
2
plots)). Biomasses consisted of feral swine carcasses or the equivalent amount of N, phosphorus, and K nutrients. After 4 years, we found that while soil N did not differ among treatments, soil K and Ca significantly increased with biomass. Microbial communities significantly differed at the 182 kg biomass treatments compared to others and indicated significant effects between carrion and nutrient additive treatments. These results demonstrate that large die-offs, such as mass mortality events, can have long-lasting effects on soil composition through increased soil nutrients and alter soil microbial community (i.e., reduced Bacilliaceae, etc.). These long-lasting impacts can permanently alter the soil community, which can lead to cascading bottom-up effects that can alter the entire ecosystem structure.
Journal Article
Marine Species Range Shifts Necessitate Advanced Policy Planning
by
Davies, Kimberley T.A.
,
Greene, Charles H.
,
Meyer-Gutbrod, Erin L.
in
Aquatic mammals
,
Distribution
,
Environmental modeling
2018
Rising global temperatures are causing a poleward shift in species distribution. Range shift velocities are higher in the marine environment, with observed rates of 30–130 km per decade. Both protected and exploited species will be at risk if marine species management policies are not structured to anticipate these range shifts. The 2017 mass mortality event of the North Atlantic right whale showcases the detrimental impact of unanticipated climate-mediated behavior in a species protected by geographically and seasonally fixed policies. Based on the results of a demographic capture-recapture model, right whales may face extinction in fewer than 30 years unless protective policies are expanded to cover their shifting distribution. Increased support of long-term monitoring programs paired with environmental modeling research is critical to developing more proactive conservation management strategies and preventing further ecological crises.
Journal Article
A novel birnavirus identified as the causative agent of summer atrophy of pearl oyster ( Pinctada fucata (Gould))
by
Atsumi, Takashi
,
Miwa, Satoshi
,
Matsuyama, Tomomasa
in
Agriculture
,
Animals
,
Atrophy - virology
2024
The Akoya pearl oyster ( Pinctada fucata (Gould)) is the most important species for pearl cultivation in Japan. Mass mortality of 0-year-old juvenile oysters and anomalies in adults, known as summer atrophy, have been observed in major pearl farming areas during the season when seawater temperatures exceed about 20 °C since 2019. In this study, we identified a novel birnavirus as the pathogen of summer atrophy and named it Pinctada birnavirus (PiBV). PiBV was first presumed to be the causative agent when it was detected specifically and frequently in the infected oysters in a comparative metatranscriptomics of experimentally infected and healthy pearl oysters. Subsequently, the symptoms of summer atrophy were reproduced by infection tests using purified PiBV. Infection of juvenile oysters with PiBV resulted in an increase in the PiBV genome followed by the atrophy of soft body and subsequent mortality. Immunostaining with a mouse antiserum against a recombinant PiBV protein showed that the virus antigen was localized mainly in the epithelial cells on the outer surface of the mantle. Although the phylogenetic analysis using maximum likelihood method placed PiBV at the root of the genus Entomobirnavirus, the identity of the bi-segmented, genomic RNA to that of known birnaviruses at the full-length amino acid level was low, suggesting that PiBV forms a new genus. The discovery of PiBV will be the basis for research to control this emerging disease.
Journal Article
Azithromycin to Reduce Childhood Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa
by
O’Brien, Kieran S
,
Ray, Kathryn J
,
Kalua, Khumbo
in
Administration, Oral
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - therapeutic use
,
Antibiotic resistance
2018
Childhood mortality remains high in sub-Saharan Africa. In this cluster-randomized, placebo-controlled trial, mortality among children younger than 5 years of age was lower among those who received azithromycin than among those who received placebo.
Journal Article
The Genome Sequence of the Octocoral Paramuricea clavata – A Key Resource To Study the Impact of Climate Change in the Mediterranean
2020
The octocoral, Paramuricea clavata, is a habitat-forming anthozoan with a key ecological role in rocky benthic and biodiversity-rich communities in the Mediterranean and Eastern Atlantic. Shallow populations of P. clavata in the North-Western Mediterranean are severely affected by warming-induced mass mortality events (MMEs). These MMEs have differentially impacted individuals and populations of P. clavata (i.e., varied levels of tissue necrosis and mortality rates) over thousands of kilometers of coastal areas. The eco-evolutionary processes, including genetic factors, contributing to these differential responses remain to be characterized. Here, we sequenced a P. clavata individual with short and long read technologies, producing 169.98 Gb of Illumina paired-end and 3.55 Gb of Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) reads. We obtained a de novo genome assembly accounting for 607 Mb in 64,145 scaffolds. The contig and scaffold N50s are 19.15 Kb and 23.92 Kb, respectively. Despite of the low contiguity of the assembly, its gene completeness is relatively high, including 75.8% complete and 9.4% fragmented genes out of the 978 metazoan genes contained in the metazoa_odb9 database. A total of 62,652 protein-coding genes have been annotated. This assembly is one of the few octocoral genomes currently available. This is undoubtedly a valuable resource for characterizing the genetic bases of the differential responses to thermal stress and for the identification of thermo-resistant individuals and populations. Overall, having the genome of P. clavata will facilitate studies of various aspects of its evolutionary ecology and elaboration of effective conservation plans such as active restoration to overcome the threats of global change.
Journal Article
Association between body mass index and cardiovascular disease mortality in east Asians and south Asians: pooled analysis of prospective data from the Asia Cohort Consortium
by
Koh, Woon-Puay
,
Yang, Gong
,
Park, Sue K
in
Asia - epidemiology
,
Asia, Eastern - epidemiology
,
Asian People - statistics & numerical data
2013
Objective To evaluate the association between body mass index and mortality from overall cardiovascular disease and specific subtypes of cardiovascular disease in east and south Asians.Design Pooled analyses of 20 prospective cohorts in Asia, including data from 835 082 east Asians and 289 815 south Asians. Cohorts were identified through a systematic search of the literature in early 2008, followed by a survey that was sent to each cohort to assess data availability.Setting General populations in east Asia (China, Taiwan, Singapore, Japan, and Korea) and south Asia (India and Bangladesh).Participants 1 124 897 men and women (mean age 53.4 years at baseline).Main outcome measures Risk of death from overall cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, stroke, and (in east Asians only) stroke subtypes.Results 49 184 cardiovascular deaths (40 791 in east Asians and 8393 in south Asians) were identified during a mean follow-up of 9.7 years. East Asians with a body mass index of 25 or above had a raised risk of death from overall cardiovascular disease, compared with the reference range of body mass index (values 22.5-24.9; hazard ratio 1.09 (95% confidence interval 1.03 to 1.15), 1.27 (1.20 to 1.35), 1.59 (1.43 to 1.76), 1.74 (1.47 to 2.06), and 1.97 (1.44 to 2.71) for body mass index ranges 25.0-27.4, 27.5-29.9, 30.0-32.4, 32.5-34.9, and 35.0-50.0, respectively). This association was similar for risk of death from coronary heart disease and ischaemic stroke; for haemorrhagic stroke, the risk of death was higher at body mass index values of 27.5 and above. Elevated risk of death from cardiovascular disease was also observed at lower categories of body mass index (hazard ratio 1.19 (95% confidence interval 1.02 to 1.39) and 2.16 (1.37 to 3.40) for body mass index ranges 15.0-17.4 and <15.0, respectively), compared with the reference range. In south Asians, the association between body mass index and mortality from cardiovascular disease was less pronounced than that in east Asians. South Asians had an increased risk of death observed for coronary heart disease only in individuals with a body mass index greater than 35 (hazard ratio 1.90, 95% confidence interval 1.15 to 3.12).Conclusions Body mass index shows a U shaped association with death from overall cardiovascular disease among east Asians: increased risk of death from cardiovascular disease is observed at lower and higher ranges of body mass index. A high body mass index is a risk factor for mortality from overall cardiovascular disease and for specific diseases, including coronary heart disease, ischaemic stroke, and haemorrhagic stroke in east Asians. Higher body mass index is a weak risk factor for mortality from cardiovascular disease in south Asians.
Journal Article
Editorial: Scientific approaches for the conservation and sustainable use of precious coral resources
2023
Contributing researchers Kise et al. conducted a population genetic analysis using genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of Japanese red coral C. japonicum (Kishinouye, 1903) in Japanese waters and showed that gene flow was widely maintained in the geographic range. [...]an expansion of oxygen minimum zones due to oxygen decrease is expected to affect the biodiversity and distribution of organisms in slope ecosystems (Bindoff et al., 2019). Giordano et al. studied in detail the skeletogenesis in the early stages of C. rubrum and found that the first sclerites appear at least 12 days after larval settlement, which is associated with a high CaCO3 production rate, and that sclerites are formed in 3–4 days. Since ocean acidification affects the early life stages of species (Kurihara, 2008; Cohen et al., 2009), this study is a significant contribution to understanding the potential effects of future pH changes. [...]Yoshimura et al. conducted high-precision Sr isotope measurements on the skeletons of several precious corals at depths of 30–1500 m in the Pacific Ocean and found that the stable isotope ratio of Sr (δ88Sr) remained almost constant regardless of the locality and depth of the coral and was not affected by changes in the partition coefficient (Kd), i.e., the skeletal and seawater Sr/Ca ratios.
Journal Article
Screening men for abdominal aortic aneurysm: 10 year mortality and cost effectiveness results from the randomised Multicentre Aneurysm Screening Study
2009
Objectives To assess whether the mortality benefit from screening men aged 65-74 for abdominal aortic aneurysm decreases over time, and to estimate the long term cost effectiveness of screening.Design Randomised trial with 10 years of follow-up.Setting Four centres in the UK. Screening and surveillance was delivered mainly in primary care settings, with follow-up and surgery offered in hospitals.Participants Population based sample of 67 770 men aged 65-74.Interventions Participants were individually allocated to invitation to ultrasound screening (invited group) or to a control group not offered screening. Patients with an abdominal aortic aneurysm detected at screening underwent surveillance and were offered surgery if they met predefined criteria.Main outcome measures Mortality and costs related to abdominal aortic aneurysm, and cost per life year gained.Results Over 10 years 155 deaths related to abdominal aortic aneurysm (absolute risk 0.46%) occurred in the invited group and 296 (0.87%) in the control group (relative risk reduction 48%, 95% confidence interval 37% to 57%). The degree of benefit seen in earlier years of follow-up was maintained in later years. Based on the 10 year trial data, the incremental cost per man invited to screening was £100 (95% confidence interval £82 to £118), leading to an incremental cost effectiveness ratio of £7600 (£5100 to £13 000) per life year gained. However, the incidence of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms in those originally screened as normal increased noticeably after eight years.Conclusions The mortality benefit of screening men aged 65-74 for abdominal aortic aneurysm is maintained up to 10 years and cost effectiveness becomes more favourable over time. To maximise the benefit from a screening programme, emphasis should be placed on achieving a high initial rate of attendance and good adherence to clinical follow-up, preventing delays in undertaking surgery, and maintaining a low operative mortality after elective surgery. On the basis of current evidence, rescreening of those originally screened as normal is not justified.Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN37381646.
Journal Article
Fouling Community on Pinna nobilis Larval Collectors in the Adriatic—Impact of Invasive Species
by
Petricioli, Lucija
,
Kujundžić, Dajana
,
Naranđa, Martina
in
Anadara transversa
,
Bivalvia
,
Collectors
2023
In the last few years, the endemic Mediterranean bivalve Pinna nobilis has been exposed to dramatic mortality in its entire area, which could lead to the extinction of the species. Throughout the Mediterranean, a lot of effort is being put into finding ways of preserving it. One of the methods used to monitor recruitment and juveniles’ survival is the installation of collectors for bivalve larvae. We installed collectors at two locations: in Brijuni National Park (North Adriatic) and Luka Cove (central Adriatic). Our aim was to compare the fouling community on the collectors in two consecutive years (2019 and 2020), especially because the installation of collectors in 2020 coincided with mass mortality events of P. nobilis in the area. The number and size of juvenile P. nobilis and the qualitative and quantitative composition of the fouling communities were determined. The results show a reduction in the number and size of juvenile P. nobilis and an explosion of the invasive bivalve Anadara transversa population on collectors in the second year. In Luka Cove, another invasive species—the ascidian Styela plicata—also seriously affected other organisms on the collectors to the point of preventing analysis of the fouling community.
Journal Article