Publications by authors named "Ambrose W"

Amid the alarming atmospheric and oceanic warming rates taking place in the Arctic, western fjords around the Svalbard archipelago are experiencing an increased frequency of warm water intrusions in recent decades, causing ecological shifts in their ecosystems. However, hardly anything is known about their potential impacts on the until recently considered stable and colder northern fjords. We analyzed macrobenthic fauna from four locations in Rijpfjorden (a high-Arctic fjord in the north of Svalbard) along its axis, sampled intermittently in the years 2003, 2007, 2010, 2013 and 2017.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers used radiocarbon dating and stable isotope analysis on the earliest human remains from Near and Remote Oceania, finding the oldest fossil outside of mainland New Guinea dates to about 11,800 years ago.
  • * The study reveals that early populations in the region relied heavily on resources from interior tropical forests, challenging the assumption that their diets were mainly coastal, thus broadening our understanding of their cultural practices and dietary habits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigated the intracellular dynamics of calcite and sulfur in the large sulfur-oxidizing, calcite-accumulating bacterium Achromatium, with an emphasis on oxygen exposure as a physiological control. For this purpose, morphological changes and possible accretion mechanisms of calcite granules in cells that were freshly collected from natural Achromatium-containing sediment were compared to cells from the same source after prolonged exposure to atmospheric oxygen. Intracellular sulfur is oxidized and removed in response to oxygen exposure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study aimed to simulate conditions in which dispersant (Dasic NS) might be used to combat an oil spill in coastal sub-Arctic water of limited depth and water exchange in order to produce input data for Net Environmental Benefit Analysis (NEBA) of Arctic and sub-Arctic coastal areas. Concentration dependent differences in acute responses and long-term effects of a 48h acute exposure to dispersed oil, with and without the application of a chemical dispersant, were assessed on the Arctic filter feeding bivalve Chlamys islandica. Icelandic scallops were exposed for 48h to a range of spiked concentrations of mechanically and chemically dispersed oil.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The current understanding of Arctic ecosystems is deeply rooted in the classical view of a bottom-up controlled system with strong physical forcing and seasonality in primary-production regimes. Consequently, the Arctic polar night is commonly disregarded as a time of year when biological activities are reduced to a minimum due to a reduced food supply. Here, based upon a multidisciplinary ecosystem-scale study from the polar night at 79°N, we present an entirely different view.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduced over 200 yr ago to the east coast of North America, now ranges from New York to Newfoundland. In the 1980s, a secondary invasion of European lineages, termed northern haplotypes, occurred in Nova Scotia. Young-of-the-year sampled in 2007 revealed that northern haplotypes were present in low frequencies at several northwestern Atlantic sites as far south as New York; a model predicted an increase in their range and frequency over time.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: This study was performed to evaluate the potential of a collagen-based membrane, collagen vitrigel (CV), for reconstructing corneal epithelium in the stromal wound and limbal stem cell deficiency (LSCD) models.

Methods: Three groups of rabbits were used in the stromal wound model: CV affixed using fibrin glue (CV + FG group, n = 9), fibrin glue only (FG group, n = 3) and an untreated control group (n = 3). In the LSCD model, one group received CV containing human limbal epithelial cells (CV + hLEC group, n = 2) and the other was an untreated control (n = 1).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Barents Sea is among the most productive areas in the world oceans, and its shallow banks exhibit particularly high rates of primary productivity reaching over 300 g C myear. Our study focused on the Svalbard Bank, an important feeding area for fishes and whales. In order to investigate how benthic community structure and benthic secondary production vary across environmental gradients and through time, we sampled across the bank and compared results with a similar study conducted 85 years ago.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Organochlorine compounds (OC) were determined in Arctic bivalves (Mya truncata, Serripes groenlandicus, Hiatella arctica and Chlamys islandica) from Svalbard with regard to differences in geographic location, species and variations related to their size and age. Higher chlorinated polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB 101-PCB 194), chlordanes and α-hexachlorocyclohexane (α-HCH) were consistently detected in the bivalves and PCBs dominated the OC load in the organisms. OC concentrations were highest in Mya truncata and the lowest in Serripes groenlandicus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this paper, we describe a velocity interferometer system based entirely on single-mode fiber optics. This paper includes a description of principles used in developing the single-mode velocity interferometry system (SMV). The SMV design is based on polarization-insensitive components.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To evaluate the effects of intracoronal bleaching on ultimate tensile strength (UTS) of sound and etched dentine and its ultrastructure morphology.

Methodology: Bovine dentine specimens with (e) or without previous etching with 37% phosphoric acid for 15 s were used for the intracoronal bleaching experiments. Teeth were randomly assigned to five treatments (n = 10): (C) control--no bleaching, (SP) sodium perborate, (CP) 35% carbamide peroxide, (25% HP) 25% hydrogen peroxide and (35% HP) 35% hydrogen peroxide.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Identifying patterns and drivers of natural variability in populations is necessary to gauge potential effects of climatic change and the expected increases in commercial activities in the Arctic on communities and ecosystems. We analyzed growth rates and shell geochemistry of the circumpolar Greenland smooth cockle, Serripes groenlandicus, from the southern Barents Sea over almost 70 years between 1882 and 1968. The datasets were calibrated via annually-deposited growth lines, and growth, stable isotope (delta(18)O, delta(13)C), and trace elemental (Mg, Sr, Ba, Mn) patterns were linked to environmental variations on weekly to decadal scales.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To describe the synthesis of a chondroitin sulfate-polyethylene glycol (CS-PEG) adhesive and characterize its physical and biological properties in vitro and in vivo.

Setting: Johns Hopkins University and a research facility, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

Methods: Metabolic activity (WST-1 reagent) was used to evaluate the cytocompatibility of the adhesive with rabbit primary epithelial, stromal, and endothelial cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium nucleatum are often coisolated from sites of infection, such as suppurative apical periodontitis. The synergistic pathogenicity of mixed infection of P. gingivalis HG 405 with F.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The goal of this study was to evaluate three-dimensional (3-D) poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels as a culture system for studying corneal keratocytes. Bovine keratocytes were subcultured in DMEM/F-12 containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) through passage 5. Primary keratocytes (P0) and corneal fibroblasts from passages 1 (P1) and 3 (P3) were photoencapsulated at various cell concentrations in PEG hydrogels via brief exposure to light.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report on various excitation geometries used in ultrasensitive flow cytometry that yield a linear relation between the fluorescence intensity measured from individual stained DNA fragments and the lengths of the fragments (in base pairs). This linearity holds for DNA samples that exhibit a wide range of conformations. The variety of DNA conformations leads to a distribution of dipole moment orientations for the dye molecules intercalated into the DNA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is widely accepted that implant surface factors affect the quality of the bone-to-implant interface. Recent additional treatments superimposed on moderately rough cpTitanium surface provide further enhancement of bone-to-implant contact. The aim of this study was to compare osteoinductive and bone-specific gene expression in cells adherent to titanium dioxide-grit blasted (TiO2) versus TiO2 grit blasted and HF treated (TiO2/HF) cpTitanium implant surfaces.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Retainers were collected from private, university, and dental labs. After viewing these corroded and control appliances using scanning electron microscopy, corroded maxillary and mandibular retainers were selected along with a control stainless-steel retainer for in-depth chemical analysis. Using electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis, monochromated Al x-rays were rastered over areas 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The effect of filled adhesives on bonding resin composites to dentin has not been fully understood. Due to their filler content, filled adhesives may act as stress breakers. The aim of this in vitro study was to evaluate the use of flowable composites of different viscosities on bonding to enamel and dentin without the use of an intermediate bonding resin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Coaggregation between Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium nucleatum strains was previously studied using either a semi-quantitative macroscopic assay or radioactive tracer assays. A new automated microtiter plate assay is introduced, in which the plate reader (Vmax) was adapted to allow quantitative evaluation of the kinetics of coaggregation. F nucleatum PK 1594 coaggregated with P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The rate of detection and sizing of individual fluorescently labeled DNA fragments in conventional single-molecule flow cytometry (SMFC) is limited by optical saturation, photon-counting statistics, and fragment overlap to approximately 100 fragments/s. We have increased the detection rate for DNA fragment sizing in SMFC to approximately 2000 fragments/s by parallel imaging of the fluorescence from individual DNA molecules, stained with a fluorescent intercalating dye, as they passed through a planar sheet of excitation laser light, resulting in order of magnitude improvements in the measurement speed and the sample throughput compared to conventional SMFC. Fluorescence bursts were measured from a fM solution of DNA fragments ranging in size from 7 to 154 kilobase pairs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Recently, a new generation of simplified one-bottle dentin bonding systems, sensitive to variations in the degree of substrate moisture, was introduced. This in vitro project compared the dentin bond strengths and interfacial ultra-morphology formed by three one-bottle bonding systems [OptiBond SOLO (ethanol-based), Prime&Bond 2.1 (acetone-based), and Single Bond (ethanol- and water-based)].

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To evaluate the effects of a carbamide peroxide bleaching agent on interfaces formed by two one-bottle dental adhesives to etched enamel. The null hypotheses tested in this study were that vital bleaching with a commercial 10% carbamide peroxide gel would not (1) increase the concentration of oxygen in the superficial layer of enamel or (2) induce ultra-morphological changes in resin-enamel interfaces.

Materials And Methods: Five extracted human incisors were treated with 10% carbamide peroxide (Opalescence) for 4 h/day for 1 week and were compared with non-bleached teeth for oxygen, calcium, and phosphorus relative concentration using EDS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF