Publications by authors named "B Christoffersen"

'Water potential' is the biophysically relevant measure of water status in vegetation relating to stomatal, canopy and hydraulic conductance, as well as mortality thresholds; yet, this cannot be directly related to measured and modelled fluxes of water at plot- to landscape-scale without understanding its relationship with 'water content'. The capacity for detecting vegetation water content via microwave remote sensing further increases the need to understand the link between water content and ecosystem function. In this review, we explore how the fundamental measures of water status, water potential and water content are linked at ecosystem-scale drawing on the existing theory of pressure-volume (PV) relationships.

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Evaluation of weight loss drugs is usually performed in diet-induced obese mice housed at ∼22°C. This is a cold stress that increases energy expenditure by ∼35% compared to thermoneutrality (∼30°C), which may overestimate drug-induced weight loss. We investigated five anti-obesity mechanisms that have been in clinical development, comparing weight loss in mice housed at 22°C vs.

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Future climate presents conflicting implications for forest biomass. We evaluate how plant hydraulic traits, elevated CO levels, warming, and changes in precipitation affect forest primary productivity, evapotranspiration, and the risk of hydraulic failure. We used a dynamic vegetation model with plant hydrodynamics (FATES-HYDRO) to simulate the stand-level responses to future climate changes in a wet tropical forest in Barro Colorado Island, Panama.

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Article Synopsis
  • Conflicting literature exists regarding whether non-dense adipose tissue in the breast acts as a risk or protective factor for breast cancer, with various biological hypotheses presented.
  • Limitations in study design and statistical methods may explain these inconsistent results, prompting a need for improved analysis techniques.
  • In a large Swedish cohort study, the authors found little evidence linking non-dense tissue to breast cancer risk, suggesting that previous studies may have struggled to isolate the effects of non-dense tissue or relied on potentially flawed modeling assumptions.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to analyze the gut microbiota of Göttingen Minipigs with metabolic syndrome and compare the effects of high-fat diets (HFD) on ovariectomized females and castrated males.
  • The results showed that pigs on an HFD gained more weight, had higher plasma insulin and dyslipidemia, while their gut microbiota composition significantly changed compared to those on a standard chow diet.
  • The findings indicate that high-fat diets led to reduced beneficial gut metabolites and altered gene expression in the liver and adipose tissue, mirroring conditions found in human obesity and insulin resistance.
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