Publications by authors named "Malcolm Hunter"

In the United States, surveillance has been key to tracking spatiotemporal emergence of blacklegged ticks [Ixodes scapularis Say (Ixodida:Ixodidae)] and their pathogens such as Borrelia burgdorferi Johnson, Schmid, Hyde, Steigerwalt & Brenner (Spirochaetales: Spirochaetaceae), the agent of Lyme disease. On the Holt Research Forest in midcoastal Maine, collection of feeding ticks from live-trapped small mammal hosts allowed us to track the emergence and establishment of I. scapularis, 1989-2019.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Exploitation of natural forests forms expanding frontiers. Simultaneously, protected area frontiers aim at maintaining functional habitat networks. To assess net effects of these frontiers, we examined 16 case study areas on five continents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Drought is a major constraint to canola production around the world. There is potential for improving crop performance in dry environments by selecting for transpiration efficiency (TE). In this work we investigated TE by studying its genetic association with carbon isotope discrimination (Δ) and other traits, e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Basolateral K(+) channels hyperpolarize colonocytes to ensure Na(+) (and thus water) absorption. Small conductance basolateral (KCNQ1/KCNE3) K(+) channels have never been evaluated in human colon. We therefore evaluated KCNQ1/KCNE3 channels in distal colonic crypts obtained from normal and active ulcerative colitis (UC) patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Surrogate concepts are used in all sub-disciplines of environmental science. However, controversy remains regarding the extent to which surrogates are useful for resolving environmental problems. Here, we argue that conflicts about the utility of surrogates (and the related concepts of indicators and proxies) often reflect context-specific differences in trade-offs between measurement accuracy and practical constraints.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate change will require novel conservation strategies. One such tactic is a coarse-filter approach that focuses on conserving nature's stage (CNS) rather than the actors (individual species). However, there is a temporal mismatch between the long-term goals of conservation and the short-term nature of most ecological studies, which leaves many assumptions untested.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Geodiversity--the variability of Earth's surface materials, forms, and physical processes-is an integral part of nature and crucial for sustaining ecosystems and their services. It provides the substrates, landform mosaics, and dynamic physical processes for habitat development and maintenance. By determining the heterogeneity of the physical environment in conjunction with climate interactions, geodiversity has a crucial influence on biodiversity across a wide range of scales.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a rapidly changing climate, conservation practitioners could better use geodiversity in a broad range of conservation decisions. We explored selected avenues through which this integration might improve decision making and organized them within the adaptive management cycle of assessment, planning, implementation, and monitoring. Geodiversity is seldom referenced in predominant environmental law and policy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vernal pools are far more important for providing ecosystem services than one would predict based on their small size. However, prevailing resource-management strategies are not effectively conserving pools and other small natural features on private lands. Solutions are complicated by tensions between private property and societal rights, uncertainties over resource location and function, diverse stakeholders, and fragmented regulatory authority.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A divergence of values has become apparent in recent debates between conservationists who focus on ecosystem services that can improve human well-being and those who focus on avoiding the extinction of species. These divergent points of view fall along a continuum from anthropocentric to biocentric values, but most conservationists are relatively closer to each other than to the ends of the spectrum. We have some concerns with both positions but emphasize that conservation for both people and all other species will be most effective if conservationists focus on articulating the values they all share, being respectful of divergent values, and collaborating on common interests.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Human colon may secrete substantial amounts of water secondary to chloride (Cl(-)) and/or potassium (K(+)) secretion in a variety of diarrhoeal diseases. Ion secretion occurs via Cl(-) and K(+) channels, which are generally assumed to be co-located in the colonocyte apical membrane, although their exact cellular sites remain unclear.

Objective:  To investigate the location of apical Cl(-) (CFTR) and apical K(+) (large conductance; BK) channels within human colonic epithelium.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Diarrhoea in ulcerative colitis (UC) mainly reflects impaired colonic Na(+) and water absorption. Colonocyte membrane potential, an important determinant of electrogenic Na(+) absorption, is reduced in UC. Colonocyte potential is principally determined by basolateral IK (KCa3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Conservation of forest amphibians is dependent on finding the right balance between management for timber production and meeting species' habitat requirements. For many pond-breeding amphibians, successful dispersal of the juvenile stage is essential for long-term population persistence. We investigated the influence of timber-harvesting practices on the movements of juvenile wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The search for generalities in ecology has often been thwarted by contingency and ecological complexity that limit the development of predictive rules. We present a set of concepts that we believe succinctly expresses some of the fundamental ideas in conservation biology. (1) Successful conservation management requires explicit goals and objectives.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To predict the effects of terrestrial habitat change on amphibian populations, we need to know how amphibians respond to habitat heterogeneity, and whether habitat choice remains consistent throughout the life-history cycle. We conducted four experiments to evaluate how the spatial distribution of juvenile wood frogs, Rana sylvatica (including both overall abundance and localized density), was influenced by habitat choice and habitat structure, and how this relationship changed with spatial scale and behavioral phase. The four experiments included (1) habitat manipulation on replicated 10-ha landscapes surrounding breeding pools; (2) short-term experiments with individual frogs emigrating through a manipulated landscape of 1 m wide hexagonal patches; and habitat manipulations in (3) small (4-m2); and (4) large (100-m2) enclosures with multiple individuals to compare behavior both during and following emigration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The management of landscapes for biological conservation and ecologically sustainable natural resource use are crucial global issues. Research for over two decades has resulted in a large literature, yet there is little consensus on the applicability or even the existence of general principles or broad considerations that could guide landscape conservation. We assess six major themes in the ecology and conservation of landscapes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Relatively few studies have examined the ecological effects of group-selection timber harvesting, and nearly all have been short-term and have lacked experimental manipulations that allow pre- and posttreatment comparisons. We have been documenting the effects of a group-selection timber harvest on bird abundance in a Maine forest for 24 years (preharvest, 1983-1987; postharvest, 1988-2006). Here we characterized the trends in bird abundance over the first 20 years of the study in the managed and control halves of the 40-ha study area.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aldosterone produces rapid, non-genomic, inhibition of basolateral intermediate conductance K(+) (IK(Ca)) channels in human colonic crypt cells but the intracellular second messengers involved are unclear. We therefore evaluated the role of protein kinase C (PKC) in aldosterone's non-genomic inhibitory effect on basolateral IK(Ca) channels in crypt cells from normal human sigmoid colon. Patch clamp studies revealed that in cell-attached patches, IK(Ca) channel activity decreased progressively to 38+/-8% (P<0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels play a central role in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) by pancreatic beta-cells. Activity of these channels is determined by their open probability (Po) and the number of channels present in a cell. Glucose is known to reduce Po, but whether it also affects the channel density is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF