Current estimates of temperature effects on plants mostly rely on air temperature, although it can significantly deviate from leaf temperature (T). To address this, some studies have used canopy temperature (T). However, T fails to capture the fine-scale variation in T among leaves and species in diverse canopies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants face a trade-off between hydraulic safety and growth, leading to a range of water-use strategies in different species. However, little is known about such strategies in tropical trees and whether different water-use traits can acclimate to warming. We studied five water-use traits in 20 tropical tree species grown at three different altitudes in Rwanda (RwandaTREE): stomatal conductance (g), leaf minimum conductance (g), plant hydraulic conductance (K), leaf osmotic potential (ψ) and net defoliation during drought.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Health workers (HWs) in Africa face challenges accessing and learning from existing online training opportunities. To address these challenges, we developed a modular, self-paced, mobile-ready and work-relevant online course covering foundational infection prevention and control (IPC) concepts. Here, we evaluate the first pilot of this course, conducted with HWs in Nigeria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Adolescents living with HIV have elevated mental distress and suboptimal antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence.
Setting: Two urban clinics in Kigali, Rwanda.
Methods: A 2-arm individual randomized controlled trial compared Trauma-Informed Cognitive Behavioral Therapy enhanced to address HIV (TI-CBTe) with usual care (time-matched, long-standing, unstructured support groups) with 356 12- to 21-year-old (M = 16.
Warming climate increases the risk for harmful leaf temperatures in terrestrial plants, causing heat stress and loss of productivity. The heat sensitivity may be particularly high in equatorial tropical tree species adapted to a thermally stable climate. Thermal thresholds of the photosynthetic system of sun-exposed leaves were investigated in three tropical montane tree species native to Rwanda with different growth and water use strategies (Harungana montana, Syzygium guineense and Entandrophragma exselsum).
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