Publications by authors named "Sarah Boyer"

Article Synopsis
  • Cryptic species are difficult to identify using traditional morphological methods, but DNA analysis and machine learning can help detect them.
  • The study focuses on a specific group of low-dispersal arachnids from New Zealand, revealing that previous analyses overestimated the number of species in this complex.
  • Using machine learning and a large dataset, the researchers found more realistic geographic ranges for cryptic species, demonstrating the effectiveness of these methods in species delimitation.
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  • Dental caries, a prevalent disease caused by oral biofilms, persists despite fluoride use, but iron oxide nanoparticles (ferumoxytol) can degrade these biofilms with hydrogen peroxide.
  • When combined with stannous fluoride, ferumoxytol significantly enhances the inhibition of biofilm growth and enamel damage compared to using either treatment alone.
  • This combination is effective in controlling dental caries in live subjects at much lower concentrations and shows no negative effects on surrounding tissues or the oral microbiome, highlighting its potential as a safe and efficient treatment for oral health.
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Article Synopsis
  • Dental caries, a common disease caused by oral biofilms, affects nearly half of the global population despite the use of fluoride, although a new FDA-approved iron oxide nanozyme (ferumoxytol) shows promise in disrupting these biofilms.
  • Combining ferumoxytol with stannous fluoride significantly enhances their effectiveness in preventing both biofilm accumulation and enamel damage, outperforming either treatment alone.
  • The synergy between these two agents not only stabilizes the stannous fluoride but also improves its catalytic activity, demonstrating a novel method to combat dental caries without adverse effects on oral health or microbiome diversity.
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Article Synopsis
  • The review examines how New Zealand's flora and fauna have been influenced by the Ōtira Glaciation during the Pleistocene, which coincides with the Last Glacial Maximum.
  • The authors highlight the complexity of species' biogeographic histories, showing how past glaciation and mountain-building shaped their distribution.
  • They also discuss glacial refugia locations, shared habitats among species, and how glaciation contributed to species diversification, while suggesting future research directions using genomic tools.
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Nuptial gifts are material donations given from male to female before or during copulation and are subject to sexual selection in a wide variety of taxa. The harvestman genus has emerged as a model system for understanding the evolution of reproductive morphology and behavior, as transitions between solicitous and antagonistic modes of courtship have occurred multiple times within the lineage and are correlated with convergence in genital morphology. We analyzed the free amino acid content of nuptial gift secretions from five species of using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.

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Austropurcellia, a genus of dispersal-limited arachnids endemic to isolated patches of coastal rainforest in Queensland, Australia, has a remarkable biogeographic history. The genus is a member of the family Pettalidae, which has a classical temperate Gondwanan distribution; previous work has suggested that Austropurcellia is an ancient lineage, with an origin that predates Gondwanan rifting. Subsequently, this lineage has persisted through major climatic fluctuations, such as major aridification during the Miocene and contraction and fragmentation of forest habitats during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).

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The study of mating choices often focuses on correlates of traits to the overall outcome of a mating interaction. However, mating interactions can proceed through a series of stages, with opportunities for assessment at each stage. We compared whether male or female size predicted mating interaction outcome across several stages of mating in five species of North American leiobunine harvestmen (commonly known as daddy longlegs).

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The scorpion family Bothriuridae occupies a subset of landmasses formerly constituting East and West temperate Gondwana, but its relationship to other scorpion families is in question. Whereas morphological data have strongly supported a sister group relationship of Bothriuridae and the superfamily Scorpionoidea, a recent phylogenomic analysis recovered a basal placement of bothriurids within Iurida, albeit sampling only a single exemplar. Here we reexamined the phylogenetic placement of the family Bothriuridae, sampling six bothriurid exemplars representing both East and West Gondwana, using transcriptomic data.

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Harvestmen (Opiliones) are a diverse order of arachnids composed of more than 6,600 described species which together span an almost global distribution. Although these animals may occur in extremely high abundance in both pristine and disturbed habitats, much of harvestman diversity remains undescribed, undocumented, and/or in need of taxonomic attention. In the current study, we focus on the harvestman diversity of the state of Minnesota, USA, where a lack of local expertise and effort has left the species richness of the state largely undocumented.

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In our recent publication (Sharma et al., 2017), we tested the hypothesis that eggs attached to the legs of male Podoctidae (Opiliones, Laniatores) constituted a case of paternal care, using molecular sequence data in tandem with multiple sequence alignments to test the prediction that sequences of the eggs and the adults that carried them would indicate conspecific identity. We discovered that the sequences of the eggs belonged to spiders, and thus rejected the paternal care hypothesis for these species.

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The taxonomy and systematics of the armored harvestmen (suborder Laniatores) are based on various sets of morphological characters pertaining to shape, armature, pedipalpal setation, and the number of articles of the walking leg tarsi. Few studies have tested the validity of these historical character systems in a comprehensive way, with reference to an independent data class, i.e.

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The genus Austropurcellia is a lineage of tiny leaf-litter arachnids that inhabit tropical rainforests throughout the eastern coast of Queensland, Australia. The majority of their diversity is found within the Wet Tropics rainforests of northeast Queensland, an area known for its exceptionally high levels of biodiversity and endemism. Studying the biogeographic history of limited-dispersal invertebrates in the Wet Tropics can provide insight into the role of climatic changes such as rainforest contraction in shaping rainforest biodiversity patterns.

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Austropurcellia Juberthie 1988 is a genus of mite harvestmen previously known from numerous localities in the Wet Tropics of northern Queensland and from one locality in central Queensland, Australia. As a result of the current study, the genus is now also known from localities in far southeast Queensland. We describe three new species of Austropurcellia from museum lots: A.

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The two current major staging systems in use for Lewy body disorders fail to classify up to 50% of subjects. Both systems do not allow for large numbers of subjects who have Lewy-type alpha-synucleinopathy (LTS) confined to the olfactory bulb or who pass through a limbic-predominant pathway that at least initially bypasses the brainstem. The results of the current study, based on examination of a standard set of ten brain regions from 417 subjects stained immunohistochemically for alpha-synuclein, suggest a new staging system that, in this study, allows for the classification of all subjects with Lewy body disorders.

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Aoraki denticulata (Arachnida, Opiliones, Cyphophthalmi, Pettalidae), a widespread 'mite harvestman' endemic to the South Island of New Zealand, is found in leaf littler habitats throughout Nelson and Marlborough, and as far south as Arthur's Pass. We investigated the phylogeography and demographic history of A. denticulata in the first genetic population-level study within Opiliones.

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The phylogeny of the temperate Gondwanan harvestman family Pettalidae is investigated by means of a new morphological matrix of 45 characters, and DNA sequence data from five markers, including two nuclear ribosomal genes (18S rRNA and 28S rRNA), one nuclear protein coding gene (histone H3), and two mitochondrial genes-one protein coding (cytochrome c oxidase subunit I) and one ribosomal (16S rRNA). Phylogenetic analyses using an array of homology schemes (dynamic and static), criteria (parsimony and maximum likelihood), and sampling strategies (optimal trees versus Bayesian phylogenetics) all agree on the monophyly of Pettalidae as well as several of its subclades, each of which is restricted to a modern landmass. While most genera as traditionally defined are monophyletic, Rakaia and Neopurcellia, distributed across Queensland (Australia) and New Zealand, are not.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study analyzes phylogenetic data to explore the relationships among sironids in the Balkan region, revealing a distinct clade called Cyphophthalmus that has been overlooked for over a century.
  • The research identifies several monophyletic groups within this clade, specifically the duricorius, serbicus, and minutus groups, indicating their diversification in similar habitats.
  • Findings suggest a potential eastern origin for these groups, with both mitochondrial and nuclear genes playing significant roles in clarifying these evolutionary relationships.
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