Publications by authors named "W Waldo Wakefield"

Noise produced by scientific equipment during fisheries surveys is largely unstudied, though these sound sources may have an effect on the organisms of interest and on their resultant stock assessments. This paper describes acoustic signatures of two underwater mobile vehicles and accompanying research ships used to survey demersal fishes, and discusses the acoustic contributions of the survey equipment to rockfish habitat. Increases in noise over ambient levels were high, but the majority of sound energy was generated by communication and navigation instrumentation on the ships and survey vehicles, and was out of the expected sensitivity range for fish hearing.

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Obesity has become a nationwide problem. In every state, at least 1 in 5 individuals is obese. Because of the obesity epidemic and the comorbidities associated with obesity, many people turn to bariatric surgery as a treatment option.

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Order Spizellomycetales was delineated based on a unique suite of zoospore ultrastructural characters and currently includes five genera and 14 validly published species, all of which have a propensity for soil habitats. We generated DNA sequences from small (SSU), large (LSU) and 5.8S ribosomal subunit genes to assess the monophyly of all genera and species in this order.

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Rhizophlyctis rosea (Chytridiomycota) is an apparently ubiquitous, soil-inhabiting, cellulose-degrading chytrid that is the type for Rhizophlyctis. Previous studies have revealed multiple zoospore subtypes among morphologically indistinguishable isolates in the R. rosea complex sensu Barr.

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The Rhizophydiales is the most recently circumscribed order in the Chytridiomycota. Past studies focused on soil chytrids from North America and Australia to determine the range of diversity within this clade of chytrids and established three families (Rhizophydiaceae, Terramycetaceae, and Kappamycetaceae) in the new order. Although Rhizophydiales contains seemingly simple chytrids morphologically, analyses of ribosomal gene sequences and zoospore characters have demonstrated unexpected genetic and ultrastructural diversity, highlighting the need for broader habitat and geographic sampling to reveal the actual diversity within this new order.

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