In this article, we partially quantify the biological potential of an exoplanet. We employ a variety of biogeographical analyses, placing biological evolution in the context of the geological evolution of the planet as a whole. Terrestrial (as in Earthly) biodiversity is tightly constrained in terms of species richness by its environment. An organism's habitable environment may be considered its niche space or hypervolume in terms of the physical characteristics in which that organism can survive and reproduce. This fundamental niche forms the broader space in which the organism realizes its true niche in terms of its interactions with other species. Many of the physical characteristics can be determined from astrophysical constraints and are thus amenable for dissection. However, the geographical space that organisms occupy is driven by the geological evolution of a sizable telluric planet. In turn, this is driven by the progressive differentiation of its interior to produce increasingly felsic crust. Using a variety of available models, we can then constrain the available space that species can inhabit using species-area relationships. By considering a combination of astrophysical constraints and geographical space, we partially quantify the numbers of species that can inhabit the landscape that geology provides. Finally, we also identify a correlation between geomorphological scale and speciation, which, if validated, will allow further dissection of species diversity on alien worlds.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2020.2304 | DOI Listing |
This study aimed to determine the prevalence of gastrointestinal parasites in alpacas on selected farms in Poland. In July and August 2019 and August 2021, 223 samples from six commercial farms were examined using coproscopic techniques. The total percentage of alpacas infected with intestinal parasites was 57.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Cardiol
January 2025
Department of Cardiology, Hospital del Mar.
Purpose Of Review: To describe the challenges that health professionals often face when attempting to provide optimal primary and secondary prevention care of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) to South Asian immigrant patients who face adverse socioeconomic factors, such as many of the South Asian men and women who live in Catalonia, and to present a number of constructive approaches that can help minimize those barriers.
Recent Findings: The challenges include limited health literacy, frequent language barriers, cultural factors that limit the relevance of standard lifestyle advice, financial barriers, limited access to preventive care, racism, and other barriers. Approaches that can help minimize them and enhance the quality of secondary cardiovascular preventive care in this group include empathy, using support from cultural mediators, enhanced proficiency using readily available translation programs, approaches that minimize financial barriers and simplify treatment regimes, and provision of more culturally competent lifestyle advice, among others.
Glob Chang Biol
December 2024
Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, AgroParisTech, Ecologie Systématique et Evolution, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
While biological invasions continue to threaten biodiversity, most of current assessments focus on the sole exposure to invasive alien species (IAS), without considering native species' response to the threat. Here, we address this gap by assessing vertebrates' vulnerability to biological invasions, combining measures of both (i) exposure to 304 identified IAS and (ii) realized sensitivity of 1600 native vertebrates to this threat. We used the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species to identify species threatened by IAS, their distribution, and the species' range characteristics of their associated IAS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEntropy (Basel)
November 2024
Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Fundamental Interactions, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
How do transformers model physics? Do transformers model systems with interpretable analytical solutions or do they create an "alien physics" that is difficult for humans to decipher? We have taken a step towards demystifying this larger puzzle by investigating the simple harmonic oscillator (SHO), x¨+2γx˙+ω02x=0, one of the most fundamental systems in physics. Our goal was to identify the methods transformers use to model the SHO, and to do so we hypothesized and evaluated possible methods by analyzing the encoding of these methods' intermediates. We developed four criteria for the use of a method within the simple test bed of linear regression, where our method was y=wx and our intermediate was : (1) Can the intermediate be predicted from hidden states? (2) Is the intermediate's encoding quality correlated with the model performance? (3) Can the majority of variance in hidden states be explained by the intermediate? (4) Can we intervene on hidden states to produce predictable outcomes? Armed with these two correlational (1,2), weak causal (3), and strong causal (4) criteria, we determined that transformers use known numerical methods to model the trajectories of the simple harmonic oscillator, specifically, the matrix exponential method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolicy Polit Nurs Pract
November 2024
School of Allied Health Professions and Midwifery, Faculty of Health Studies, University of Bradford, Bradford, UK.
Background: Healthcare worker migration, influenced by push and pull factors, is accentuated by active recruitment strategies of developed nations. This scoping review explores experiences of internationally educated nurses, midwives, and healthcare professionals in the UK since 2010, acknowledging the historical context of UK recruitment policy and the implementation of codes of practice by the World Health Organisation and the UK government.
Methods: Using the Population, Concept, and Context framework, systematic literature searches were conducted in various databases, including CINAHL, Science Direct, Scopus, PubMed/Medline, and Google Scholar.
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