185 results match your criteria: "Macaulay Institute[Affiliation]"

Cabbage contains the glucosinolate sinigrin, which is hydrolyzed by myrosinase to allyl isothiocyanate. Isothiocyanates are thought to inhibit the development of cancer cells by a number of mechanisms. The effect of cooking cabbage on isothiocyanate production from glucosinolates during and after their ingestion was examined in human subjects.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The conservation and regeneration of native Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) woodlands is being actively encouraged by conservation agencies in the UK because of their high biodiversity value. In the present study, the consequences of regeneration on terrestrial fungal communities was determined in three parallel transects running from open moorland, through an intermediate zone showing seedling colonization, into a mature Scots pine forest at Abernethy Forest, Cairngorm, Scotland.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Environmental influences on fetal and neonatal development can affect neural, reproductive, immune and cardiovascular function in adult humans and animals. The effects can be exerted at many different stages of development from before conception to after birth. Effects may even be exerted during a preceding generation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Charles Darwin first used the term 'survival of the fittest' in the 5th edition of The origin of species. A literal interpretation implies that predators will selectively prey upon the weakest members of a population. We demonstrate that this is true for African wild dogs hunting impala.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Optimal diet selection, frequency dependence and prey renewal.

Theor Popul Biol

September 2003

The Macaulay Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, Scotland AB15 8QH, UK.

This paper extends existing models of frequency-dependent diet selection by considering the optimal diet selection of a predator feeding upon prey populations which can be depleted but are also capable of renewal (e.g. immigration, growth, or reproduction).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The breakdown of glucosinolates, a group of thioglucoside compounds found in cruciferous plants, is catalysed by dietary or microbial myrosinase. This hydrolysis releases a range of breakdown products among which are the isothiocyanates, which have been implicated in the cancer-protective effects of cruciferous vegetables. The respective involvement of plant myrosinase and gut bacterial myrosinase in the conversion, in vivo, of glucosinolates into isothiocyanates was investigated in sixteen Fischer 344 rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chromite ore processing residue (COPR), derived from the so-called high lime processing of chromite ore, contains high levels of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) and has a pH between 11 and 12. Ferrous sulfate, which is used for remediation of Cr(VI) contamination in wastewater and soils via reduction to Cr(III) and subsequent precipitation of iron(III)/chromium(III) hydroxide, has also been proposed for remediation of Cr(VI) in COPR. Instead, however, addition of FeSO4 to the infiltrating solution in column experiments with COPR greatly increased leaching of Cr(VI).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sole-carbon-source tests (Biolog), designed to identify bacteria, have become very popular for metabolically fingerprinting soil microbial communities, despite disadvantages associated with the use of carbon source profiles that primarily select for fast-growing bacteria. In this paper we describe the use of an alternative method that combines the advantages of the Biolog community-level physiological profile (CLPP) method, in which microtiter-based detection plates are used, with the ability to measure carbon dioxide evolution from whole soil. This method facilitates measurement over short periods of time (4 to 6 h) and does not require the extraction and culturing of organisms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

•  The contribution of insect prey to total N in the carnivorous plants, Drosera rotundifolia and D. intermedia, was quantified in situ and without any experimental manipulation using natural abundance stable isotope analysis. •  Samples of D.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Abstractions of surface and groundwater for irrigation in Scotland are currently subject to control in only two small catchments. Under the terms of the EU Water Framework Directive, it will be necessary to introduce new legislation to control abstractions elsewhere. To help in the development of appropriate policy for Scotland a study has been carried out to examine the significance of irrigation and the effectiveness of different types of control strategies in terms of the economics of potato cropping and stream hydrology in Scotland.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A range of techniques, normally associated with mineralogical studies of soils and sediments, has been used to characterise the solid materials found on sites contaminated with chromite ore processing residue (COPR). The results show that a wide range of minerals are present, many of which are found extensively in high-temperature synthetic systems such as cements and clinkers and their low temperature hydration products. Thus, the minerals in COPR can be divided into three main categories: unreacted feedstock ore (chromite); high temperature phases produced during chromium extraction (brownmillerite, periclase and larnite); and finally, minerals formed under ambient weathering conditions on the disposal sites (brucite, calcite, aragonite, ettringite, hydrocalumite, hydrogarnet).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

ORCHESTRA: an object-oriented framework for implementing chemical equilibrium models.

Environ Sci Technol

March 2003

Soil Science Group, Macaulay Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, AB15 8QH, UK.

This work presents a new object-oriented structure for chemical equilibrium calculations that is used in the modeling framework ORCHESTRA (Objects Representing CHEmical Speciation and TRAnsport). In contrast to standard chemical equilibrium algorithms, such as MINEQL, MINTEQ2A, PHREEQC, and ECOSAT, model equations are not hard-coded in the source code, but instead all equations are defined in text format and read by the ORCHESTRA calculation kernel at run time. This makes model definitions easily accessible and extendible by users.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effect of undernutrition in utero, during late gestation (from day 100), and early neonatal life on hypothalamic-pituitary function was investigated in female lambs born to ewes fed rations calculated to provide either 100% (high; H) or 70% (low; L) of the energy requirements to sustain a twin pregnancy. Following parturition in early spring, ewes and lambs were maintained on pasture with sward heights of 6 cm (H) or 4 cm (L) until week 8 of lactation and then sward heights of 5 cm (H) or 3 cm (L) until weaning at week 14. Mean lamb birth weights were 18% lower in L than H animals (P<0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The dynamics of internal cycling of nitrogen were studied in the southern hemisphere conifer miro [Prumnopitys ferruginea (G. Benn. ex D.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Four fungal 18S rDNA and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primer pairs were tested for their specificity towards target fungal DNA in soil DNA extracts, and their ability to assess the diversity of fungal communities in a natural grassland soil was compared. Amplified PCR products were cloned, and approximately 50 clones from each library were sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis and database searches indicated that each of the sequenced cloned DNA fragments was of fungal origin for each primer pair, with the exception of the sequences generated using the 18S rDNA primers nu-SSU-0817 and nu-SSU-1196, where 35 of the 50 sequenced clones represented soil invertebrates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between shoot nitrate concentration, mediated by nitrate supply to roots, and root exudation from Hordeum vulgare. Plants were grown for 14 d in C-free sand microcosms, supplied with nutrient solution containing 2 mM nitrate. After this period, three treatments were applied for a further 14 d: (A) continued supply with 2 mM nitrate (zero boost), (B) supply with 10 mM nitrate (low boost), and (C) supply with 20 mM nitrate (high boost).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The objective of this study was to determine the extent to which herbivores are able to use conditioned food aversions and preferences to learn about the nutritional and toxic properties of food plants, when food options are simultaneously available. Conditioned food aversions and preferences have been invoked as important mechanisms by which free-ranging herbivores optimize food selection by learning about the negative and positive consequences of consuming particular plant species through a series of encounters. In most previous tests of this hypothesis, access to individual test foods has been separated in time, giving animals the opportunity to associate particular foods with particular post-ingestive effects.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Matrix population models are widely applied in conservation ecology to help predict future population trends and guide conservation effort. Researchers must decide upon an appropriate level of model complexity, yet there is little theoretical work to guide such decisions. In this paper we present an analysis of a stage-structured model, and prove that the model's structure can be simplified and parameterised in such a way that the long-term growth rate, the stable-stage distribution and the generation time are all invariant to the simplification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reduced atmospheric CO2 inhibits nitrogen mobilization in Festuca rubra.

Physiol Plant

September 2002

The Macaulay Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, AB15 8QH, UK Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, Plas Gogerddan, Aberystwyth, SY23 3EB, UK.

In defoliated grasses, where photosynthesis is reduced due to removal of leaf material, it is well established that remobilization of nitrogen occurs from both older remaining leaves and roots towards the younger growing leaves. In contrast, little is known about the movement of nitrogen within intact grass plants experiencing prolonged inhibition of photosynthesis. We tested the following hypotheses in Festuca rubra L.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper reviews some of the current water quality issues relating to the surface waters of Scotland and highlights some of the key issues likely to be significant over the next decade. The sustainable management of water quality requires an appreciation of the temporal and spatial assessment of the resource, together with an identification of reference or natural conditions from which to determine change, and the elucidation of the drivers of change. Only through this integrated approach, can appropriate management strategies be developed and prioritised, bearing in mind that impacts may be decoupled from sources in both time and space.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We tested the hypothesis that the infra-gastrointestinal parasite population of herbivores affects their grazing behaviour in relation to the supra-parasite population of parasites in the environment. Our first objective was to create a naturally heterogeneous sward structure of gaps and tussocks using a continuous grazing scheme. We then demonstrate that a nutrition vs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Jarman (1974) proposed a series of relationships between habitat use, food dispersion, and social behavior and hypothesized a series of evolutionary steps leading to sexual dimorphism in body size through sexual selection in African antelope species. The hypothesis states that sexual size dimorphism evolved in a three-step process. Initially, ancestral monomorphic and monogamous ungulate species occupying closed habitats radiated into open grassland habitats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Megaherbivores influence trophic guilds structure in African ungulate communities.

Oecologia

May 2002

Institute of Cell, Animal and Population Biology, Ashworth Buildings, University of Edinburgh, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, UK.

We used a data set of ungulate censuses from 31 natural ecosystems from East and Southern Africa to test two hypotheses: (1) megaherbivores should dominate ungulate communities in ecosystems with high rainfall and low soil nutrient status because of their ability to survive on poor quality food resources, and (2) the abundance of megaherbivores affects the abundance of the mesoherbivores, distinguishing the different feeding guilds: mesograzers, mesobrowsers and mesomixed feeders. Two axes of a multivariate analysis (77% of the variance) discriminated the sites well, the first separating sites dominated by megaherbivores from those dominated by mesoherbivores, and the second representing a gradient between mesograzers and mesobrowsers. Our analysis shows (1) that megaherbivores can be considered to be a separate trophic guild and (2) that mesograzers and mesobrowsers respond differently to variation in their trophic environments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

New light on the cholodny-went theory.

Plant Physiol

July 1987

The Macaulay Institute for Soil Research, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, AB9 2QJ, Scotland.

The existence of different auxin sensitivities in epidermal and subepidermal tissues (KV Thimann, CL Schneider 1938 Plant Physiol 25: 627-641) suggests a refinement to the Cholodny-Went theory which overcomes some of the difficulties associated with it. A model is presented to account for the inverse tropic responses of shoots and roots through differences in the respective locations of the auxin-sensitive tissues.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Interfacing an analogue infrared spectrometer to a microcomputer.

Talanta

February 1987

Department of Spectrochemistry, Macaulay Institute for Soil Research, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, Scotland.

An Apple microcomputer has been interfaced to a Perkin-Elmer model 577 infrared spectrometer. The spectral data are digitized with the aid of an in-house designed 12-bit analogue-to-digital interface unit. Control and status signals are obtained from the spectrometer and an optical encoder unit is used to provide an accurate wavenumber marker for the conversion and data recording.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF