45 results match your criteria: "University of Alaska Fairbanks 99775[Affiliation]"

Phytoplasma diseases on potatoes are not well understood and have gone largely undetected in China. During the growing seasons of 2005 through 2010, potato disease surveys were conducted in seed and commercial fields in Yunnan Province. Samples were also harvested from three seed potato production areas in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in 2007 and 2010.

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During a disease survey conducted in 2009 in Alaska, one potato plant (Solanum tuberosum) with symptoms characteristic of aster yellows, such as apical leaves rolling inward, leaves turning yellow or purple, and presence of aerial tubers, was found in a commercial field. Total DNA was extracted from leaves, stems, and roots of the symptomatic and symptomless plants with a DNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) according to the instructions of the manufacturer. A nested PCR was carried out with the first round primer pair P1/P7 followed by second round primer pair R16F2n/R16R2 (1,3).

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Potatoes (Solanum tuberosum) are one of the most important crops in China following rice, wheat, and corn. Aster yellows phytoplasma appeared to be widespread in China; it was found to cause diseases on alfalfa, oranges, peaches, periwinkles, bamboo (1), and cactus (4). However, scant information of this pathogen on potatoes is available except for a few short reports published during the 1950s.

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Phenotype is often viewed as a product of genes and the environment in which these genes are expressed. However, numerous studies have shown that environment can cause lasting changes in phenotype that can be passed from one generation to the next, much as genes are transmitted. In clonally propagated organisms, persistence of environmental effects has been observed in a range of plant and animal species, but has rarely been the object of study.

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The purpose of this study was to assess the immediate influence of brief exposure to images taken from print media on the general self-consciousness and body self-consciousness of 67 college women. After viewing photographs of either thin female models or control photographs, the women completed the Self-consciousness Scale and the Body Self-consciousness Questionnaire. Although alpha was .

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Ground squirrels withstand up to 90% reductions in cerebral blood flow during hibernation as well as rapid reperfusion upon periodic arousals from torpor. Metabolic suppression likely plays a primary adaptive role which allows hibernating species to tolerate such phenomena. However, several other aspects of hibernation physiology are also consistent with tolerance to dramatic fluctuations in cerebral blood flow, suggesting that multiple neuroprotective adaptations may work in concert during hibernation.

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The benzene and toluene levels inside of eight homes with attached garages were measured during July 1998 in Fairbanks, Alaska. A thermal desorption tube method and charcoal tube method were used to collect and analyze samples (thermal desorption tube method %RDS = 1.9 for n = 6; charcoal tube method %RDS = 6.

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Antibiotic treatment and post-handling survival of reindeer calves in Alaska.

J Wildl Dis

October 1999

Department of Plant, Animal and Soil Sciences, School of Agriculture and Land Resources Management, University of Alaska Fairbanks 99775-7200, USA.

Free ranging reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus) are driven into corral systems and handled each summer on the Seward Peninsula (Alaska, USA). During June and July of 1995-96 reindeer calves were inspected for injury, handled, weighed, and randomly treated with long-acting oxytetracycline. Calves that returned to subsequent handlings within the same year, received treatment only if they had been treated during their first handling.

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Microdialysis is a widely used in vivo sampling technique commonly used to monitor extracellular levels of a variety of molecules including neurotransmitters and metabolites. To facilitate interpretation of microdialysis results, this study critically examines changes in synaptic morphology induced by microdialysis. Tissue surrounding microdialysis probes was examined using light and electron microscopy at three distances from the probe tract.

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Levels of organochlorine contaminants in blood of northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) pups and the blood and milk of their dams early in the lactation period are reported here. The contaminants included 15 selected individual polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners and DDT metabolites identified through high-performance liquid chromatography. Congeners CB-77, -81, -126, -169 and -189 were below the limits of detection in milk and blood samples analyzed.

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20 men were randomly assigned to a control or an experimental group. After baseline screening, all subjects performed moderate physical exercise for 2 min., then rested for 10 min.

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Seven species of fish were surveyed for muscle tissue mercury content across a broad area of western Alaska. Total mercury levels were determined by cold vapor atomic fluorescence spectroscopy in 66 fish sampled during 1997. Methylmercury in sampled fish amounted to 97 to 100% of total mercury values.

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The levels of Hsp 70, a heat shock protein, was quantitatively determined in Pacific halibut, Hippoglossus stenolepis, from the Cook Inlet region in south central Alaska. A dot blot analysis using a monoclonal antibody for Hsp 70 was combined with a standard protein analysis to determine Hsp 70 levels in 26 samples from gills. The average Hsp 70 concentration was 4.

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This study was designed to investigate the effects of acquisition of a second language on auditory even-related brain potentials and discrimination of foreign language phonemes by 36 women (ages 18 to 47 years), and 25 men (ages 18 to 36 years) and of varying linguistic background, in response to synthetic versions of Japanese phonemes. Subjects were subsequently tested on discrimination between spoken Japanese phonemes. Analysis indicated that the men and women differed in phonological processing and in the way acquisition of the second language affected phonological processing.

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Saturated fatty acids constitute a considerable energy reserve that could convey survival value under chronic cold exposure. It was investigated whether acclimation to cold was associated with a change in the ability of a small microtine rodent, the red-backed vole (Clethrionomys rutilis), to increase the use of saturated fatty acids during thermogenesis. The C-14 labeled stearic acid, a typical saturated fatty acid (FA), was used to determine the rate of utilization through oxidation.

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Heterogeneous cholinergic reactions of ringed seal coronary arteries.

Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol

April 1998

Institute of Marine Science, University of Alaska Fairbanks 99775-7220, USA.

Coronary blood flow of some seal species is unusual in that it is highly variable in both non-diving and diving conditions and shows intermittent fluctuations, especially during dives when it frequently ceases for brief periods. We sought regulatory mechanisms governing these reactions by studying isometric tension recordings of isolated left circumflex (LC) and left anterior descending (LAD) coronary arteries of ringed seals, Phoca hispida, during reactions to a variety of agents for stimulating or blocking autonomic responses of the vascular smooth muscle. Micromolar acetylcholine (ACh) produced constriction of the small diameter segments of the LAD, but relaxation of the LC and larger segments of LAD.

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Diving seals, ischemia-reperfusion and oxygen radicals.

Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol

April 1998

Institute of Marine Science, University of Alaska Fairbanks 99775-7220, USA.

The cardiovascular adaptations of seals that contribute to their ability to tolerate long periods of diving asphyxial hypoxia result in episodic regional ischemia during diving and abrupt reperfusion upon termination of the dive. These conditions might be expected to result in production of oxygen-derived free radicals and other forms of highly reactive oxygen species. Seal organs vary during dives with respect to the degree and persistence of ischemia.

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Previous laboratory studies have shown that photoperiodic adult songbirds experience seasonal variations in singing frequency that correlate with plasma androgen levels, as well as changes in the brain regions that control singing (vocal control regions). The present study investigates naturally occurring seasonal changes in the sizes of these regions in a wild migratory species (dark-eyed junco, Junco hyemalis), with samples from adolescence to post-breeding fall migration. In adult males, the volumes of the vocal control regions area X and the higher vocal center (HVC) were large during the breeding season when birds were singing and androgen levels were high, and decreased in size after the breeding season when singing had stopped and androgen levels were low.

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We evaluated the plasma concentration of the acute phase protein haptoglobin (Hp) from Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) and harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) in regions of Alaska (USA) where the populations of these pinnipeds were declining and compared the values with concentrations of Hp from the same species in areas where the populations were stable. Samples were collected from 1992 through 1994 at sites in Southeast Alaska, Prince William Sound, the Gulf of Alaska, and the Aleutian Islands. Significantly higher levels of Hp were found in the samples from the areas of decline compared to those from stable populations.

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The pathogenicity of Brucella suis biovar 4 for bison (Bison bison) was evaluated by inoculation of 2.1 x 10(7) colony forming units (CFU) in 0.1 ml saline into the conjunctival sac of six pregnant cows.

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One-hundred-and-ninety-one samples of blood serum collected from 186 polar bears (Ursus maritimus) between 1987 and 1992 were analysed for morbillivirus antibodies. The samples were collected in the Bering, Chukchi and East Siberian seas. Sixty-eight samples (35.

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Complete nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b, tRNA(prolime), and tRNA(threonine) genes were described for 166 brown bears (Ursus arctos) from 10 geographic regions of Alaska to describe natural genetic variation, construct a molecular phylogeny, and evaluate classical taxonomies. DNA sequences of brown bears were compared to homologous sequences of the polar bear (maritimus) and of the sun bear (Helarctos malayanus), which was used as an outgroup. Parsimony and neighbor-joining methods each produced essentially identical phylogenetic trees that suggest two distinct clades of mtDNA for brown bears in Alaska: one composed only of bears that now reside on some of the islands of southeastern Alaska and the other which includes bears from all other regions of Alaska.

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Relationships within the subfamily Caprinae have never been fully resolved. Phylogenies have been proposed based on morphological, behavioral, ecological, and some molecular comparisons. Because of the relatively poor fossil record of the Caprinae, paleontological evidence has not been extensively used in phylogenetic reconstruction for this group.

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The safety of two attenuated oral rabies vaccines was evaluated in mink and in five species of rodents which occur in the Arctic. A 0.03 ml sample of liquid vaccine was installed directly into the mouth of voles and lemmings and 0.

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