154 results match your criteria: "University of California Davis Davis[Affiliation]"

Background matching, an important form of camouflage, can be challenging for animals that range across heterogeneously colored habitats. To remain cryptic in such habitats, animals may employ color change, background choice, or generalist coloration, and the efficacy of these strategies may be influenced by an animal's mobility. We examined camouflage strategies in the praying mantis .

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  • * Organic aerosols were found to be the most significant contributor to PM mass, accounting for over 40% annually, with biomass smoke influencing particulate organic matter and elemental carbon levels.
  • * Seasonal variations in aerosol species were notable, particularly for particulate organic matter, fine dust, and ammonium nitrate, pointing to the need for further evaluation of how urban and rural emissions affect aerosol concentrations and atmospheric conditions.
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  • The study focuses on a malaria vector prevalent in West Africa and specifically in São Tomé and Príncipe, aiming to assess its population genetics for potential field trials of genetically engineered organisms.
  • The engineered organisms feature genes that produce anti-Plasmodium peptides and utilize a Cas9-based gene drive, with research examining gene flow and dispersal rates among different subpopulations on the islands.
  • Analysis suggests a dispersal range of about 3-7 km, indicating the complexity of these dynamics and leading to the conclusion that a minimally impactful gene drive could spread easily across the islands.
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Determining how gavaging laying hens with lead (Pb) effects lead concentration in table eggs, bone, blood, and liver.

J Food Prot

October 2023

Department of Population Health and Reproduction, School of Veterinary Medicine - Cooperative Extension, University of California Davis. Davis, California 95616. Electronic address:

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  • Previous research found that lead (Pb) and other heavy metals are present in eggs from backyard birds, with environmental exposure likely playing a key role in this contamination.
  • A cohort study measured Pb levels in eggs and various tissues, finding much higher concentrations in bone, blood, and liver compared to eggs.
  • The low Pb concentration in eggs suggests that while chickens may accumulate Pb in other tissues, this still poses a public health risk due to potential exposure through consumption.
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Sub-city, or sub-sewershed, wastewater monitoring for infectious diseases offers a data-driven strategy to inform local public health response and complements city-wide data from centralized wastewater treatment plants. Developing strategies for equitable representation of diverse populations in sub-city wastewater sampling frameworks is complicated by misalignment between demographic data and sampling zones. We address this challenge by: (1) developing a geospatial analysis tool that probabilistically assigns demographic data for subgroups aggregated by race and age from census blocks to sub-city sampling zones; (2) evaluating representativeness of subgroup populations for COVID-19 wastewater-based disease surveillance in Davis, California; and (3) demonstrating scenario planning that prioritizes vulnerable populations.

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  • Counter diffusion is a superior method for growing large, high-quality protein crystals compared to traditional techniques, producing better diffraction data and structures.
  • The article presents user-friendly designs for counter-diffusion chambers in a 2D microfluidic chip, allowing for efficient crystal growth and preservation.
  • This innovative approach maintains crystal hydration for extended periods, simplifies chip fabrication using common materials, and enhances crystallography capabilities by minimizing sample handling and background scatter.
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Background: Increased vascular Ca1.2 channel function causes enhanced arterial tone during hypertension. This is mediated by elevations in angiotensin II/protein kinase C signaling.

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  • Poikilohydric plants can dry out and rehydrate, and scientists want to measure how much carbon they gain or lose during these cycles.
  • They created a special setup to monitor how different types of moss react to being dry or wet and found that field-collected moss loses a lot of carbon while lab-grown moss gains carbon quickly when watered.
  • This research helps us understand how these plants deal with water stress, which is important for studying climate change and how plants survive in different environments.
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Hybrid organic-inorganic materials, both dense and porous, have gained significant attention in recent years due to their extreme tunability in terms of compositions and functional properties. A deep understanding of their intrinsic stability is crucial to accelerate the discovery of new compositions that are not only functional but also thermodynamically stable. Here, we report the first systematic experimental study of the effect of A-site cations on the thermodynamic stability of a series of hybrid manganese formate perovskites [AH]Mn[HCOO] with AH = CHNH , (CH)NH , (CH)NH , CH(NH) , and C(NH) using acid solution calorimetry.

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Eusocial insects, such as ants and termites, are characterized by high levels of coordinated social organization. This is contrasted by solitary insects that display more limited forms of collective behavior. It has been hypothesized that this gradient in sociobehavioral sophistication is positively correlated with chemical profile complexity, due to a potentially increased demand for diversity in chemical communication mechanisms in insects with higher levels of social complexity.

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Reproduction, although absolutely essential to a species' persistence, is in itself challenging. As anthropogenic change increasingly affects every landscape on Earth, it is critical to understand how specific pressures impact the reproductive efforts of individuals, which directly contribute to the success or failure of populations. However, organisms rarely encounter a single burden at a time, and the interactions of environmental challenges can have compounding effects.

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  • This study investigates how the time taken to obtain an ECG (door-to-ECG or D2E time) impacts the time between ECG and the PCI procedure (ECG-to-PCI or E2B) in STEMI patients across 10 emergency departments over three years.
  • Findings indicate that patients with a D2E time greater than 10 minutes had longer E2B intervals compared to those with timely ECGs, especially during the triage phase in the ED.
  • The research suggests that reducing D2E times, particularly for patients diagnosed during triage, could significantly enhance the efficiency of care for STEMI patients.
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Prolonged water stress can shift rhizoplane microbial communities, yet whether plant phylogenetic relatedness or drought tolerance predicts microbial responses is poorly understood. To explore this question, eight members of the clade with varying affinity to serpentine soil were subjected to three watering regimes. Rhizoplane bacterial communities were characterized using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and we compared the impact of watering treatment, soil affinity, and plant species identity on bacterial alpha and diversity.

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Background: Free open access medical education (FOAM) resources have become increasingly popular in graduate medical education. Despite their accessibility, the assessment of FOAM resources' quality is challenging due to their decentralized nature and the diverse qualifications of their authors and distribution platforms. In this first pediatric systematic online academic resource (SOAR) review, we utilized a systematic methodology to aggregate and assess the quality of FOAM resources on pediatric respiratory infectious disease topics.

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Light detection and ranging (lidar) has emerged as a valuable tool for examining the fine-scale characteristics of vegetation. However, lidar is rarely used to examine coastal wetland vegetation or the habitat selection of small mammals. Extensive anthropogenic modification has threatened the endemic species in the estuarine wetlands of the California coast, such as the endangered salt marsh harvest mouse (; SMHM).

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When reproductive success is determined by the relative availabilities of a series of essential, non-substitutable resources, the theory of balanced fitness limitations predicts that the cost of harvesting a particular resource shapes the likelihood that a shortfall of that resource will constrain realized fitness. Plant reproduction through female function offers a special opportunity to test this theory; essential resources in this context include, first, the pollen received from pollinators or abiotic vectors that is used to fertilize ovules, and, second, the resources needed to provision the developing seeds and fruit. For many plants realized reproductive success through female function can be readily quantified in the field, and one key potential constraint on fitness, pollen limitation, can be assessed experimentally by manually supplementing pollen receipt.

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Migratory animals follow seasonal cycles comprising linked phases often with different habitat requirements and demographic processes. Conservation of migratory species therefore must consider the full seasonal cycle to identify points limiting population viability. For western monarch butterflies, which have experienced significant declines, early spring is considered a critical period in the annual population cycle.

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Eriocitrin (eriodictyol 7--β-rutinoside), a citrus flavonoid from lemon juice and peel, reduces hyperglycemia and improves diabetes-related biomarkers in prediabetes patients. Eriocitrin is first metabolized by gut microbiota, producing energy for gut cells and short chain fatty acids that play a relevant role in glycemic control. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of Eriomin®, a nutraceutical composed of 70% eriocitrin, 5% hesperidin, and 4% naringin, on the microbiota of prediabetic patients.

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Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins, and sufficient protein intake is important for skeletal health. We utilized stored serum from the Cardiovascular Health Study in 1992-1993 to examine the relationship between levels of the essential amino acid tryptophan (trp) and its oxidized and nonoxidized metabolites to risk for incident hip fractures and mortality over 12 years of follow-up. We included 131 persons who sustained a hip fracture during this time period and 131 without a hip fracture over these same 12 years of follow-up; 58% female and 95% White.

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  • The text discusses the evolving role of collaborative biostatistics units in academic health centers (AHCs) across the U.S., which provide centralized resources and infrastructure for researchers in various fields or within specific disciplines like cancer.
  • A survey of 129 leaders revealed that most are over 45, hold doctoral degrees, and typically have primary appointments in medical schools, with key metrics for career advancement including NIH grant funding and authorship in peer-reviewed journals.
  • The findings offer a benchmark for evaluating collaboration models, serving as a useful reference for institutional administrators looking to enhance or restructure quantitative support infrastructures.
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Ber is an antioxidant-rich fruit from Asia and has recently been cultured in Central America. The antioxidant capacity and antimicrobial activity of cultured of bers from Guanacaste, Costa Rica, were evaluated. Two farm locations and two cultivars were evaluated.

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In California, over 3.4 million tons of wine grapes were crushed in 2020 while every year roughly 20% of the grape mass goes unused. Grape cluster thinning at veraison, a common agricultural practice to ensure color homogeneity in wine grapes, adds to the production costs and generates substantial on-farm loss during grapevine cultivation in which the health-promoting values of thinned clusters (unripe grapes) are usually overlooked.

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Electrophysiological patterns of visual word recognition in deaf and hearing readers: An ERP mega-study.

Lang Cogn Neurosci

October 2022

School of Speech, Language and Hearing Science, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, United States.

Deaf and hearing readers have different access to spoken phonology which may affect the representation and recognition of written words. We used ERPs to investigate how a matched sample of deaf and hearing adults (total n = 90) responded to lexical characteristics of 480 English words in a go/no-go lexical decision task. Results from mixed effect regression models showed a) visual complexity produced small effects in opposing directions for deaf and hearing readers, b) similar frequency effects, but shifted earlier for deaf readers, c) more pronounced effects of orthographic neighborhood density for hearing readers, and d) more pronounced effects of concreteness for deaf readers.

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We have developed a serology test platform for identifying individuals with prior exposure to specific viral infections and provide data to help reduce public health risks. The serology test composed of a pair of cell lines engineered to express either a viral envelop protein (Target Cell) or a receptor to recognize the Fc region of an antibody (Reporter Cell), that is, . The formation of an immune synapse, facilitated by the analyte antibody, resulted into a dual-reporter protein expression by the Reporter Cell.

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