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1.
J Fish Biol ; 104(1): 125-138, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37728039

RESUMEN

This study provides a regional picture of long-term changes in Atlantic salmon growth at the southern edge of their distribution, using a multi-population approach spanning 49 years and five populations. We provide empirical evidence of salmon life history being influenced by a combination of common signals in the marine environment and population-specific signals. We identified an abrupt decline in growth from 1976 and a more recent decline after 2005. As these declines have also been recorded in northern European populations, our study significantly expands a pattern of declining marine growth to include southern European populations, thereby revealing a large-scale synchrony in marine growth patterns for almost five decades. Growth increments during their sea sojourn were characterized by distinct temporal dynamics. At a coarse temporal resolution, growth during the first winter at sea seemed to gradually improve over the study period. However, the analysis of finer seasonal growth patterns revealed ecological bottlenecks of salmon life histories at sea in time and space. Our study reinforces existing evidence of an impact of early marine growth on maturation decision, with small-sized individuals at the end of the first summer at sea being more likely to delay maturation. However, each population was characterized by a specific probabilistic maturation reaction norm, and a local component of growth at sea in which some populations have better growth in some years might further amplify differences in maturation rate. Differences between populations were smaller than those between sexes, suggesting that the sex-specific growth threshold for maturation is a well-conserved evolutionary phenomenon in salmon. Finally, our results illustrate that although most of the gain in length occurs during the first summer at sea, the temporal variability in body length at return is buffered against the decrease in post-smolt growth conditions. The intricate combination of growth over successive seasons, and its interplay with the maturation decision, could be regulating body length by maintaining diversity in early growth trajectories, life histories, and the composition of salmon populations.


Asunto(s)
Salmo salar , Humanos , Animales , Ríos , Europa (Continente) , Evolución Biológica , Estaciones del Año
2.
Anesth Analg ; 128(6): e97-e99, 2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31094796

RESUMEN

Anesthetic agents are known greenhouse gases with hundreds to thousands of times the global warming impact compared with carbon dioxide. We sought to mitigate the negative environmental and financial impacts of our practice in the perioperative setting through multidisciplinary staff engagement and provider education on flow rate reduction and volatile agent choice. These efforts led to a 64% per case reduction in carbon dioxide equivalent emissions (163 kg in Fiscal Year 2012, compared with 58 kg in Fiscal Year 2015), as well as a cost savings estimate of $25,000 per month.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos , Anestesia por Inhalación , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales , Gases de Efecto Invernadero/análisis , Nebulizadores y Vaporizadores , Anestesiología , Anestésicos , Anestésicos por Inhalación/economía , Automóviles , Dióxido de Carbono , Ahorro de Costo , Desflurano , Cirugía General , Calentamiento Global , Humanos , Tecnología de la Información , Capacitación en Servicio , Comunicación Interdisciplinaria , Isoflurano , Óxido Nitroso/análisis , Enfermeras y Enfermeros , Sevoflurano , Suiza
3.
Lancet ; 392(10164): 2595-2605, 2018 12 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30509743

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Infant pain has immediate and long-term effects but is undertreated because of a paucity of evidence-based analgesics. Although morphine is often used to sedate ventilated infants, its analgesic efficacy is unclear. We aimed to establish whether oral morphine could provide effective and safe analgesia in non-ventilated premature infants for acute procedural pain. METHODS: In this single-centre masked trial, 31 infants at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK, were randomly allocated using a web-based facility with a minimisation algorithm to either 100 µg/kg oral morphine sulphate or placebo 1 h before a clinically required heel lance and retinopathy of prematurity screening examination, on the same occasion. Eligible infants were born prematurely at less than 32 weeks' gestation or with a birthweight lower than 1501 g and had a gestational age of 34-42 weeks at the time of the study. The co-primary outcome measures were the Premature Infant Pain Profile-Revised (PIPP-R) score after retinopathy of prematurity screening and the magnitude of noxious-evoked brain activity after heel lancing. Secondary outcome measures assessed physiological stability and safety. This trial is registered with the European Clinical Trials Database (number 2014-003237-25). FINDINGS: Between Oct 30, 2016, and Nov 17, 2017, 15 infants were randomly allocated to morphine and 16 to placebo; one infant assigned placebo was withdrawn from the study before monitoring began. The predefined stopping boundary was crossed, and trial recruitment stopped because of profound respiratory adverse effects of morphine without suggestion of analgesic efficacy. None of the co-primary outcome measures differed significantly between groups. PIPP-R score after retinopathy of prematurity screening was mean 11·1 (SD 3·2) with morphine and 10·5 (3·4) with placebo (mean difference 0·5, 95% CI -2·0 to 3·0; p=0·66). Noxious-evoked brain activity after heel lancing was median 0·99 (IQR 0·40-1·56) with morphine and 0·75 (0·33-1·22) with placebo (median difference 0·25, 95% CI -0·16 to 0·80; p=0·25). INTERPRETATION: Administration of oral morphine (100 µg/kg) to non-ventilated premature infants has the potential for harm without analgesic efficacy. We do not recommend oral morphine for retinopathy of prematurity screening and strongly advise caution if considering its use for other acute painful procedures in non-ventilated premature infants. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust and National Institute for Health Research.


Asunto(s)
Analgésicos Opioides/administración & dosificación , Morfina/administración & dosificación , Dolor Asociado a Procedimientos Médicos/tratamiento farmacológico , Administración Oral , Analgésicos Opioides/efectos adversos , Bradicardia/inducido químicamente , Femenino , Edad Gestacional , Humanos , Recien Nacido con Peso al Nacer Extremadamente Bajo , Recién Nacido , Recien Nacido Prematuro , Enfermedades del Prematuro/terapia , Masculino , Morfina/efectos adversos , Consumo de Oxígeno/efectos de los fármacos , Dimensión del Dolor , Método Simple Ciego , Taquicardia/inducido químicamente , Insuficiencia del Tratamiento
4.
Science ; 333(6039): 203-6, 2011 Jul 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21680812

RESUMEN

Gas accretion onto some massive black holes (MBHs) at the centers of galaxies actively powers luminous emission, but most MBHs are considered dormant. Occasionally, a star passing too near an MBH is torn apart by gravitational forces, leading to a bright tidal disruption flare (TDF). Although the high-energy transient Sw 1644+57 initially displayed none of the theoretically anticipated (nor previously observed) TDF characteristics, we show that observations suggest a sudden accretion event onto a central MBH of mass about 10(6) to 10(7) solar masses. There is evidence for a mildly relativistic outflow, jet collimation, and a spectrum characterized by synchrotron and inverse Compton processes; this leads to a natural analogy of Sw 1644+57 to a temporary smaller-scale blazar.

5.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 125(4): 2443-51, 2009 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19354418

RESUMEN

This article presents a method for reducing the computation time required for estimating cumulative sound exposure levels. Sound propagation has to be computed from every source position to every desired receiver location; so if there are many source positions, then the problem can quickly become computationally expensive. The authors' solution to this problem is to extract all possible source-receiver pathways and to cluster these with a self-organizing neural net. Sound propagation is modeled only for the cluster centroids and extrapolated for the entire geographic region. The tool is illustrated for the example of a marine seismic survey over a tropical coral reef. Resident fish species were expected not to flee the reef, but to stay among the corals for the entire duration of the survey. In such cases, the modeling of cumulative sound exposure levels is sometimes requested as part of environmental impact assessments. The tool developed combines a seismic source model, a near-field sound propagation model, and a far-field sound propagation model. The neural network reduces the computation time by a factor of 55. The cost is an error in modeled received levels of less than -1+/-3 dB re 1 microPa(2) s.

6.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 124(5): 2833-40, 2008 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19045771

RESUMEN

This article describes an automatic detector for marine mammal vocalizations. Even though there has been previous research on optimizing automatic detectors for specific calls or specific species, the detection of any type of call by a diversity of marine mammal species still poses quite a challenge--and one that is faced more frequently as the scope of passive acoustic monitoring studies and the amount of data collected increase. Information (Shannon) entropy measures the amount of information in a signal. A detector based on spectral entropy surpassed two commonly used detectors based on peak-energy detection. Receiver operating characteristic curves were computed for performance comparison. The entropy detector performed considerably faster than real time. It can be used as a first step in an automatic signal analysis yielding potential signals. It should be followed by automatic classification, recognition, and identification algorithms to group and identify signals. Examples are shown from underwater recordings in the Western Canadian Arctic. Calls of a variety of cetacean and pinniped species were detected.


Asunto(s)
Comunicación Animal , Caniformia , Cetáceos , Mamíferos/fisiología , Agua de Mar , Animales , Regiones Árticas , Automatización , Caniformia/fisiología , Cetáceos/fisiología , Ecosistema , Entropía , Océanos y Mares
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