The Marine Microbial Eukaryote Transcriptome Sequencing Project (MMETSP): Illuminating the Functional Diversity of Eukaryotic Life in the Oceans through Transcriptome Sequencing
- P. Keeling, Fabien Burki, A. Worden
- BiologyPLoS Biology
- 13 January 2014
This Community Page describes a resource of 700 transcriptomes from marine microbial eukaryotes to help understand their role in the world's oceans.
Longitudinal change in regional brain volumes in prodromal Huntington disease
- E. Aylward, P. Nopoulos, Jane S. Paulsen
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
- 30 September 2010
Clinical trials using white matter or striatal volume change as an outcome measure will be most efficient if the sample is restricted to individuals who are within 15 years of estimated onset of diagnosable disease.
Effects of snow removal and algal photoacclimation on growth and export of ice algae
The response of ice algae to snow loss depends both on the amount of change in snow depth and algal photophysiology, and the smaller relative increase in irradiance after removal of thin or partial snow layers allowed algae to maintain high specific-growth rates that compensated for loss from physical mechanisms.
Effect of growth conditions on flow‐induced inhibition of population growth of a red‐tide dinoflagellate
- A. Juhl, Vivianna Velazquez, M. Latz
- Environmental Science
- 1 June 2000
The population growth of some dinoflagellates is known to be reduced by exposure to fluid flow. The red‐tide dinoflagellate Lingulodinium polyedrum was used to examine the effect of growth conditions…
MECHANISMS OF FLUID SHEAR‐INDUCED INHIBITION OF POPULATION GROWTH IN A RED‐TIDE DINOFLAGELLATE1
- A. Juhl, Michael I. Latz
- Biology, Environmental Science
- 1 August 2002
The results predict that cell division in L. polyedrum populations will be inhibited by levels of oceanic turbulence common for near‐surface waters, unless shear‐stress levels are unusually high or when cellular condition resembles late exponential/stationary phase cultures.
Mobilization of arsenic during one-year incubations of grey aquifer sands from Araihazar, Bangladesh.
- K. Radloff, Zhongqi Cheng, A. van Geen
- Environmental ScienceEnvironmental Science and Technology
- 15 May 2007
Small periodic additions of oxygen suppressed the release of As from sediments at all three depths, which supports the notion that anoxia is a prerequisite for accumulation of As in Bangladesh groundwater.
Effect of fluid shear and irradiance on population growth and cellular toxin content of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium fundyense
- A. Juhl, V. Trainer, M. Latz
- Environmental Science
- 1 June 2001
Cultures of the dinoflagellate, Alexandrium fundyense, a producer of toxins responsible for paralytic shellfish poisoning, were exposed to quantified laminar shear generated in Couette flow for 1‐24 h d 21.
Cerebral cortex structure in prodromal Huntington disease
- P. Nopoulos, E. Aylward, Jane S. Paulsen
- Biology, MedicineNeurobiology of Disease
- 1 December 2010
8OHdG as a marker for Huntington disease progression
- J. Long, W. Matson, A. Juhl, B. Leavitt, Jane S. Paulsen
- BiologyNeurobiology of Disease
- 1 June 2012
Elevated surface chlorophyll associated with natural oil seeps in the Gulf of Mexico
- N. D'souza, A. Subramaniam, J. Montoya
- Environmental Science, Geology
- 1 March 2016
Natural hydrocarbon seeps account for up to 47% of the oil released into the oceans. In situ and remote measurements of chlorophyll concentrations suggest that natural hydrocarbons enhance…
...
...