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Life Sciences Commons

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The University of Maine

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2015

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Articles 1 - 30 of 63

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Linking Remote Sensing And Various Site Factors For Predicting The Spatial Distribution Of Eastern Hemlock Occurrence And Relative Basal Area In Maine, Usa, Kathleen Dunckel, Aaron Weiskittel, Greg Fiske, Steven A. Sader, Erika Latty, Amy Arnett Dec 2015

Linking Remote Sensing And Various Site Factors For Predicting The Spatial Distribution Of Eastern Hemlock Occurrence And Relative Basal Area In Maine, Usa, Kathleen Dunckel, Aaron Weiskittel, Greg Fiske, Steven A. Sader, Erika Latty, Amy Arnett

Publications

Introduced invasive pests are perhaps the most important and persistent catalyst for changes in forest composition. Infestation and outbreak of the hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae; HWA) along the eastern coast of the USA, has led to widespread loss of hemlock (Tsuga canadensis (L.) Carr.), and a shift in tree species composition toward hardwood stands. Developing an understanding of the geographic distribution of individual species can inform conservation practices that seek to maintain functional capabilities of ecosystems. Modeling is necessary for understanding changes in forest composition, and subsequent changes in biodiversity, and one that can be implemented at the species …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 12, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Dec 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 12, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 11, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Nov 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 11, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 10, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Oct 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 10, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Using The Real Food Calculator To Assess The University Of Maine's Dining Purchases Within A Food System Context, Ashely Thibeault Oct 2015

Using The Real Food Calculator To Assess The University Of Maine's Dining Purchases Within A Food System Context, Ashely Thibeault

Honors College

This study investigated the University of Maine’s food purchasing using the Real Food Calculator to determine the Real Food percentage. Real Food is defined by the Real Food Challenge as local, humane, fair, and ecologically sound. The Real Food Challenge is an organization that seeks to create systemic food system change through student efforts on college campuses by shifting food purchasing to 20% Real Food by 2020. The University of Maine had 5% Real Food in the 2012-2013 academic year. While there are limitations to Real Food and the Real Food Calculator, it may produce a change in the food …


The Dandy Scroll, Fall 2015, University Of Maine Pulp And Paper Foundation Oct 2015

The Dandy Scroll, Fall 2015, University Of Maine Pulp And Paper Foundation

General University of Maine Publications

The Fall 2015 issue of The Dandy Scroll newsletter produced by the University of Maine Pulp and Paper Foundation.


One Giant Leap For Categorizers: One Small Step For Categorization Theory, David J. Smith, Shawn W. Ell Sep 2015

One Giant Leap For Categorizers: One Small Step For Categorization Theory, David J. Smith, Shawn W. Ell

Psychology Faculty Scholarship

We explore humans’ rule-based category learning using analytic approaches that highlight their psychological transitions during learning. These approaches confirm that humans show qualitatively sudden psychological transitions during rule learning. These transitions contribute to the theoretical literature contrasting single vs. multiple category-learning systems, because they seem to reveal a distinctive learning process of explicit rule discovery. A complete psychology of categorization must describe this learning process, too. Yet extensive formal-modeling analyses confirm that a wide range of current (gradient-descent) models cannot reproduce these transitions, including influential rule-based models (e.g., COVIS) and exemplar models (e.g., ALCOVE). It is an important theoretical conclusion …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 9, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Sep 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 9, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Rapid: Ecological Resistance Of Multiply Stressed Populations: The Response Of Tidal Marsh Birds And Plants To Hurricane Sandy, Brian J. Olsen, Chris S. Elphick, Greg Shriver Aug 2015

Rapid: Ecological Resistance Of Multiply Stressed Populations: The Response Of Tidal Marsh Birds And Plants To Hurricane Sandy, Brian J. Olsen, Chris S. Elphick, Greg Shriver

University of Maine Office of Research Administration: Grant Reports

All animal and plant populations can weather change. However, the amount of environmental change a population can absorb is likely to depend upon other, past and ongoing stresses that the population experiences. This project will test whether the ability of populations of native plants and animals in coastal marshes to withstand the recent, extreme storm Hurricane Sandy was greater or less in marshes more subject to past stresses. Researchers will compare the abundances of marsh plants and animals before and after the storm and test whether vulnerability was greater in more specialized species or in marshes surrounded by development, invaded …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 8, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Aug 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 8, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Evaluation Of A Waistband For Attaching External Radiotransmitters To Anurans, Luke Alexander Groff, Amber Pitt, Robert Baldwin, Aram J K Calhoun, Cynthia Loftin Jul 2015

Evaluation Of A Waistband For Attaching External Radiotransmitters To Anurans, Luke Alexander Groff, Amber Pitt, Robert Baldwin, Aram J K Calhoun, Cynthia Loftin

Publications

Radiotelemetry provides fine-scale temporal and spatial information about an individual's movements and habitat use; however, its use for monitoring amphibians has been restricted by transmitter mass and lack of suitable attachment techniques. We describe a novel waistband for attaching external radiotransmitters to anurans and evaluate the percentages of resulting abrasions, lacerations, and shed transmitters. We used radiotelemetry to monitor movements and habitat use of wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus) in 2006 and 2011–2013 in Maine, USA; American toads (Anaxyrus americanus) in 2012 in North Carolina, USA; and, wood frogs, southern leopard frogs (L. sphenocephalus), and green frogs (L. clamitans) in 2012 …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 7, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Jul 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 7, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 6, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Jun 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 6, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Career: Dynamics Of Hierarchical Householdstructured Epidemiological Models, David Hiebeler May 2015

Career: Dynamics Of Hierarchical Householdstructured Epidemiological Models, David Hiebeler

University of Maine Office of Research Administration: Grant Reports

Mathematical and computational models will be used to study populations hierarchically segregated into groups referred to as "households". These households may represent patches within an agricultural field, fields within a landscape, dorms within a school, schools within a city, cities within a region, or even subnetworks within larger computer networks. Population models and epidemiological models will be explored within this framework, complementing other work with lattice-structured populations. In the models, interactions within a household occur much more often than interactions between different households. Primary goals of the models are to better understand how and why spatially targeted and/or clustered treatments …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 5, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance May 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 5, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Effects Of Environmentally Relevant Transplacental Arsenic Exposure On Mouse (Mus Musculus) Hepatic Protein Expression, Jay Knowlton May 2015

Effects Of Environmentally Relevant Transplacental Arsenic Exposure On Mouse (Mus Musculus) Hepatic Protein Expression, Jay Knowlton

Honors College

Inorganic arsenic is a well-known toxic element found around the world, but the molecular mechanisms involved in arsenic toxicity are currently poorly understood. Arsenic has been linked to several types of cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and other metabolic diseases. This project explores the toxic effects of arsenic using mouse (Mus musculus) as a mammalian model organism. Preliminary data from the Van Beneden lab has shown that mice respond to low-dose, transplacental arsenic exposure in a dose-, sex-, and generation-dependent manner. The current study addresses a potential mechanism of toxicity by determining relative expression levels of pAKT/AKT1, a serine/threonine kinase that …


Allelic Variants Of Oprm1, Comt And Abcb1 On Pre-Withdrawal Sleep-Wake Regulation In The Opioid Exposed Neonate, Zakiah-Lee Meeks May 2015

Allelic Variants Of Oprm1, Comt And Abcb1 On Pre-Withdrawal Sleep-Wake Regulation In The Opioid Exposed Neonate, Zakiah-Lee Meeks

Honors College

Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) is a neonatal medical condition of prenatal opioid withdrawal, secondary to prenatal exposure. NAS increases mortality and morbidity through seizure risk, and excessive sympathetic autonomic tone; which affects respiration and dysregulates sleep and feeding. Our laboratory has recruited more than 200 pregnant women who are in treatment for opiate dependence with methadone maintenance treatments. We have found that NAS severity is modulated by the presence of allelic variants of OPRM1 118A>G (μ-opiate receptor) and COMT 158 A>G (catechol-o-methyl transferase) genes, revealing a positive correlation between minor alleles of these two genes and severity reflected …


Depth Preferences Of Sturgeon In Critical Habitat, Elizabeth A. Dunbar May 2015

Depth Preferences Of Sturgeon In Critical Habitat, Elizabeth A. Dunbar

Honors College

The depth and vertical movements of Atlantic sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus oxyrinchus) and shortnose sturgeon (Acispenser brevirostrum) at Bucks Ledge (river kilometer 21) in the Penobscot River were examined to investigate sturgeon depth preferences and jumping habits. The purpose of this project was to expand knowledge on the endangered and threatened sturgeon populations in Maine waters. Behavior of 20 individual sturgeon (6 Atlantic sturgeon and 14 shortnose sturgeon) was used to characterize fish depth as it varied with water depth, e.g., in relation to tidal periodicity or not (random). The study used depth data collected using acoustic telemetry between 2007 and …


A Multi-Institution Investigation Of Educational Practices And Strategies In Stem Courses, Scott James Merrill May 2015

A Multi-Institution Investigation Of Educational Practices And Strategies In Stem Courses, Scott James Merrill

Honors College

This study examines the teaching practices of faculty participating in the Automated Analysis of Constructed Response (AACR) project. The AACR project focuses on using short-answer assessment questions to elicit the mixed models students have about key concepts in STEM courses. The 19 faculty from six different institutions who participated in this project are all teaching biology courses, asking biology AACR questions, and participating in Faculty Learning Communities (FLCs). FLCs are a method of faculty professional development in which groups of faculty regularly meet to discuss issues of teaching and learning. Here I use a combination of classroom observation data and …


Towards A New Measure For Human Visual Acuity, Andrew B. Wilson May 2015

Towards A New Measure For Human Visual Acuity, Andrew B. Wilson

Honors College

This prospective study investigates whether a newly modified software program can effectively substitute for clinical measures of visual acuity like the standard Landolt C, ETDRS (Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study) and Snellen charts. One goal of this study is to compare these different charts to the computerized experiment that we have created. Important differences between recognition versus resolution based visual acuity charts are discussed in light of these studies. The “open door” computerized acuity program displayed a black box on a white background (XoW) or a white box on a black background (WoX) that had an opening on one of …


Vision Problems In Ecuador: Developing A Clinical Trial To Test Visual Acuity In Rural Populations, Ty B. Bolte May 2015

Vision Problems In Ecuador: Developing A Clinical Trial To Test Visual Acuity In Rural Populations, Ty B. Bolte

Honors College

In many developing countries, access to medical care and screenings are difficult, and this is especially true for countries with large rural populations, such as Ecuador. There are many groups and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that contribute time and money to educational systems and other basic infrastructure, but not necessarily medical screenings. In the case of eyesight, without proper screening an individual may fall behind academically or even withdraw from education simply because they cannot see. The simple addition of corrective lenses could be the difference between a life of poverty, and a life of wellbeing for many of these individuals. …


University Of Maine Proposal For Joining The Nsf Center For Advanced Forestry Systems, Robert G. Wagner, Aaron R. Weiskittel Apr 2015

University Of Maine Proposal For Joining The Nsf Center For Advanced Forestry Systems, Robert G. Wagner, Aaron R. Weiskittel

University of Maine Office of Research Administration: Grant Reports

University of Maine (UM) is planning to join the existing multi-university Industry/University Cooperative Research Center (I/UCRC) entitled "The Center for Advanced Forestry Systems" (CAFS) which was established in 2007 with four member institutions: North Carolina State University (lead university), Oregon State University, Purdue University and Virginia Tech. The primary focus of the proposed research site within CAFS will be modeling the productivity of managed natural forests. This research focus will be addressed at multiple scales ranging from the individual tree to the regional forest. UM has a long history of applied research in the management of naturally regenerated forests as …


Highlights From The Darling Marine Center’S 50th Anniversary Celebration, Darling Marine Center, University Of Maine Apr 2015

Highlights From The Darling Marine Center’S 50th Anniversary Celebration, Darling Marine Center, University Of Maine

General University of Maine Publications

Video of highlights from the Darling Marine Center's 50th anniversary celebration Aug. 6–8, 2015.


Collaborative Cnic: Us-Argentina Planning Visits For Fungal Biodiversity Investigation, Laurie B. Connell Apr 2015

Collaborative Cnic: Us-Argentina Planning Visits For Fungal Biodiversity Investigation, Laurie B. Connell

University of Maine Office of Research Administration: Grant Reports

This collaborative project aims to catalyze a research collaboration between US and Argentinian researchers. The project will be led by Drs. Russell Rodriguez at Symbiogenics and Regina Redman of the University of Washington, both in Seattle, Washington, and Dr. Laurie Connell at the University of Maine, Orono, for the US side. On the Argentinean side, Drs. Diego Libkind, Martin Molino and Virginia de Garcia of INIBIOMA (Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente, an Argentinean National Scientific and Technical Research Council Institute) and the University of Comahue, are the counterparts for the project. The Argentinian researchers bring to the collaboration …


Understanding Social Resilience In The Maine Lobster Industry, Teresa R. Johnson, Anna M. Henry Apr 2015

Understanding Social Resilience In The Maine Lobster Industry, Teresa R. Johnson, Anna M. Henry

Publications

The Maine lobster Homarus americanus fishery is considered one of the most successful fisheries in the world due in part to its unique comanagement system, the conservation ethic of the harvesters, and the ability of the industry to respond to crises and solve collective-action problems. However, recent threats raise the question whether the industry will be able to respond to future threats as successfully as it has to ones in the past or whether it is now less resilient and can no longer adequately respond to threats. Through ethnographic research and oral histories with fishermen, we examined the current level …


Landings, Vol. 23, No. 4, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance Apr 2015

Landings, Vol. 23, No. 4, Maine Lobstermen’S Community Alliance

Landings: News & Views from Maine's Lobstering Community

Landings content emphasizes science, history, resource sustainability, economic development, and human interest stories related to

Maine’s lobster industry. The newsletter emphasizes lobstering as a traditional, majority-European American lifeway with an economic and social heritage unique to the coast of Maine. The publication focuses how ongoing research to engage in sustainable, non-harmful, and non-wasteful commercial fishing practices benefit both the fishery and Maine's coastal legacy.

Maine Lobstermen’s Community Alliance (MLCA) started publication of Landings, a 24-page newsletter in January 2013 as the successor of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association (MLA) Newsletter. As of 2022, the MLCA published over 6,500 copies of …


Complete Annotations Of The Cluster E Mycobacteriophage Ukulele Genome And Characterization Of Cluster E Lysogeny Regulation, Gwendolyn M. Beacham Apr 2015

Complete Annotations Of The Cluster E Mycobacteriophage Ukulele Genome And Characterization Of Cluster E Lysogeny Regulation, Gwendolyn M. Beacham

Honors College

Mycobacteriophages (phages) are diverse and abundant viruses that infect species of the genus Mycobacterium. Mycobacteriophages are categorized into clusters based primarily on nucleotide similarity (18). Some clusters are well-characterized, while others, such as Cluster E, are poorly characterized (20). There are 54 members of Cluster E (39) including the phage Ukulele that was isolated at the University of Maine in 2011. This thesis is aimed towards characterizing Cluster E phages using Ukulele as a model. Cluster E phages have long tails of approximately 300 nm and they produce slightly turbid plaques on a lawn of Mycobacterium smegmatis. Putative …


The Role Of Macrophages In Resistance To Caseous Lymphadenitis, Amy Fish Apr 2015

The Role Of Macrophages In Resistance To Caseous Lymphadenitis, Amy Fish

Honors College

Caseous lymphadenitis (CL) is a chronic disease that affects sheep and goats worldwide. CL causes a large economic loss to producers via milk and fiber losses, carcass condemnation, and chronic wasting of animals. Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis (C. psTB) causes CL, and infected animals produce abscesses, typically in lymph nodes, lungs, liver, and mammary tissues. Ruptured abscesses release C. psTB, and can contaminate the environment. The bacteria are extremely hardy and can survive in the external environment for over a year, infecting other animals through open wounds.

Macrophages engulf C. psTB when it enters the body, and carry it …


Is The Ubiquitous Antibacterial Agent Triclosan An Uncoupler Of Mammalian Mitochondria, Hina Hashmi Apr 2015

Is The Ubiquitous Antibacterial Agent Triclosan An Uncoupler Of Mammalian Mitochondria, Hina Hashmi

Honors College

Triclosan (TCS), an antibacterial agent widely found in household and clinical products, is readily absorbed into human skin, but TCS effects on mammalian cells are largely unknown. TCS has been found to alleviate symptoms of human eczema, via an unknown mechanism. Mast cells are ubiquitous, key players in allergy, infectious disease, carcinogenesis, autism, and many other diseases and physiological functions. One important function of mast cells is release of pro-inflammatory mediators from intracellular granules (degranulation) upon challenge with antigen. Non-cytotoxic doses of TCS inhibit several functions of both human (HMC-1.2) and rat (RBL-2H3) mast cells, including degranulation. Previous work in …


The University Of Maine Food And Fitness Environment: Is It Health Promoting?, Carolyn Anne Stocker Apr 2015

The University Of Maine Food And Fitness Environment: Is It Health Promoting?, Carolyn Anne Stocker

Honors College

Obesity impacts one in six young adults, ages 20-29, and is a major risk factor for chronic disease. An environmental audit of the University of Maine campus was conducted to identify supports for healthful lifestyles by assessing the vending, dining, and recreation environments. Instruments developed by a multistate research team were used to determine scores and percentages for the audit. Ten buildings were assessed in the vending assessment. The mean healthful snack percentage was 17% and the mean healthful beverage percentage was 18% of total items. Two on-campus and seven off- campus dining establishments were assessed. The on-campus dining establishments …