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1.
J Vet Med Educ ; 43(1): 47-57, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26751910

ABSTRACT

Veterinary students are confronted with a high workload and an extensive number of examinations. However, the skills students gained in high school cannot serve as satisfactory coping strategies during veterinary training. This disparity can lead to test anxiety, as frequently reported by international surveys. In response, a pilot study was carried out to evaluate the effects of a newly developed training seminar to prevent and/or reduce test anxiety. The seminar was offered on a voluntary basis as a low-threshold intervention to first- and second-year veterinary students at three different veterinary schools in Germany. The intervention was offered in two different designs: in either a block or in a semester course containing cognitive and behavioral approaches as well as skill-deficit methods. By conducting a survey and interviews among the participants it was determined whether the contents of the seminar were perceived as helpful for counteracting test anxiety. The potential of the intervention was evaluated using a German test anxiety questionnaire (PAF). The contents of the training seminar were all assessed as beneficial but evaluated slightly differently by first- and second-year students. The results indicate that the seminar prevents and reduces test anxiety significantly compared to the control group students. The greatest effects were achieved by offering the intervention to first-year students and as a block course. As the participants benefit from the intervention independent of the extent of test anxiety, these results suggest that it may be profitable to integrate a workshop on coping strategies in the veterinary curriculum.


Subject(s)
Education, Veterinary/methods , Performance Anxiety/prevention & control , Students/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Adolescent , Female , Germany , Humans , Male , Pilot Projects , Schools, Veterinary , Young Adult
2.
Environ Pollut ; 164: 132-41, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22361051

ABSTRACT

Tree-ring width of Picea abies was studied along an altitudinal gradient in the Harz Mountains, Germany, in an area heavily affected by SO(2)-related forest decline in the second half of the 20th century. Spruce trees of exposed high-elevation forests had earlier been shown to have reduced radial growth at high atmospheric SO(2) levels. After the recent reduction of the SO(2) load due to clean air acts, we tested the hypothesis that stem growth recovered rapidly from the SO(2) impact. Our results from two formerly damaged high-elevation spruce stands support this hypothesis suggesting that the former SO(2)-related spruce decline was primarily due to foliar damage and not to soil acidification, as the deacidification of the (still acidic) soil would cause a slow growth response. Increasing temperatures and deposited N accumulated in the topsoil are likely additional growth-promoting factors of spruce at high elevations after the shortfall of SO(2) pollution.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants/toxicity , Picea/growth & development , Sulfur Dioxide/toxicity , Air Pollutants/analysis , Air Pollution/statistics & numerical data , Atmosphere/chemistry , Environmental Monitoring , Germany , Picea/drug effects , Rain/chemistry , Sulfur Dioxide/analysis
3.
Ann Bot ; 108(2): 359-66, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21788378

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUNDS AND AIMS: Lecanora conizaeoides was until recently western and central Europe's most abundant epiphytic lichen species or at least one of the most common epiphytes. The species is adapted to very acidic conditions at pH values around 3 and high concentrations of SO(2) and its derivatives formed in aqueous solution, and thus spread with increasing SO(2) deposition during the 19th and 20th centuries. With the recent decrease of SO(2) emissions to nearly pre-industrial levels within 20 years, L. conizaeoides declined from most of its former range. If still present, the species is no longer the dominant epiphyte, but is occurring in small densities only. The rapid spread of the L. conizaeoides in Europe from an extremely rare species to the probably most frequent epiphytic lichen and the subsequent rapid dieback are unprecedented by any other organism. The present study aimed at identifying the magnitude of deacidification needed to cause the dieback of the lichen. METHODS: The epiphytic lichen diversity and bark chemistry of montane spruce forests in the Harz Mountains, northern Germany, were studied and the results were compared with data recorded with the same methods 13-15 years ago. KEY RESULTS: Lecanora conizaeoides, which was the dominant epiphyte of the study area until 15 years ago, is still found on most trees, but only with small cover values of ≤1 %. The bark pH increased by only 0·4 pH units. CONCLUSIONS: The data suggest that only slight deacidification of the substratum causes the breakdown of the L. conizaeoides populations. Neither competitors nor parasites of L. conizaeoides that may have profited from reduced SO(2) concentrations are likely causes of the rapid dieback of the species.


Subject(s)
Lichens/growth & development , Lichens/metabolism , Sulfur Dioxide/poisoning , Air Pollutants/poisoning , Germany , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Lichens/drug effects , Plant Bark/chemistry , Population Dynamics
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