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1.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 8267, 2023 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38092756

ABSTRACT

Sustainable agricultural intensification could improve ecosystem service multifunctionality, yet empirical evidence remains tenuous, especially regarding consequences for spatially coupled ecosystems connected by flows across ecosystem boundaries (i.e., metaecosystems). Here we aim to understand the effects of land-use intensification on multiple ecosystem services of spatially connected grasslands and wetlands, where management practices were applied to grasslands but not directly imposed to wetlands. We synthesize long-term datasets encompassing 53 physical, chemical, and biological indicators, comprising >11,000 field measurements. Our results reveal that intensification promotes high-quality forage and livestock production in both grasslands and wetlands, but at the expense of water quality regulation, methane mitigation, non-native species invasion resistance, and biodiversity. Land-use intensification weakens relationships among ecosystem services. The effects on grasslands cascade to alter multifunctionality of embedded natural wetlands within the metaecosystems to a similar extent. These results highlight the importance of considering spatial flows of resources and organisms when studying land-use intensification effects on metaecosystems as well as when designing grassland and wetland management practices to improve landscape multifunctionality.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Grassland , Wetlands , Biodiversity , Agriculture/methods
2.
J Wildl Dis ; 39(3): 567-75, 2003 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14567217

ABSTRACT

Free-ranging feral swine (Sus scrofa) are known to be present in at least 32 states of the USA and are continuously expanding their range. Infection with pseudorabies virus (PRV) occurs in feral swine and the primary route of transmission in free-living conditions seems to be venereal. Between 1995 and 1999, naturally infected feral swine and experimentally infected hybrid progeny of feral and domestic swine, were kept in isolation and evaluated for occurrence of latent PRV indigenous to feral swine in sacral and trigeminal ganglia and tonsil. Sacral ganglia were shown, by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of the thymidine kinase (TK) gene of PRV, to be the most frequent sites of latency of PRV. Nine (56%) of 16 sacral ganglia, seven (44%) of 16 trigeminal ganglia, and five (39%) of 13 tonsils from naturally infected feral swine were positive for PCR amplification of TK sequences of PRV. These tissues were negative for PRV when viral isolation was attempted in Vero cells. DNA sequencing of cloned TK fragments from the sacral ganglia of two feral swine, showed only one nucleotide difference between the two fragments and extensive sequence homology to fragment sequences from various domestic swine PRV strains from China, Northern Ireland, and the USA. The hybrid feral domestic swine, experimentally inoculated with an indigenous feral swine PRV isolate by either the genital or respiratory route, acquired the infection but showed no clinical signs of pseudorabies. Virus inoculated into either the genital or respiratory tract could, at times, be isolated from both these sites. The most common latency sites were the sacral ganglia, regardless of the route and dose of infection in these experimentally infected hybrids. Nine of 10 sacral ganglia, six of 10 trigeminal ganglia, and three of 10 tonsils were positive for PCR amplification of TK sequences. No virus was isolated from these tissues in Vero cells. The demonstration of the sacral ganglia as the most common sites of latency of pseudorabies viruses indigenous to feral swine, supports the hypothesis that these viruses are primarily transmitted venereally, and not by the respiratory route as is common in domestic swine, in which the trigeminal ganglia are the predominant sites of virus latency.


Subject(s)
Ganglia, Sympathetic/virology , Herpesvirus 1, Suid/physiology , Pseudorabies/transmission , Swine Diseases/transmission , Virus Latency , Animals , Animals, Domestic , Animals, Wild , Base Sequence , DNA, Viral/chemistry , Female , Herpesvirus 1, Suid/enzymology , Herpesvirus 1, Suid/genetics , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Palatine Tonsil/virology , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Pseudorabies/epidemiology , Pseudorabies/virology , Respiratory Tract Infections/epidemiology , Respiratory Tract Infections/transmission , Respiratory Tract Infections/veterinary , Respiratory Tract Infections/virology , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid , Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Viral/epidemiology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Viral/transmission , Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Viral/veterinary , Sus scrofa , Swine Diseases/epidemiology , Swine Diseases/virology , Thymidine Kinase/genetics , Trigeminal Ganglion/virology
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