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2.
Ecol Appl ; 18(5): 1093-106, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18686574

ABSTRACT

Ranches are being converted to exurban housing developments in the southwestern United States, with potentially significant but little-studied impacts on biological diversity. We counted birds in grasslands and savannas in southeastern Arizona that were grazed by livestock, embedded in low-density exurban housing developments, or both, or neither. Species richness and bird abundance were higher in exurban neighborhoods than in undeveloped landscapes, independent of livestock grazing. The positive response to development was particularly evident among doves, quail, hummingbirds, aerial insectivores, and some but not all ground-foraging sparrows. Effects of livestock grazing were comparatively minor and mostly involved birds with requirements for tall ground cover or the lack of it. The average rank correlation between counts of individual species and housing density was positive across all transects. However, this relationship disappeared among the exurban transects alone, and bird species richness on the exurban transects was negatively correlated with the number of homes nearby. These results suggest that the positive influence of exurban development on avian abundance and variety was greatest at the lowest housing densities. We attribute the attraction of many birds to exurban development to an oasis effect, in which resources otherwise scarce in arid southwestern environments (shade, nectar, nest sites, and especially water) are relatively abundant around exurban home sites. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that exurban home sites represented resource supply points inside birds' home ranges otherwise consisting mostly of natural vegetation.


Subject(s)
Birds , Urban Renewal , Animals , Arizona , Birds/physiology , Feeding Behavior , Species Specificity
3.
Ecology ; 88(5): 1322-7, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17536417

ABSTRACT

Species richness and evenness are components of biological diversity that may or may not be correlated with one another and with patterns of species abundance. We compared these attributes among flowering plants, grasshoppers, butterflies, lizards, summer birds, winter birds, and rodents across 48 plots in the grasslands and mesquite-oak savannas of southeastern Arizona. Species richness and evenness were uncorrelated or weakly negatively correlated for each taxonomic group, supporting the conclusion that richness alone is an incomplete measure of diversity. In each case, richness was positively correlated with one or more measures of abundance. By contrast, evenness usually was negatively correlated with the abundance variables, reflecting the fact that plots with high evenness generally were those where all species present were about equally uncommon. Therefore richness, but not evenness, usually was a positive predictor of places of conservation value, if these are defined as places where species of interest are especially abundant. Species diversity was more positively correlated with evenness than with richness among grasshoppers and flowering plants, in contrast to the other taxonomic groups, and the positive correlations between richness and abundance were comparatively weak for grasshoppers and plants as well. Both of these differences can be attributed to the fact that assemblages of plants and grasshoppers were numerically dominated by small subsets of common species (grasses and certain spur-throated grasshoppers) whose abundances differed greatly among plots in ways unrelated to species richness of the groups as a whole.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Ecology , Ecosystem , Animals , Arizona , Birds/classification , Birds/growth & development , Butterflies/classification , Butterflies/growth & development , Grasshoppers/classification , Grasshoppers/growth & development , Lizards/classification , Lizards/growth & development , Poaceae/classification , Poaceae/growth & development , Population Density , Population Dynamics , Quercus/classification , Quercus/growth & development , Rodentia/classification , Rodentia/growth & development , Species Specificity , Time Factors
5.
Fortschr Ophthalmol ; 87(3): 255-9, 1990.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2376373

ABSTRACT

Glaucomatous optic nerve atrophy is associated with morphological and psychophysical changes. Using Roth's Besancon anomalometer, the Farnsworth 100 hue test and Nagel's anomaloscope, we examined color vision in 86 eyes of 51 patients suffering from chronic open-angle glaucoma and 57 eyes of 41 normal subjects. In the normal control group, blue und green sensitivity decreased and, accordingly, the anomaly quotient tested with Nagel's anomaloscope increased significantly (p less than 0.00001) with age. If the glaucoma and control groups were matched for age, refractive error and central visual acuity, decreasing blue sensitivity significantly (p less than 0.05) correlated with diminished visibility of the retinal nerve fiber bundles, a higher morphological glaucoma stage and larger perimetric defects. The presence and depth of localized defects of the retinal nerve fiber layer were not significantly different in glaucoma subgroups with lower and higher blue sensitivity, respectively, when the subgroups were matched for age, refractive error and visual acuity. No papillomorphologic marker for the cyanodyschromatopsia was detected. Red-green color vision was not significantly different between the normal and glaucoma eyes. Testing of blue color vision as an additional method is useful in the differential diagnosis of beginning glaucomatous optic nerve damage in patients with clear optic media and lack of macular changes.


Subject(s)
Color Vision Defects/etiology , Glaucoma, Open-Angle/etiology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Color Perception Tests , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Optic Atrophy/etiology
6.
Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol ; 228(4): 321-5, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2401415

ABSTRACT

Optic nerve damage is associated with impairment of psychophysical functions. We measured dark adaptation in 21 eyes of 14 normal subjects, 35 eyes of 19 patients with primary open-angle glaucoma, and 7 eyes of 4 patients with nonglaucomatous descending optic nerve atrophy. In the normal subjects light thresholds and time of the shoulder in the dark adaptation curve increased significantly with age. In eyes with glaucomatous or nonglaucomatous optic nerve damage light sensitivity was lower than in normal eyes of age-matched control groups. Rod light sensitivity was significantly (P less than 0.05) correlated with neuroretinal rim loss, parapapillary chorioretinal atrophy, and relative afferent pupillary defects. We conclude that velocity and degree of dark adaptation decrease with increasing age. Patients with glaucomatous and nonglaucomatous optic nerve atrophy show decreased light sensitivity especially in the rod part of dark adaptation worsening with advancing optic nerve damage.


Subject(s)
Dark Adaptation , Glaucoma, Open-Angle/complications , Optic Atrophy/complications , Adult , Aged , Aging , Female , Glaucoma, Open-Angle/physiopathology , Humans , Light , Male , Middle Aged , Optic Atrophy/physiopathology , Photic Stimulation
7.
Am J Ophthalmol ; 107(2): 137-44, 1989 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2913807

ABSTRACT

Using planimetric analysis of stereoscopic optic disk photographs, we studied 21 optic nerve heads of 11 subjects who shared the common feature of optic cups that were larger than the mean + 2 S.D. within the normal population. A comparison of these findings to those of 571 normal optic disks and 706 optic nerve heads in eyes with chronic primary open-angle glaucoma showed the following morphologic characteristics: (1) abnormally large optic disk area (mean +/- S.D., 4.49 +/- 0.56 mm2), (2) large cup/disk ratios with the horizontal ratio (0.78 +/- 0.03) significantly (P less than .001) larger that the vertical (0.71 +/- 0.03), (3) increased incidence of cilioretinal arteries, (4) normal neuroretinal rim area (2.06 +/- 0.35 mm2), (5) normal neuroretinal rim configuration, inferiorly (0.43 +/- 0.08 mm) broader (P less than .001, Wilcoxon test) than superiorly (0.33 +/- 0.06 mm), smallest (P less than .0001) temporally (0.20 +/- 0.04 mm), (6) normal form of zone alpha (irregular hypopigmentation and hyperpigmentation) of the parapapillary chorioretinal atrophy with its widest extension in the temporal horizontal area, (7) no zone beta (visible large choroidal vessels and sclera), (8) normal caliber of the parapapillary retinal vessels, and (9) normal parapillary retinal nerve fiber layer. These characteristics are helpful in the differentiation of primary and secondary large cups.


Subject(s)
Glaucoma/diagnosis , Optic Disk/anatomy & histology , Adult , Aged , Atrophy , Choroid/pathology , Female , Glaucoma/pathology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Optic Disk/pathology , Reference Values , Retina/pathology , Retinal Vessels/pathology , Terminology as Topic
9.
J Assoc Off Anal Chem ; 65(2): 215-7, 1982 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6282802

ABSTRACT

A procedure based on steam distillation is described for the determination of residues of the thiocarbamate herbicides diallate and triallate. The herbicides are steam-distilled directly from aqueous suspensions of milk and plant samples and trapped in hexane. After column cleanup on either activated Florisil or silica cartridges, samples are quantitated by gas-liquid chromatography. Recoveries of diallate and triallate from milk, lettuce, peas, corn, canarygrass seed and straw, and flax straw ranged from 77 to 96%.


Subject(s)
Herbicides/analysis , Milk/analysis , Plants/analysis , Thiocarbamates/analysis , Triallate/analysis , Animals , Cattle , Chromatography, Gas/methods , Isomerism , Time Factors
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