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A new fern-like fossil plant is described from the lower Upper Devonian of southern Ellesmere Island, Canadian Arctic Archipelago. The plant occurs in an Archaeopteris-dominated flora preserved in the Nordstrand Point Formation (Mid-Late Frasnian) near Bird Fiord. The plant has a pinnate vegetative system with three branch orders and laminate sphenopteroid pinnules. Primary pinnae usually diverge from the main axis in distichous pairs (quadriseriate), but can depart singly (biseriate). Each primary pinna bears a basal catadromic aphlebia. Anatomically, the plant exhibits a mesarch, bipolar protostele that is ribbon- to clepsydropsoid-shaped in the main axis. Primary pinna traces are also initially bipolar and crescent-shaped, but may become four-ribbed before dividing into a pair of bipolar traces. The morphology and anatomy of this plant are nongymnospermous and are most similar to Zygopteridales (particularly Rhacophytaceae and Zygopteridaceae). The Frasnian age of Ellesmeris shows that laminated foliage had evolved in some zygopterid ferns much earlier than previously recognized. The Sphenopteris-like pinnules of Ellesmeris indicate the need for caution when attributing such a convergent foliar design to other plant groups, such as the Devonian gymnosperms.  相似文献   
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Gordon Murray 《CMAJ》1953,69(3):296-299
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A series of in vitro experiments were conducted to assess three fibrolytic enzyme preparations as potential feed additives in equine diets. The three fibrolytic enzyme preparations were a concentrated cellulase (E1), an acid cellulase (E2) and a concentrated xylanase (E3). The enzymes were evaluated on their ability to modify the cell wall fraction of high-temperature dried lucerne (HTL) under various experimental conditions including differences in temperature, pH, incubation period, substrate levels and particle size to enable selection of the enzyme preparation most effective in the hydrolysis of lucerne. Results showed enzyme activities (as measured by reducing sugar assays) to be greatest at 50 °C, pH 5 and over an incubation period of greater than 20 h. E1 exhibited the greatest effect on total monosaccharide release from the HTL compared to E2 and E3. Moreover, dry matter (DM) and total non-starch polysaccharide (TNSP) losses were also greater in HTL treated with E1 compared to E2 and E3. Therefore, since the cell wall fraction of HTL contained substantial amounts of cellulose, the enzyme with the highest cellulase activity (Enzyme 1) was most effective in hydrolysing the cell walls of HTL. Consequently, it would appear that the application of exogenous fibrolytic enzyme preparations to forages requires the chemical characterisation of the target forage to enable selection of enzymes that are (a) most suitable to degrade the cell wall components of the candidate forage and (b) effective under field conditions.  相似文献   
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Introduction  

Total cholesterol (TC) and blood pressure (BP) are likely to take a dynamic course over time in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). This would have important implications in terms of using single-point-in-time measurements of these variables to assess coronary artery disease (CAD) risk. The objective of this study was to describe and quantify variability over time of TC and BP among patients with SLE and to determine their correlates.  相似文献   
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Emerging infectious diseases threaten a wide diversity of animals, and important questions remain concerning disease emergence in socially structured populations. We developed a spatially explicit simulation model to investigate whether—and under what conditions—disease-related mortality can impact rates of pathogen spread in populations of polygynous groups. Specifically, we investigated whether pathogen-mediated dispersal (PMD) can occur when females disperse after the resident male dies from disease, thus carrying infections to new groups. We also examined the effects of incubation period and virulence, host mortality and rates of background dispersal, and we used the model to investigate the spread of the virus responsible for Ebola hemorrhagic fever, which currently is devastating African ape populations. Output was analyzed using regression trees, which enable exploration of hierarchical and non-linear relationships. Analyses revealed that the incidence of disease in single-male (polygynous) groups was significantly greater for those groups containing an average of more than six females, while the total number of infected hosts in the population was most sensitive to the number of females per group. Thus, as expected, PMD occurs in polygynous groups and its effects increase as harem size (the number of females) increases. Simulation output further indicated that population-level effects of Ebola are likely to differ among multi-male–multi-female chimpanzees and polygynous gorillas, with larger overall numbers of chimpanzees infected, but more gorilla groups becoming infected due to increased dispersal when the resident male dies. Collectively, our results highlight the importance of social system on the spread of disease in wild mammals.  相似文献   
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