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Maps of (baseline) δC and δN values of primary producers or consumers near the base of food webs provide crucial information for interpreting patterns in the isotopic composition of consumers that occupy higher trophic levels. In marine systems, understanding how oceanographic variables influence these values enables the creation of dynamic isoscapes across time and space, providing insights into how ecosystems function. The San Jorge Gulf (SJG) in the southwest Atlantic Ocean (45° S-47° S) is an area of particular importance, as it is located on one of the most productive continental shelves in the world, supporting large fisheries and marine mammal and seabird populations. We reconstructed spatial variation in zooplankton δC and δN values across SJG and investigated their relationship with physical and chemical oceanographic conditions. During cruises in the austral spring of 2016 and 2017, we collected medium-sized copepods whose isotopic composition integrate short-term (days to weeks) variation in oceanographic conditions recorded by phytoplankton at the base of the food web. We also collected data on water column depth, surface and bottom temperatures, water column stability, and macronutrient (nitrate, phosphate, and silicic acid) concentrations. The results revealed significant variation in both δC and δN values of up to 7-8‱ over a relatively small spatial scale (200-300 km). Copepod δC values were lower at the center of the SJG, showing an inverse correlation with water column stability, surface nitrate concentration, and water column depth. δN values showed a strong and negative relationship with surface nitrate concentration and water column stability, increasing from south to north in the SJG. δN values also showed a positive relationship with surface silicic acid concentration. These spatial patterns in nutrient dynamics and copepod carbon and nitrogen isotope values are interpreted in the context of the dominant northward current and temporal development of the frontal systems in the SJG.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology13120990 | DOI Listing |
Patient Prefer Adherence
August 2025
Allergy and Asthma Network, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Purpose: For the development of novel and efficacious drugs and improvement of patients' quality of life, the involvement of patient stakeholders in drug development is essential. This study was conducted among patients with asthma to understand their unmet needs with current treatments, and expectations from new treatments.
Methods: Sanofi collaborated with the Allergy & Asthma Network (AAN), a US-based patient advocacy group and their patient community.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform
July 2025
The key to achieving assist-as-needed (AAN) control in rehabilitation robots lies in accurately predicting patient motion intentions. This study, for the first time, redefines motion intention prediction from the perspective of sequence-to-sequence translation by analogizing sEMG signals and joint angles to the source language and target language, respectively. The proposed 3DCNN-TF model achieves precise translation of neural control signals into kinematic representations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Anthropol
July 2025
Department of Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
This article examines the crucial role of veterinarians in making animal death valuable, enabling productive life, and managing uncontrolled dying. Based on ethnographic fieldwork on dairy farms in the Netherlands, and considering veterinarians as gatekeepers of the food chain, health practitioners, and governance actors, I articulate the "value-scapes" of food production that shape which animals die, when, and how, and whether death is desirable, a waste, or a warning. Veterinization here narrates how veterinary expertise is shaped by diverse societal concerns like food security, public health, animal welfare, and ecological sustainability, and knotted into shifting and multifaceted formations of Dutch-European animality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEndoscopy
August 2025
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
In most colonoscopies performed for bowel symptoms, no significant lesions are found. To decrease the number of unnecessary colonoscopies, we evaluated the performance of two-sample fecal immunochemical testing (FIT) in ruling out significant lesions.Symptomatic patients referred for colonoscopy were instructed to perform two FITs from separate bowel movements prior to colonoscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Vaccin Immunother
December 2025
Department of Pediatrics and Vaccine, Infection and Immunology, Spaarne Gasthuis Hospital, Haarlem, the Netherlands.
The European Medicines Agency has authorized two interventions to prevent lower respiratory tract disease due to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV-LRTD) in infants: nirsevimab, a monoclonal antibody, and bivalent stabilized prefusion F subunit maternal vaccine (RSVpreF). In the Netherlands, RSV-LRTD protection is recommended for all infants with nirsevimab given preferential recommendation over RSVpreF. We evaluated cost-effectiveness of various intervention strategies to prevent RSV in the Netherlands.
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