PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Roadside research from the pinelands and coast to coast

Drexel scientists present studies of pine snakes and fire-dependent flowers at Ecological Society of America meeting

Roadside research from the pinelands and coast to coast
2014-08-12
(Press-News.org) PHILADELPHIA (August 12, 2014)— "Roads are essentially the primary feature of human civilization at this point," according to Dane Ward, a doctoral student in environmental science at Drexel University who is presenting research at the Ecological Society of America (ESA) meeting. Perhaps not surprisingly, Ward, along with fellow doctoral students Ryan Rebozo and Kevin P.W. Smith from the Laboratory of Pinelands Research led by Walter Bien, PhD in Drexel's College of Arts and Sciences, took advantage of a cross-country roadtrip from Philadelphia to the meeting in Sacramento this week for some extra ecological data collection. "While traveling across the country and passing through different types of environments, we stopped every few hundred miles to evaluate the immediate roadside vegetation and comparing that to the plants in the natural environments 20 meters away from the road." Their cross-country look at roadside ecology is a new venture, but their scientific work closer to home in the New Jersey Pinelands also has a relationship to the road. What Flower Prefers to Grow After You Mow? With their attractive purple and pink flowers, gentians are popular as cultivated garden plants. The Pine Barrens gentian species (Gentiana autumnalis), thrives after its ecosystem has experienced disturbance, as one of the earliest species to begin re-inhabiting empty spaces – a phase known as early succession. But the gentian and other early successional species in the Pine Barrens are growing rare because of human intervention: suppressing wildfires, which are the most common natural disturbance in the area. The Pine Barrens of New Jersey are second only to California in the frequency of wildfires. Suppressing them protects human lives nearby, but means there are far fewer disturbed places where gentians prefer to grow. Is mowing – including roadside mowing – an effective replacement for wildfires to help sustain the Pine Barrens gentian population? That is one of the questions Rebozo is addressing in research he will present at the Ecological Society of America meeting on Aug. 13. Rebozo said that currently both mowing and prescribed burns are rarely used as management practices for successional species in the Pine Barrens. For his research, he worked with the New Jersey Air National Guard to implement prescribed burns for experimental purposes at the Warren Grove Range, where Drexel's Laboratory of Pinelands Research conducts environmental research. Rebozo also identified sites where gentians grow unmanaged or mowed, including one mowed roadside site where gentians happened to grow. Rebozo found that where mowing and burning disturbances were introduced, the gentians responded with increased plant density (more than doubled at some sites), flowering percentage and patch size – often within one year of the disturbance. Prescribed burns had an even stronger positive impact on gentian growth and reproduction than mowing did. "With a burn comes not only clearing of vegetation, but also an influx of nutrients," Rebozo said. "The plants respond well to that in terms of flowering and the number of seeds they set the next year." When Snakes Meet the New Jersey Highway Roads are a challenge for northern pine snakes (Pituophis melanoleucus) in the New Jersey Pine Barrens, based on the findings that Ward will present at the ESA meeting on Aug. 15. At this meeting, Ward will also become chair of the student section of ESA, after serving as vice chair for the past year. Ward has worked on both substrate experiments – testing how well snakes move across different types of road surfaces – and landscape-level analyses of how much snake-friendly habitat is actually available for pine snakes without requiring dangerous road-crossings. He has found that snakes move much faster, and with less sinuous movement, on sand compared to asphalt and concrete surfaces. "Then we used that knowledge and looked at the landscape," Ward said. In New Jersey, the most densely populated state in the country, the network of roads can dramatically shape the area of land that snake populations can occupy without facing significant risk of population loss during road crossings. "Roads reduce the number of snakes we can have by creating more small patches of usable habitat, in many cases too small to support even a single pine snake," Ward said. Ward analyzed the road layout and habitat types in the pine snake's historic range in New Jersey and identified a total of 3,872 habitat patches divided by roads and natural barriers. Of those, only 156 patches were of a large enough size to support a small population of 3-5 adult snakes. Ward said this work has helped inform ongoing efforts in the state to mitigate the impact of roads and provide connectivity for snakes and other wildlife to cross them safely. Two years ago, the New Jersey Air National Guard agreed to participate in a pilot study to test the feasibility of using culverts to guide snakes under roads as part of a larger study of northern pine snakes at Warren Grove Gunnery Range. The New Jersey State Department of Transportation installed culverts under portions of the Atlantic City Expressway last year.

Newborn Snakes Finding Their Path Through Life "Most reptiles are great mapmakers," said Smith, a doctoral student in Drexel's Laboratory of Pinelands Research who will present research on northern pine snakes at the ESA meeting on Aug. 14. At the meeting, Smith is also serving as the student liaison to the education diversity council. Adult snakes tend to have a good idea of where they are and what is around them, but neonates, or newborn snakes, don't have those mental maps established when they first emerge from the nest. Smith is tracking neonate pine snakes to find out where they go and where they stay to get a deeper picture of the species' habitat needs. He is supplementing that tracking with simple experiments to find out why snakes might go one way or another. Smith's tracking of neonate pine snakes over two years has shown that the young snakes stay fairly close to the nest in their first year – ranging from 30 to about 250 meters away – but use a wide range of habitat types. Smith's study site offers a range of uplands, lowlands, transitional zones, swamps and cranberry bogs. Although pine snakes are considered an upland species, the neonates moved readily through lowlands and wetlands, as well as grassy areas. Smith has also performed behavioral experiments with neonate snakes to test the hypothesis that their movements could be influenced by social factors. "Sometimes more than one female pine snake will nest in a single burrow," Smith said. "The neonates may then come out with some siblings and some non-siblings. Do they have preferences in whose scent trail they follow?" Using a simple Y-shaped maze test, he is trying to find out if neonate snakes prefer to follow their siblings or unrelated neonates.

INFORMATION: Videos Substrate experiments with pine snakes on concrete and sand, footage by Dane Ward, http://youtu.be/XCKz1VQ26gQ Neonate pine snake emergence from nest, by Kevin P.W. Smith, http://youtu.be/0aycaVXP2_M Neonate pine snake in Y maze experiment, by Kevin P.W. Smith, http://youtu.be/3NaQU70ILyM

ESA Conference Abstracts Ryan R. Rebozo and Walter F. Bien: The influence of disturbance on the demography of the rare pine barren gentian (Gentiana autumnalis) in New Jersey, http://eco.confex.com/eco/2014/webprogram/Paper48767.html Dane C. Ward and Walter F. Bien: The effect of roads on the movement and landscape structure of the northern pine snake, Pituophis melanoleucus, in the Pinelands of New Jersey, http://eco.confex.com/eco/2014/webprogram/Paper49666.html Kevin P.W. Smith and Walter F. Bien: The neonatal spatial ecology of the Northern pinesnake (Pituophis melanoleucus) in the New Jersey pine barrens, http://eco.confex.com/eco/2014/webprogram/Paper49671.html For information about earlier phases of the pine snake research that Smith, Ward and other members of the Bien lab at Drexel presented at ESA last year, see: http://newsblog.drexel.edu/2013/08/02/why-cant-the-snakes-cross-the-road-secret-lives-of-baby-snakes-and-other-new-jersey-pineland-snake-science/

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Roadside research from the pinelands and coast to coast Roadside research from the pinelands and coast to coast 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UMN and NYBC research finds potential MERS transmission mechanism between bats and humans

2014-08-12
Researchers have identified the mechanism used by the deadly MERS virus to transmit from bats to humans. Bats are a native reservoir for MERS and the finding could be critical for understanding the animal origins of the virus, as well as preventing and controlling the spread of MERS and related viruses in humans. The findings were published in the most recent edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Leading the research was Fang Li, Ph.D., associate professor of Pharmacology at the University of Minnesota Medical School. Graduate students Yang ...

Notre Dame paper offers insights into a new class of semiconducting materials

2014-08-12
A new paper by University of Notre Dame researchers describes their investigations of the fundamental optical properties of a new class of semiconducting materials known as organic-inorganic "hybrid" perovskites. The research was conducted at the Notre Dame Radiation Laboratory by Joseph Manser, a doctoral student in chemical and biomolecular engineering, under the direction of Prashant Kamat, Rev. John A. Zahm Professor of Science. The findings appear in a paper in the August 10 edition of the journal Nature Photonics. The term "perovskites" refers to the structural ...

New analysis reveals tumor weaknesses

2014-08-12
CAMBRIDGE, Mass-- Scientists have known for decades that cancer can be caused by genetic mutations, but more recently they have discovered that chemical modifications of a gene can also contribute to cancer. These alterations, known as epigenetic modifications, control whether a gene is turned on or off. Analyzing these modifications can provide important clues to the type of tumor a patient has, and how it will respond to different drugs. For example, patients with glioblastoma, a type of brain tumor, respond well to a certain class of drugs known as alkylating agents ...

Federal Drug Discount Program faces challenges, report finds

2014-08-12
A federal program that provides billions in drug discounts to safety net hospitals and other health care providers is expanding under health care reform, but divergent views on the purpose and future scope of the program creates uncertainty for safety net providers and drug manufacturers, according to new report from the RAND Corporation. The so-called 340B program faces a number of critical issues, such as whether to change and better define eligibility, strengthen compliance efforts and provide greater transparency about the discounts provided through the program, according ...

Digital literacy reduces cognitive decline in older adults, experts find

2014-08-12
Researchers have found a link between digital literacy and a reduction in cognitive decline, according to a study published in The Journals of Gerontology, Series A: Medical Sciences on July 8th. Led by Andre Junqueira Xavier at the Universidade do Sul de Santa Catarina, this is the first major study to show that digital literacy, or the ability to engage, plan and execute digital actions such as web browsing and exchanging emails, can improve memory. Drawn from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, the study followed 6442 participants in the UK between the ages ...

Regional anesthesia for pediatric knee surgery reduces pain, speeds recovery

Regional anesthesia for pediatric knee surgery reduces pain, speeds recovery
2014-08-12
VIDEO: As many as 98 percent of all pediatric knee surgeries performed at Nationwide Children's Hospital were done in an outpatient setting, as a result of this method that reduces... Click here for more information. A recent study of an ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia technique, called femoral nerve block, shows that it leads to less opioid use and allows the majority of patients to go home within hours of surgery. As many as 98 percent of all pediatric knee surgeries ...

Oxidative stress is significant predictor for hip fracture, research shows

2014-08-12
CINCINNATI—Oxidative stress is a significant predictor for hip fracture in postmenopausal women, according to new research led by University of Cincinnati (UC) epidemiologists. The research, appearing online ahead of print in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, was led by Tianying Wu, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in the UC College of Medicine Department of Environmental Health, and Shuman Yang, a postdoctoral fellow in the department. They collaborated with researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School. "To our knowledge, this ...

Fires in Northern Washington State

Fires in Northern Washington State
2014-08-12
The Pacific Northwest has been inundated with wildfires most stemming from lightning strikes during summer storms. Four of these wildfires can be seen in this natural-color Aqua satellite image collected by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer, MODIS, instrument aboard. This image was taken on August 11, 2014. Actively burning areas, detected by MODIS's thermal bands, are outlined in red. The Upper Falls wildfire was started by a lightning strike on August 03. It is located 17 Miles North of Winthrop WA, 37 miles Northwest of Omak, WA and has grown to ...

NASA sees a weaker Tropical Storm Julio far north of Hawaii

NASA sees a weaker Tropical Storm Julio far north of Hawaii
2014-08-12
Tropical Storm Julio continues to weaken as it moves through cooler waters of the Central Pacific Ocean. NASA's Terra satellite passed over Julio and saw that the bulk of the clouds and precipitation were being pushed to the34 north of the center as the storm tracked far north of the Hawaiian Islands. NASA's Terra satellite passed over Julio on August 11 at 21:25 UTC (5:25 p.m. EDT) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument aboard took a visible picture of the storm. The MODIS image revealed a circular center, but most of the clouds and ...

Copper foam turns carbon dioxide into useful chemicals

Copper foam turns carbon dioxide into useful chemicals
2014-08-12
PROVIDENCE, R.I. -- A catalyst made from a foamy form of copper has vastly different electrochemical properties from catalysts made with smooth copper in reactions involving carbon dioxide, a new study shows. The research, by scientists in Brown University's Center for the Capture and Conversion of CO2, suggests that copper foams could provide a new way of converting excess CO2 into useful industrial chemicals. The research is published in the journal ACS Catalysis. As levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere continue to rise, researchers are looking for ways to make ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The Human Immunome Project unveils scientific plan to decode and model the immune system

New research funding awarded to assess the role of race in predicting heart disease

Exploring the role of seven key genes in breast cancer: insights from in silico and in vitro analyses

The therapeutic effects of baicalein on the hepatopulmonary syndrome in the rat model of chronic common bile duct ligation

Development and characterization of honey-containing nanoemulsion for topical delivery

Decoding cellular ‘shape-shifters’

"Seeing the invisible": new tech enables deep tissue imaging during surgery

After 25 years, researchers uncover genetic cause of rare neurological disease

Probing the effects of interplanetary space on asteroid Ryugu

T. rex not as smart as previously claimed, scientists find

Breakthrough in brown fat research: Researchers from Denmark and Germany have found brown fat’s “off-switch”

Tech Extension Co. and Tech Extension Taiwan to build next-generation 3D integration manufacturing lines using Tokyo Tech's BBCube Technology

Atomic nucleus excited with laser: a breakthrough after decades

Losing keys and everyday items ‘not always sign of poor memory’

People with opioid use disorder less likely to receive palliative care at end of life

New Durham University study reveals mystery of decaying exoplanet orbits

The threat of polio paralysis may have disappeared, but enterovirus paralysis is just as dangerous and surveillance and testing systems are desperately needed

Study shows ChatGPT failed when challenging ESCMID guideline for treating brain abscesses

Study finds resistance to critically important antibiotics in uncooked meat sold for human and animal consumption

Global cervical cancer vaccine roll-out shows it to be very effective in reducing cervical cancer and other HPV-related disease, but huge variations between countries in coverage

Negativity about vaccines surged on Twitter after COVID-19 jabs become available

Global measles cases almost double in a year

Lower dose of mpox vaccine is safe and generates six-week antibody response equivalent to standard regimen

Personalised “cocktails” of antibiotics, probiotics and prebiotics hold great promise in treating a common form of irritable bowel syndrome, pilot study finds

Experts developing immune-enhancing therapies to target tuberculosis

Making transfusion-transmitted malaria in Europe a thing of the past

Experts developing way to harness Nobel Prize winning CRISPR technology to deal with antimicrobial resistance (AMR)

CRISPR is promising to tackle antimicrobial resistance, but remember bacteria can fight back

Ancient Maya blessed their ballcourts

Curran named Fellow of SAE, ASME

[Press-News.org] Roadside research from the pinelands and coast to coast
Drexel scientists present studies of pine snakes and fire-dependent flowers at Ecological Society of America meeting