Search results for "Global Change"
showing 10 items of 639 documents
Occurrence of CTX-M Producing Escherichia coli in Soils, Cattle, and Farm Environment in France (Burgundy Region).
2012
Article en open access; International audience; CTX-M [a major type of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBU] producing Escherichia coli are increasingly involved in human infections worldwide. The aim of this study was to investigate potential reservoirs for such strains: soils, cattle, and farm environment. The prevalence of bla(CTX-M) genes was determined directly from soil DNA extracts obtained from 120 sites in Burgundy (France) using real-time PCR. bla(CTX-M) targets were found in 20% of the DNA extracts tested. Samples of cattle feces (n = 271) were collected from 182 farms in Burgundy. Thirteen ESBL-producing isolates were obtained from 12 farms and further characterized for the pr…
Les modèles climatiques régionaux : outils de décomposition des échelles spatio-temporelles.
2011
11 pages; National audience; Les modèles climatiques régionaux sont des outils de désagrégation des champs géophysiques, résolvant les équations de la thermodynamique atmosphérique dans le but de simuler à des échelles fines des champs surfaciques tels que la pluviométrie. Prenant à la fois en compte les échelles larges imposées aux bornes du domaine et les échelles plus fines à l'intérieur du domaine (topographie, occupation du sol, types de sol, ...), ces outils sont particulièrement pertinents pour séparer le signal forcé du bruit stochastique inhérent au système climatique. Une méthodologie est ici proposée pour distinguer les différentes échelles spatio-temporelles de la variabilité cl…
Emissions and spatial variability of N2O, N2 and nitrous oxide mole fraction at the field scale, revealed with 15N isotopic techniques.
2006
Abstract The accurate measurement of nitrous oxide (N 2 O) and dinitrogen (N 2 ) during the denitrification process in soils is a challenge which will help to estimate the contribution of soil N 2 O emissions to global warming. Oxygen concentration, nitrate concentration and carbon availability are generally the main factors that control soil denitrification rate and the amount of N 2 O or N 2 emitted. The aim of this paper is to present a database of the N 2 O mole fraction measured at the field scale, and to test hypotheses concerning its regulation. A 15 N-nitrate tracer solution was added to 36 undisturbed soil cores on a 20 m×20 m cultivated field plot. Fluxes of CO 2 , N 2 O and N 2 f…
Incorporating classified dispersal assumptions in predictive distribution models – A case study with grasshoppers and bush-crickets
2011
Abstract Current and future species distributions depend on environmental conditions, but the ability of species to shift their range boundaries or to expand their distribution ranges in response to global change also depends on their dispersal capacity. Dispersal capacity, however, has often been neglected in previous studies that either assumed no-dispersal or full dispersal, both of which are unrealistic for most taxa. The aims of this study are (i) to identify the predictors of the present spatial distribution on a regional scale for 13 grasshoppers and bush-crickets, and (ii) to derive predictions of their future distributions under climate change by applying different dispersal capaci…
Correlation between mutation rate and genome size in riboviruses: mutation rate of bacteriophage Qβ.
2013
Abstract Genome sizes and mutation rates covary across all domains of life. In unicellular organisms and DNA viruses, they show an inverse relationship known as Drake’s rule. However, it is still unclear whether a similar relationship exists between genome sizes and mutation rates in RNA genomes. Coronaviruses, the RNA viruses with the largest genomes (∼30 kb), encode a proofreading 3′ exonuclease that allows them to increase replication fidelity. However, it is unknown whether, conversely, the RNA viruses with the smallest genomes tend to show particularly high mutation rates. To test this, we measured the mutation rate of bacteriophage Qβ, a 4.2-kb levivirus. Amber reversion-based Luria–D…
Variability in the mutation rates of RNA viruses
2014
ABSTRACT: It is well established that RNA viruses show extremely high mutation rates, but less attention has been paid to the fact that their mutation rates also vary strongly, from 10-6 to 10-4 substitutions per nucleotide per cell infection. The causes explaining this variability are still poorly understood, but candidate factors are the viral genome size and polarity, host-specific gene expression patterns, or the intracellular environment. Differences between animal and plant viruses, or between arthropod-borne and directly transmitted viruses have also been postulated. Finally, RNA viruses may be able to regulate the rate at which new mutations spread in the population by modifying f…
Variation in RNA virus mutation rates across host cells.
2014
It is well established that RNA viruses exhibit higher rates of spontaneous mutation than DNA viruses and microorganisms. However, their mutation rates vary amply, from 10−6 to 10−4 substitutions per nucleotide per round of copying (s/n/r) and the causes of this variability remain poorly understood. In addition to differences in intrinsic fidelity or error correction capability, viral mutation rates may be dependent on host factors. Here, we assessed the effect of the cellular environment on the rate of spontaneous mutation of the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), which has a broad host range and cell tropism. Luria-Delbrück fluctuation tests and sequencing showed that VSV mutated similarly…
Understanding melt generation beneath the slow-spreading Kolbeinsey Ridge using 238U, 230Th, and 231Pa excesses
2011
International audience; To examine the petrogenesis and sources of basalts from the Kolbeinsey Ridge, one of the shallowest locations along the global ridge system, we present new measurements of Nd, Sr, Hf, and Pb isotopes and U-series disequilibria on 32 axial basalts. Young Kolbeinsey basalts (full-spreading rate = 1.8 cm/yr; 67 degrees 05'-70 degrees 26'N) display ((230)Th/(238)U) 1 with ((230)Th/(238)U) from 0.95 to 1.30 and have low U (11.3-65.6 ppb) and Th (33.0 ppb-2.40 ppm) concentrations. Except for characteristic isotopic enrichment near the Jan Mayen region, the otherwise depleted Kolbeinsey basalts (e. g. (87)Sr/(86)Sr = 0.70272-0.70301, epsilon(Nd) = 8.4-10.5, epsilon(Hf) = 15…
Record of latest Barremian-Cenomanian environmental change in tectonically controlled depressions from the Jura-Burgundy threshold (Jura Mountains, e…
2019
The area of the western Jura Mountains constitutes the former Jura-Burgundy threshold between the Tethys Ocean and the epicontinental Paris Basin Sea. During the Barremian, the area was covered by a shallow-water Urgonian carbonate platform. Tectonic processes influenced the architecture of the Urgonian platform and were notably responsible for the formation of fault-related depressions on top of the Urgonian series, which were subsequently transformed into incised valleys and then to marine depocenters. Their sedimentary infills are mostly represented by the Perte-du-Rhône Formation and record stepwise environmental change on the innermost platform, which was strongly influenced by the nea…
A new breath of life for anoxia.
2008
The middle of the Cretaceous (120–80 Ma) was one of the warmest periods of the past 300 m.y., with tropical sea-surface temperatures well over 30 °C ([Puceat et al., 2007][1]; [Forster et al., 2007a][2]) and atmospheric CO2 levels much higher than today. Therefore this period can give us crucial