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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    San Diego :Elsevier Science & Technology,
    Keywords: Communicable diseases -- Handbooks, manuals, etc. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (365 pages)
    Edition: 3rd ed.
    ISBN: 9781483183565
    Language: English
    Note: Front Cover -- A Synopsis of Infectious and Tropical Diseases -- Copyright Page -- Preface to the Third Edition -- Preface to the First Edition -- Table of Contents -- Section I: Diseases due to Viruses -- Chapter 1. HERPESVIRUS INFECTIONS -- Herpes Simplex -- Varicella-zoster Infections -- Epstein-Barr Virus -- Cytomegalovirus Infection (CMV) -- Chapter 2. INFLUENZA -- Epidemiology -- Mode of Infection -- Aetiology -- Morbid Anatomy -- Quarantine Period -- Symptoms -- Complications and Sequelae -- Diagnosis -- Prognosis -- Treatment -- Chapter 3 COMMON COLD (Acute Coryza -- Acute Rhinitis) -- Aetiology -- Symptoms and Signs -- Treatment -- Diagnosis -- Chapter 4. MEASLES (Rubeola -- Morbilli) -- Aetiology -- Morbid Anatomy -- Mode of Infection -- Duration oflnfectivity -- Quarantine -- Symptoms -- The Blood -- Variations in Clinical Type -- Mortality -- Relapses -- Complications -- Sequelae -- Association with other Disease -- Diagnosis -- Prognosis -- Prophylaxis -- Treatment -- chapter 5. RUBELLA -- Mode of Infection -- Duration of Infectivity -- Quarantine Period for Contacts -- Symptoms -- Complications -- Diagnosis -- Treatment -- Congenital Defects due to Maternal Rubella -- Prophylaxis -- Chapter 6. MUMPS (Epidemic Parotitis) -- Aetiology -- Morbid Anatomy -- Mode of Infection -- Duration of lnfectivity -- Symptoms -- Complications -- Various Rare Sequelae -- Diagnosis -- Treatment -- Prevention -- Chapter 7. ROTAVIRUS INFECTION -- Aetiology -- Epidemiology -- Pathology -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Management -- Prevention -- Chapter 8. ENTEROVIRUSES -- Coxsackie Viruses -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Treatment -- Echoviruses -- Chapter 9. POLIOMYELITIS (Heine-Medin Disease -- Polioencephalitis -- Infantile Paralysis) -- Distribution -- Virus -- Mode of Entry of Virus -- Mode of Spread of Infection. , Development of Epidemics -- Morbid Anatomy -- Cerebrospinal Fluid -- Blood -- Clinical Grades of Severity -- Symptoms -- Prognosis -- Diagnosis -- Laboratory -- Prophylaxis -- Treatment -- Chapter 10. RABIES (Hydrophobia -- Lyssa -- La Rage) -- Distribution -- Morbid Anatomy -- The Virus -- Symptoms -- Diagnosis -- Prognosis -- Prophylaxis -- Post-exposure Treatment -- Rabies in Dogs -- Paralytic Rabies transmitted by Bats -- Chapter 11. ARBOVIRUS DISEASES -- General Characteristics -- Group A: Viscerotropic -- Neurotropic -- Group B: Viscerotropic -- Neurotropic -- UngroupedArthropod-borne Viruses -- Virus -- Incubation Period -- Symptoms -- Treatment -- Virus -- Epidemiology -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Virus Isolation -- Serology -- Treatment -- Prognosis -- Chapter 12. YELLOW FEVER (International Nomenclature: Amaryl) -- Virus -- Vectors -- Geographical Distribution -- Mode of Transmission -- Morbid Anatomy -- Clinical Types -- Duration of Infectivity -- Isolation -- Symptoms -- Summary of Symptoms -- Progress -- Diagnosis -- Differential Diagnosis -- Control of Yellow Fever -- Active Immunization by Vaccine -- Treatment -- Chapter 13. DENGUE (Break-bone -- Dandy or Seven-day Fever) -- Classic Dengue -- Haemorrhagic Fever Caused by Dengue Viruses -- Chapter 14. VIRAL HEPATITIS -- Hepatitis A Virus Infection -- Hepatitis B Virus Infection -- Delta-agent Infection (δ) -- Non-A Non-B Hepatitis -- Chapter 15. PHLEBOTOMUS FEVER {Sandfly Fever -- Papatasi Fever -- Three-day Fever) -- Distribution -- Mode of Infection -- Symptoms -- Diagnosis -- Prophylaxis -- Chapter 16. HAEMORRHAGIC FEVERS -- Omsk Haemorrhagic Fever and Kyasanur Forest Disease -- Lassa Fever -- Haemorrhagic Fevers of South America -- Chapter 17. MARBURG AND EBOLA VIRUS INFECTIONS (Vervet Monkey Disease -- Green Monkey Disease) -- Definition -- Aetiology -- Epidemiology. , Pathology -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Management -- Chapter 18. ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME (AIDS) -- Aetiology -- Epidemiology -- Incubation Period -- Period of Communicability -- Immunopathology -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Management -- Isolation -- Prognosis -- Prevention -- Chapter 19. KURU -- Definition -- Epidemiology -- Aetiology -- Pathology -- Clinical Features -- Treatment -- Chapter 20. SMALLPOX -- Transmission -- Clinical Features -- Vaccination and Control -- Section II: Diseases Due to Rickettsia and Chlamydia -- Chapter 21. TYPHUS FEVER -- Epidemic Typhus Fever (Exanthematic, Louseborne, or True Typhus) -- Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever -- Fièvre Boutonneuse -- Scrub Typhus (Tsutsugamushi Fever -- Japanese River Fever) -- Murine Typhus (Flea Typhus -- Urban Typhus) -- Chapter 22. TRENCH FEVER -- History -- Mode of Transmission -- General Course -- Symptoms of Primary Fever -- Pyrexia -- Sequelae -- Progress -- Treatment -- Chapter 23. Q FEVER -- History -- Epidemiology -- Laboratory Tests -- Symptoms -- Diagnosis -- Laboratory Confirmation -- Treatment -- Prognosis -- Chapter 24. LYMPHOGRANULOMA VENEREUM (Tropical or Climatic Bubo -- Lymphogranuloma or Lymphopathia Inguinale -- Poradenitis) -- Non-LGV Chlamydiae -- Trachoma and Inclusion Conjunctivitis -- Chapter 25. PSITTACOSIS -- Bird Infections -- Organism -- Morbid Anatomy -- Symptomatology in Human Beings -- Progress and Prognosis -- Diagnosis -- Treatment -- Section III: Diseases ø due to Spirochaetes -- Chapter 26. RELAPSING FEVERS -- A. Louse-borne -- B. Tick-borne -- Chapter 27. LEPTOSPIROSIS -- Weil's Disease -- Other Forms of Leptospirosis -- Chapter 28. TREPONEMATOSES -- PRIMARY STAGE -- SECONDARY STAGE -- TERTIARYSTAGE -- QUARTERNARYSTAGE (PARENCHYMATOUSSYPHILIS) -- DELAYED CONGENITAL SYPHILIS -- SYPHILIS OF THE LUNGS -- SYPHILIS OF THE BRONCHI. , SYPHILIS OF THE TONGUE -- SYPHILIS OF THE PHARYNX -- SYPHILIS OF THE LIVER (Syphilitic Hepatitis) -- SYPHILIS OF THE ALIMENTARY TRACT -- SYPHILIS OF THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM -- RENAL SYPHILIS -- SYPHILIS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM -- Chapter 29. Y AWS ( Framboesia ) -- Pinta -- Intermediate Treponematoses -- Chapter 30. RAT-BITE FEVER -- Bacteriology -- Symptoms -- Incubation Period -- Onset -- Course -- Relapse -- Blood -- Mortality -- Diagnosis -- Treatment -- Section IV: Bacterial Diseases -- Chapter 31. TYPHOID FEVER -- Paratyphoid Fever -- Chapter 32. BACTERIAL FOOD POISONING -- 'Food Poisoning' caused by Infection with Salmonellae -- Staphylococcal Food Poisoning -- Clostridial Food Poisoning and Enteritis Necroticans -- Other ( Food Poisoning' Organisms -- Chapter 33. DYSENTERY -- 1. Bacillary Dysentery -- 2. Amoebic Dysentery -- 3. Amoebiasis of the Liver (Amoebic Hepatitis and Liver Abscess) -- Intestinal and Urogenital Protozoa other than Entamoeba -- Chapter 34. STREPTOCOCCAL IN FECTIONS -- Clinical Syndromes produced by Streptococcal Infection -- Suppurative Streptococcal Syndromes -- Immunologically Mediated Complications of Clinical or Subclinical Streptococcal Infection -- Acute Anaphylactoid Purpura -- Toxin-mediated Streptococcal Disease -- Chapter 35. STAPHYLOCOCCAL INFECTIONS -- Staphlococcal Scpticamia -- Other Deep-seated Staphylococcal Infections -- Staphylococcal Enterocolitis -- Chapter 36. DIPHTHERIA -- Desert Sore -- Chapter 37. WHOOPING-COUGH (PERTUSSIS) -- Incidence -- Bacteriology -- Morbid A natomy -- Mode of Infection -- Duration of Infectivity -- Symptoms -- Physical Signs -- Blood Changes -- Duration -- Complications -- Diagnosis -- Radiology -- Cause of the Whoop -- Prophylaxis -- Treatment -- Chapter 38. HAEMOPHILUS INFLUENZAE INFECTIONS -- Bacteriology -- Clinical Manifestations -- Diagnosis -- Treatment. , Chapter 39. MENINGOCOCCAL MENINGITIS (Cerebrospinal Fever -- Cerebrospinal Meningitis -- Spotted Fever -- (In infants) Posterior Basal Meningitis) -- Aetiology and Epidemiology -- Mode of Infection -- Bacteriology -- Morbid Anatomy -- Duration of Infectivity -- Quarantine Period -- Symptoms -- Ordinary Form -- Other Clinical Types -- Complications and Sequelae -- Cerebrospinal Fluid -- Diagnosis -- Differential Diagnosis -- Course and Prognosis -- Prophylaxis -- Treatment -- Chapter 40. GONOCOCCAL INFECTIONS -- Aetiology -- Bacteriology -- Clinical Conditions in Adults -- Treatment of Disseminated Gonococcal Infections -- Chapter 41. BRUCELLOSIS (Undulant Fever -- Malta Fever) -- Brucella Melitensis Infection -- Brucella Abortus and Brucella Suis Infections -- Chapter 42. CHOLERA -- Aetiology -- Bacteriology -- Mode of Infection -- Duration of Infectivity -- Quarantine Period -- Pathology -- Symptoms -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Prognosis -- Prophylaxis -- Treatment -- Other Species of Vibrios -- Chapter 43. PLAGUE -- Aetiology -- Bacteriology -- Morbid Anatomy -- Duration of Infectivity -- Quarantine Period -- Symptoms -- Diagnosis -- Prophylaxis -- Treatment -- Chapter 44. TETANUS (Lockjaw) -- General Tetanus -- Neonatal Tetanus -- Localized Tetanus -- Cephalic Tetanus -- Chapter 45. GLANDERS -- Bacteriology -- Morbid Anatomy -- Symptoms -- Diagnosis -- Treatment -- Melioidosis -- Epidemiology -- Morbid A natomy -- Symptoms -- Diagnosis -- Treatment -- Chapter 46. ANTHRAX (Malignantpustule -- Woolsorter's disease. (In animals) Splenic fever) -- Aetiology and Epidemiology -- Bacteriology -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Prophylaxis (Man) -- Prophylaxis (Animals) -- Treatment -- Chapter 47. LEPROSY -- Epidemiology -- Aetiology -- Pathology -- Clinical Features -- Diagnosis -- Differential Diagnosis -- Prognosis -- Treatment -- Prophylaxis. , Chapter 48. TULARAEMIA.
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin / Heidelberg,
    Keywords: Absorption (Physiology). ; Physiology, Comparative. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (258 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783642733758
    Series Statement: Advances in Comparative and Environmental Physiology Series ; v.2
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Book
    Book
    Kingston : Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: III, 114 S , Ill., graph. Darst
    ISBN: 064211630X
    Series Statement: ANARE research notes 49
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Keywords: Area/locality; Conductivity, average; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, top/min; ELEVATION; Heat flow; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Method comment; Number; Number of conductivity measurements; Sample, optional label/labor no; Temperature gradient
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 20 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Keywords: Area/locality; Depth, bottom/max; ELEVATION; Heat flow; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Number; Number of conductivity measurements; Sample, optional label/labor no
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 6 data points
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Westwood, Karen; Thomson, Paul G; van den Enden, Rick; Maher, L E; Wright, S; Davidson, Andrew T (2018): Ocean acidification impacts primary and bacterial production in Antarctic coastal waters during austral summer. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 498, 46-60, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jembe.2017.11.003
    Publication Date: 2024-03-15
    Description: Polar waters may be highly impacted by ocean acidification (OA) due to increased solubility of CO2 at colder water temperatures. Three experiments examining the influence of OA on primary and bacterial production were conducted during austral summer at Davis Station, East Antarctica (68°35′ S, 77°58′ E). For each experiment, six minicosm tanks (650 L) were filled with 200 μm filtered coastal seawater containing natural communities of Antarctic marine microbes. Assemblages were incubated for 10 to 12 days at CO2 concentrations ranging from pre-industrial to post-2300. Primary and bacterial production rates were determined using NaH14CO3 and 14C-leucine, respectively. Net community production (NCP) was also determined using dissolved oxygen. In all experiments, maximum photosynthetic rates (Pmax, mg C mg/chl a/h) decreased with elevated CO2, clearly reducing rates of total gross primary production (mg C/L/h). Rates of cell-specific bacterial productivity (μg C/cell/h) also decreased under elevated CO2, yet total bacterial production (μg C/L/h) and cell abundances increased with CO2 over Days 0–4. Initial increases in bacterial production and abundance were associated with fewer heterotrophic nanoflagellates and therefore less grazing pressure. The main changes in primary and bacterial productivity generally occurred at CO2 concentrations 〉 2 × present day (〉 780 ppm), with the same responses occurring regardless of seasonally changing environmental conditions and microbial assemblages. However, NCP varied both within and among experiments, largely due to changing nitrate + nitrite (NOx) availability. At NOx concentrations 〈 1.5 μM photosynthesis to respiration ratios showed that populations switched from net autotrophy to heterotrophy and CO2 responses were suppressed. Overall, OA may reduce production in Antarctic coastal waters, thereby reducing food availability to higher trophic levels and reducing draw-down of atmospheric CO2, thus forming a positive feedback to climate change. NOX limitation may suppress this OA response but cause a similar decline.
    Keywords: Alkalinity, total; Ammonium; Antarctic; Aragonite saturation state; Bacteria; Bacterial production of carbon; Bacterial production of carbon per cell; Bicarbonate ion; Biomass/Abundance/Elemental composition; Calcite saturation state; Calculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. (2010); Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Carbon, organic, dissolved; Carbon, organic, particulate; Carbonate ion; Carbonate system computation flag; Carbon dioxide; Chlorophyll a; Coast and continental shelf; Community composition and diversity; Containers and aquaria (20-1000 L or 〈 1 m**2); Davis_Station_OA; Entire community; EXP; Experiment; Experiment duration; Fugacity of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air); Gross primary production of carbon; Gross primary production of oxygen; Laboratory experiment; Maximum photosynthetic efficiency per chlorophyll a biomass; Nanoflagellates, heterotrophic; Net community production of oxygen; Nitrate and Nitrite; OA-ICC; Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre; Other metabolic rates; Partial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air); Pelagos; pH; Phosphate; Photosynthetic efficiency, carbon production; Polar; Primary production/Photosynthesis; Ratio; Respiration; Respiration rate, oxygen; Salinity; Saturation light intensity; Silicate; Temperature, water; Treatment; Type
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5854 data points
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Book , peerRev
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of Ecological Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Ecology 95 (2014): 2062–2068, doi:10.1890/13-1671.1.
    Description: Foliar nitrogen to phosphorus (N:P) ratios are widely used to indicate soil nutrient availability and limitation, but the foliar ratios of woody plants have proven more complicated to interpret than ratios from whole biomass of herbaceous species. This may be related to tissues in woody species acting as nutrient reservoirs during active growth, allowing maintenance of optimal N:P ratios in recently produced, fully expanded leaves (i.e., “new” leaves, the most commonly sampled tissue). Here we address the hypothesis that N:P ratios of newly expanded leaves are less sensitive indicators of soil nutrient availability than are other tissue types in woody plants. Seedlings of five naturally established tree species were harvested from plots receiving two years of fertilizer treatments in a lowland tropical forest in the Republic of Panama. Nutrient concentrations were determined in new leaves, old leaves, stems, and roots. For stems and roots, N:P ratios increased after N addition and decreased after P addition, and trends were consistent across all five species. Older leaves also showed strong responses to N and P addition, and trends were consistent for four of five species. In comparison, overall N:P ratio responses in new leaves were more variable across species. These results indicate that the N:P ratios of stems, roots, and older leaves are more responsive indicators of soil nutrient availability than are those of new leaves. Testing the generality of this result could improve the use of tissue nutrient ratios as indices of soil nutrient availability in woody plants.
    Description: Data are from Santiago et al. (2012), which was supported by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to S. J. Wright, a Smithsonian Institute Scholarly Studies grant to S. J. Wright and J. B. Yavitt, and a University of California Regent’s Faculty Fellowship to L. S. Santiago. L. A. Schreeg was partially supported through a Marine Biological Laboratory-Brown University SEED grant to Z. Cardon, S. Porder, and L. A. Schreeg.
    Keywords: Barro Colorado Nature Monument, Panama ; Forests ; Nitrogen ; N:P ratios ; Phosphorus ; Soil nutrient availability ; Stoichiometry ; Woody plants
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Journal of Applied Physics 70 (1991), S. 1565-1569 
    ISSN: 1089-7550
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: We have calculated the temperature dependence of the carrier density in epitaxial layers of semiconductors deposited on semi-insulating substrates when the potentials at the surface and the substrate interface are pinned. The results of these calculations are compared to experiments on thin, nominally undoped p-type layers of GaAs deposited epitaxially on EL2-dominated substrates. The theory predicts that as the temperature is lowered to some critical value the depletion layers at the edges of the epilayer overlap for thin, lightly doped samples. Below this value the carrier density decreases exponentially with inverse temperature with an activation energy which depends on the surface and interface potentials, as well as on the dopant concentration and the width of the layer. This activation energy can be derived analytically for strong depletion. In the intermediate range between negligible and complete depletion of the layer the carrier density must be obtained by numerical methods, and we present the results of such a calculation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    Journal of Applied Physics 68 (1990), S. 2475-2481 
    ISSN: 1089-7550
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: The electrical properties and microstructure of InAs ohmic contacts to n-type GaAs, prepared by sputter-depositing a single target, were studied by measuring the contact resistance (Rc) by the transmission line method and analyzing the interfacial structure by x-ray diffraction and cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy. Current-voltage measurement of an as-deposited InAs/W contact showed Schottky behavior, where the W layer was used as a cap layer. The InAs layer had an amorphous structure and a uniform oxide layer was observed at the InAs/GaAs interface. Even after annealing at 800 °C, ohmic behavior was not obtained in this contact because the intervening oxide layer prevented the InAs and GaAs interaction. By adding Ni to the InAs/W contacts (where Ni was deposited by an evaporation method), the interaction between the InAs and the GaAs was enhanced. Nickel interacted with As in the InAs layer and formed NiAs phases after annealing at temperature above 600 °C. The excess In in the InAs layer reacted with the GaAs substrate, forming InxGa1−xAs phases which covered about 80% of the GaAs interface. The Rc values of ∼0.4 Ω mm were obtained for InAs/Ni/W and Ni/InAs/Ni/W contacts at annealing temperatures in the range of 750–850 °C. These contacts contained only high melting point compounds and the contacts were stable during annealing at 400 °C for more than 100 h after ohmic contact formation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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