Wednesday, 9 February 2011

What's new for 'JKB_daily1' in PubMed

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Sender's message: Sepsis or genomics or altitude: JKB_daily1

Sent on Wednesday, 2011 Feb 09
Search (sepsis[MeSH Terms] OR septic shock[MeSH Terms] OR altitude[MeSH Terms] OR genomics[MeSH Terms] OR genetics[MeSH Terms] OR retrotransposons[MeSH Terms] OR macrophage[MeSH Terms]) AND ("2009/8/8"[Publication Date] : "3000"[Publication Date]) AND (("Science"[Journal] OR "Nature"[Journal] OR "The New England journal of medicine"[Journal] OR "Lancet"[Journal] OR "Nature genetics"[Journal] OR "Nature medicine"[Journal]) OR (Hume DA[Author] OR Baillie JK[Author] OR Faulkner, Geoffrey J[Author]))
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PubMed Results
Items 1 - 2 of 2

1. Science. 2011 Jan 21;331(6015):324-7.

Changes in climatic water balance drive downhill shifts in plant species' optimum elevations.

Crimmins SM, Dobrowski SZ, Greenberg JA, Abatzoglou JT, Mynsberge AR.

Department of Forest Management, College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA.

Abstract

Uphill shifts of species' distributions in response to historical warming are well documented, which leads to widespread expectations of continued uphill shifts under future warming. Conversely, downhill shifts are often considered anomalous and unrelated to climate change. By comparing the altitudinal distributions of 64 plant species between the 1930s and the present day within California, we show that climate changes have resulted in a significant downward shift in species' optimum elevations. This downhill shift is counter to what would be expected given 20th-century warming but is readily explained by species' niche tracking of regional changes in climatic water balance rather than temperature. Similar downhill shifts can be expected to occur where future climate change scenarios project increases in water availability that outpace evaporative demand.

PMID: 21252344 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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2. Science. 2011 Jan 21;331(6015):287-8.

Research ethics. Research practice and participant preferences: the growing gulf.

Trinidad SB, Fullerton SM, Ludman EJ, Jarvik GP, Larson EB, Burke W.

Department of Bioethics and Humanities, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98185, USA. sbtrini@uw.edu

PMID: 21252333 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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