We evaluated whether the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins around the fast-developing island of Mayotte are threatened. We used opportunistic photo-identification data and capture-mark-recapture models to estimate key demographic parameters and then assessed the conservation status of the species using the IUCN Red List regional criteria. The population home range was estimated with the minimum convex polygon method as 978 km 2 , the annual abundance was estimated from closed population models as 82 ±19 SE individuals and the annual survival rate was estimated using a Cormack-Jolly-Seber model as 0.937 ± 0.059 SE. From the data available, we believe migrations of individuals between Mayotte and its neighbouring islands are likely but would not exceed a few individuals per year. Based on IUCN guidelines for classification at local scales, we classified Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins around Mayotte as Endangered. We strongly recommend the establishment of a long-term population-monitoring program and the implementation of management measures.
Context: The effect of advance care planning (ACP) interventions on the trajectory of end-of-life treatment preference congruence between patients and surrogate decision-makers is unstudied. Objective: To identify unobserved distinctive patterns of congruence trajectories and examine how the typology of outcome development differed between ACP and controls. Methods: Multisite, assessor-blinded, intent-to-treat, randomized clinical trial enrolled participants between October 2013 to March 2017 from 5 hospital-based HIV clinics. Persons living with HIV(PLWH)/surrogate dyads were randomized to 2 weekly 60-minute sessions: ACP (1) ACP facilitated conversation, (2) advance directive completion; or Control (1) Developmental/relationship history, (2) Nutrition/Exercise. Growth Mixed Modeling was used for 18-month post-intervention analysis. Findings: 223 dyads (N = 449 participants) were enrolled. PLWH were 56% male, aged 22 to 77 years, and 86% African American. Surrogates were 56% female, aged 18 to 82 years, and 84% African American. Two latent classes (High vs. Low) of congruence growth trajectory were identified. ACP influenced the trajectory of outcome growth (congruence in all 5 AIDS related situations) by latent class. ACP dyads had a significantly higher probability of being in the High Congruence latent class compared to controls (52%, 75/144 dyads versus 27%, 17/62 dyads, p = 0.001). The probabilities of perfect congruence diminished at 3-months post-intervention but was then sustained. ACP had a significant effect (β = 1.92, p = 0.006, OR = 7.10, 95%C.I.: 1.729, 26.897) on the odds of being in the High Congruence class. Conclusion: ACP had a significant effect on the trajectory of congruence growth over time. ACP dyads had 7 times the odds of congruence, compared to controls. Three-months post-intervention is optimal for booster sessions.
Seabirds spend most of their life at sea and have to possess a waterproof plumage to be able to sit on water for extended periods. We tracked juvenile Barau's petrels for the first time, when they leave their birth colony and found that half of the transmitters stopped soon after they first landed on the water off Réunion Island. We suspected from observation at sea that birds may have problems with the waterproofness of their plumage. Therefore during the next season we set up a simple protocol to assess waterproofness of the plumage of the birds just before they fledge. This protocol is based on the calculation of a wettability index expressed as the mass of water logged in the plumage after simulating the bird sitting on the sea surface. We found that at least one third of chicks ready to fledge gained more than 4 g of water in 20 s, indicating that plumage was not waterproof. Within a sample of birds having fledged and before reaching the sea surface, a similar proportion of birds had their plumage not waterproof. For the birds tracked, only those with an index indicating a waterproof plumage successfully dispersed after their first touch on the sea surface. We provide evidence of a possible major cause of mortality of juvenile seabirds that has not been described previously in wild seabirds, but could exist in other species. This issue may be a major cause of threat to the endangered Barau's petrel.
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