The origins of South America's exceptional plant diversity are poorly known from the fossil record. We report on unbiased quantitative collections of fossil floras from Laguna del Hunco (LH) and Río Pichileufú (RP) in Patagonia, Argentina. These sites represent a frost-free humid biome in South American middle latitudes of the globally warm Eocene. At LH, from 4,303 identified specimens, we recognize 186 species of plant organs and 152 species of leaves. Adjusted for sample size, the LH flora is more diverse than comparable Eocene floras known from other continents. The RP flora shares several taxa with LH and appears to be as rich, although sampling is preliminary. The two floras were previously considered coeval. However, (40)Ar/(39)Ar dating of three ash-fall tuff beds in close stratigraphic association with the RP flora indicates an age of 47.46+/-0.05 Ma, 4.5 million years younger than LH, for which one tuff is reanalyzed here as 51.91+/-0.22 Ma. Thus, diverse floral associations in Patagonia evolved by the Eocene, possibly in response to global warming, and were persistent and areally extensive. This suggests extraordinary richness at low latitudes via the latitudinal diversity gradient, corroborated by published palynological data from the Eocene of Colombia.
Isotopic synovectomy is being proposed as an option in the treatment of patients with haemophilic arthropathy. We present our experience with 11 paediatric patients who underwent 17, P-32 isotopic synovectomies for chronic haemophilic arthropathy. P-32 was injected into the joint per protocol, approved by the institutional review board. All our patients were male. Nine were factor VIII and two were factor IX deficient. The following joints were treated: ankle (n=10 procedures), elbow (n=5) and knee (n=2). The first procedure was performed on December 1993. None were human immunodeficiency virus positive. Mean age at the first procedure was 10.8 years (range, 5.2-15.2 years). Mean pretreatment joint clinical scores using the World Federation of Hemophilia guidelines for the ankle was 5.5 (SD +/- 2.3), the elbow 4.2 (+/-2.5), and knee 5.5 (+/-3.5); the corresponding post-treatment scores were 2.6 (+/-2.0), 1.4 (+/-0.5) and 2.5 (+/-3.5) respectively. Presynovectomy mean radiological scores using the Pettersson method were: ankle 1.8, elbow 1.8, and knee 1.5. A scoring system used in our centre for evaluating joints using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) gave the following mean pretreatment scores: ankle 9.5, elbow 8.4, and knee 5.0. A marked decrease (an 80-100% decrease) in bleeding was seen in 13 of 17 procedures, and a moderate decrease (51-79% decrease) in two procedures, accounting for 85% reduction in bleeding into the target joints. The procedure was well tolerated and no untoward side-effects were noted as of May 1999, with a median follow-up of 40 months (range 19-65 months). None had any clinical evidence of cancer. Three patients had their joints retreated [elbow (one), ankle (two)]. These procedures were also well tolerated. In conclusion, in our study, isotopic synovectomy using P-32 appears to be feasible, safe and efficacious in the treatment of haemophilic arthropathy in paediatric patients who have been followed for a median of 40 months. As previously shown, MRI appears to give more detailed information about joint arthropathy than plain radiographs.
Species living in highly fragmented landscapes often occur as metapopulations with frequent population turnover. Turnover rate is known to depend on ecological factors, such as population size and connectivity, but it may also be influenced by the phenotypic and genotypic composition of populations. The Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) in Finland uses two host-plant species that vary in their relative abundances among distinct habitat patches (dry meadows) in a large network of ∼1,700 patches. We found no effect of host species use on local extinction. In contrast, population establishment was strongly influenced by the match between the host species composition of an empty habitat patch and the relative host use by larvae in previous years in the habitat patches that were well connected to the target patch. This "colonization effect" could be due to spatially variable plant acceptability or resistance or to spatially variable insect oviposition preference or larval performance. We show that spatial variation in adult oviposition preference occurs at the relevant spatial scale and that the other possible causes of the colonization effect can be discounted. We conclude that the colonization effect is generated by host preference influencing the movement patterns of ovipositing females. Migrant females with dissimilar host preferences have different perceptions of relative patch quality, which influences their likelihood of colonizing patches with particular host composition.Keywords: classical metapopulation, oviposition preference, colonization, spatial dynamics, Melitaea cinxia.Classical metapopulations persist in a balance between local extinctions and the establishment of new local populations at currently empty but suitable habitat patches
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