scholarly journals Placing the east-west North American aridity gradient in a multi-century context

Author(s):  
Daniel Alexander Bishop ◽  
A Park Williams ◽  
Richard Seager ◽  
Edward Cook ◽  
Dorothy Peteet ◽  
...  
2005 ◽  
Vol 83 (10) ◽  
pp. 1343-1352 ◽  
Author(s):  
M D Hofmeyr ◽  
B T Henen ◽  
V J.T Loehr

The small tortoises of southern Africa include the only testudinid taxa that produce single-egg clutches. This group includes the world's smallest tortoise, Homopus signatus (Gmelin, 1789), which inhabits a harsh, arid environment. Climate and body size may influence reproductive output, so we hypothesized that the east–west aridity gradient in southern Africa affects egg and clutch size of the small indigenous tortoises, and that the morphology of H. signatus constrains egg size, preventing the formation of optimal eggs. Here we show that aridity and unpredictable rainfall determine which of these tortoise taxa produce single-egg clutches. Taxa in less predictable environments produce larger eggs relative to body size than do taxa in more predictable environments. Homopus signatus produces the largest egg relative to body size, probably to enhance offspring survival in its harsh environment. Body size, pelvic aperture size, and the narrow anal gap of H. signatus appear to constrain egg size. Despite these constraints, females produce rigid-shelled eggs larger than the pelvic canal and use pelvic kinesis to pass eggs at oviposition; both features are unknown in other chelonians and emphasize the selective advantage of large eggs to H. signatus.


2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunlei Lu ◽  
Wenchun Han

China is now the world’s largest source of international students. In terms of learning performance, Chinese graduate students studying in North America exhibit distinct differences from students who are born and raised in North America. Conflicting cultural values compel Chinese students to reconcile East-West cultures, and put an onus on North American instructors to implement culturally-sensitive pedagogy. Employing the theoretic framework of yin-yang theory, this paper examines Chinese graduate students’ classroom performance against the backdrop of East-West cultural negotiation, and specifically seeks to identify which factors inhibit Chinese graduate students’ participation in North American classrooms. Drawing from their own living experiences, the authors employ self-study in the methodological form of narrative inquiry – in conjunction with references from existing literature – to investigate Chinese graduates’ classroom challenges. Results reveal six factors impacting students’ classroom performance: language; knowledge of the education system; knowledge of the social system; personality; influence of traditional culture; and social/economic/political changes. Future research directions are also suggested.Key words: Chinese graduates, East-West, cross-culture, North America, classroom involvement, self-study 


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Bishop ◽  
Park Williams ◽  
Richard Seager ◽  
Edward Cook ◽  
Dorothy Peteet ◽  
...  

<p>Global climate change is projected to exacerbate regional droughts across much of the globe by the end of the 21<sup>st</sup>century, while increases in precipitation extremes are projected to increase regional flood risk. Trends consistent with these changes have already been observed across the contiguous United States (US). Instrumental records indicate a 20<sup>th</sup>-century trend towards drier soil moisture conditions over a large portion of the western US and wetter conditions over the eastern US, termed here as the east-west US aridity gradient. If these trends continue through the end of the 21<sup>st</sup> century, there would be significant consequences for human and ecological health, socioeconomics, water resources, and agriculture in both the semi-arid southwestern and flood-prone eastern US. A greater understanding of the spatiotemporal nature of terrestrial water variability across the US is critical to mitigate its impacts and inform policy decisions in the coming decades.</p><p>Using empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs) of instrumental summer (JJA) drought and soil moisture indices with a normalized Varimax rotation, we identify multiple independent regional soil moisture modes across the contiguous US. Modes in the northeastern and midwestern US contribute to wetting in the eastern US and a mode in the southwestern US contributes to drying in the western US, collectively increasing the east-west aridity gradient during the 20<sup>th</sup> century. The gradient has been studied previously, but its recent observed trend has not been contextualized within the natural range of variability in the paleoclimate record. Such a contextualization would improve our understanding of the underlying drivers of the modern trend and help benchmark future climate change projections. Here, we seek to (1) determine the timescales that the aridity gradient has been most active, (2) contextualize and evaluate the spatial characteristics and physical mechanisms of the aridity gradient trend within its natural range of climate variability, and (3) evaluate the relative roles of anthropogenic climate change and natural climate variability on the recent gradient trend.</p><p>The modes impacting the observed US aridity gradient are also apparent in multiple paleoclimate data products that span the past millennium (e.g., tree ring-reconstructed North American Drought Atlas, multi-proxy Paleo Hydrodynamics Data Assimilation product), although spatial characteristics of these modes vary through time. Using these products, we find that the recent observed multidecadal trend toward wetting in the east and drying in the west was abnormal relative to the last millennium. During 1956-2005, the mean soil-moisture difference between the east and west US was larger than during any other 50-year period since the end of the Medieval Warm Period (1201-1250 CE). Additional work will decompose the effects of temperature and precipitation on soil moisture trends and variability through time and relate the reconstructions to last-millennium CMIP5/CMIP6 climate simulations to assess model ability to simulate the reconstructed range of multi-annual to decadal hydroclimatic variability across the US. We will also assess climate projections to investigate the potential contribution of anthropogenic climate trends to the strengthened aridity gradient observed over the past century, providing insights into how this gradient may trend in future decades.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 325-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon Mastracci ◽  
Ian Adams

Emotional labor is the effort to express job-appropriate emotions and/or suppress inappropriate emotions. The effort manifests in interpersonal interactions, whether face to face or voice to voice, and can increase stress and burnout. Most research in emotional labor is based on North American samples. Could public servants in different cultures experience emotional labor differently? We test the provocative hypothesis that emotional labor is less stressful for people in collectivist cultures, due to the predominance of harmony and interdependence in such cultures. Our results confirm that emotional labor via surface acting leads to burnout to a lesser degree for respondents in collectivist cultures compared with individualistic cultures. Emotional labor via deep acting actually lowers burnout in collectivist cultures. We also find that emotional labor theories based on North American studies may be used in Eastern contexts, and that public servants in collectivist cultures are more responsive to display rules compared with those in individualist cultures.


The Condor ◽  
10.1650/7805 ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 107 (2) ◽  
pp. 197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey F. Kelly ◽  
Richard L. Hutto

2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
T. Keith Philips ◽  
Mark Callahan ◽  
Jesús Orozco ◽  
Naomi Rowland

A hypothesized evolutionary history of the North American endemic trichiine scarab genusTrichiotinusis presented including all eight species and three outgroup taxa. Data from nineteen morphological traits and CO1 and 28S gene sequences were used to construct phylogenies using both parsimony and Bayesian algorithms. All results show thatTrichiotinusis monophyletic. The best supported topology shows that the basal speciesT. lunulatusis sister to the remaining taxa that form two clades, with four and three species each. The distribution of one lineage is relatively northern while the other is generally more southern. The ancestralTrichiotinuslineage arose from 23.8–14.9 mya, and east-west geographic partitioning of ancestral populations likely resulted in cladogenesis and new species creation, beginning as early as 10.6–6.2 mya and as recently as 1.2–0.7 mya. Morphological character evolution is also briefly discussed. The limited distribution ofT. rufobrunneusin Florida andT. viridansin the Midwest mainly due to urban development and widespread agriculture makes these two species of conservation concern.


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