Heterotrophic microbes on detritus play critical roles in the nutrition of detritivorous animals, yet few studies have examined factors controlling the acquisition of microbial nutrients toward detritivore growth, which is termed “incorporation". Here, we assessed effects of detrital substrate identity (leaf type), background nutrients, and detritivore species identity on detritivore incorporation of microbial carbon (C) and phosphorus (P) in leaf litter diets. We fed oak and maple litter conditioned under two nutrient concentrations (50 or 500 µg P L(-1)) to the detritivorous caddisfly larvae Ironoquia spp., Lepidostoma spp., and Pycnopsyche lepida and used the radioisotopes 14C as glucose and 33P as phosphate to dually trace incorporation of microbial C and P by caddisflies. Incorporation efficiencies of microbial C (mean ± SE = 12.3 ± 1.3%) were one order of magnitude higher than gross growth efficiencies for bulk detrital C from recent studies (1.05 ± 0.08%). Litter type did not affect incorporation of microbial nutrients; however, caddisflies incorporated microbial P 11 % less efficiently when fed litter from the higher P concentration. Two lower body C:P species (Pycnopsyche and Ironoquia) exhibited 9.9 and 7.1% greater microbial C and 19.0 and 17.7% greater microbial P incorporation efficiencies, respectively, than the higher body C:P species (Lepidostoma). Our findings support ecological stoichiometry theory on post-ingestive regulation that animals fed lower C:P diets should reduce P incorporation efficiency due to excess diet P or alleviation of P-limited growth, and that lower C:P species must incorporate dietary C and P more efficiently to support fast growth of P-rich tissues.
PurposeThis article seeks to describe the new service offered by Talis.Design/methodology/approachThe approach suggested in this article will not only promote the library and the value that it provides to the community as a whole, but suggests how it will increase the efficiency of library staff.FindingsThe emergence of new and innovative sites such as Google and Amazon do not threaten many responsive and adaptable libraries. Instead, they validate much that libraries have always done, bringing their expertise to the fore to a wider audience.Originality/valueThe article provides a view and explanation of Talis from the company itself illustrated with examples.
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Point-of-care (POC) testing is an innovative and revolutionary in vitro diagnostic (IVD) technology that enables the real-time conduct of pathology testing during a patient consultation, facilitating immediate clinical action. When conducted under a quality-assured framework, POC testing is an essential diagnostic tool, and is now well embedded, in primary health care settings in rural communities around the world. POC testing helps bridge the gap in health equity access that exists in geographically isolated rural communities and empowers patients to invest in understanding and improving their own health literacy. Using POC testing networks for chronic, acute and infectious diseases that are currently operating in rural and remote Australia, this chapter explores the operational, clinical and economic benefits that POC testing can deliver, and the lessons learned that have contributed to continuously improved quality of POC testing service delivery. Investment in POC testing and infrastructure by Australian governments, both federal and state, has reaped significant rewards for patients in rural communities. Additionally, translational research in this field has provided insight into how POC testing can be successfully scaled up for broad application in low- and middle-income countries.
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