We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites. Close this message to accept cookies or find out how to manage your cookie settings.
To save content items to your account,
please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies.
If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account.
Find out more about saving content to .
To save content items to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org
is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings
on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part
of your Kindle email address below.
Find out more about saving to your Kindle.
Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations.
‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi.
‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.
This chapter plays an important role in the argument of the book. It shows that there is room in Aristotle’s life for a study of what is common to animals and plants in addition to separate studies of animals and plants. At the same time, it shows that what Aristotle is able, or willing, to say in common for animals and plants is truly limited. By the end of the chapter the reader will see that the Peripatetic study of life is a complex scientific endeavor consisting of at least three components: a study of what is common to animals and plants followed by separate yet coordinated studies of animals and plants. What Aristotle is able, or willing, to say in common for animals and plants is to be found within the boundaries of project of the Parva naturalia.
Sponges are important components of marine systems globally, and while sponges have generally been shown to tolerate ocean acidification (OA), most earlier studies have focused on demosponges with siliceous skeletons. In contrast, little is known of how calcareous sponges, with calcite or aragonite skeletons, may react to OA conditions. Here we measured tissue necrosis and respiration rate of the temperate New Zealand calcareous sponge Grantia sp. to simulated OA. Our treatment conditions were based on the IPCC RCP8.5 (pCO2 1131.9 ± 113 μatm) scenario over a 28 day experiment, and responses were compared to current day control conditions (pCO2 512.59 ± 23 μatm). Sponge respiration rate was not significantly different between the control and treatment sponges and there was no evidence of tissue necrosis over the course of the experiment. Overall, our study is consistent with earlier studies on demosponges, showing calcareous sponges to be resilient to OA.
Abject breath, running over with its own refuse and yet refusing to stop breathing, forms a gasping undertone to Beckett’s oeuvre. To give a sense of the longevity and development of Beckettian respiration, this article examines passages across the range of his career, paying attention to several prose works – the short story ‘Dante and the Lobster’ (1934) and the novels Murphy (1938) and Molloy (1951/55) – and two brief plays: Breath (1969) and Not I (1972). While there is no simple development of Beckett’s writing on the breath, an ambiguous movement can be traced from an initial rejection of a conception of the breath as immaculate and easeful to a deeper exploration of breath as polluted and broken, and to a final, insistent association of respiration with rubbish, and life with death. If there is hope to be found in the Beckettian breath, it lies not on the page but in the breath-carried conversations of the rehearsal room, exemplified above all by his collaboration with Billie Whitelaw on Not I.
In a well-known passage (Juv. 13 (7).473a15–474a24), Aristotle preserves a fragment of Empedocles’ poem dealing with respiration, in which the clepsydra is used as a model for breathing. Although there is a substantial literature on this subject, most scholars have focused on explaining Empedocles’ account of the mode of operation of the clepsydra as well as on assessing the extent to which Aristotle’s interpretation does justice to Empedocles’ fragment. What has received little attention is the fact that Aristotle begins his criticism of Empedocles by offering a specific counterproposal of his own, one that rests on the idea that the mechanism of respiration can be explained in a much clearer fashion through the analogy of a forge bellows. References to bellows are actually already traceable to Homer. At the same time, the bellows–lungs analogy continued to be used for centuries after Aristotle. The aim of this chapter is to provide an overview of the existing literary and archaeological evidence about bellows in Greek antiquity in order to build a complete picture of its function and hence clarify Aristotle’s theory of respiration.
Efficient extraction of oxygen from ambient waters played a critical role in the development of early arthropods. Maximizing gill surface area enhanced oxygen uptake ability but, with gills necessarily exposed to the external environment, also presented the issue of gill contamination. Here we document setae inserted on the dorsal surface of walking legs of the benthic-dwelling middle Cambrian Olenoides serratus and on the gill shaft of the Late Ordovician Triarthrus eatoni. Based on their physical positions relative to gill filaments, we interpret these setae to have been used to groom the gills, removing particles trapped among the filaments. The coordination between setae and gill filaments is comparable to that seen among modern crustaceans, which use a diverse set of setae-bearing appendages to penetrate between gill filaments when grooming. Grooming is known relatively early in trilobite evolutionary history and would have enhanced gill efficiency by maximizing the surface area for oxygen uptake.
The climate benefit of forests is mostly recognized in their removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Over the course of a tree’s lifetime, the accumulated carbon in biomass is carbon removed from the atmosphere. Species differ in growth rate, size at maturity, and longevity, but the basic principle of biomass accumulation over the lifetime of a tree is the basis for using forests to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Decomposition of organic material in the soil emits carbon dioxide and reduces the net carbon gain by forests. Wildfires, insect outbreaks, logging, and other disturbances also release carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. The combination of these processes – carbon gain from biomass growth; carbon loss from the soil and from disturbances – makes some forests a sink for atmospheric carbon; the forests have a net gain of carbon annually. Other forests are a source of carbon, in which there is a net loss of carbon to the atmosphere. Forests are, at a global scale, an annual carbon sink, which reduces the accumulation of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Nature-based solutions to mitigate climate change aim to enhance the carbon sink.
Regulation of the cardiovascular system, the respiratory system and the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) is represented in the lower brain stem. These control systems require precise coordination and are closely integrated, which is reflected in the anatomy and physiology of the neural substrates of these control systems. Included in this integration are the final autonomic pathways, the enteric nervous system and the spinal autonomic circuits. The circuits in the medulla oblongata are under the control of the upper brain stem, hypothalamus and telencephalon. Neurons involved in regulation of arterial blood pressure and respiration are situated in rostrocaudally organized columns of neurons in the ventrolateral medulla (VLM). The rostral VLM is a sympathetic cardiovascular premotor nucleus mediating reflexes to sympathetic cardiovascular preganglionic neurons such as arterial baroreceptor, arterial chemoreceptor and other reflexes. The caudal raphe nuclei of the medulla oblongata are involved in thermoregulation and regulation of energy balance. The respiratory pattern in cardiovascular neurons is generated by the "common cardiorespiratory network" in the VLM. Neural control of the GIT by the lower brain stem is exerted by multiple reflex circuits consisting of vagal afferents from the GIT, neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarii and parasympathetic preganglionic neurons projecting to the GIT.
Speech physiology consists of the articulatory structures, including the respiratory system, the larynx and various vocal tract articulators, plus the sensory organs, which provide auditory, somatosensory and visual inputs that map the feature space in which speech is produced and perceived. In this chapter the focus is on the neurophysiology of the articulatory structures. The acoustic characteristics of speech sounds are determined by changes in the length and tension of muscles, coordinated, at the lowest level, by interlinked clusters of motor neurons and interneurons in the brainstem which are themselves directed by excitation from cortical and midbrain structures. This chapter provides a brief foundation to these systems and structures, taking a functional perspective. The progressive nature of research into the anatomy and physiology of speech continues to generate new discoveries, and advances in modelling and mapping of biomechanical and neural control promise new avenues for phonetic research.
Chapter 7 presents the soil carbon cycle. The chapter largely by-passes the still uncertain processes that occur at the molecular scale. The focus is on macroscopic properties and how they vary with space and time. Soil C storage is first examined from a box model perspective, which introduces mass balance equations and how they are useful, when coupled with data, in beginning to understanding soil C dynamics. The chapter includes an introductory perspective on the vertical trends in soil C and the transport-reaction models that are needed to fully explain these patterns. Soil organic C is largely removed from soil as CO2, and production-diffusion models are introduced to explain observable CO2 depth profiles and to calculate the fluxes to the atmosphere. Diffusion impacts the C isotope composition of soil CO2 and any CaCO3 minerals that subsequently form. These are examined through the lens of diffusion modeling, which is now common, and critical, in any examination of soil properties with depth.
Lennox explores the role of cooling in the regulation of natural heat and the preservation of life with special interest in methodological questions about how Aristotle arrived at his views about the critical role of cooling in the lives of blooded animals and why he insists that both the brain and the lungs are involved in moderating the animal’s heat. Lennox concludes that Aristotle was somewhat perplexed by the brain, and that his changing views about its presence in the cephalopods may be an indication of that perplexity.
Pyrolized carbon in biochar can sequester atmospheric CO2 into soil to reduce impacts of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. When estimating the stability of biochar, degradation of biochar carbon, mobility of degradation products, and ingress of carbon from other sources must all be considered. In a previous study we tracked degradation in biochars produced from radiocarbon-free wood and subjected to different physico-chemical treatments over three years in a rainforest soil. Following completion of the field trial, we report here a series of in-vitro incubations of the degraded biochars to determine CO2 efflux rates, 14C concentration and δ13C values in CO2 to quantify the contributions of biochar carbon and other sources of carbon to the CO2 efflux. The 14C concentration in CO2 showed that microbial degradation led to respiration of CO2 sourced from indigenous biochar carbon (≈0.5–1.4 μmoles CO2/g biochar C/day) along with a component of carbon closely associated with the biochars but derived from the local environment. Correlations between 14C concentration, δ13C values and Ca abundance indicated that Ca2+ availability was an important determinant of the loss of biochar carbon.
In order to evaluate effects of three land uses on isotopic compositions of CO2 and O2 of soil air to 5 m soil depth, a field study was conducted in the Calhoun Critical Zone Observatory, located in the subtropical climate of the Southern Piedmont of South Carolina, USA. Soil gas reservoirs were installed in ecosystems with three different land uses, each replicated three times: (i) reference hardwood stands that were never cultivated; (ii) currently cultivated plots; (iii) pine stands, which had been used for growing cotton in 19th century but were abandoned in about the 1930s and 1940s when they were regenerated with pines that are today 70–80 yr old. In addition to soil CO2 and O2 concentration measurements, soil gas samples were analyzed for Δ14C, δ13C, and δ18O. Stable carbon isotopic composition becomes lighter with the depth in soils of all three land uses: in the cultivated site δ13C decreases from –18‰ at 0.5 m to –21‰ at 5 m, in pine site from –22 to –25‰, and in hardwood from –21.5 to –24.5‰, respectively. Δ14C increased with depth from 40 to 60‰ in the top 0.5 m to about 80–140‰ at 5 m depending on land use. While surficial soils had relatively similar Δ14C in CO2, between 40 to 60‰ at 0.5 m, at 3 and 5 m, cultivated soils had the highest Δ14C, hardwood the lowest, and pine in between, a pattern that emphasizes the importance of contemporary respired CO2 in hardwood stands. Oxygen isotopic composition of CO2 did not change with depth, whereas free O2 was greatly enriched in lower horizons of forest soils, which we attribute to strong fractionation by respiration.
This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of and risk factors for Eustachian tube dysfunction leading to middle-ear pathology in patients on chronic mechanical ventilation via tracheostomy tube.
Methods:
A total of 40 patients on chronic ventilation were included in a prospective cohort study. Middle-ear status was determined by tympanometry. Tympanograms were categorised as types A, B or C; types B and C were defined as middle-ear pathology.
Results:
In all, 57 ears of 40 patients were examined. Disease was found in at least 1 ear in 26 out of 40 patients. Middle-ear pathology was found in 25 out of 34 patients who were tube fed (via nasogastric tube or percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy) vs 1 patient out of the 6 fed orally (p = 0.014), and in 23 out of 31 with conscious or cognitive impairment vs 3 out of 9 cognitively intact patients (p = 0.044).
Conclusion:
Middle-ear pathology is common in patients on chronic mechanical ventilation via tracheostomy tube. The highest prevalence was in those with impaired consciousness or cognition, and oral feeding appeared protective.
Laboratory studies were conducted to determine the effect of seed coat on woolly cupgrass seed moisture and oxygen uptake, and to determine if water-soluble growth inhibitors are present in the seed. Intact dormant seeds did not respond to any temperature regime or to oxygen concentrations above atmospheric level. Dehulling increased germination of dormant seed to about 85%. Oxygen concentrations above atmospheric level increased germination of partially dehulled (1/4 distal end of the seed dehulled) seeds an additional 10%. Oxygen uptake by dehulled dormant and intact nondormant seeds was greater than intact dormant seeds. Leaching intact dormant seeds did not promote germination, nor did the leachate inhibit germination of nondormant seeds. Embryos excised from dormant seeds germinated under laboratory conditions. Results from this study suggest that the woolly cupgrass seed coat may inhibit germination by controlling oxygen availability to the embryo.
Survival of hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata Royle) plants and propagules after removal from water and desiccation under controlled conditions were studied. Both apical and sub-apical sections of hydrilla plants were physiologically alive after drying for 16 h at 30 C and 40% relative humidity. Tubers survived drying conditions longer than turions. There was 16.7% sprouting in tubers that had been dried for 64 h, while percent sprouting of turions decreased sharply as the drying period increased from 0 to 8 h.
Net (apparent) photosynthesis rate (Pn) of jointed goatgrass (Aegilops cylindrica Host # AEGCY) leaves in the greenhouse became light saturated at a photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) of about 1000 μE·m–1-2·s–1 with a maximum Pn of 27 mg CO2 ·dm–2 ·h–1. Diffusive resistance to water vapor (rl) of adaxial leaf surfaces was 43% that of abaxial surfaces, in part, because stomatal density was 50% greater on adaxial leaf surfaces than on abaxial surfaces. Dark respiration rate (Rd) was 1.6 mg CO2 ·dm−2·h−1. Light compensation point (CPl) was 21 μE·m−2·s−1 and CO2 compensation point (CPc) was 32 ppmv. In the field, where light intensity and temperature were greater than in the greenhouse, leaves became light saturated for Pn at a higher intensity, and Rd and CPl were three times greater than in the greenhouse. Pn and Rd of spikes at anthesis were at least 30% less and 200% greater, respectively, than the values for leaves.
Induction of germination in dormant barnyardgrass seeds by wounding was investigated. Previous research indicated that a volatile compound was emitted during imbibition of wounded caryopses. When wounded caryopses were submerged in agar, total germination and speed of germination were stimulated, and the stimulation was dependent upon the concentration of agar. A twofold increase in germination occurred in 1% agar versus water, and a fivefold increase with caryopses placed in 5% agar. When wounded caryopses were imbibed, there was a fourfold increase in respiration over that of intact caryopses after 1 h. This increased rate of respiration of wounded caryopses continued for 7 h, while there was a gradual increase in respiration of intact caryopses. Carbon dioxide induced intact dormant caryopses to germinate but was not effective in stimulating germination of the seed (spikelet). High levels of abscisic acid found in the hulls of dormant seeds may have prevented the action of carbon dioxide. These results suggest that increased respiration resulting from wounding provides elevated levels of carbon dioxide in the microenvironment of the seed, thus stimulating germination. Removal of the hulls is necessary for germination even in high levels of carbon dioxide.
Responses of Rhizoctonia solani Kuhn to napropamide [2-(α-naphthoxy)-N,N-diethylpropionamide], were evaluated by measuring whole-cell respiration, mitochondrial respiration, ATP synthesis, and membrane leakage. Whole-cell respiration, measured with an O2 electrode, was stimulated in the presence of napropamide at 1.1, 2.2, and 4.4 × 10−5 M. Mitochondrial respiration was stimulated at 1.1 × 10−11 M, but higher concentrations were inhibitory. The addition of 10−5 M napropamide to isolated mitochondria of R. solani resulted in reduced ATP synthesis, measured by the firefly luciferase assay, and in increased membrane permeability as measured by increases in electrical conductivity of filtrates from R. solani grown in culture medium containing napropamide. These results indicate that, under laboratory conditions, napropamide reduced ATP synthesis, caused membrane leakage, and stimulated respiration in R. solani.
The effects of sethoxydim {2-[1-(ethoxyimino) butyl]-5-[2-(ethylthio)propyl]-3-hydroxy-2-cyclohexen-1-one} on the metabolic activity of excised root tips of corn (Zea mays, L. ‘Goldencrossbantam′) were studied under laboratory conditions. Uptake and incorporation of 14C-labeled thymidine, uridine, leucine, glucose, and acetic acid into cell constituents, as well as respiration, increased continuously with time progressions during the incubation period. Sethoxydim did not affect either the uptake of any 14C-precursor into or respiration of the root tip tissue. Although RNA and protein syntheses were not affected by the herbicide, DNA and cell wall syntheses were inhibited 120 min after treatment with sethoxydim. Incorporation of 14C-acetic acid into lipid fraction was inhibited by sethoxydim in a time- and concentration-dependent fashion. This inhibition was observed at a shorter time after sethoxydim treatment than that of any other 14C-precursor. The effect was not observed in the nonproliferative regions of corn roots, whereas cerulenin (a fatty acid synthase inhibitor) inhibited the incorporation of 14C-acetic acid both in proliferative and nonproliferative regions. It is suggested that the inhibition of lipid synthesis by sethoxydim does not play a major role in the mode of action of this herbicide. The effects of sethoxydim, including those on lipid metabolism, are closely associated with proliferative conditions of susceptible graminaceous plants.
Surface and subsurface soils are complex biological, chemical, and physical environments and to understand the fate of pesticides in the soil environment is a formidable task. To determine the environmental fate of pesticides requires a diverse array of techniques and procedures. Microbiological approaches range from applied to basic, laboratory to field, qualitative to quantitative, and from low to high technology. In the arena of biodegradation, teams of scientists are needed to develop predictive models for the behavior of pesticides in the soil environment. From our perspectives, we have documented the existing status of the microbiology of environmental fate studies with pesticides. Verification of data from laboratory studies to the field environment is needed. On the other hand, efforts to design better field studies to assess microbial processes are essential to advance our understanding of environmental fate studies with pesticides.