709 research outputs found
Standing alongside your friends
Why do countries contribute troops to UN peacekeeping? Recognizing the incentives to free ride on the contributions of other countries, existing explanations have tended to focus on the private benefits of providing troops. There has been particular emphasis on some major contributing countries that gain financially from providing peacekeepers. An alternative explanation could be that countries prefer to deploy troops to peacekeeping alongside countries with similar foreign policy preferences in order to maximize jointly produced private benefits. Accordingly, the willingness to provide peacekeepers should depend on which other countries are providing troops to peacekeeping operations. The implications are explored within the context of games on networks, and it is demonstrated that in equilibrium countries that are more Bonacich central in the network of foreign policy preference contribute disproportionally to UN peacekeeping. Based on actual contributions to UN peacekeeping from 1990 until 2011, we find that policy complementarities explain why countries provide a larger proportion of peacekeepers to a particular mission. Importantly, centrality in the network of policy complementarities matters and not simply that countries have moderate policy preferences. There is robust evidence for the prevalence of peacekeeping alongside your ‘friends’; in effect, countries with a lot of ‘friends’ contribute more peacekeepers
A multi-purpose modular system for high-resolution microscopy at high hydrostatic pressure
We have developed a modular system for high-resolution microscopy at high
hydrostatic pressure. The system consists of a pressurised cell of volume ~100
microlitres, a temperature controlled holder, a ram and a piston. We have made
each of these components in several versions which can be interchanged to allow
a wide range of applications. Here, we report two pressure cells with pressure
ranges 0.1-700MPa and 0.1-100MPa, which can be combined with hollow or solid
rams and pistons. Our system is designed to work with fluorescent samples
(using a confocal or epifluorescence microscope), but also allows for
transmitted light microscopy via the hollow ram and piston. The system allows
precise control of pressure and temperature [-20-70C], as well as rapid
pressure quenching. We demonstrate its performance and versatility with two
applications: time-resolved imaging of colloidal phase transitions caused by
pressure changes between 0.1MPa and 101MPa, and imaging the growth of
Escherichia coli bacteria at 50MPa. We also show that the isotropic-nematic
phase transition of pentyl-cyanobiphenyl (5CB) liquid crystal provides a
simple, convenient and accurate method for calibrating pressure in the range
0.1-200MPa
Party Policy Diffusion
Do parties learn from or emulate parties in other political systems? This research develops the argument that parties are more likely to employ the heuristic of learning from and emulating foreign successful (incumbent) parties. Spatial-econometric analyses of parties? election policies from several established democracies robustly confirm that political parties respond to left-right policy positions of foreign political parties that have recently governed. By showing that parties respond to these foreign incumbent parties, this work has significant implications for our understanding of party competition. Furthermore, we contribute to the literature on public policy diffusion, as we suggest that political parties are important vehicles through which public policies diffuse
The molecular products and biogeochemical significance of lipid photooxidation in West Antarctic surface waters
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2018. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here under a nonexclusive, irrevocable, paid-up, worldwide license granted to WHOI. It is made available for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 232 (2018): 244-264, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2018.04.030.The seasonal depletion of stratospheric ozone over the Southern Hemisphere allows abnormally
high doses of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) to reach surface waters of the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP)
in the austral spring, creating a natural laboratory for the study of lipid photooxidation in the shallow
mixed layer of the marginal ice zone. The photooxidation of lipids under such conditions has been
identified as a significant source of stress to microorganisms, and short-chain fatty acids altered by
photochemical processes have been found in both marine aerosols and sinking marine particle material.
However, the biogeochemical impact of lipid photooxidation has not been quantitatively compared at
ecosystem scale to the many other biological and abiotic processes that can transform particulate organic
matter in the surface ocean. We combined results from field experiments with diverse environmental data,
including high-resolution, accurate-mass HPLC-ESI-MS analysis of lipid extracts and in situ
measurements of ultraviolet irradiance, to address several unresolved questions about lipid photooxidation
in the marine environment. In our experiments, we used liposomes — nonliving, cell-like aggregations of
lipids — to examine the photolability of various moieties of the intact polar diacylglycerol (IP-DAG)
phosphatidylcholine (PC), a structural component of membranes in a broad range of microorganisms. We
observed significant rates of photooxidation only when the molecule contained the polyunsaturated fatty
acid (PUFA) docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). As the DHA-containing lipid was oxidized, we observed the
steady ingrowth of a diversity of oxylipins and oxidized IP-DAG; our results suggest both the intact IPDAG
the degradation products were amenable to heterotrophic assimilation. To complement our
experiments, we used an enhanced version of a new lipidomics discovery software package to identify the
lipids in water column samples and in several diatom isolates. The galactolipid digalactosyldiacylglycerol
(DGDG), the sulfolipid sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol (SQDG) and the phospholipids PC and
phosphatidylglycerol (PG) accounted for the majority of IP-DAG in the water column particulate (≥ 0.2
μm) size fraction; between 3.4 and 5.3 % of the IP-DAG contained fatty acids that were both highly
polyunsaturated (i.e., each containing ≥ 5 double bonds). Using a broadband apparent quantum yield (AQY) that accounted for direct and Type I (i.e., radical-mediated) photooxidation of PUFA-containing
IP-DAG, we estimated that 0.7 ± 0.2 μmol IP-DAG m-2 d-1 (0.5 ± 0.1 mg C m-2 d-1) were oxidized by
photochemical processes in the mixed layer. This rate represented 4.4 % (range, 3-21 %) of the mean
bacterial production rate measured in the same waters immediately following the retreat of the sea ice.
Because our liposome experiments were not designed to account for oxidation by Type II photosensitized
processes that often dominate in marine phytodetritus, our rate estimates may represent a sizeable
underestimate of the true rate of lipid photooxidation in the water column. While production of such
diverse oxidized lipids and oxylipins has been previously observed in terrestrial plants and mammals in
response to biological stressors such as disease, we show here that a similar suite of molecules can be
produced via an abiotic process in the environment and that the effect can be commensurate in magnitude
with other ecosystem-scale biogeochemical processes.J.R.C. acknowledges support
from a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) STAR Graduate Fellowship (Fellowship
Assistance agreement FP-91744301-0). This work was also supported by U.S. National
Science Foundation awards OCE-1059884 and PLR-1543328 to B.A.S.V.M., NSF award PLR-
1341479 to A. M., the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through grant GBMF3301 to B.A.S.V.M.,
and a WHOI Ocean Ventures Fund award to J.R.C
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