65 research outputs found

    Diario de Campo: Boletín Interno de los investigadores del área de Antropología. 78 (2005) julio. Diario de Campo

    No full text
    - "Plaza pública" Bello pleonasmo, bella paradoja por Abilio Vergara Figueroa. - Pensar-comprender la sexualidad del primate paradójico. (Del cómo concebirla al cómo abordarla) por Xabier Lizarraga Cruchaga. - Alteraciones culturales posmortem entre los Pericúes de Baja California Sur por Carmen María Pijoan A., Josefina Mansilla L. - Políticas de protección del patrimonio cultural en México, pasado, presente y futuro por Leonel Durán Solís. - Lo femenino y lo masculino: su designación social a partir del estudio de los objetos de uso cotidiano por Graciela Abascal Johnson. - Por el sendero de los helados por Jiapsy Arias González. - Animosos por el sabor a las ánimas por Luis Enrique Ferro Vidal. - Hacia una ética ambiental global en le nueva sociedad por Arcadio Monroy Ata. - Suplemento 34. Antropología del espacio público: La plaza. - Documentos. Vida y obra de Francisco Belma

    Author Correction: The landscape of viral associations in human cancers

    No full text
    author correctio

    Author Correction: Comprehensive analysis of chromothripsis in 2,658 human cancers using whole-genome sequencing

    No full text
    author correctio

    Odorant Binding Proteins of the Red Imported Fire Ant, Solenopsis invicta: An Example of the Problems Facing the Analysis of Widely Divergent Proteins

    No full text
    PMCID: PMC3031547This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose

    Global spatial risk assessment of sharks under the footprint of fisheries

    No full text
    © 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. Effective ocean management and the conservation of highly migratory species depend on resolving the overlap between animal movements and distributions, and fishing effort. However, this information is lacking at a global scale. Here we show, using a big-data approach that combines satellite-tracked movements of pelagic sharks and global fishing fleets, that 24% of the mean monthly space used by sharks falls under the footprint of pelagic longline fisheries. Space-use hotspots of commercially valuable sharks and of internationally protected species had the highest overlap with longlines (up to 76% and 64%, respectively), and were also associated with significant increases in fishing effort. We conclude that pelagic sharks have limited spatial refuge from current levels of fishing effort in marine areas beyond national jurisdictions (the high seas). Our results demonstrate an urgent need for conservation and management measures at high-seas hotspots of shark space use, and highlight the potential of simultaneous satellite surveillance of megafauna and fishers as a tool for near-real-time, dynamic management.Full Tex

    Loose ends: almost one in five human genes still have unresolved coding status

    No full text
    The authors have accidently omitted one co-author. Part of the work described in this study was performed in the laboratory of Dr Manolis Kellis, Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA and The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA, USA. Dr Kellis’ name has been added to the authorship and the published article has been updated

    Author Correction: Expanded encyclopaedias of DNA elements in the human and mouse genomes

    No full text
    Online Correction for: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2493-4 | Erratum for https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/21299In the version of this article initially published, two members of the ENCODE Project Consortium were missing from the author list. Rizi Ai (Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA) and Shantao Li (Program in Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA) are now included in the author list. These errors have been corrected in the online version of the article : 'Expanded encyclopaedias of DNA elements in the human and mouse genomes'.https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-04226-3https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-04226-
    corecore