18,042 research outputs found
MUELLER NAMED DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT FOR U HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER
MUELLER NAMED DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT FOR U HEALTH SCIENCES CENTE
De novo sulfur SAD phasing of the lysosomal 66.3 kDa protein from mouse
Lakomek K, Dickmanns A, Mueller U, et al. De novo sulfur SAD phasing of the lysosomal 66.3 kDa protein from mouse. Acta Crystallographica Section D. 2009;65(3):220-228
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3370: James Mueller
Photograph of author Jim Mueller, professor in the Mayborn school of Journalism at UNT, posing with his book, "Shooting Arrows and Slinging Mud"
Mueller (Birth, 1899-11-12)
Address: Tafel5270/P.119/1899/F W/U. S./U. S./Mrs. H. HardtOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MUELLER-MULLER'
Mama's boy: sex differences in juvenile survival in a highly dimorphic large mammal, the Galapagos sea lion
Kraus C, Mueller B, Meise K, Piedrahita P, Pörschmann U, Trillmich F. Mama's boy: sex differences in juvenile survival in a highly dimorphic large mammal, the Galapagos sea lion. Oecologia. 2013;171(4):893-903.In many mammals, early survival differs between the sexes, with males proving the more fragile sex ["Fragile male (FM) hypothesis"], especially in sexually dimorphic species where males are the larger sex. Male-biased allocation (MBA) by females may offset this difference. Here, we evaluate support for the FM and MBA hypotheses using a dataset on Galapagos sea lions (Zalophus wollebaeki). We statistically model sex-specific survival as it depends on body mass and environmental conditions (sea surface temperature, SST, a correlate of marine productivity) at three developmental stages, the perinatal phase (1st month), the main lactation period (1st year), and the weaning period (2nd year). Supporting the FM hypothesis, we found that, early in life (1st month), at equal birth mass, males survived less well than females. During the remainder of the first year of life, male survival was actually less sensitive to harsh environmental conditions than that of females, contradicting the FM hypothesis and supporting the MBA hypothesis. During the second year of life, only male survival suffered with high SSTs as predicted by the FM hypothesis. At each developmental stage, observed survival rates were almost equal for both sexes, suggesting that mothers buffer against the inherent fragility of male offspring through increased allocation, thereby masking the differences in survival prospects between the sexes
Valentin Mueller.— Frühe Plastik in Griechenland u. Vorderasien. Augsburg, Dr B. Filser Verlag, 1929
Ronzevalle Sébastien. Valentin Mueller.— Frühe Plastik in Griechenland u. Vorderasien. Augsburg, Dr B. Filser Verlag, 1929. In: Mélanges de l'Université Saint-Joseph, tome 15, 1930. pp. 318-320
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