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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: red cardinal + north american + cardinal  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/1/2008)

WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE
Urbanite Baltimore, MD -
Next, Carlson grabbed her binoculars, jammed a worn copy of the National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America into the back of her capris, ...
Bob Verdi | Sunday Column
Chicago Tribune, United States - Jun 29, 2008
After Sunday night, the Sox will worry about the Twins and Tigers while the Cubs monitor the Cardinals and Brewers. Chicago's teams could graduate from a ...
O'Dowd makes no promises
Denver Post, CO -
The Cardinals, Phillies, A's, Mets, Yankees and Red Sox are among those interested. Despite Hideki Okajima's ineffectiveness, Boston has not yet stepped up ...
Mr. Hockey elbows his way into Rochester
MLive.com, MI - Jun 27, 2008
"You haven't been elbowed until you've been elbowed by Gordie Howe," Ed Douesnard of Cardinal, Ontario, said proudly. Rochester's WHEC-TV also posted a ...
Brook Lopez
CBSSports.com - Jun 26, 2008
He became the first Cardinal to earn All-American recognition since Josh Childress was recognized by multiple organizations in 2004, including first-team AP ...
Numbers, not quality, down in EGF Classic
Grand Forks Herald, ND - Jun 25, 2008
Area players who were honorable mentions were Casey Cardinal, Red Lake County, and Aanders Johnson, Fosston. . . . Langdon?s American Legion team went 4-0 ...
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News-Leader.com, MO - Jun 29, 2008
The fun fest is free and will be set up outside the main gates of Hammons Field prior to the 7:10 pm Springfield Cardinals vs. the Midland RockHounds game. ...
Spring Softball All-Scholastics
Boston Herald, United States - Jun 23, 2008
One of the premier catchers in the state, Latini batted .480 with four home runs for Cardinal Spellman, helping the Cardinals tie for the Catholic Central ...
Busch's Last Call in St. Louis?
TIME - Jun 20, 2008
Known as the "Mad Hungarian" for his antics on the mound, Hrabosky was a star relief pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals back when the Busch family owned ...
Univision Announces Nominees for Inaugural ''Tecate Premios ...
PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria - Jun 26, 2008
Miguel Cotto 3. Juan Manuel Marquez Baseball Hispanic Player of the Year 1. David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox 2. Albert Pujols, St. Louis Cardinals 3. ...
Source: Google News

… Maintenance of Species-Typical Plumage Pigmentation in Male American Goldfinches (Carduelis tristis … -
KJ McGraw, GE Hill, R Stradi, RS Parker - Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 2001 - UChicago Press
... plumage coloration in a wild population of northern cardinals. ... The Birds of North
America, ed. A. Poole and F ... pattern in a series of red-pigmented Carduelinae ...

Red coloration of male northern cardinals correlates with mate quality and territory quality -
LLR Wolfenbarger - Behavioral Ecology, 1999 - ISBE
... Female mate choice and male red coloration in a natural three ... Life histories of North
American cardinals, grosbeaks, buntings, towhees, finches, sparrows and ...

[CITATION] … and intraspecific variation in plumage pigmentation in male American Goldfinches (Carduelis tristis … -
KJ McGRAW, GE HILL - Functional Ecology, 2001 - Blackwell Synergy
... that birds that had naturally red plumage before ... variation in two other North American
passerines exhibiting ... and the Northern Cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis ...

Habitat selection by birds of riparian communities: evaluating effects of habitat alterations
DF Stauffer, LB Best - Journal of Wildlife Management, 1980 - JSTOR
... species Great crested flycatcher Red-headed woodpecker Red-bellied woodpecker ... Austin,
Jr., ed. Life histories of North American cardinals, grosbeaks, buntings ...

Predation on Northern Cardinal nests: Does choice of nest site matter? -
TS Filliater, R Breitwisch, PM Nealen - Condor, 1994 - JSTOR
... Snakes (Lampro- peltis doliata), Gray and Red Squirrels (Sciurus ... Life histories of
North American cardinals, grosbeaks, buntings, towhees, finches, sparrows ...

RELATIONSHIPS AMONG NORTH AMERICAN SONGBIRD TRENDS, HABITAT FRAGMENTATION, AND LANDSCAPE OCCUPANCY -
TM Donovan, CH Flather - Ecological Applications, 2002 - JSTOR
... Fragmentation of North American breeding habitat, defined in ... species were the Ovenbird,
Red-eyed Vireo, Wood Thrush, Northern Cardinal (Cardinalis cardi ...

[PDF] FORTY-FOURTH SUPPLEMENT TO THE AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGISTS?UNION CHECK-LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS
C Rasmussen, JV Remsen Jr, JD Rising, DF Stotz - The Auk, 2003 - ist-socrates.berkeley.edu
... (H, I) Paroaria capitata Yellow-billed Cardinal. ... Red-billed Pigeon. ... In the list of
French Names of North American Birds, insert the following species in the ...

Area-Dependent Changes in the Bird Communities and Vegetation of Southern Wisconsin Forests -
B Ambuel, SA Temple - Ecology, 1983 - JSTOR
... Grosbeak (P = .89) and the American Cardinal and Red ... of Starlings, Common Grackles,
and Red-winged Blackbirds ... managing bird communities of North American forests ...

Evolutionary lag versus bill-size constraints: a comparative study of the acceptance of cowbird eggs … -
S Rohwer, CD Spaw - Evolutionary Ecology, 1988 - Springer
... the previously forested regions of eastern North America in the ... the mid- continental
region (eg Red-eyed Vireo ... edge species (eg, Northern Cardinal) because they ...

Community development following removal of urchins, Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis, from the … -
JH Himmelman, A Cardinal, E Bourget - Oecologia, 1983 - Springer
... On the northeast coast of North America, only one such ... of Anse aux Basques on the
north shore of the ... 2). Three red algae Ptilota serrata, Phycodrys rubens, and ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

North American Red Cardinal

Red Cardinal

Caption: Red Cardinal

Credit: US Fish and Wildlife Service

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

High aflatoxin levels in wild bird feed
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Wild birdseed contained higher levels of aflatoxins and other mycotoxins than any other kind of pet food analyzed in studies done around the world, a new review of those studies reports in an article scheduled for the Dec. 27 issue of ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

Trevor K. Smith and colleagues at the University of Guelph in Ontario point out that mycotoxins are harmful compounds produced by fungi that can grow in cereal grains and nuts used in many pet foods. The compounds are carcinogenic and have other ill effects when consumed at sufficient doses.

The U. S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and its counterpart in Canada have a legal limit of 20 micrograms per kilogram for aflatoxin in pet food. "Wild bird feed was found to be the most contaminated among different types of pet foods in several surveys, possibly due to the use of corn, nuts, and seeds as significant ingredients," the researchers said. "Up to one-fourth of the wild bird feed samples were contaminated with more than 100 micrograms of aflatoxin. This presents a potential health threat to the birds."

Among commercial dog and cat foods, the percentage of samples positive for aflatoxin varied from study to study, the researchers found. However, even the positive samples generally had levels of aflatoxin below the FDA limit.

ARTICLE #1 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
"Mycotoxins in Pet Food: A Review on Worldwide Prevalence and Prevention Strategies"

DOWNLOAD PDF http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/jafcau/asap/pdf/jf062363+.pdf
DOWNLOAD HTML http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/jafcau/asap/html/jf062363+.html

CONTACT:

Trevor K. Smith, Ph.D.
University of Guelph
Guelph, Ontario, Canada
Phone: 519-824-4142 Ext. 53746
Fax: 519-822-7897
Email: tsmith@uoguelph.ca


ARTICLE #2 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Toward pinpointing the location of bacterial infections
Journal of the American Chemical Society

In an advance in the emerging field of bacterial imaging, scientists are reporting development of a method for identifying specific sites of localized bacterial infections in living animals. Bradley D. Smith at the University of Notre Dame and colleagues describe the method in a report scheduled for the Jan. 10 edition of the Journal of the American Chemical Society, a weekly publication.

The researchers previously discovered fluorescent molecular probes containing zinc that could be used to discriminate between common pathogenic bacteria -- such as E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus -- and mammalian cells. In new research, they report using the probes to pinpoint the sites of staph infections in living laboratory mice. In everyday medicine, physicians may have difficulty distinguishing localized bacterial infections from sites of sterile inflammation.

"Bacterial imaging is an emerging technology that has many health and environmental applications," the researchers note. "For example, there is an obvious need to develop highly sensitive assays that can detect very small numbers of pathogenic bacterial cells in food, drinking water, or biomedical samples. In other situations, the goal is to study in vivo the temporal and spatial distribution of bacteria in live animals."

ARTICLE # 2 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
"Optical Imaging of Bacterial Infection in Living Mice Using a Fluorescent Near-Infrared Molecular Probe"

DOWNLOAD PDF http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/jacsat/asap/pdf/ja0665592.pdf
DOWNLOAD HTML http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/jacsat/asap/html/ja0665592.html

CONTACT:

Bradley D. Smith, Ph.D.
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, Indiana
Phone: 574-631-8632
Fax: 574-631-6652
Email: smith.115@nd.edu


ARTICLE #3 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

New sensor simplifies efforts to safeguard drinking water from cyanide
Analytical Chemistry

A new method for detecting cyanide in drinking water and other sources offers numerous advantages over cumbersome existing technology, scientists report in an article scheduled for the Jan. 1 issue of ACS' Analytical Chemistry, a semi-monthly journal.

Idaho State University's Jeffrey J. Rosentreter, Yegor G. Timofeyenko and Susan Mayo point out that cyanide is critical in industries ranging from fertilizers and plastics to mining and steel production, with 1.4 million tons produced worldwide each year. Cyanide also is toxic and its presence in the environment must be monitored closely. Existing instruments, however, require large samples, take a long time to produce results, require specially trained operators, and have poor precision and other drawbacks.

The researchers describe development of a new cyanide sensor that overcomes those disadvantages, while being inexpensive and portable. The sensor, for instance, produces results of toxins in water instantaneously and targets the specific form of cyanide toxic to humans and other organisms -- making it especially attractive for safety and security applications, the researchers state.

ARTICLE #3 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
"Piezoelectric Quartz Crystal Microbalance Sensor for Trace Aqueous Cyanide Ion Determination"

DOWNLOAD PDF http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/ancham/asap/pdf/ac060890m.pdf
DOWNLOAD HTML http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/ancham/asap/html/ac060890m.html

CONTACT:
Jeffrey J. Rosentreter, Ph.D.
Phone: 208-282-4444
Fax: 208-282-4373
Email: rosejeff@isu.edu


ARTICLE #4 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Easing concerns about the toxicity of diamond nanoparticles
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B

New research has brightened the prospects for using nanodiamonds as drug carriers, implant coatings, nanorobots and other medical applications that take advantage of diamond nanoparticles' attractive properties. The research is scheduled for publication Dec. 28 in ACS' weekly The Journal of Physical Chemistry B.

Liming Dai (University of Dayton), Saber M. Hussain (Wright-Patterson Air Force Base) and colleagues, including PhD student Amanda Schrand, explain that advances in technology have made a new generation of nanodiamonds available. Although diamond in bulk form is inert and biocompatible, nano-materials often behave differently than their bulk counterparts. That led to concern that diamond nanoparticles might have toxic effects on cells.

"We have for the first time assessed the cytotoxicity of nanodiamonds ranging in size from 2 to 10 nm," the researchers state, adding that nanodiamonds were not toxic to a variety of different cell types. "These results suggest that nanodiamonds could be ideal for many biological applications in a diverse range of cell types," they add.

ARTICLE #4 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
"Are Diamond Nanoparticles Cytotoxic?"

DOWNLOAD PDF http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/jpcbfk/asap/pdf/jp066387v.pdf
DOWNLOAD HTML http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/sample.cgi/jpcbfk/asap/html/jp066387v.html

CONTACT:
Liming Dai, Ph.D.
University of Dayton
Dayton, Ohio
Phone: 937-229-2670/2679
Fax: 937-229-3433
Email: ldai@udayton.edu


ARTICLE #5 EMBARGOED FOR 9 A.M., EASTERN TIME, JAN. 1, 2007

Headaches form over a possible new form of aspirin
Chemical & Engineering News

New scientific insights into the packaging of molecules in solids may tempt jokesters to add a second line to that old medical axiom, "Take two aspirin and call me in the morning." Insiders familiar with an unfolding controversy about aspirin -- more than 100 billion tablets of which are produced worldwide each year -- might quip, "Well, doctor, should I take Form I or Form II?"

An article scheduled for the Jan.1 issue of Chemical & Engineering News, the ACS' weekly newsmagazine, discusses the controversy that has arisen since 2006, when scientists isolated, described and filed a patent for a putative new form of aspirin. Written by C&EN senior editor Ivan Amato, the article describes subtle differences in the crystal, or internal, structures of familiar acetylsalicylic acid and the newly described Form II of aspirin.

The article explains that the discovery of Form II may not have any practical implications for people who take aspirin. However, uncertainties about Form II do showcase surprising knowledge gaps in organic chemists' understanding of the solid state of matter, Amato writes. Those gaps are apparent at a time when pharmaceutical companies are recognizing that minuscule differences in the crystal structures of drugs can have big influences on how drugs work in patients.

ARTICLE #5 EMBARGOED FOR 9 A.M., EASTERN TIME, JAN. 1, 2007
"Aspirin's Dose of Structural Insight: A recently identified crystal packing of aspirin is reminding chemists that discoveries lurk in the most familiar places"

FOR FULL TEXT, CONTACT:

Michael Bernstein
ACS News Service
Phone: 202-872-6042
Fax: 202-872-4370
Email: m_bernstein@acs.org


Journalists' Resources

ACS Evergreens -- Holiday Story Ideas

'Tis the season for evergreens -- those evergreen feature stories that are fresh to every new generation of readers, viewers and listeners. Here are a few of our favorites from the ACS News Service, with links to press releases and full texts of the corresponding original scientific journal articles.

Yes, Virginia, some snowflakes are the same
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/snowflakes.pdf

Tweaking bubbly's bubbles
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/champagne.pdf

O Christmas tree: Your bark may fight arthritis
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/bark.pdf

Cranberries contain a natural antibiotic
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/cranberries.pdf

"Gift of the Magi" bears anti-cancer agents
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/magi.pdf

Cinnamon helps lower sugar levels in diabetes
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/cinnamon.pdf

Dark chocolate: A heart-healthy treat
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/chocolate.pdf

Popcorn: No more leftover kernels?
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/journalist_resources/popcorn.pdf

HOLIDAY PODCASTS
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/presspac/holidaypodcast.html


Mark Your Calendars: Chemistry's expanding role in cancer research
Chemistry in Cancer Research: A Vital Partnership

Chemistry has an increasingly important role in research on cancer diagnosis, prevention and treatment. To spotlight that role, the American Chemical Society (ACS) and the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) will cosponsor a special conference entitled, "Chemistry in Cancer Research: A Vital Partnership," Feb. 4-7 in San Diego, Calif. The program will feature presentations by prominent scientists on drug discovery, proteomics, the chemical biology of carcinogenesis, biomarkers and analytical chemistry, modeling and bioinformatics, and structural biology.
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/meetings/specialty/AACR/index.html

###

ACS NEWS SERVICE
Weekly PressPac - ALL CONTENT IS FOR IMMEDIATE USE EXCEPT ARTICLE #5 (EMBARGOED FOR 9 A.M., EASTERN TIME, JAN 1, 2007)

Click below for your HOLIDAY GREETING from ACS
http://acswebcontent.acs.org/presspac/greeting.html

PressPac Archive: http://www.chemistry.org/news/presspac.html

The American Chemical Society (ACS) News Service PressPac is your access point for discoveries in fields ranging from astronomy to zoology, which are reported in the 35 peer-reviewed journals of the American Chemical Society. With more than 158,000 members, ACS is the world's largest scientific society. Chemistry is the science that transforms lives, and these news alerts are from the leading edge of that science at ACS headquarters.

The information in this press package is intended for your personal use in news gathering and reporting and should not be distributed to others. Anyone using advance ACS News Service Weekly Press Package information for stocks or securities dealing may be guilty of insider trading under the federal Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

To download manuscripts and images, please click on the links provided with each item. Please cite the individual journal, or the American Chemical Society, as the source of this information.

The American Chemical Society -- the world's largest scientific society -- is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

 
 
 
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