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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: sandra hines + 206) 543-2580 + shines@u.washington.edu  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/8/2008)

A look at Wisconsin's candidates
Chicago Tribune, United States -
... DISTRICT 41 Scott Milheiser (Democrat) Joan A. Ballweg (Republican), incumbent STATE ASSEMBLY, DISTRICT 42 Fred Clark (Democrat) JA Hines (Republican), ...
State raises property taxes for 20000 in Minneapolis
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN -
Two council members, Sandra Colvin Roy and Scott Benson, are among those nicked. Todd argues that the state's methods are flawed in a rising or falling ...
REDLANDS BOWL CONTINUES TO PROVIDE GREAT MEMORIES
Inland Empire, CA -
In spite of that, Gebara felt that the 2004 musical Annie required a live dog with theater experience to play Sandy. Her conviction resulted in the great ...
TAKING A SCHOOL TRIP DOWN MEMORY LANE
Grimsby Evening Telegraph, UK - Jul 5, 2008
... Janice Hines (61), of Ancaster Avenue, Grimsby, Diane Johansson (61), of Crosland Avenue, Grimsby, Frances Mabbott (60), of Greyfriars, Grimsby, Sandra ...
Students interact with NASA
Burleson-Crowley Connection, TX - Jun 30, 2008
Jeanie Gilbert, director of resource development and safe schools coordinator for BISD, helped organizers such as Sandra Hines, director of instructional ...
Busted in Brevard: Weekend arrests
Florida Today, FL - Jul 7, 2008
Arrested: Jackie Theodore Hines, 54, of 2387 Roman Ave. SE, Palm Bay. Charges: battery - domestic violence, child abuse. 11:19 am July 5. ...
Most e-mailed stories
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - Jul 7, 2008
Call Sandra Martin at 817 282-1292 for more information Safe Kids Tarrant County, led by Cook Children?s Medical Center, offers weekly car-seat checks at ...
Casper College announces dean's honor roll
The Casper Star Tribune, WY - Jul 6, 2008
... Angela N. Harshman, Sebastian Hausser, Tonya M. Hedquist, Rachael N. Henley, Morgan J. Hespe, Patricia A. Hines, Colin B. Holmes, Matthew S. Holmes, ...
SIUE DEAN'S LIST (7-6-08)
Belleville News Democrat,  USA - Jul 6, 2008
... Andrea Catherine Hanewinkel, Rachel A. Hankins, Ashleigh Lynn Henson, Leah Ann Herrington, Anne Marie Hill, Aaron Michael Hines, Caitlin K. Hoelscher, ...
Veteran Fiesta athletes motivated to compete
Gloucester Daily Times,  USA - Jun 23, 2008
... and Salvi Benson were passing the torch on to young up-and-comers like Jake Wood, Sandy Pallazolo and Vinny Parisi. But Russell Hines changed all that. ...
Source: Google News

Genome sequence of the Brown Norway rat yields insights into mammalian evolution -
… Worley, PE Burch, G Okwuonu, S Hines, L Lewis, C … - Nature, 2004 - adsabs.harvard.edu
The laboratory rat (Rattus norvegicus) is an indispensable tool in experimental
medicine and drug development, having made inestimable contributions to human
health. We report here the genome sequence of the Brown Norway (BN) rat ...

Spontaneous pushing during birth Relationship to perineal outcomes -
CM Sampselle, S Hines - Journal of Nurse-Midwifery, 1999 - Elsevier
Vaginal birth is a recognized factor in perineal tissue damage and postpartum
perineal pain. This study examined outcomes of 39 primiparous women who had
spontaneous vaginal births. In a retrospective survey, women were asked to ...

Prevention of Urinary Incontinence by Behavioral Modification Program: A Randomized, Controlled … -
… , AR HERZOG, TE RAGHUNATHAN, S HINES, KL MESSER, C … - The Journal of Urology, 2004 - Elsevier
We performed a randomized, controlled trial comparing a BMP treatment group to a
control, no treatment group in ambulatory, postmenopausal, continent women (0 to
5 days of incontinent episodes in the previous year) 55 years and older who ...

The Genome of the Sea Urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus -
… Gill, C Hamilton, J Hernandez, S Hines, J Hume, LR … - Science, 2006 - sciencemag.org
We report the sequence and analysis of the 814-megabase genome of the sea urchin
Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, a model for developmental and systems biology.
The sequencing strategy combined whole-genome shotgun and bacterial ...

Insights into social insects from the genome of the -
… , H Dinh, R Gill, J Hernandez, S Hines, J Hume, L … - Nature, 2006 - adsabs.harvard.edu
Here we report the genome sequence of the honeybee Apis mellifera, a key model
for social behaviour and essential to global ecology through pollination.
Compared with other sequenced insect genomes, the A. mellifera genome has ...

Prevention of Organ Allograft Rejection by a Specific Janus Kinase 3 Inhibitor -
… JM Casavant, TA Blumenkopf, M Hines, MF Brown, BM … - Science, 2003 - sciencemag.org
Because of its requirement for signaling by multiple cytokines, Janus kinase 3
(JAK3) is an excellent target for clinical immunosuppression. We report the
development of a specific, orally active inhibitor of JAK3, CP-690,550, ...

Preschoolers+ Computers= ABC: Computer Programming Abilities of Five-Year-Old Children.
SN Hines - Educational Computer, 1983 - eric.ed.gov
... Not available from ERIC. Click on any of the links below to perform a new search.
ERIC #: EJ285672. Title: Preschoolers + Computers = ABC: Computer Programming
Abilities of Five-Year-Old Children. Authors: Hines, Sandra N. ...

Association of exogenous DNA with cattle and insect spermatozoa in vitro -
PW Atkinson, ER Hines, S Beaton, KI Matthaei, KC … - Molecular Reproduction and Development, 1991 - doi.wiley.com
Association of Exogenous DNA With Cattle and ... PETER W. ATKINSON,' ERIC R.
HINES,' SANDRA BEATON; KLAUS I. MATTHAEI, KEN C. REED; AND MARK P. BRADLEY'
CSIRO Division of Entomology, Canberra'; AB Technology Pty. Limited, ...

A conformational switch in syntaxin during exocytosis: role of munc18 -
I Dulubova, S Sugita, S Hill, M Hosaka, I … - The EMBO Journal, 1999 - nature.com
Syntaxin 1, an essential protein in synaptic membrane fusion, contains a helical
autonomously folded N-terminal domain, a C-terminal SNARE motif and a
transmembrane region. The SNARE motif binds to synaptobrevin and SNAP-25 to ...

Learning outcomes of a group behavioral modification program to prevent urinary incontinence -
… , KL Messer, JS Seng, TE Raghunathan, SH Hines, AC … - International Urogynecology Journal, 2005 - Springer
Abstract This study describes acquisition of knowledge and motor skill in
bladder training (BT) and pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) and adherence
following a behavioral modification program (BMP). Essentially continent ...

Source: Google Scholar

Contact: Sandra Hines
shines@u.washington.edu
206-543-2580
University of Washington

Waters off Washington state only second place in world where glass sponge reefs found

Thirty miles west of Grays Harbor, University of Washington scientists have discovered large colonies of glass sponges thriving on the seafloor.

The species of glass sponges capable of building reefs were thought extinct for 100 million years until they were found in recent years in the protected waters of Canada's Georgia and Hecata straits, the only place in the world they've been observed until now.

The discovery in Washington waters extends the range of reef-building glass sponges into open ocean.

The sponge reefs could be important to the ecosystems on the Washington coast because they create a thriving oasis dense with sea life on seafloor that is otherwise sparely populated for miles, says Paul Johnson, UW professor of oceanography and chief scientist on the UW's ship Thomas G. Thompson, June 10-16, when the Washington glass sponge reefs were discovered. The glass sponge reefs were alive with zooplankton, sardines, crabs, prawns and rockfish.

"It's like looking at an overcrowded aquarium in an expensive Japanese restaurant," he says.

The Washington sponge reefs are each hundreds of feet in length and width. It's possible that the state has reefs comparable to the Canadian reefs that are miles in length, Johnson says.

The glass sponge reefs on the continental shelf west of Grays Harbor appear to be thriving on specialized bacteria that consume methane gas that the UW scientists were surprised to discover flowing out of the seafloor in copious amounts. Methane has not been detected by Canadian scientists near their glass sponge reefs, thus the Washington margin reefs could represent a new type of ecosystem on the shelf, one where the abundant biology is fueled by methane gas derived from ancient carbon in the sediments, Johnson says.

The glass sponges – so-called because their skeletons are made of silica (the same material as beach sand) – come in un-sponge-like shapes similar to cups and funnels. They range in color from creamy white to brilliant hues of yellow. The reefs build upward as new generations of sponges grow atop the still-hard silica skeletons of previous generations. The reefs just discovered are in 650 feet of water and rise between 6 and 15 feet above the seafloor. The sponges on the mounds grow as tall as 1 ½ feet.

The mounds off Grays Harbor have the same trio of glass sponge species as the reefs discovered in Canadian waters. The reefs in the Georgia and Hecata straits are in relatively protected marine waters, causing scientists to previously speculate that those reef-building glass sponges required a special ecological niche that allowed them to grow in those waters.

The field discovered on the open Washington shelf is very exposed to winter storms, which makes it much more likely that other reef-building glass sponges are still to be found around the globe, for example, on the Alaskan and Russian continental shelves, Johnson says.

Solitary glass sponges are found living in many parts of the world's oceans but are composed of different species than the ones capable of colonizing themselves into reefs. Individual glass sponges generally live 100 to 200 years and the Canadian sponge reefs have been dated as being 8,000 years old, making them comparable to coral reefs and redwood forests, Johnson says.

The reef-building sponge species had their heyday 150 million years ago when ocean conditions allowed them to grown near the surface of the ocean. Their fossilized remains, for example, are found in outcrops that are hundreds of miles long on land throughout Europe, all sites that were underwater in the late Jurassic period. It was thought the reef-building glass sponges were all driven to extinction 100 million years ago when diatoms, single-celled algae that also require silica dissolved in seawater, evolved in the global oceans and began using up the silica needed by the reef-building glass sponges.

The Washington and British Columbia reef-building glass sponges have learned to live at water depths that are below the sunlit zone where diatoms live but where the essential dissolved silica they need is available.

###

Johnson originally participated in a 2005 Canadian expedition to the Georgia Strait sponge reef and reasoned that a similar environment existed on the Washington shelf. The expedition that discovered the reefs was funded by the UW's Washington Sea Grant and the School of Oceanography and included faculty and undergraduates from the UW and University of Victoria.

For more information: Johnson, johnson@ocean.washington.edu

Glass-sponge Reef

Caption: The same species of glass sponge in this 2005 photo from British Columbia waters is one of a trio of reef-building sponges that have been discovered on the seafloor 30 miles west of Grays Harbor . The sponges, the tallest of which are 1 1/2 feet tall, have grown on mounds of skeletons of previous generations of glass sponges. The image depicts only a tiny part of a reef in Canadian waters that stretches miles in length.

Credit: University of Victoria

Usage Restrictions: Credit line required

Locator Map

Caption: The box shows the approximately 2-square-mile area 30 miles west of Grays Harbor where University of Washington scientists, on an expedition funded by the UW Washington Sea Grant and School of Oceanography , discovered both large colonies of glass sponges and copious amounts of methane flowing from the seafloor.

Credit: University of Washington

Usage Restrictions: Credit line required

 
 
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