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14 pages, 693 KiB  
Article
Exposure of American Black Bears (Ursus americanus) to Ticks, Tick-Borne Diseases, and Intestinal Parasites in Wisconsin
by Nika S. Reichert, Daniela Mathieu, Christopher J. Katz and Kent A. Hatch
Diversity 2024, 16(9), 537; https://doi.org/10.3390/d16090537 - 2 Sep 2024
Viewed by 1055
Abstract
We surveyed 159 American black bears (Ursus americanus) over a period of three years for the occurrence of ticks, tick-borne diseases, and intestinal parasites in Wisconsin. We collected blood from the bears to test for the presence of antibodies to Borrelia [...] Read more.
We surveyed 159 American black bears (Ursus americanus) over a period of three years for the occurrence of ticks, tick-borne diseases, and intestinal parasites in Wisconsin. We collected blood from the bears to test for the presence of antibodies to Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease), Rickettsia rickettsii (Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF)), Babesia, Ehrlichia, Ehrlichia canis, Brucella canis, and Anaplasma phagocytophilum. We also examined scat samples for intestinal parasites. We commonly found the tick Dermacentor variabilis, but also present the first report of Rhipicephalus sanguineus on black bears. We detected antibodies to Lyme disease and RMSF. We detected antibodies to E. canis for the first time in a bear and both antibodies to R. rickettsii and A. phagocytophilum for the first time in a black bear in Wisconsin. No antibodies for Babesia or Br. canis were detected. We found eggs of the intestinal parasite Baylasascaris transfuga as well as a low number of Toxascara leonina and unknown Capillaria species occurrences in the examined feces. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Wildlife Welfare)
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<p>(<b>A</b>) Males and female black bears captured per year and per month (all years combined for each month). Black bars represent male black bears while open bars represent female black bears. (<b>B</b>) Presence/absence of ticks on black bears per year and per month. Black bars represent ticks present while open bars represent an absence of ticks. (<b>C</b>) Test results for Lyme disease per year and per month. Black bars represent a positive test, while open bars represent a negative test. (<b>D</b>) Test results for all other tick-borne diseases tested per year and per month. Black bars represent a positive test, while open bars represent a negative test. (<b>E</b>) Presence/absence of <span class="html-italic">B. transfuga</span> in black bear feces per year and per month. Black bars represent <span class="html-italic">B. transfuga</span> present, while open bars represent an absence of <span class="html-italic">B. transfuga</span>.</p>
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14 pages, 4035 KiB  
Case Report
Debilitating Musculoskeletal Disease in Two Free-Ranging Juvenile American Black Bears (Ursus americanus)
by Isabella C. Fahrenholz, Michelle M. Dennis, Federica Morandi, Keren E. Dittmer and Julie D. Sheldon
Animals 2024, 14(14), 2088; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14142088 - 17 Jul 2024
Viewed by 1529
Abstract
Severe musculoskeletal disease characterized by marked joint laxity was the cause of euthanasia in two wild juvenile American black bears (Ursus americanus) admitted to a rehabilitation facility in eastern Tennessee in 2023. Previously, almost all reported musculoskeletal diseases in this population [...] Read more.
Severe musculoskeletal disease characterized by marked joint laxity was the cause of euthanasia in two wild juvenile American black bears (Ursus americanus) admitted to a rehabilitation facility in eastern Tennessee in 2023. Previously, almost all reported musculoskeletal diseases in this population were of traumatic etiology, even in malnourished yearlings. Case 1 was an orphaned 11-month-old male cub exhibiting disproportionate dwarfism, progressive immobility, and joint laxity. Necropsy findings suggested either chondrodysplasia or rickets, and imaging findings supported a skeletal dysplasia. Case 2 was a 14-month-old emaciated male yearling exhibiting joint laxity and immobility. Necropsy findings showed osteoporosis and serous atrophy of fat, and imaging findings were inconsistent with a skeletal dysplasia. Both cases were clinically inconsistent with rickets based on normal calcium, phosphorous, and parathyroid hormone concentrations; however, Case 1 had hypovitaminosis D (9 nmol/L) compared to healthy juvenile black bears. We hypothesize that Case 1 had a genetic chondrodysplasia while the osteoporosis of Case 2 was due to chronic malnutrition. The goal of this case report is to inform wildlife agencies and facilities to monitor for similar, non-trauma-related debilitating musculoskeletal disease in free-ranging bears and evaluate cases that allow us to further understand the disease processes involved. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Pathology of Wildlife in the Americas)
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<p>Case 1: Stature and pathological findings. (<b>A</b>) Stance as observed in enclosure. Note hyperextension of carpi (arrow) and disproportionate dwarfism. (<b>B</b>) Pleural surface of right hemithorax showing enlarged costochondral junctions (arrowheads). (<b>C</b>) Longitudinally transected distal femur with thickened physis (arrow). (<b>D</b>) Photomicrograph of distal femur physis; h = widened zone of hypertrophy (inset), m = metaphyseal bone. Hematoxylin and eosin (HE). Bar = 150 µm.</p>
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<p>Case 1: Sagittal MIP CT reconstructions of the elbows and shoulders (top row) and parasagittal thin-section reconstruction of the shoulders (bottom row). Notice the small and incompletely mineralized proximal humeral epiphyses, with irregular cranial margins (solid arrows), and the flattened shape of the glenoid cavities (dotted arrows). The distal humeral condyles are also smaller than normal and mildly irregular (open arrows), and the proximal radial epiphyses are small and irregularly marginated. As a result of the small epiphyses, the joint spaces appear widened.</p>
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<p>Case 2: Sagittal CT reconstruction of the spine (<b>left</b>) and oblique reconstruction of the right 13th rib, displayed in bone window (<b>right</b>). Notice the collapse of the L3–4 intervertebral disc space (solid arrow) and the smooth bridging callus at the level of a chronic rib fracture (open arrowhead). Overall bone opacity is normal.</p>
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<p>Case 2: Oblique parasagittal MIP CT reconstructions of the elbows and carpi (top row) and parasagittal thin-section reconstruction of the shoulders (bottom row). Although the proximal humeral epiphyses are incompletely mineralized, they are larger and smoother than in Case 1 (solid arrows); the glenoid cavities have a normal morphology (dotted arrows). The distal humeral condyles are normal in size and the joint space of the elbow is within normal limits. The distal physes of the radii and ulnae are only slightly smaller than expected for the age, and the carpal bones are normally mineralized (open arrowheads).</p>
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<p>Case 2: Histopathological findings. (<b>A</b>) Longitudinally transected proximal femur with thick articular cartilage and open physis (arrow). (<b>B</b>) Photomicrograph of proximal femur physis with relatively normal thickness of zone of hypertrophy (h), metaphyseal cap of bone (arrowhead), and paucity of primary spongiosa in metaphysis (m). HE. Bar = 50 µm.</p>
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16 pages, 9923 KiB  
Article
First Discovery of the North American Leaf-Mining Moth Chrysaster ostensackenella (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) in Russia: The Genetic Diversity of a Novel Pest in Invaded vs. Native Range
by Natalia I. Kirichenko, Nina A. Kolyada and Stanislav Gomboc
Insects 2023, 14(7), 642; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14070642 - 15 Jul 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2094
Abstract
Here, we report the first detection of the North American leaf-mining moth Chrysaster ostensackenella (Fitch, 1859) (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) on North American black locust Robinia pseudoacacia (Fabaceae) in Primorsky Krai (the Russian Far East) in July 2022. Overall, six moths were reared from the [...] Read more.
Here, we report the first detection of the North American leaf-mining moth Chrysaster ostensackenella (Fitch, 1859) (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) on North American black locust Robinia pseudoacacia (Fabaceae) in Primorsky Krai (the Russian Far East) in July 2022. Overall, six moths were reared from the leaf mines and identified based on adult morphology (forewing pattern and male genitalia) and three of them were DNA barcoding. Description of the leaf mines that allowed us to distinguish the damage of Ch. ostensackenella from other gracillariids associated with R. pseudoacacia is provided. The phylogeographic analysis comparing the DNA barcodes from Russia with those from other invaded countries in Europe (Italy) and East Asia (South Korea and Japan) and from the native range (North America) was performed. Intraspecific genetic diversity reached 3.29%. Altogether, 10 haplotypes were revealed among 21 studied specimens in the Holarctic. The detection of one haplotype common for Japan and the USA (North Carolina) suggests that the invasion to East Asia could have happened from the USA directly, rather than through Europe. A shared haplotype defined for Japan and the Russian Far East points at a possible moth species’ spread to Primorsky Krai from earlier invaded Hokkaido. Further distribution of Ch. ostensackenella in East Asia and Europe is expected, bearing in mind the wide planting of R. pseudoacacia in these continents. Furthermore, an accidental introduction of the moth to the Southern Hemisphere, where black locust was introduced, is not ruled out. Full article
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<p>The localities in Primorsky Krai (the Russian Far East), where leaves with the mines of <span class="html-italic">Chrysaster ostensackenella</span> were sampled on <span class="html-italic">Robinia pseudoacacia</span> in 2022, and the proximity of the territories in China and Japan where the moth was detected in 2015 and 2021, respectively. Primorsky Krai: 1—Gornotaejnoe, arboretum of MTS; 2—Gornotaejnoe, village plantings; 3—planting next to Khorol village. The map was produced using ArcGIS Pro software, version 3.1 [<a href="#B29-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">29</a>].</p>
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<p><span class="html-italic">Chrysaster ostensackenella</span>: male (<b>A</b>,<b>B</b>) and its genitalia (<b>C</b>); Sample ID: NK1931, Mountain-Taiga Station, Gornotaejnoe, Primorsky Krai, Russia. Photo N. Kirichenko.</p>
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<p>Biology of <span class="html-italic">Chrysaster ostensackenella.</span> (<b>A</b>) Freshly collected leaf mine on the upper side of the leaf compounds of <span class="html-italic">Robinia pseudoacacia</span>; (<b>B</b>,<b>C</b>) herbarized leaves with the mines with a visible short tunnel proceeding the blotch mine (<b>C</b>–<b>E</b>); (<b>F</b>) the larva dissected from the leaf mine; (<b>G</b>) abandoned white silky cocoon on the lower side of the leaf compound; (<b>H</b>) the cocoon with the pupa inside. Mountain-Taiga Station, Gornotaejnoe, Primorsky Krai, Russia. Photo N. Kolyada and N. Kirichenko.</p>
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<p>Leaf mines of three North American <span class="html-italic">Robinia</span>-feeding gracillariids in Eurasia: (<b>A</b>,<b>E</b>) branched blotch mines of <span class="html-italic">Parectopa robiniella</span> situated over the midrib, Slovenia, July 2022; (<b>B</b>,<b>C</b>,<b>F</b>) lower and upper side blotch (tentiform) mines of <span class="html-italic">Macrosaccus robiniella</span>, ibidem; (<b>D</b>) the blotch mine of <span class="html-italic">Chrysaster ostensackenella</span>, Russia, Promorsky Krai, August 2022. Photo N. Kirichenko, S. Gomboc and N. Kolyada.</p>
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<p>Maximum likelihood COI tree showing the relatedness of <span class="html-italic">Chrysaster ostensackenella</span> from Russia (indicated by red color) with the specimens from the USA (native range), Italy, South Korea, and Japan (invaded range). Each specimen is indicated by a GenBank accession number, species name, region, and country. Next to the clusters, BIN numbers are provided. MTS—Mountain-Taiga Station. <span class="html-italic">Ch. hagicola</span> (indicated in blue color) was used to root the tree.</p>
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<p>The haplotype network of <span class="html-italic">Chrysaster ostensackenella</span> in the Holarctic. The haplotypes (H1–H10) are represented by circles. The number of individuals belonging to each haplotype is indicated in parentheses next to the haplotype. The haplotypes are connected with a 95% confidence level. The colored sectors represent the countries or regions where the haplotypes were found. The vertical strokes on the connection lines and two small empty circles represent hypothetical haplotypes not observed in the study. The geographical distribution of all haplotypes is reported in <a href="#insects-14-00642-t003" class="html-table">Table 3</a>.</p>
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<p>Modern range of <span class="html-italic">Chrysaster ostensackenella</span> in the Holarctic. The native range of the species as determined from data gathered in [<a href="#B15-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">15</a>] is indicated. The year of the species discovery beyond native range: 2015 in China (Shandong, Liaoning Provinces) [<a href="#B23-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">23</a>,<a href="#B24-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">24</a>], 2017 in South Korea (Cheongju-si, Seongnam-si, Yeosu-si, Seoul) [<a href="#B25-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">25</a>], 2021 in Japan (Hokkaido: Minaminomori, Urimakunishi Prefectures) [<a href="#B26-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">26</a>], 2022 in Italy (Monte Terminillo) [<a href="#B27-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">27</a>], and 2022 * in Russia (Primorsky Krai: Gornotaejnoe, Khorol villages) (present paper). The maps were produced using ArcGIS Pro software [<a href="#B29-insects-14-00642" class="html-bibr">29</a>].</p>
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18 pages, 2857 KiB  
Article
Developing a Preference Scale for a Bear: From “Bearly Like” to “Like Beary Much”
by Jennifer Vonk
Animals 2023, 13(9), 1554; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13091554 - 6 May 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2001
Abstract
A preference scale for use by nonhuman animals would allow them to communicate their degree of liking for individual items rather than just relative preferences between pairs of items. It would also allow animals to report liking for images of objects that would [...] Read more.
A preference scale for use by nonhuman animals would allow them to communicate their degree of liking for individual items rather than just relative preferences between pairs of items. It would also allow animals to report liking for images of objects that would be difficult to directly interact with (e.g., potential mates and habitat modifications). Such scales can easily be presented using touchscreen technology. Few zoos have used touchscreen technology for species other than nonhuman primates. I present a description of efforts taken to create such a scale for use with a single zoo-housed American black bear (Ursus americanus). Although the bear did not reach a high level of proficiency with assigning preferred and non-preferred food items to categorical responses of “like” and “dislike,” she was able to learn how to use the like and dislike buttons differentially for a single preferred and less preferred food item and she selected the correct response button for the preferred item at above chance levels. These data contribute to our limited understanding of black bear cognition and suggest that conditional discriminations may be difficult for black bears. This finding can inform continued efforts to create a simpler tool for nonhumans to communicate their preferences to human caregivers in a more nuanced way than is currently possible. More generally, the current study contributes to the growing body of work supporting the use of touchscreen technology for providing enrichment to less studied species like bears. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Animal–Computer Interaction: Advances and Opportunities)
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<p>Experimental set-up showing Migwan peering from around the edge of the touchscreen.</p>
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<p>Flowchart of the phases of the experiment.</p>
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<p>Sample trials of Phase 3 NAPS with the preferred food (<bold>top</bold>) and less preferred food (<bold>bottom</bold>).</p>
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<p>Trial of Phase 5 NAPS.</p>
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<p>Average number of trials in which preferred foods were chosen during the food preference assessment.</p>
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<p>Performance on the Final NAPS Training Task.</p>
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<p>Number of Trials in which Responses were Selected for each Food in Phase Six.</p>
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<p>Response Latencies as a Function of Response and Correctness in Phase 6.</p>
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15 pages, 7245 KiB  
Article
Comparative Analysis of Olfactory Receptor Repertoires Sheds Light on the Diet Adaptation of the Bamboo-Eating Giant Panda Based on the Chromosome-Level Genome
by Chuang Zhou, Yi Liu, Guangqing Zhao, Zhengwei Liu, Qian Chen, Bisong Yue, Chao Du and Xiuyue Zhang
Animals 2023, 13(6), 979; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13060979 - 8 Mar 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2847
Abstract
The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is the epitome of a flagship species for wildlife conservation and also an ideal model of adaptive evolution. As an obligate bamboo feeder, the giant panda relies on the olfaction for food recognition. The number of [...] Read more.
The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is the epitome of a flagship species for wildlife conservation and also an ideal model of adaptive evolution. As an obligate bamboo feeder, the giant panda relies on the olfaction for food recognition. The number of olfactory receptor (OR) genes and the rate of pseudogenes are the main factors affecting the olfactory ability of animals. In this study, we used the chromosome-level genome of the giant panda to identify OR genes and compared the genome sequences of OR genes with five other Ursidae species (spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus), American black bear (Ursus americanus), brown bear (Ursus arctos), polar bear (Ursus maritimus) and Asian black bear (Ursus thibetanus)). The giant panda had 639 OR genes, including 408 functional genes, 94 partial OR genes and 137 pseudogenes. Among them, 222 OR genes were detected and distributed on 18 chromosomes, and chromosome 8 had the most OR genes. A total of 448, 617, 582, 521 and 792 OR genes were identified in the spectacled bear, American black bear, brown bear, polar bear and Asian black bear, respectively. Clustering analysis based on the OR protein sequences of the six species showed that the OR genes distributed in 69 families and 438 subfamilies based on sequence similarity, and the six mammals shared 72 OR gene subfamilies, while the giant panda had 31 unique OR gene subfamilies (containing 35 genes). Among the 35 genes, there are 10 genes clustered into 8 clusters with 10 known human OR genes (OR8J3, OR51I1, OR10AC1, OR1S2, OR1S1, OR51S1, OR4M1, OR4M2, OR51T1 and OR5W2). However, the kind of odor molecules can be recognized by the 10 known human OR genes separately, which needs further research. The phylogenetic tree showed that 345 (about 84.56%) functional OR genes were clustered as Class-II, while only 63 (about 15.44%) functional OR genes were clustered as Class-I, which required further and more in-depth research. The potential odor specificity of some giant panda OR genes was identified through the similarity to human protein sequences. Sequences similar to OR2B1, OR10G3, OR11H6 and OR11H7P were giant panda-specific lacking, which may be related to the transformation and specialization from carnivore to herbivore of the giant panda. Since our reference to flavoring agents comes from human research, the possible flavoring agents from giant panda-specific OR genes need further investigation. Moreover, the conserved motifs of OR genes were highly conserved in Ursidae species. This systematic study of OR genes in the giant panda will provide a solid foundation for further research on the olfactory function and variation of the giant panda. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Animal Genetics and Genomics)
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<p>The bamboo-eating giant panda within the Ursidae. (<b>a</b>) A photo of the giant panda was taken by Bo Luo. (<b>b</b>) The phylogenetic position of the giant panda from TimeTree (<a href="http://timetree.org/" target="_blank">http://timetree.org/</a>, accessed on 1 January 2022).</p>
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<p>Structure information of ORs of the giant panda.</p>
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<p>Chromosomal distribution of the functional OR genes of the giant panda.</p>
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<p>The phylogenetic tree of functional OR genes in the giant panda.</p>
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<p>Comparison of OR gene clusters (<b>a</b>) between four species from genus <span class="html-italic">Ursus</span> (<b>b</b>) between three different genera from family Ursidae.</p>
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<p>The five most conserved motifs of functional OR genes in six animals. The high degree of amino acid coding represents the degree of conservatism.</p>
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12 pages, 1889 KiB  
Article
Access to Multiple Habitats Improves Welfare: A Case Study of Two Zoo-Housed Black Bears (Ursus americanus)
by Kelly Bruno, Cassidy Hubbard and Emily Lynch
J. Zool. Bot. Gard. 2023, 4(1), 87-98; https://doi.org/10.3390/jzbg4010010 - 31 Jan 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 4844
Abstract
Using various forms of enrichment, animal care specialists encourage species-specific behaviors and discourage stereotypic behaviors. Within the zoo community, bears (Ursids spp.) are commonly housed, yet are prone to exhibiting stress-related behaviors. Here, we assess the effect of access to multiple habitats, [...] Read more.
Using various forms of enrichment, animal care specialists encourage species-specific behaviors and discourage stereotypic behaviors. Within the zoo community, bears (Ursids spp.) are commonly housed, yet are prone to exhibiting stress-related behaviors. Here, we assess the effect of access to multiple habitats, including areas of off guest view, on the welfare of two American black bears (U. americanus) housed at the North Carolina Zoo. In this study, we looked at two behaviors, pacing and foraging to represent negative and positive welfare indicators. We performed logistic regressions to model the effect of access on these behaviors. Because having an animal visible to guests is important to consider when creating management plans, we also explored the effect of access on the bears’ visibility. We found that full access reduced the likelihood of pacing by an average of 13% and increased the likelihood of foraging by an average of 5%. Access to multiple areas reduced the probability of visibility by 57% for one individual but did not impact visibility of the other bear. This case study suggests the value of access to zoo animal welfare and should incite future research aimed at exploring the effects of access on various behavioral outcomes. Full article
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<p>Map of black bear enclosure at the North Carolina Zoo.</p>
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<p>Predicted likelihood of pacing by access type. Error bars represent 95% standard error.</p>
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<p>Predicted likelihood of foraging by access. Error bars represent 95% standard error.</p>
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<p>Predicted likelihood of Luna’s visibility across different types of access. Error bars represent 95% standard error.</p>
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<p>Predicted likelihood of Nova’s visibility across different types of access. Error bars represent 95% standard error.</p>
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21 pages, 5283 KiB  
Article
Developing a Reliable Welfare Assessment Tool for Captive Hibernatory Bear Species
by Chloe J. Maher, Angela Gibson, Laura M. Dixon and Heather Bacon
Animals 2021, 11(11), 3090; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11113090 - 29 Oct 2021
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 4790
Abstract
Animal welfare assessments are essential for the identification of welfare hazards and benchmarking of welfare improvements, though welfare assessments for zoo species are lacking. Bears are commonly housed in zoos but currently no composite welfare assessment tool exists for captive bears. This study [...] Read more.
Animal welfare assessments are essential for the identification of welfare hazards and benchmarking of welfare improvements, though welfare assessments for zoo species are lacking. Bears are commonly housed in zoos but currently no composite welfare assessment tool exists for captive bears. This study describes the development of such a tool for use across hibernating bear species. A draft tool was developed using indicators derived from the literature and a modified Delphi analysis with an international group of bear keepers. A total of 18 bear keepers from 12 zoos were recruited to trial the tool on 24 brown bears and American black bears. The participating keepers assessed their bears three times across a period of nine days. Intraclass correlation coefficients analysis was used to analyse inter-, intra-rater and item reliability. The inter- and intra-rater reliability showed good to excellent levels of agreement (>0.7, p < 0.05). Item reliability was also assessed and showed good to excellent levels of agreement (>0.75, p < 0.05). The resulting bear welfare assessment is an important step in identifying and understanding challenges to bear welfare in captivity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Zoo and Wild Animals Welfare Assessments)
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<p>The process of development and refinement of welfare indicators taken from the literature and industry experts.</p>
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<p>ICC values for all bears assessed for inter-rater reliability. The horizontal line sits at 0.75. Values above 0.75 are considered values of good reliability. In the case of bears with multiple assessments, the mean ICC score was calculated and depicted in the graph.</p>
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<p>ICC values for all bears assessed for intra-rater reliability. The horizontal line sits at 0.75. Values above 0.75 are considered values of good reliability. In the case of bears with multiple assessments, the mean ICC score was calculated and depicted in the graph for each individual assessor.</p>
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<p>Percentage welfare score for: (<b>a</b>) brown bears and (<b>b</b>) American black bears.</p>
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<p>Percentage welfare scores showing: (<b>a</b>) physical health section for brown bears; (<b>b</b>) physical health section for American black bears; (<b>c</b>) behaviour section for brown bears; (<b>d</b>) behaviour section for American black bears; (<b>e</b>) environment section for brown bears; and (<b>f</b>) environment section for American black bears.</p>
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<p>Percentage welfare scores showing: (<b>a</b>) physical health section for brown bears; (<b>b</b>) physical health section for American black bears; (<b>c</b>) behaviour section for brown bears; (<b>d</b>) behaviour section for American black bears; (<b>e</b>) environment section for brown bears; and (<b>f</b>) environment section for American black bears.</p>
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<p>Percentage welfare scores showing: (<b>a</b>) physical health section for brown bears; (<b>b</b>) physical health section for American black bears; (<b>c</b>) behaviour section for brown bears; (<b>d</b>) behaviour section for American black bears; (<b>e</b>) environment section for brown bears; and (<b>f</b>) environment section for American black bears.</p>
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17 pages, 581 KiB  
Article
Menthol Smoking and Nicotine Dependence among Black/African American Women Smokers Living in Low-Resource, Rural Communities
by Dina M. Jones, Margarete C. Kulik, Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, Sandilyn Bullock, Mignonne C. Guy and Pebbles Fagan
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18(20), 10877; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182010877 - 16 Oct 2021
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 4645
Abstract
Black/African American women from low-resource, rural communities bear a disproportionate burden of tobacco-related morbidity and mortality. This study examined associations between menthol smoking and socioeconomic deprivation with nicotine dependence and quitting behaviors among Black/African American women cigarette and/or little cigar/cigarillo smokers, aged 18–50 [...] Read more.
Black/African American women from low-resource, rural communities bear a disproportionate burden of tobacco-related morbidity and mortality. This study examined associations between menthol smoking and socioeconomic deprivation with nicotine dependence and quitting behaviors among Black/African American women cigarette and/or little cigar/cigarillo smokers, aged 18–50 living in low-resource, rural communities. Baseline survey data from a randomized controlled behavioral/intervention trial (#NCT03476837) were analyzed (n = 146). Outcomes included time to first tobacco product (cigarette/little cigar/cigarillo) use within 5 min of waking, Fagerstrom Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND) score, and ever attempting to quit cigarettes. Socioeconomic deprivation measures included education, income, and receiving supplemental nutritional assistance (SNAP) program benefits. In adjusted regression analyses, menthol smoking was associated with both greater FTND scores and time to first tobacco product use within 5 min of waking, but not ever attempting to quit cigarettes. Regardless of menthol status, only 25.0% of smokers reported that they would quit smoking if menthol cigarettes were banned. The proportion of smokers who smoked their first tobacco product within 5 min of waking increased slightly with greater socioeconomic deprivation. Additional research and targeted efforts are needed to reduce nicotine dependence among Black/African American women smokers living in rural, low-resource communities where access to cessation services is limited. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Vulnerable Populations: Substance and Behavioral Addictions)
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<p>Diagram showing the number of participants screened for eligibility, determined to be eligible, and enrolled as of 26 July 2021.</p>
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10 pages, 612 KiB  
Article
“I Love It When You Play that Holy Ghost Chord”: Sounding Sacramentality in the Black Gospel Tradition
by Braxton D. Shelley
Religions 2020, 11(9), 452; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11090452 - 4 Sep 2020
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2967
Abstract
This essay argues that the distinctive aesthetic practices of many African American Christian congregations, indexed by the phrase “the Black gospel tradition”, are shaped by a sacramentality of sound. I contend that the role music routinely plays in the experience of the holy [...] Read more.
This essay argues that the distinctive aesthetic practices of many African American Christian congregations, indexed by the phrase “the Black gospel tradition”, are shaped by a sacramentality of sound. I contend that the role music routinely plays in the experience of the holy uncovers sanctity in the sound itself, enabling it to function as a medium of interworldly exchange. As divine power takes an audible form, the faith that “comes by hearing” is confirmed by religious feeling—both individual and collective. This sacramentality of sound is buttressed by beliefs about the enduring efficacy of divine speech, convictions that motivate the intensive character of gospel’s songs, sermons, and shouts. The essay begins with a worship service from Chicago, Illinois’ Greater Harvest Missionary Baptist Church, an occasion in which the musical accompaniment for holy dancing brought sound’s sacramental function into particularly clear relief. In the essay’s second section, I turn to the live recording of Richard Smallwood’s “Hebrews 11”, a recording that accents the creative power of both divine speech and faithful utterances, showing how reverence for “the word of God” inspires the veneration of musical sound. In the article’s final move, I show how both of the aforementioned performances articulate a sacramental theology of sound—the conviction that sound’s invisible force brings spiritual power to bear on the material world. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Music: Its Theologies and Spiritualities—A Global Perspective)
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<p>Riff gestured by Pastor Thomas.</p>
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<p>Excerpt from shouting music at Greater Harvest Missionary Baptist Church (MBC).</p>
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14 pages, 1424 KiB  
Article
Behavior in Free-Living American Black Bear Dens: Parturition, Maternal Care, and Cub Behavior
by Lynn L. Rogers, Linda McColley, Janet Dalton, Jim Stroner, Douglas Hajicek, Adam Partin and Gordon M. Burghardt
Animals 2020, 10(7), 1123; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10071123 - 1 Jul 2020
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 7368
Abstract
Denning behavior has long remained the least observed aspect of bear behavior. During 2010–2013, we used webcams, microphones, the internet, and 14,602 h of archived video to document the denning behaviors of two adult wild black bears (Ursus americanus) as they [...] Read more.
Denning behavior has long remained the least observed aspect of bear behavior. During 2010–2013, we used webcams, microphones, the internet, and 14,602 h of archived video to document the denning behaviors of two adult wild black bears (Ursus americanus) as they gave birth and cared for four litters through six winters in northeastern Minnesota. Observations included types of dens, labor, pre-parturient genital swelling, birthing positions, post-partum vocalizations, mothers removing amniotic tissues and warming newborn cubs in sub-freezing temperatures, frequency of nursing, cubs establishing nipple order, yearlings suckling, the ingestion of snow and icicles, the ingestion of foot pads, urination and defecation in latrine areas, toilet-licking, eye opening, reciprocal tongue-licking, play, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and possible dreaming, and reactions to wildlife intruders. The use of this new method for observing natural bear dens allowed the identification of many behaviors undescribed for any species of wild bear in dens. We also discuss the need for future studies and how the depth and duration of black bear hibernation varies with body condition and geographic region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Wildlife)
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<p>(<b>A</b>). Lily’s burrow den on 4 December 2009. (<b>B</b>). Lily at den 24 March 2010. The white tube extending into the den contains the webcam installed on 8 January 2010. (<b>C</b>). Nine-month-old Hope at the root mound den on 25 October 2010, showing vegetation that she and three-year-old Lily had raked into it for bedding. (<b>D</b>). Four-year-old Lily and nine-month-old Faith in the deep rock den 12 November 2011. (<b>E</b>). Five-year-old Lily in the slash pile den on 10 September 2012. (<b>F</b>). Two-year-old Jewel showing the dirt mound she excavated to enlarge her burrow den of the previous year on 22 October 2011. (<b>G</b>). Two-year-old Jewel in her enlarged burrow den with the webcam installed on 7 January 2012. (<b>H</b>). The burrow den of three-year-old Jewel with its throw mound and webcam on 23 December 2012. It was used by Jewel and her yearlings Fern and Herbie in the winter of 2012–2013.</p>
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12 pages, 271 KiB  
Essay
Their American Dream
by Danné E. Davis
Genealogy 2020, 4(2), 45; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy4020045 - 7 Apr 2020
Viewed by 5375
Abstract
Centuries before W.E.B. DuBois named the colorline—i.e., racism—as the problem of the 20th century, skin color stratification was a persistent phenomenon. In 1983 Black feminist, scholar, and Pulitzer Prize winning author Alice Walker termed “colorism” as “prejudicial or preferential treatment of same-race people [...] Read more.
Centuries before W.E.B. DuBois named the colorline—i.e., racism—as the problem of the 20th century, skin color stratification was a persistent phenomenon. In 1983 Black feminist, scholar, and Pulitzer Prize winning author Alice Walker termed “colorism” as “prejudicial or preferential treatment of same-race people based solely on their [skin] color”. Using the tools of genealogy, I conducted a critical family history of my parents, Lem and Mae’s, pursuit of their American Dream. Such exploration digs deep to decipher the nexuses of a family’s evolution. Dr. Maya Angelou routinely shared stories about her past to impart the importance of embracing one’s history. For my parents, the American Dream meant opportunity, which included home ownership. Their American Dream began as African Americans in the United States’ Jim Crow south. Lem was a light-skinned man; Mae a dark-complexion woman. They met, married, and bought a small home in segregated Columbia, South Carolina. Bearing the cloak of oppression, my parents joined millions of southern Blacks in the Great Migration relocating to northern cities—my parents landed in Boston, Massachusetts. Throughout their journey, Lem and Mae reached back to their ancestors, and drew from within themselves to improve their circumstances. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Genealogy and Critical Family History)
16 pages, 3500 KiB  
Article
Projecting Mammal Distributions in Response to Future Alternative Landscapes in a Rapidly Transitioning Region
by Michael V. Cove, Craig Fergus, Iara Lacher, Thomas Akre and William J. McShea
Remote Sens. 2019, 11(21), 2482; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs11212482 - 24 Oct 2019
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 4366
Abstract
Finding balance between the needs of people and wildlife is an essential component of planning sustainable landscapes. Because mammals make up a diverse and ecologically important taxon with varying responses to human disturbance, we used representative mammal species to examine how alternative land-use [...] Read more.
Finding balance between the needs of people and wildlife is an essential component of planning sustainable landscapes. Because mammals make up a diverse and ecologically important taxon with varying responses to human disturbance, we used representative mammal species to examine how alternative land-use policies might affect their habitats and distributions in the near future. We used wildlife detections from camera traps at 1591 locations along a large-scale urban to wild gradient in northern Virginia, to create occupancy models which determined land cover relationships and the drivers of contemporary mammal distributions. From the 15 species detected, we classified five representative species into two groups based on their responses to human development; sensitive species (American black bears and bobcats) and synanthropic species (red foxes, domestic cats, and white-tailed deer). We then used the habitat models for the representative species to predict their distributions under four future planning scenarios based on strategic versus reactive planning and high or low human population growth. The distributions of sensitive species did not shrink drastically under any scenario, whereas the distributions of synanthropic species increased in response to anthropogenic development, but the magnitude of the response varied based on the projected rate of human population growth. This is likely because most sensitive species are dependent on large, protected public lands in the region, and the majority of projected habitat losses should occur in non-protected private lands. These findings illustrate the importance of public protected lands in mitigating range loss due to land use changes, and the potential positive impact of strategic planning in further mitigating mammalian diversity loss in private lands. Full article
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<p>Camera trapping area with 1591 camera trap sites from 2012 to 2018, and the Changing Landscapes Initiative (CLI) study area from across an urban to rural gradient, northern Virginia.</p>
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<p>Schematic of the four quadrants defining our scenario plans along population growth and strategic planning gradients for the CLI study area in northern Virginia.</p>
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<p>Predicted occupancy probabilities, core (green) and suitable (purple) habitat areas, and predicted changes over time for five representative mammals [(<b>a</b>) black bear, (<b>b</b>) bobcat, (<b>c</b>) domestic cat, (<b>d</b>) red fox, and (<b>e</b>) white-tailed deer] in protected and non-protected areas during the contemporary period (2011) and under two planning scenarios into 2060. HR represents high human population growth and reactive planning, whereas S represents low population growth and strategic planning. Habitat areas were predicted from the top-ranking occupancy model with the effects of land cover and anthropogenic covariates from 1591 locations across an urban to rural gradient, northern Virginia, 2012–2018.</p>
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<p>Predicted occupancy probabilities, core (green) and suitable (purple) habitat areas, and predicted changes over time for five representative mammals [(<b>a</b>) black bear, (<b>b</b>) bobcat, (<b>c</b>) domestic cat, (<b>d</b>) red fox, and (<b>e</b>) white-tailed deer] in protected and non-protected areas during the contemporary period (2011) and under two planning scenarios into 2060. HR represents high human population growth and reactive planning, whereas S represents low population growth and strategic planning. Habitat areas were predicted from the top-ranking occupancy model with the effects of land cover and anthropogenic covariates from 1591 locations across an urban to rural gradient, northern Virginia, 2012–2018.</p>
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10 pages, 1917 KiB  
Article
A Serosurvey of Multiple Pathogens in American Black Bears (Ursus americanus) in Pennsylvania, USA Indicates a Lack of Association with Sarcoptic Mange
by Kevin D. Niedringhaus, Justin D. Brown, Mark A. Ternent, Christopher A. Cleveland and Michael J. Yabsley
Vet. Sci. 2019, 6(4), 75; https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci6040075 - 20 Sep 2019
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 7265
Abstract
Infectious diseases, particularly of wildlife, are intrinsically linked to human and domestic animal health. Reports of sarcoptic mange in black bears (Ursus americanus) are increasing in multiple states in the USA and while the reason is unknown, mange in other species [...] Read more.
Infectious diseases, particularly of wildlife, are intrinsically linked to human and domestic animal health. Reports of sarcoptic mange in black bears (Ursus americanus) are increasing in multiple states in the USA and while the reason is unknown, mange in other species has been associated with immunosuppression from multiple causes. Serum from bears across Pennsylvania were collected to determine the seroprevalence of five pathogens important for animal and/or human health: Canine distemper virus (CDV), canine parvovirus (CPV), canine adenovirus-1 (CAV), Toxoplasma gondii, and Trichinella sp. from bears with sarcoptic mange as well as bears that were clinically normal. Several of these pathogens, particularly canine distemper virus, are associated with immunosuppression and secondary infections in other hosts. In addition to describing the seroprevalence and relating these findings to data from other regions, statistics were performed to determine if antibodies to any of these pathogens were associated with mange in bears. The overall seroprevalence to these pathogens was as follows: CDV 7.1% (17/240), CPV 16% (15/94), CAV 6.9% (6/87), Toxoplasma gondii 64.9% (194/299), and Trichinella spiralis 3.2% (7/220). While there was no association between mange and antibodies to these pathogens, infection with one or more of these pathogens has implications for bears, other wildlife, domestic animal, and human health. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Zoonotic and Emerging Diseases at Human-Animal Interface)
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<p>Black bears with sarcoptic mange. (<b>A</b>) Young black bear with clinical sarcoptic mange, note severe emaciation and hair loss. (<b>B</b>) Collared sow with severe alopecia as a result of sarcoptic mange.</p>
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<p>Microscopic views of <span class="html-italic">S. scabiei</span>. (<b>A</b>) Severe hyperkeratosis in the epidermis associated with round mites (arrow). (<b>B</b>) High-magnification image of an adult, female <span class="html-italic">S. scabiei</span> mite; this species can be differentiated from other mites on bears by its round shape and short legs.</p>
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13 pages, 7008 KiB  
Article
“Precious Lord”: Black Mother-Loss and the Roots of Modern Gospel
by Maurice Wallace
Religions 2019, 10(4), 285; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10040285 - 23 Apr 2019
Viewed by 5680
Abstract
Thomas Dorsey’s 1932 gospel song Take My Hand, Precious Lord is one of modern gospel music’s most canonical works. Although its composition by Dorsey in the wake of his wife’s sudden death in childbirth is a widely known oral history, the cultural implications [...] Read more.
Thomas Dorsey’s 1932 gospel song Take My Hand, Precious Lord is one of modern gospel music’s most canonical works. Although its composition by Dorsey in the wake of his wife’s sudden death in childbirth is a widely known oral history, the cultural implications of a wider history of health care disparities in the US leading to higher rates of black maternal and infant mortality have not been seriously considered. This article studies the history of black maternal and infant mortality in Chicago during the Great Migration as it bears on the mournful sounds of the gospel blues and its gender-inflected beginnings. The history of early gospel, I argue, was profoundly influenced by black women’s sympathetic identification with the experiences of migration and mother-loss Nettie Dorsey’s death represents. While Thomas Dorsey is distinguished as “the father of gospel music,” Nettie Dorsey might be fruitfully imagined as the spectral “mother” of gospel in its mournful expressions of black women’s spiritual consciousness. As such, she stands in for an alternate history of modern gospel musicality, one helping African American religious and musical history see and hear better what Emily Lordi calls “black feminist resonance” in black musical production in the golden age of gospel. Full article
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<p>Certificate of Death, No. 25300, “NETTIE DORSEY (Col)” (30 September 1932).</p>
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<p>Nettie H. Dorsey and Thomas Dorsey Jr. still from <span class="html-italic">Say Amen Somebody</span> (1982).</p>
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<p>Tintoretto, “Madonna and Child” (c. 1570–1572), oil on canvas.</p>
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1872 KiB  
Article
Ambiguous Results When Using the Ambiguous-Cue Paradigm to Assess Learning and Cognitive Bias in Gorillas and a Black Bear
by Molly C. McGuire, Jennifer Vonk and Zoe Johnson-Ulrich
Behav. Sci. 2017, 7(3), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs7030051 - 9 Aug 2017
Cited by 21 | Viewed by 6186
Abstract
Cognitive bias tests are frequently used to assess affective state in nonhumans. We adapted the ambiguous-cue paradigm to assess affective states and to compare learning of reward associations in two distantly related species, an American black bear and three Western lowland gorillas. Subjects [...] Read more.
Cognitive bias tests are frequently used to assess affective state in nonhumans. We adapted the ambiguous-cue paradigm to assess affective states and to compare learning of reward associations in two distantly related species, an American black bear and three Western lowland gorillas. Subjects were presented with three training stimuli: one that was always rewarded (P), one that was never rewarded (N) and one that was ambiguous (A) because its reward association depended on whether it had been paired with P (PA pairing) or N (NA pairing). Differential learning of NA and PA pairs provided insight into affective state as the bear and one gorilla learned NA pairs more readily, indicating that they focused on cues of reinforcement more than cues of non-reinforcement, whereas the opposite was true of one gorilla. A third gorilla did not learn either pairings at above chance levels. Although all subjects experienced difficulty learning the pairings, we were able to assess responses to A during probe trials in the bear and one gorilla. Both responded optimistically, but it was difficult to determine whether their responses were a true reflection of affective state or were due to preferences for specific stimuli. Full article
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<p>Stimuli sets (<b>a</b>) gorillas’ stimuli set; (<b>b</b>) Migwan’s summer set; (<b>c</b>) Migwan’s fall set. For each set, the three stimuli on the left are the training stimuli used to create the NA and PA sets (N, P, and A) while the two stimuli on the right are the novel stimuli introduced during probe trials. On each trial, the subject would see only two stimuli displayed next to each other on the screen according to which stimuli were designated as A, P and N for that subject.</p>
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<p>Average proportion of correct trials and standard error for both PA and NA trial types for each subject across the training phase in blocks of four sessions.</p>
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<p>Proportion of testing trials on which Chip selected the familiar stimulus by stimulus pairings.</p>
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<p>Proportion of correct trials for Migwan during training for both PA and NA pairs during the Summer Phase in blocks of four sessions.</p>
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<p>Proportion of correct trials for Migwan during training for both PA and NA pairs during the Fall Phase in blocks of four sessions—Shaded area indicating separate NA and PA sessions.</p>
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<p>Number of trials (eight total) in which the ambiguous stimulus was chosen (in the ambiguous-novel pairings) by Migwan across probe trials by season.</p>
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<p>Comparison of Chip and Migwan’s performance on each trial type across their first 200 sessions of training. Data is shown in blocks of four sessions.</p>
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