Ronald L. Carter
Loma Linda University
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Featured researches published by Ronald L. Carter.
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2009
Harold J Marlow; William K. Hayes; Samuel Soret; Ronald L. Carter; Ernest Schwab; Joan Sabaté
Food demand influences agricultural production. Modern agricultural practices have resulted in polluted soil, air, and water; eroded soil; dependence on imported oil; and loss of biodiversity. The goal of this research was to compare the environmental effect of a vegetarian and nonvegetarian diet in California in terms of agricultural production inputs, including pesticides and fertilizers, water, and energy used to produce commodities. The working assumption was that a greater number and amount of inputs were associated with a greater environmental effect. The literature supported this notion. To accomplish this goal, dietary preferences were quantified with the Adventist Health Study, and California state agricultural data were collected and applied to state commodity production statistics. These data were used to calculate different dietary consumption patterns and indexes to compare the environmental effect associated with dietary preference. Results show that, for the combined differential production of 11 food items for which consumption differs among vegetarians and nonvegetarians, the nonvegetarian diet required 2.9 times more water, 2.5 times more primary energy, 13 times more fertilizer, and 1.4 times more pesticides than did the vegetarian diet. The greatest contribution to the differences came from the consumption of beef in the diet. We found that a nonvegetarian diet exacts a higher cost on the environment relative to a vegetarian diet. From an environmental perspective, what a person chooses to eat makes a difference.
Animal Behaviour | 1986
Ronald L. Carter; Leonard R. Brand
Abstract Experiments were performed to compare homospecific and heterospecific species choice in two closely related species of white-footed mice, Peromyscus californicus and P. eremicus . Both species significantly chose the homospecific stimulus animal. Significant homospecific choice was made by mice from sympatric but not from allopatric populations. Reciprocal cross-fostering between the two species resulted in significant choice for the heterospecific (foster) species by P. eremicus , and random choice by cross-fostered P. californicus . Laboratory-reared controls chose significantly for the homospecific chamber. No significant difference in choice performance was demonstrated between males and females, even when the oestrus stages of the females (both stimulus and test animals) were statistically controlled. A comparison of different test durations and temporal regimes of data collection was performed and 90 min was found to be the most efficient experiment duration with our apparatus.
Biodiversity and Conservation | 2012
William K. Hayes; John B. Iverson; Charles R. Knapp; Ronald L. Carter
Ample evidence confirms that large invasive mammalian competitors and predators can devastate endangered insular iguana populations. However, the impact of invasive rodents, particularly rats (Rattus rattus), has remained elusive. Tail autotomy occurs frequently in lizards, often as an antipredator tactic, but sometimes from intraspecific aggression. Tail autotomy can incur substantial locomotor, behavioral, energetic, and survival costs. Furcation (i.e., dividing into branches) of regenerated tails may also result from attempted predation but occurs much more rarely, and with unknown costs. To evaluate the potential impact of invasive rodents—primarily rats—on West Indian rock iguanas (genus Cyclura), we compared tail-break and tail-furcation frequencies among 19 insular iguana populations (3,537 individuals) representing three species in the Bahamian Archipelago (including the Turks and Caicos Islands). The findings supported our three hypotheses: (1) that tail-break and tail-furcation frequencies are significantly higher in populations coexisting with invasive rodents; (2) that tail-furcation results primarily from failed predation attempts rather than intraspecific aggression; and (3) that frequencies of tail breaks and tail furcation are associated with each other, suggesting a degree of commonality in cause-effect (i.e., failed predation attempts). Tail furcation, in contrast to tail breakage, never occurred on islands lacking invasive mammalian predators. We conclude that invasive rodents, particularly rats, may have a greater impact on endangered insular iguana species than previously recognized.
Archive | 2002
John R. Scarbrough; David L. Cowles; Ronald L. Carter
A review of microsatellites in shrimp is presented. Microsatellites are abundant and polymorphic and should be useful for molecular studies, particularly those involving population genetic structure. Microsatellites are likely to become an increasingly important tool to help in the understanding of shrimp species with applications to aquaculture, ecology, conservation, and genetics.
Evolution | 1990
Loren H. Rieseberg; Ronald L. Carter; Scott Zona
Archive | 2004
Allison C. Alberts; Ronald L. Carter; William K. Hayes; Emília P. Martins
Zoo Biology | 2008
Amy C. Utt; Nancy C. Harvey; William K. Hayes; Ronald L. Carter
Archive | 2017
Allison C. Alberts; Ronald L. Carter; William K. Hayes; Emília P. Martins; Jeffrey M. Lemm; Lori A. Jackintell
Archive | 2004
William K. Hayes; Ronald L. Carter; Jr. Samuel Cyril; Benjamin Thornton
Plant Species Biology | 1991
Scott Zona; Loren H. Rieseberg; Ronald L. Carter; Khiem Doan