Project description:Dr Patricia Clugston was a British Columbia native who completed her plastic surgery residency training in Vancouver in 1993 before pursuing a fellowship in Nashville with Dr Patrick Maxwell in 1994. When Dr Clugston returned to Vancouver, she helped to establish a comprehensive and renowned breast reconstruction program. She spent her career advocating for and working towards better treatment options for women seeking breast reconstruction. As a determined surgeon and accomplished athlete, Dr Clugston was truly a tour de force in all aspects of her life. Patty, as she was affectionately known by her colleagues, loved her job. Dr Clugston was an avid advocate for medical education and an outstanding clinical researcher and speaker that established her as a shining star in Canadian plastic surgery. Patty had always lived life to the fullest and was determined that scleroderma would not change this. Her sharp wit, intellectual curiosity, and pragmatism masked an incredible courage as she fought bravely against a cruel disease. Dr Clugston died on March 1, 2005, at the age of 46 surrounded by the loving company of her husband, friends, and family at the Vancouver General Hospital. The Dr Patricia Clugston Chair in Breast Reconstruction was established in her name to honour her legacy and continue to improve the care of patients with breast cancer.
Project description:Highly seasonal conditions of tropical dry forests determine the temporal patterns of insect abundance. However, density-independent factors such as natural disturbances can abruptly change environmental conditions, affecting insect populations. We address the effects of the Hurricane Patricia (category 5) on species density and abundance of three feeding guilds of herbivorous insects (sap-sucking, folivorous beetles and xylophagous) and predatory beetles associated to the canopy of a tropical dry forest. Hurricane Patricia has been the strongest tropical hurricane ever reported in the Western Hemisphere. Herbivorous insects (sap-sucking and xylophagous) and predatory beetles increased in species density and abundance in the following months after the hurricane, compared to samples before it. The positive response of sap-sucking insects to Hurricane Patricia was probably related to an increase in the availability of new shoots and leaf meristems after the natural coppicing by the hurricane, while xylophagous guild seems to have been positively affected by the increase in the amount and diversity of deadwood resources. The positive response of predatory beetles may be the result of a bottom-up effect due to a greater availability of arthropod preys after the hurricane. We demonstrated that catastrophic hurricane disturbances could be important events that temporarily increase the species density and abundance of insects in tropical dry forests.