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In December 2013, during a Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak in French Polynesia, a patient in Tahiti sought treatment for hematospermia, and ZIKV was isolated from his semen. ZIKV transmission by sexual intercourse has been previously... more
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      Medical MicrobiologyPolynesiaEmerging Infectious DiseasesDisease Outbreaks
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    •   35  
      HistoryGeographySocial ProblemsPopulation Genetics
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      Medical MicrobiologyPolynesiaEmerging Infectious DiseasesPhylogeny
The pristine island ecosystems of East Polynesia were among the last places on Earth settled by prehistoric people, and their colonization triggered a devastating transformation. Overhunting contributed to widespread faunal extinctions... more
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      Ancient HistoryPolynesiaRadiocarbonMultidisciplinary
We estimate an effective mutation rate at an average Y chromosome short-tandem repeat locus as per 54 6.9 # 10 25 years, with a standard deviation across loci of , using data on microsatellite variation within Y 54 5.7 # 10 chromosome... more
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      PolynesiaBiological SciencesMutationNew Zealand
Two prehistoric migrations peopled the Pacific. One reached New Guinea and Australia, and a second, more recent, migration extended through Melanesia and from there to the Polynesian islands. These migrations were accompanied by two... more
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      Ancient HistoryAustraliaSciencePolynesia
The human settlement of the Pacific Islands represents one of the most recent major migration events of mankind. Polynesians originated in Asia according to linguistic evidence or in Melanesia according to archaeological evidence. To shed... more
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      Evolutionary BiologyGeneticsMolecular BiologyEast Asia
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    •   14  
      Ancient HistoryAnthropologySciencePolynesia
The accumulation of large and small plastic debris is a problem throughout the world's oceans and coastlines. Abundances and types of small plastic debris have only been reported for some isolated beaches in the SE Pacific, but these data... more
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      PolynesiaEnvironmental MonitoringChileMarine And Environmental Pollution
Morinda citrifolia L (noni) is one of the most important traditional Polynesian medicinal plants. Remedies from isolated Polynesian cultures, such as that of Rotuma, illustrate traditional indications that focus upon leaves, roots, bark,... more
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      Complementary and Alternative MedicineTraditional MedicinePolynesiaPhytotherapy
To explore the effects of seasonal variation on the diagnosis of vitamin D sufficiency and to determine whether age, gender, and ethnicity modify these effects.
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      EngineeringVitamin DPolynesiaAdolescent
Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii isolates were obtained from eight patients in two hospitals in Curitiba, Brazil. The isolates were multiresistant, belonged to a single strain, and produced the OXA-23 carbapenemase. Treatment... more
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      BrazilPolynesiaAdolescentHospitals
Abbreviations used in this paper: AAI, Amerindian Admixture Index; BMI, body mass index; 95% CI, 95% confidence interval; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; NIDDM, noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus; OR, odds... more
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      Genetic EpidemiologyGastroenterologyPolynesiaChile
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      GeneticsGeographyPolymorphismIndonesia
We detected an unusual increase in congenital cerebral malformations and dysfunction in fetuses and newborns in French Polynesia, following an epidemic of Zika virus (ZIKV), from October 2013 to March 2014. A retrospective review... more
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      Magnetic Resonance ImagingPolynesiaBrainPregnancy
In this study, the archaic counting systems of Mesopotamia as understood through the Neolithic tokens, numerical impressions, and proto-cuneiform notations were compared to the traditional number-words and counting methods of Polynesia as... more
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      PolynesiaMesopotamiaUruk PeriodNumber Systems
Background: The human history of Oceania comprises two extremes: the initial colonizations of Near Oceania, one of the oldest out-of-Africa migrations, and of Remote Oceania, the most recent expansion into unoccupied territories. Genetic... more
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      Principal Component AnalysisPolynesiaPopulation DynamicsBiological Sciences
Increasing algal cover on tropical reefs worldwide may be maintained through feedbacks whereby algae outcompete coral by altering microbial activity. We hypothesized that algae and coral release compositionally distinct exudates that... more
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      TechnologyCarbonMicrobial EcologyCoral Reefs
The magnitude and duration of viraemia in children admitted to the hospital with dengue was studied during a dengue 2 outbreak in French Polynesia in 1996-1997. Forty-nine patients from whom at least 3 plasma samples were available were... more
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      MicrobiologyRNAMedical MicrobiologyPolynesia
Human settlement of Polynesia was a major event in world prehistory. Despite the vastness of the distances covered, research suggests that prehistoric Polynesian populations maintained spheres of continuing interaction for at least some... more
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      GeneticsHuman GeneticsPopulation GeneticsPolynesia
The “Polynesian motif” defines a lineage of human mtDNA that is restricted to Austronesian-speaking populations and is almost fixed in Polynesians. It is widely thought to support a rapid dispersal of maternal lineages from Taiwan ∼4000... more
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      Gene FlowPopulation GeneticsIndonesiaPolynesia
This study investigated the influence of reproductive strategy (benthic or pelagic eggs) and habitat preferences (lagoon or outer slope) on both diversity and genetic differentiation using a set of populations of seven coral reef fish... more
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      Evolutionary BiologyGenetic DriftReproductionMolecular Evolution
The Marquesas Islands have traditionally been divided into a northwestern and a southeastern group, a division which reflects language dialect differences. Additionally, archaeological studies have also suggested that differences in... more
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      Evolutionary BiologyGeographyArchaeologyPaleontology
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      MicrobiologyParasitologyZoologyImmune response
Integration of archaeology, modern genetics, and ancient DNA holds promise for the reconstruction of the human past. We examine the advances in research on the indigenous peoples of Polynesia to determine: (1) what do archaeological and... more
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      ArchaeologyPolynesiaAncient DNAPacific ocean
The population of Easter Island is one of the most interesting extant human communities due to its unique demographic history, its geographic isolation, and the development of an incomparable culture characterized by the towering “Moais”... more
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      Evolutionary BiologyArchaeologyAnthropologyPopulation Genetics
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      Climate ChangeSymbiosisPolynesiaBiological Sciences
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      MicrobiologyZoologyPolynesiaQueensland
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      PolynesiaCultural EvolutionCladisticsCultural Phylogeny
We have used Y-chromosomal polymorphisms to trace paternal lineages in Polynesians by use of samples previously typed for mtDNA variants. A genealogical approach utilizing hierarchical analysis of eight rare-event biallelic polymorphisms,... more
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      GeneticsPolymorphismPopulation GeneticsPolynesia
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      GeneticsGeographyPopulation GeneticsMolecular Evolution
The prevalence of diabetes mellitus among patients treated for end-stage renal failure by dialysis in France was studied in two stages (UREMIDIAB Study). The first stage consisted of a questionnaire which was mailed to all dialysis... more
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      Kidney transplantationPolynesiaNew CaledoniaGuyana
The importance of spatial heterogeneity and spatial scales (at a village or neighbourhood scale) has been explored with individual-based models. Our reasoning is based on the Chilean Easter Island (EI) case, where a first dengue epidemic... more
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      GeographyDemographyBrazilPolynesia
A number of alternative hypotheses seek to explain the origins of the three groups of Pacific populations-Melanesians, Micronesians, and Polynesians-who speak languages belonging to the Oceanic subfamily of Austronesian languages. To test... more
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      GeneticsSoutheast AsiaPolynesiaBayesian Analysis
The islands of Micronesia and Polynesia collectively comprise the last major region of the globe to be settled by humans. Both of these groups of islands were colonized within the last 4,000 years by Austronesianspeaking agriculturists.... more
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      Evolutionary BiologyArchaeologyAnthropologyPolynesia
Background: Climate-induced coral bleaching poses a major threat to coral reef ecosystems, mostly because of the sensitivities of key habitat-forming corals to increasing temperature. However, susceptibility to bleaching varies greatly... more
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      PigmentationCoral ReefsPolynesiaClimate
Genetic variation in ABCG2 (rs2231142, Q141K), encoding a uric acid transporter, is associated with gout in diverse populations. The aim of this study was to examine a role for ABCG2 in gout susceptibility in New Zealand Mā ori, Pacific... more
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      PolynesiaAdolescentBiological SciencesPhylogeny
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      Population GeneticsPolynesiaLanguageCultural Anthropology
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      Natural ProductsPolynesiaPharmacognosyMedicinal Plants
Synopsis The most diverse and species-rich class of the phylum Porifera is Demospongiae. In recent years, the systematics of this clade, which contains more than 7000 species, has developed rapidly in light of new studies combining... more
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      ZoologyComputational BiologyPolynesiaPorifera
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      Molecular EvolutionIndonesiaPolynesiaBiological Sciences
The hypervariable 1 region of human mtDNA shows markedly reduced variability in Polynesians, and this variability decreases from western to eastern Polynesia. Fiftyfour sequences from New Zealand Maori show that the mitochondrial... more
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      Oral historyPolynesiaSensitivity AnalysisMultidisciplinary
Osteological studies both old and new have utilized various Polynesian cranial samples, individually or in combination, to assess the racial composition of prehistoric Polynesians as a group, with regards to other Pacific populations, or... more
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      Evolutionary BiologyArchaeologyAnthropologyPolynesia
A 7000-year-long sequence of environmental change during the Holocene has been reconstructed for a central Pacific island (Mangaia, Cook Islands). The research design used geomorphological and palynological methods to reconstruct... more
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      ArchaeologyPaleontologyResearch DesignExotic Species
Beginning ca. A.D. 1400, Polynesian farmers established permanent settlements along the arid southern flank of Haleakala Volcano, Maui, Hawaiian Islands; peak population density (43-57 persons per km 2 ) was achieved by A.D. 1700 -1800,... more
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      ArchaeologySoilWaterHousing
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      GeographyHuman GeographyDemographyEconomics
The Hawaiian Islands, like many other high volcanic islands, are characterized by a diversity of ecozones, which had ramifications for the types of subsistence strategies that developed within each. Although traditional cultivation... more
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      Human Behavioral EcologyPolynesiaOceania (Archaeology)Modeling and Simulation
While the fire coral Millepora platyphylla is an important component of Indo-Pacific reefs, where it thrives in a wide range of environments, the ecological and biological processes driving its distribution and population structure are... more
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      Coral ReefsPolynesiaPopulation DynamicsMultidisciplinary
During the recent chikungunya fever outbreak in French Polynesia in October 2014 to March 2015, we observed an abnormally high number of patients with neurological deficit. Clinical presentation and complementary exams were suggestive of... more
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      Magnetic Resonance ImagingPolynesiaTreatment OutcomeDisease Outbreaks
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      PolynesiaRisk ManagementPublic HealthRisk assessment