This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.

In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.

Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.

Displaying 281 - 290 of 294
Filtering by

Clear all filters

161820-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The desire to start a family is something millions of people around the globe strive to achieve. However, many factors such as the societal changes in family planning due to increasing maternal age, use of birth control, and ever-changing lifestyles have increased the number of infertility cases seen in the

The desire to start a family is something millions of people around the globe strive to achieve. However, many factors such as the societal changes in family planning due to increasing maternal age, use of birth control, and ever-changing lifestyles have increased the number of infertility cases seen in the United States each year. Infertility can manifest as a prolonged inability to conceive, or inability to carry a pregnancy full-term. Modern advancements in the field of reproductive medicine have begun to promote the use of Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART) to circumvent reduced fertility in both men and women. Implementation of techniques such as In Vitro Fertilization, Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection, and Pre-Implantation Genetic Testing have allowed many couples to conceive. There is continual effort being made towards developing more effective and personalized fertility treatments. This often begins in the form of animal research—a fundamental step in biomedical research. This dissertation examines infertility as a medical condition through the characterization of normal reproductive anatomy and physiology in the introductory overview of reproduction. Specific pathologies of male and female-factor infertility are described, which necessitates the use of ARTs. The various forms of ARTs currently utilized in a clinical setting are addressed including history, preparations, and protocols for each technology. To promote continual advancement of the field, both animal studies and human trials provide fundamental stepping-stones towards the execution of new techniques and protocols. Examples of research conducted for the betterment of human reproductive medicine are explored, including an animal study conducted in mice exploring the role of tyramine in ovulation. With the development and implementation of new technologies and protocols in the field, this also unearths ethical dilemmas that further complicate the addition of new technologies in the field. Combining an extensive review in assisted reproduction, research and clinical fieldwork, this study investigates the history and development of novel research conducted in reproductive medicine and explores the broader implications of new technologies in the field.
ContributorsPeck, Shelbi Marie (Author) / Baluch, Debra P (Thesis advisor) / Maienschein, Jane (Thesis advisor) / Sweazea, Karen (Committee member) / Ellison, Karin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
171961-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Eusocial insect colonies have often been imagined as “superorganisms” exhibiting tight homeostasis at the colony level. However, colonies lack the tight spatial and organizational integration that many multicellular, unitary organisms exhibit. Precise regulation requires rapid feedback, which is often not possible when nestmates are distributed across space, making decisions asynchronously.

Eusocial insect colonies have often been imagined as “superorganisms” exhibiting tight homeostasis at the colony level. However, colonies lack the tight spatial and organizational integration that many multicellular, unitary organisms exhibit. Precise regulation requires rapid feedback, which is often not possible when nestmates are distributed across space, making decisions asynchronously. Thus, one should expect poorer regulation in superorganisms than unitary organisms.Here, I investigate aspects of regulation in collective foraging behaviors that involve both slow and rapid feedback processes. In Chapter 2, I examine a tightly coupled system with near-instantaneous signaling: teams of weaver ants cooperating to transport massive prey items back to their nest. I discover that over an extreme range of scenarios—even up vertical surfaces—the efficiency per transporter remains constant. My results suggest that weaver ant colonies are maximizing their total intake rate by regulating the allocation of transporters among loads. This is an exception that “proves the rule;” the ant teams are recapitulating the physical integration of unitary organisms. Next, I focus on a process with greater informational constraints, with loose temporal and spatial integration. In Chapter 3, I measure the ability of solitarily foraging Ectatomma ruidum colonies to balance their collection of protein and carbohydrates given different nutritional environments. Previous research has found that ant species can precisely collect a near-constant ratio between these two macronutrients, but I discover these studies were using flawed statistical approaches. By developing a quantitative measure of regulatory effect size, I show that colonies of E. ruidum are relatively insensitive to small differences in food source nutritional content, contrary to previously published claims. In Chapter 4, I design an automated, micro-RFID ant tracking system to investigate how the foraging behavior of individuals integrates into colony-level nutrient collection. I discover that spatial fidelity to food resources, not individual specialization on particular nutrient types, best predicts individual forager behavior. These findings contradict previously published experiments that did not use rigorous quantitative measures of specialization and confounded the effects of task type and resource location.
ContributorsBurchill, Andrew Taylor (Author) / Pavlic, Theodore P (Thesis advisor) / Pratt, Stephen C (Thesis advisor) / Hölldobler, Bert (Committee member) / Cease, Arianne (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
161439-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Programmed cell death plays an important role in a variety of processes that promote the survival of the host organism. Necroptosis, a form of programmed cell death, occurs through a signaling pathway involving receptor-interacting serine-threonine protein kinase 3 (RIPK3). In response to vaccinia virus infection, necroptosis is induced through DNA-induced

Programmed cell death plays an important role in a variety of processes that promote the survival of the host organism. Necroptosis, a form of programmed cell death, occurs through a signaling pathway involving receptor-interacting serine-threonine protein kinase 3 (RIPK3). In response to vaccinia virus infection, necroptosis is induced through DNA-induced activator of interferon (DAI), which activates RIPK3, leading to death of the cell and thereby inhibiting further viral replication in host cells. DAI also localizes into stress granules, accumulations of mRNAs that have stalled in translation due to cellular stress. The toxin arsenite, a canonical inducer of stress granule formation, was used in this project to study necroptosis. By initiating necroptosis with arsenite and vaccinia virus, this research project investigated the roles of necroptosis proteins and their potential localization into stress granules. The two aims of this research project were to determine whether stress granules are important for arsenite- and virus-induced necroptosis, and whether the proteins DAI and RIPK3 localize into stress granules. The first aim was investigated by establishing a DAI and RIPK3 expression system in U2OS cells; arsenite treatment or vaccinia virus infection was then performed on the U2OS cells as well as on U2OSΔΔG3BP1/2 cells, which are not able to form stress granules. The second aim was carried out by designing fluorescent tagging for the necroptosis proteins in order to visualize protein localization with fluorescent microscopy. The results show that arsenite induces DAI-dependent necroptosis in U2OS cells and that this arsenite-induced necroptosis likely requires stress granules. In addition, the results show that vaccinia virus induces DAI-dependent necroptosis that also likely requires stress granules in U2OS cells. Furthermore, a fluorescent RIPK3 construct was created that will allowfor future studies on protein localization during necroptosis and can be used to answer questions regarding localization of necroptosis proteins into stress granules. This project therefore contributes to a greater understanding of the roles of DAI and RIPK3 in necroptosis, as well as the roles of stress granules in necroptosis, both of which are important in research regarding viral infection and cellular stress.
ContributorsGogerty, Carolina (Author) / Jacobs, Bertram (Thesis advisor) / Langland, Jeffrey (Committee member) / Jentarra, Garilyn (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
193382-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Contraceptives are a vital part of reproductive care by preventing unwanted pregnancy, providing relief to premenstrual syndrome or PMS symptoms, and more. Birth control has been around for many centuries and has given women autonomy over their reproductive health. The Griswold v. Connecticut Supreme Court case in 1965 was the

Contraceptives are a vital part of reproductive care by preventing unwanted pregnancy, providing relief to premenstrual syndrome or PMS symptoms, and more. Birth control has been around for many centuries and has given women autonomy over their reproductive health. The Griswold v. Connecticut Supreme Court case in 1965 was the first ruling that made birth control accessible to the public under the law. However, this ruling only pertained only to married couples until the Eisenstadt v. Baird case in 1972. That case gave single women the ability to legally purchase contraceptives for themselves. In the decades since those rulings, many laws and policies have been put into place to give those in lower-income areas the ability to purchase contraceptives as well. With this increase in accessibility, those who use contraceptives, or are thinking of starting birth control, need to understand how to use it, when to use it, and the effects of using contraceptives. In the United States, nurses outnumber doctors by a 4:1 ratio and spend more time with patients than anyone else in a clinic or hospital environment. Nurses, being the main healthcare providers with whom a patient will interact, often are the ones patients ask questions about care and overall advice. Nurses must be able to relay valuable information about treatments or medicines, such as birth control, and give accurate information on the effects such treatments have. Nursing students need to be prepared. However, the amount of information provided, and opinions given might be affected by their nursing education, past experiences with birth control, and more. This project surveys nursing students at Arizona State University on their attitudes, behaviors, and beliefs towards birth control interventions, and how their individual experiences and education influence these perceptions.
ContributorsHiggins, Ilani Elyce (Author) / Gur-Arie, Rachel (Thesis advisor) / Ellison, Karin (Thesis advisor) / Maienschein, Jane (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
193397-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) including superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals occur naturally as a byproduct of aerobic respiration. To mitigate damages caused by ROS, Escherichia coli employs defenses including two cytosolic superoxide dismutases (SODs), which convert superoxide to hydrogen peroxide. Deletion of both sodA and sodB, the genes coding

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) including superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals occur naturally as a byproduct of aerobic respiration. To mitigate damages caused by ROS, Escherichia coli employs defenses including two cytosolic superoxide dismutases (SODs), which convert superoxide to hydrogen peroxide. Deletion of both sodA and sodB, the genes coding for the cytosolic SOD enzymes, results in a strain that is unable to grow on minimal medium without amino acid supplementation. Additionally, deletion of both cytosolic SOD enzymes in a background containing the relA1 allele, an inactive version of the relA gene that contributes to activation of stringent response by amino acid starvation, results in a strain that is unable to grow aerobically, even on rich medium. These observations point to a relationship between the stringent response and oxidative stress. To gain insight into this relationship, suppressors were isolated by growing the ∆sodAB relA1 cells aerobically on rich medium, and seven suppressors were further examined to characterize distinct colony sizes and temperature sensitivity phenotypes. In three of these suppressor-containing strains, the relA1 allele was successfully replaced by the wild type relA allele to allow further study in aerobic conditions. None of those three suppressors were found to increase tolerance to exogenous superoxides produced by paraquat, which shows that these mutations only overcome the superoxide buildup that naturally occurs from deletion of SODs. Because each of these suppressors had unique phenotypes, it is likely that they confer tolerance to SOD-dependent superoxide buildup by different mechanisms. Two of these three suppressors have been sent for whole-genome sequencing to identify the location of the suppressor mutation and determine the mechanism by which they confer superoxide tolerance.
ContributorsFlake, Melissa (Author) / Misra, Rajeev (Thesis advisor) / Shah, Dhara (Committee member) / Wang, Xuan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
193428-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
There is increasing interest in growing strawberries (Fragaria ×ananassa) in indoor environments such as vertical farms, as the continued sustainability of outdoor production is threatened due to reductions in arable land, labor shortages, and an increased frequency of drought. However, the optimal conditions for growing strawberries hydroponically in sole-source lighting

There is increasing interest in growing strawberries (Fragaria ×ananassa) in indoor environments such as vertical farms, as the continued sustainability of outdoor production is threatened due to reductions in arable land, labor shortages, and an increased frequency of drought. However, the optimal conditions for growing strawberries hydroponically in sole-source lighting conditions have yet to be established. The objectives of this research were to investigate the optimal lighting conditions and nutrient concentrations for strawberry production in vertical farming. In the first study, bare-root plants of two strawberry cultivars, ‘Albion’ and ‘Monterey’, were grown in an indoor vertical farm under a 22 °C air temperature and an 18-h photoperiod with 90 μmol·m−2·s−1 of blue light and 250 μmol·m−2·s−1 of red light with and without 50 μmol·m−2·s−1 of additional far-red light from light-emitting diodes. Adding far-red light increased the fruit number per plant by 36%, total fruit fresh mass by 48%, and total soluble solids content by 12% in ‘Albion’, but not ‘Monterey’. In the second study, bare root plants of strawberries ‘Monterey’ and ‘San Andreas’ were grown under a 23 °C air temperature and an 18-h photoperiod with an extended photosynthetic photon flux density of 350 μmol·m−2·s−1. Plants were subjected to four potassium to nitrogen ratios (K:N) of 1.5:1, 2.5:1, 3.5:1, and 4.5:1 in a deep-water culture hydroponic system. Increasing K:N from 1.5:1 to 4.5:1 increased the root dry mass of ‘Monterey’, but generally had little to no effect on vegetative growth in either cultivar. In addition, in both cultivars, increasing K:N from 1.5:1 to 4.5:1 decreased individual fruit size and increased titratable acidity. These results suggest that for indoor strawberry production, including far-red light in sole-source lighting can improve fruit production in some strawberry cultivars. However, increasing K:N in the hydroponic nutrient solution generally does not benefit plant growth, fruit production, and fruit quality.
ContributorsRies, Jonathan (Author) / Park, Yujin (Thesis advisor) / Sagers, Cynthia (Committee member) / Meng, Qingwu (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
193362-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The Northwest (NW) Atlantic porbeagle Lamna nasus is overfished and captured as bycatch in fisheries within the region. A comprehensive understanding of the population’s life history (e.g., reproduction) and habitat use, and the impact of capture with different gear types (e.g., post-release mortality) is needed to ensure effective fisheries management

The Northwest (NW) Atlantic porbeagle Lamna nasus is overfished and captured as bycatch in fisheries within the region. A comprehensive understanding of the population’s life history (e.g., reproduction) and habitat use, and the impact of capture with different gear types (e.g., post-release mortality) is needed to ensure effective fisheries management plans, develop bycatch mitigation strategies, and support stock recovery. This research used satellite tagging technologies to address gaps in knowledge needed to support management and conservation decisions for the NW Atlantic porbeagle. I provided the first estimate of post-release survival and recovery periods for immature porbeagles captured with rod-and-reel. Although survival was high (100%), juvenile porbeagles exhibited a recovery period in surface waters that may make them vulnerable to further fishing interactions. Next, I described the vertical habitat use of young porbeagles to recommend possible fishing modifications to reduce risk of capture. Young porbeagles spent more time in surface waters during summer compared to fall and during the night compared to day, suggesting that risk of capture may be reduced by setting gear deeper during summer and at night when this life stage’s behavior is reduced to the upper water column. Then, I provided an analysis of the seasonal and life stage-based habitat use of porbeagles. Space use was concentrated in continental shelf waters around Cape Cod, Massachusetts regardless of season and life stage. Given the relatively small and static high occupancy area overlaps with a high concentration of fishing activity, this region could be considered for spatial management of the NW Atlantic porbeagle. Finally, I used ultrasonography and satellite tagging to describe the three-dimensional habitat use of gravid porbeagles for the first time. Gravid porbeagles demonstrated seasonal differences in horizontal and vertical habitat use but spent most of the pupping season in waters southeast of Cape Cod or on Georges Bank, suggesting this region may be serving as a pupping ground for at least a portion of this population. Conservation efforts should focus on these important habitats to protect the next generation of porbeagles.
ContributorsAnderson, Brooke Nicole (Author) / Ferry, Lara (Thesis advisor) / Bowlby, Heather (Committee member) / Hammerschlag, Neil (Committee member) / Kang, Yun (Committee member) / Saul, Steven (Committee member) / Sulikowski, James (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
193689-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Mealworms (Tenebrio molitor), the larval stage of yellow mealworm beetles, are a popular feeder insect for birds, amphibians, reptiles, fish, and even human populations throughout the world. As such, the goal of this work was to understand how the diet of mealworms impacts their nutritional quality as variations in quality

Mealworms (Tenebrio molitor), the larval stage of yellow mealworm beetles, are a popular feeder insect for birds, amphibians, reptiles, fish, and even human populations throughout the world. As such, the goal of this work was to understand how the diet of mealworms impacts their nutritional quality as variations in quality can impact the animals (and humans) that consume them. In this study, 500 mealworms were divided among each of the following substrates designed to model food sources available in urban versus rural, more natural areas: 100% wheat germ (control); 100% Styrofoam; mixture of soil, grasses, and leaves from urban lawns; a mixture of soil, grasses and leaves from rural lawns; 50% mixture of wheat germ + carrots; natural fertilizer; or fertilizer with weed killer. The mealworms were maintained at room temperature and the diets were replaced bi-weekly to prevent spoilage and to remove mealworm waste. Once a week for three weeks, mealworms were sampled from each substrate and frozen at -20°C. After 3 weeks, mealworms housed in wheat germ + carrots weighed significantly more than all other groups (p<0.05), whereas those housed in Styrofoam or urban lawn substrates weighed significantly less at week 3 as compared to week 1 (p<0.01). The urban lawn substrate resulted in greater molting and contained the highest number of pupae, but also the greatest mortality among the substrates. The Bradford method measured the total protein content of mealworms homogenized in phosphate-buffered saline. Mealworms maintained on wheat germ had significantly greater total protein content as compared to mealworms transitioned to any other diet (p<0.05). So, compared to wheat germ, urban foods generally reduced protein, total sugars, and crude fat, although they also decreased oxidized lipoproteins. Urban lawn had lower oxidized lipoprotein content than wheat germ, but levels were higher compared to wheat germ with carrots and natural fertilizer. In addition, urban foods generally increase the water content in mealworms. Urban foods were not much different from rural lawns as no there was difference between urban and rural lawns. Differences in body mass and total protein support the hypothesis that mealworms' nutritional quality is altered by ingesting urban substrates. These data suggest that mealworms (and potentially other insects) in cities may be exposed to food substrates that result in less nutritional value than those living in more natural areas as mimicked by the rural lawn substrates and wheat germ control, although they may be higher in water content.
ContributorsLockett, Rory Earle (Author) / Sweazea, Karen (Thesis advisor) / Deviche, Pierre (Committee member) / Senko, Jesse (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
193523-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The genus Buellia remains one of the largest, poorly resolved genera of crustose lichens world-wide. A global revision is challenging because of its enormous diversity .As a step towards a more comprehensive revision, three easily separated groups were examined. Buellia sulphurica is easily recognized by its vivid yellow color, caused

The genus Buellia remains one of the largest, poorly resolved genera of crustose lichens world-wide. A global revision is challenging because of its enormous diversity .As a step towards a more comprehensive revision, three easily separated groups were examined. Buellia sulphurica is easily recognized by its vivid yellow color, caused by rhizocarpic acid, a secondary metabolite rarely reported from the genus. The species has been considered endemic to the Galapagos, but it is morphologically and anatomically almost identical to B. xanthinula, a taxon previously described from Brazil. Moreover, both have rhizocarpic acid. Additionally, a specimen from Georgia with a similar morphology and anatomy with identical secondary chemistry has been examined here. Based on this research, it is discussed whether all three taxa represent a single species. Another aspect of the research presented here focused on species of Buellia that parasitize other lichens. It is generally assumed that they are strongly host-specific. Parasitic specimens of Buellia recently collected in the Great Basin are morphologically similar to taxa previously reported from Northern Europe, South America, and North America. Preliminary studies, comparing the material with specimens of B. uberior, B. miriquidica, B. malmei and B. imshaugii, suggest that the Great Basin material is best recognized as representatives of distinct, currently undescribed species. Finally, as part of this thesis a group of specimens from the Galapagos containing xanthones has been examined. This heterogeneous group represents an assemblage of taxa that are not necessarily closely related, but easily recognized by their bright yellow to orange UV-fluorescence and orange spot test reaction with sodium hypochlorite. For this group, morphological and anatomical characters were documented, and their secondary chemistry analyzed with thin-layer chromatography. For all three groups, i.e., the Buellia xanthinula-group, the parasitic species, and the ones with xanthones, detailed descriptions are provided.
ContributorsParrinello, Christian (Author) / Bungartz, Frank (Thesis advisor) / Wojciechowski, Martin (Committee member) / Pigg, Kathleen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
193653-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
As water is essential for survival, seasonal scarcity of freshwater resources can pose a challenge for many species. In xeric environments, efficient location of ephemeral water is crucial to capitalize on this rare, critical resource. Yet little is known about how organisms locate water, though it has been acknowledged that

As water is essential for survival, seasonal scarcity of freshwater resources can pose a challenge for many species. In xeric environments, efficient location of ephemeral water is crucial to capitalize on this rare, critical resource. Yet little is known about how organisms locate water, though it has been acknowledged that olfactory spatial navigation may benefit water searching in xeric-adapted species. Additionally, drinking behavior may be influenced by water salinity as consuming water with salinity levels that exceed blood osmolality can induce or exacerbate dehydration. To investigate whether animals can locate water via olfaction, whether salinity affects the amount of water consumed, and whether the extent of dehydration affects both processes, I conducted three experiments in a xeric-adapted reptile, the Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum). Two experiments used a T-maze to examine the effects of various olfactory cues and hydration state on spatial navigation to water resources, while the third experiment examined willingness to drink water of various salinity levels depending on the extent of dehydration. I found that Gila monsters accurately navigated to olfactory cues associated with aged tap water, but not other olfactory cues (pond water, geosmin/MIB, IBMP/IPMP). Increased extent of dehydration correlated with greater spatial navigation efficiency but did not meaningfully impact navigation accuracy. Moderately dehydrated Gila monsters selectively consumed water with lower salinity levels (freshwater, 1,250 ppm, and 2,500 ppm) and avoided highly saline water resources (10,000 ppm and 20,000 ppm). However, considerably dehydrated animals demonstrated an increased propensity to consume water with higher salinity levels. These results provide evidence for olfactory spatial navigation and selective consumption of saline water as strategies to locate water and efficiently osmoregulate in an osmotically challenging environment. These findings underscore the observed adaptable physiological and behavioral traits Gila monsters and other xeric-adapted species use to endure the seasonal water limitations.
ContributorsNorthrop, Victoria (Author) / DeNardo, Dale F (Thesis advisor) / Gerber, Leah R (Committee member) / Martins, Emilia P (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024