Search results for "litter"

showing 10 items of 315 documents

Modelling Inoculum Availability ofPlurivorosphaerella nawaein Persimmon Leaf Litter with Bayesian Beta Regression

2019

AbstractCircular leaf spot (CLS), caused byPlurivorosphaerella nawae, is a serious disease of persimmon (Diospyros kaki) inducing necrotic lesions on leaves, defoliation and fruit drop. Under Mediter-ranean conditions,P. nawaeforms pseudothecia in the leaf litter during winter and ascospores are released in spring infecting susceptible leaves. Persimmon growers are advised to apply fungicides for CLS control during the period of inoculum availability, which was defined based on ascospore counts under the microscope. A model of inoculum availability ofP. nawaewas developed and evaluated as an alternative to ascospore counts. Leaf litter samples were collected weekly in L’Alcúdia from 2010 to…

EpidemiologyVapour Pressure DeficitMycosphaerella nawaePlant ScienceMycologyEarly warning systemsPlurivorosphaerella nawaeVapor pressure deficitU40 Surveying methodsCLs upper limitsMycologyLeaf spotU10 Mathematical and statistical methodsH20 Plant diseasesDiospyros kakiFungicidesWarning systemsEcologybiologyDiospyros kakiPlant litterbiology.organism_classificationIntegrated nested Laplace approximation (INLA)FungicideHorticultureAscosporeCircular leaf spotBeta regressionAgronomy and Crop Sciencedecision support systems
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Turtles on the trash track: loggerhead turtles exposed to floating plastic in the Mediterranean Sea

2019

Loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) spend most of their life in large marine areas occupying a variety of habitats where they are exposed to different types of threats. Among these, marine litter is known to pose a risk of entanglement or ingestion. Areas of risk exposure can be identified where the species overlap with litter accumulations, but gathering data on this highly mobile species and marine litter, especially in high sea areas, is challenging. Here we analysed five years of sea turtle and marine litter data collected by a network of research bodies along fixed trans-border transects in the Mediterranean Sea. Ferries were used as observation platforms to gather systematic data on …

FisheryGeographyMediterranean seaEcologyQL1-991Track (disk drive)QK1-989Marine debrisBotanyLoggerhead turtle marine litter Mediterranean Sea monitoring risk assessmentZoologyNature and Landscape ConservationEndangered Species Research
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Endocrine and ovarian response after a 2-day controlled suckling and eCG treatment in lactating rabbit does.

2006

Synchronization methods are used to obtain higher fertility when artificial insemination (AI) is applied to lactating rabbit does. The most common methods are eCG administration or temporary doe–litter separation. Nevertheless, drawbacks have been reported, such as negative side effects of hormonal treatment in the doe and low litter growth due to absence of suckling, respectively. Recently, improved reproductive performance (without visible consequences on young rabbit growth), has been obtained by applying a 2-day controlled nursing method before AI, by allowing for a 10 min nursing of the litter 24 h of separation. The present study was undertaken to examine the pituitary (PRL, LH, FSH) …

FollicleLHLitter (animal)Malemedicine.medical_specialtyPRLmedicine.medical_treatmentOvaryRabbitSynchronizationBiologyInseminationChorionic GonadotropinAndrologyFollicleEndocrinologyFood AnimalsOvarian FolliclePregnancyInternal medicineLactationFSHFollicular phasemedicineEndocrine systemAnimalsLactationInsemination ArtificialArtificial inseminationOvaryGeneral MedicineOrgan SizeLuteinizing HormoneImmunohistochemistryGHAnimals SucklingProlactinEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureAnimal Science and ZoologyFemaleRabbitsFollicle Stimulating HormoneEstrus SynchronizationAnimal reproduction science
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Evaluation of different similarity indices as measures of succession in arthropod communities of the forest floor after clear-cutting.

1979

Communities of spiders (Araneae) and beetles (Coleoptera) living in the soil and litter of clear-cut areas were compared with those of intact forest stands. Sixteen different indices of similarity were tested on three sets of material: spiders and beetles examined during one year in three clear-cut areas felled 3, 6 and 9 years earlier, and spiders in one clear-cut area examined during 7 successive years after felling. Other sources of evidence showed that succession in the spider community was divergent for at least 7 years after felling. The indices that seemed to express the changes best were: (1) Kendall's rank correlation test, (2) the Bray-Curtis measure, (3) Renkonen's percentage sim…

Forest floorClearcuttingSimilarity (network science)Correlation coefficientEcologyLitterEcological successionBiologyFellingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsRank correlationOecologia
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Habitat patchiness affects decomposition and faunal diversity: a microcosm experiment on forest floor.

1998

Environmental heterogeneity has been intensively studied, but little is known about relationships between habitat patchiness and soil processes. The aim of this study was to investigate (1) the impact of patchiness of the litter layer on the decomposer community and litter decomposition rate, and (2) whether the impact of soil fauna on the rates of processes differs in relation to patchiness. An experiment was carried out in microcosms with coniferous forest humus and four kinds of litter with different C:N ratios or stages of decomposition, either separately (i.e. in patches) or mixed with each other. Microarthropod species diversity was better maintained in the patchy systems. In the abse…

Forest floorEcologyFaunaSoil biologyLitterPlant litterBiologyMicrocosmEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDecomposerHumusOecologia
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Effects of heavy metals on soil microflora

2000

Elevated concentrations of heavy metals are known to cause disturbances in all living organisms. A reduction in the activity of forest microbes, expressed as decreased carbon and nitrogen mineralisation, may result in a slower rate of litter decomposition and slower nutrient cycling in the whole ecosystem (Baath 1989). In areas severely polluted by heavy metals, this can be seen as an accumulation of undecomposed litter on the forest floor. Thus, in addition to the direct toxicity of heavy metals, the trees may suffer from nutrient deficiency resulting from the decrease in the mineralisation of nutrients from the litter. Heavy metals can also retard litter decomposition processes in less po…

Forest floorNutrient cycleNutrientMicrobial population biologyChemistryEnvironmental chemistryLitterEcosystemComposition (visual arts)Vegetation
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Language learning strategies and teaching practices in adult L2 education : The case of Swedish for Immigrants

2019

This article highlights the use and co-construction of language learning strategies (LLS) in second language education for adults with short previous education. In a case study, we explore how LLS are used and co-constructed by one student and one teacher. The data for the article was created in an action research programme comprising two Swedish for Immigrants (SFI) schools, and the methodology used was classroom observation based in linguistic ethnography. In accordance with Griffiths (2013, p. 15) LLS are defined as “activities consciously chosen by learners for the purpose of regulating their own language learning”. For the analysis of LLS, Oxford’s (1990) taxonomy was chosen. In the ch…

General Language Studies and LinguisticsLanguages and LiteratureJämförande språkvetenskap och allmän lingvistikDidacticsSpråk och litteratursecond language learningDidaktikSwedish for Immigrantsadult educationlanguage learning strategies
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Relatedness Does not Affect Competitive Behavior of Rival Males or Offspring Growth in Multiply Sired Litters of Bank Voles (Myodes glareolus)

2014

Kin selection operates through the fitness of an organism's relatives. In the polyandry context, kin selection may be observable on the one hand in competition between rival males and, on the other hand, in competition between litter mates. Sperm competition theory predicts that males should invest less into mating when competing for fertilizations against a close relative as compared to an unrelated male. We tested this hypothesis with bank voles (Myodes glareolus) by mating each focal male to two females: one of which had previously mated with a full sibling of the focal male and the other one with a male unrelated to the focal male. However, we found no effect of rival male relatedness o…

GeneticsLitter (animal)OffspringZoologyContext (language use)Kin selectionBiologybiology.organism_classificationBank volebehavior and behavior mechanismsta1181Animal Science and ZoologyMatingParent–offspring conflictSperm competitionreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEthology
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Tensor-product states and local indistinguishability: an optical linear implementation

2000

In this paper we investigate the properties of distinguishability of an orthogonal set of product states of two three level particle system by a simple class of joint measures. Here we confine ourselves to a system of analysis built up of linear elements, such as beam splitters and phase shifters, delay lines, electronically switched linear devices and auxiliary photons. We present here the impossibility of realization of a perfect never falling analyzer with this tools.

Hilbert spaceQuantum entanglementTopologylaw.inventionQuantum nonlocalitysymbols.namesakeTensor productQuantum Information Entanglement Non-localitylawProduct (mathematics)Electronic engineeringsymbolsQuantum informationRealization (systems)Beam splitterMathematicsAIP Conference Proceedings
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Remembering nature through art : Hölderlin and the poetic representation of life

2021

ABSTRACT For Friedrich Hölderlin, the mediatory role of aesthetics was central to overcoming the challenges of modern life, in particular human beings’ antagonistic relationship to nature. This article claims that Hölderlin preserves and improves what is true in Kant’s conception of the beautiful: that the experience of beauty concerns recognizing our dependence on nature, and that this recognition resonates in the works of artistic geniality as well. The article furthermore argues that the twentieth-century philosopher Theodor W. Adorno’s interpretation of Hölderlin sheds light on how Hölderlin’s late poetry constitutes a remembrance of nature that avoids fetishizing nature as an origin to…

HistorylanguagePoetrymedia_common.quotation_subjectAdornoAestheticsRepresentation (arts)ArtbeautyGeniusModern lifeVDP::Humaniora: 000History and Philosophy of SciencereconciliationLitteraturvetenskapAestheticsGeneral Literature StudiesBeautygeniusmedia_common
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