344 research outputs found

    Dynamics and Production of Forage in Winter Pasture under Continuous Grazing with Energetic Supplementation

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    This experiment was carried out at Federal University of Santa Maria, from July 09 to November 12, 1999 to evaluate the dynamics and production of forage of oat (Avena strigosa Schreb) and italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum Lam) mixture. The grazing system used was continuous with variable stocking rate to maintain 1500kg/ha of herbage mass in all treatments. The heifers were subjected to different levels of energetic supplementation. They are 0, 0.7 and 1.4% of LW/day. The pasture of oat and italian ryegrass presented an accumulation rate of 45.7, 55.1 and 50.0 kg of DM/ha /day and a total dry matter (DM) production of 7067, 7222 and 8137 kg/ha for 0, 0.7 and 1.4% of LW/day levels, respectively. The average percentage of leaf component was 8.26, 11.48 and 11.72 for oat and 23.12, 22.35 and 20.93 for Italian ryegrass at 0, 0.7 and 1.4% of LW/day levels, respectively. The supplementation neither affected the accumulation rate nor the total DM production of the pasture (P\u3e 0.05). The senescent material was lower (P\u3c 0.05) with no supplementation

    Effect of Energetic Supplementation on Forage Losses in an Oat and Italian Ryegrass Pasture under Continuous Grazing

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    The experiment was conducted at UFSM-RS to quantify herbage losses in oat and Italian ryegrass mixture under continuous grazing by beef heifers. A continuous grazing method with variable stocking rate was utilized to maintain the same herbage mass, 1500 kg DM/ha, in all treatments. The treatments consisted of levels of energetic supplement (0, 0.7 and 1.4% of LW/day). The pasture was evaluated every 28 days, when forage not suitable for grazing was collected in points previously marked in experimental area. The daily losses of herbage mass were of 22.32, 18.98 and 21.16 kg of DM/ha/day, equivalent to 2.61, 1.91 and 1.41% of LW for levels of 0, 0.7 and 1.4% of LW/day, respectively. The results showed greater stocking rates in supplemented treatments, being 21.2% and 57.4% higher in 0.7 and 1.4% LW/day, respectively, than unsupplemented one

    Non-Commutative Gauge Theories and the Cosmological Constant

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    We discuss the issue of the cosmological constant in non-commutative non-supersymmetric gauge theories. In particular, in orbifold field theories non-commutativity acts as a UV cut-off. We suggest that in these theories quantum corrections give rise to a vacuum energy \rho, that is controlled by the non-commutativity parameter \theta, \rho ~ 1/theta^2 (only a soft logarithmic dependence on the Planck scale survives). We demonstrate our claim in a two-loop computation in field theory and by certain higher loop examples. Based on general expressions from string theory, we suggest that the vacuum energy is controlled by non-commutativity to all orders in perturbation theory.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex. 4 eps figures. v2: Typos corrected. To appear in Phys.Rev.

    PDB12 BUDGET IMPACT ANALYSIS OF THE INTRODUCTION OF ROSIGLITAZONE IN THE TREATMENT OFTYPE-2 DIABETES. THE ITALIAN NHS PERSPECTIVE

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