7,468 research outputs found

    Simulating forensic casework scenarios in experimental studies: The generation of footwear marks in blood

    Get PDF
    A study was designed to investigate the effects of external variables, including blood type, flooring surface, footwear tread depth and blood dryness, on the appearance of blood-based footwear marks, with particular reference to simulating a specific casework scenario. Results showed that footwear marks left in human blood tended to be of greater quality than those in equine blood, highlighting a potential issue in applying data generated with equine blood to human bloodstains in casework. Footwear tread effects were also dependent on blood type, but the type of flooring surface did not affect the appearance of the mark. Under some conditions, as the blood dried, the amount of detail retained from footwear contact decreased. These results provide the beginnings of an empirical evidence base to allow a more accurate interpretation of blood-based footwear marks in forensic casework. When applied to a disputed bloodstain in a specific case, these results also demonstrate the importance of such experiments in narrowing the range of explanations possible in the interpretation of forensic evidence

    How South Pacific mangroves may respond to predicted climate change and sea level rise

    Get PDF
    In the Pacific islands the total mangrove area is about 343,735 ha, with largest areas in Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Fiji and New Caledonia. A total of 34 species of mangroves occur, as well as 3 hybrids. These are of the Indo-Malayan assemblage (with one exception), and decline in diversity from west to east across the Pacific, reaching a limit at American Samoa. Mangrove resources are traditionally exploited in the Pacific islands, for construction and fuel wood, herbal medicines, and the gathering of crabs and fish. There are two main environmental settings for mangroves in the Pacific, deltaic and estuarine mangroves of high islands, and embayment, lagoon and reef flat mangroves of low islands. It is indicated from past analogues that their close relationship with sea-level height renders these mangrove swamps particularly vulnerable to disruption by sea-level rise. Stratigraphic records of Pacific island mangrove ecosystems during sea-level changes of the Holocene Period demonstrate that low islands mangroves can keep up with a sea-level rise of up to 12 cm per 100 years. Mangroves of high islands can keep up with rates of sea-level rates of up to 45 cm per 100 years, according to the supply of fluvial sediment. When the rate of sea-level rise exceeds the rate of accretion, mangroves experience problems of substrate erosion, inundation stress and increased salinity. Rise in temperature and the direct effects of increased CO2 levels are likely to increase mangrove productivity, change phenological patterns (such as the timing of flowering and fruiting), and expand the ranges of mangroves into higher latitudes. Pacific island mangroves are expected to demonstrate a sensitive response to the predicted rise in sea-level. A regional monitoring system is needed to provide data on ecosystem changes in productivity, species composition and sedimentation. This has been the intention of a number of programs, but none has yet been implemented

    Are Drivers of Root-Associated Fungal Community Structure Context Specific?

    Get PDF
    The composition and structure of plant-root-associated fungal communities are determined by local abiotic and biotic conditions. However, the relative influence and identity of relationships to abiotic and biotic factors may differ across environmental and ecological contexts, and fungal functional groups. Thus, understanding which aspects of root-associated fungal community ecology generalise across contexts is the first step towards a more predictive framework. We investigated how the relative importance of biotic and abiotic factors scale across environmental and ecological contexts using high-throughput sequencing (ca. 55 M Illumina metabarcoding sequences) of >260 plant-root-associated fungal communities from six UK salt marshes across two geographic regions (South-East and North-West England) in winter and summer. Levels of root-associated fungal diversity were comparable with forests and temperate grasslands, quadrupling previous estimates of salt-marsh fungal diversity. Whilst abiotic variables were generally most important, a range of site- and spatial scale-specific abiotic and biotic drivers of diversity and community composition were observed. Consequently, predictive models of diversity trained on one site, extrapolated poorly to others. Fungal taxa from the same functional groups responded similarly to the specific drivers of diversity and composition. Thus site, spatial scale and functional group are key factors that, if accounted for, may lead to a more predictive understanding of fungal community ecology

    Nucleotide Biosynthesis Is Critical for Growth of Bacteria in Human Blood

    Get PDF
    Proliferation of bacterial pathogens in blood represents one of the most dangerous stages of infection. Growth in blood serum depends on the ability of a pathogen to adjust metabolism to match the availability of nutrients. Although certain nutrients are scarce in blood and need to be de novo synthesized by proliferating bacteria, it is unclear which metabolic pathways are critical for bacterial growth in blood. In this study, we identified metabolic functions that are essential specifically for bacterial growth in the bloodstream. We used two principally different but complementing techniques to comprehensively identify genes that are required for the growth of Escherichia coli in human serum. A microarray-based and a dye-based mutant screening approach were independently used to screen a library of 3,985 single-gene deletion mutants in all non-essential genes of E. coli (Keio collection). A majority of the mutants identified consistently by both approaches carried a deletion of a gene involved in either the purine or pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthetic pathway and showed a 20- to 1,000-fold drop in viable cell counts as compared to wild-type E. coli after 24 h of growth in human serum. This suggests that the scarcity of nucleotide precursors, but not other nutrients, is the key limitation for bacterial growth in serum. Inactivation of nucleotide biosynthesis genes in another Gram-negative pathogen, Salmonella enterica, and in the Gram-positive pathogen Bacillus anthracis, prevented their growth in human serum. The growth of the mutants could be rescued by genetic complementation or by addition of appropriate nucleotide bases to human serum. Furthermore, the virulence of the B. anthracis purE mutant, defective in purine biosynthesis, was dramatically attenuated in a murine model of bacteremia. Our data indicate that de novo nucleotide biosynthesis represents the single most critical metabolic function for bacterial growth in blood and reveal the corresponding enzymes as putative antibiotic targets for the treatment of bloodstream infections

    Health Workers' Performance in the Implementation of Patient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) Strategy Under Programmatic Conditions in Tanzania: A Cross Sectional Study.

    Get PDF
    Patient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) is a promising treatment delivery strategy for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB). It aims to improve adherence to treatment by giving patients the choice of having drug intake supervised at the health facility by a medical professional or at home by a supporter of their choice. A cross-sectional survey was undertaken in three districts of Tanzania during October 2007, one year after PCT was rolled out nationally. Semi-structured questionnaires were used to assess whether key elements of the PCT approach were being implemented, to evaluate supporters' knowledge, to capture opinions on factors contributing to treatment completion, and to assess how treatment completion was measured. Transcripts from open-ended responses were analysed using framework analysis. Interviews were conducted with 127 TB patients, 107 treatment supporters and 70 health workers. In total, 25.2% of TB patients were not given a choice about the place of treatment by health workers, and only 13.7% of those given a choice reported that they were given adequate time to make their decision. Only 24.3% of treatment supporters confirmed that they were instructed how to complete patients' treatment cards. Proper health education was the factor most frequently reported by health workers as favouring successful completion of TB treatment (45.7%). The majority of health workers (68.6%) said they checked returned blister packs to verify whether patients had taken their treatment, but only 20.0% checked patients' treatment cards. The provision of choice of treatment location, information on treatment, and guidance for treatment supporters need to be improved. There is a requirement for regular re-training of health workers with effective supportive supervision if successful implementation of the PCT approach is to be sustained

    3-D inkjet printed solid oxide electrochemical reactors III. cylindrical pillared electrode microstructures

    Get PDF
    Inkjet printing is a scalable technique that can fabricate customised three-dimensional microstructures, reproducibly, accurately, and with high material utilisation, by printing multiple layers sequentially onto previously printed layers, to produce architectures tailored in this case to electrochemical reactors. Printable yttria-stabilised zirconia (YSZ) and lanthanum strontium manganite (LSM) inks were formulated to enable fabrication of solid oxide electrochemical reactors (SOERs): H2O-H2 | Ni(O)-YSZ | YSZ | YSZ pillars | LSM | O2. Of the geometries studied, equi-sized, hexagonally-arranged cylindrical pillars were predicted to produce the largest ratio of interfacial to geometric (cross-sectional) areas. However, this neglects effects of potential and current density distributions that constrain up-scaling to more modest factors. Hence, using kinetic parameter values from the literature, finite element computational simulations of the pillared SOER in (H2 - O2) fuel cell mode predicted peak power densities of 0.11 W cm−2 at 800 °C, whereas its counterpart with only a planar electrolyte layer produced only 0.05 W cm−2; i.e. the pillars were predicted to enhance peak power densities by ca. 2.3. Arrays of several thousand YSZ cylindrical pillars were printed, with post-sintering diameter, height, and spacing of 25, 95 and 63 μm, respectively. LSM was inkjet-printed onto the pillars, and sintered subsequently, to produce contiguous films ca. 4 μm thick. In (H2 - O2) fuel cell mode at 725, 770, and 795 °C, these reactors produced peak power densities of 0.09, 0.21, 0.30 W cm−2, respectively, 3–6 times greater than the performance of ‘benchmark’ Ni(O)-YSZ | YSZ | LSM reactors inkjet-printed with planar cathodes operating under the same conditions, thereby demonstrating the benefit of inkjet printing as a fabrication technique for SOERs

    Predicting optimal geometries of 3D-printed solid oxide electrochemical reactors

    Get PDF
    Solid oxide electrochemical reactors (SOERs) may be operated in fuel cell (SOFC) or electrolyser (SOE) modes, at temperatures > 800 K, depending on electrolyte and electrode materials. In electrolyser mode, current densities of ≥ ca. 104 A m−2 are achievable at potential differences ideally at the thermoneutral values of 1.285 V for steam splitting or 1.46 V for CO2 splitting at 750 °C. As for large scale chemical processes in general, such reactors are required to be energy efficient, economic, of scalable design and fabrication, and durable ideally over ≥ ca. 10 years. Increasing densities of electrode | electrolyte interfacial areas (and electrode | electrolyte | pore triple phase boundaries) of solid oxide fuel cells or electrolysers offers one means of increasing performance, reproducibility, durability and potentially decreasing cost. Three-dimensional structuring of those interfaces can be achieved by 3D printing, but modelling is required to optimise geometries. Using kinetic parameter values from the literature, COMSOL Multiphysics® finite element software was used to predict effects of 3D geometries, increasing interfacial to geometric area ratios, on SOER performances for YSZ ((ZrO2)0.92(Y2O3)0.08) oxide ion conducting electrolyte and Ni-YSZ electrode based cells, relative to corresponding planar structures with < 10 μm thick planar YSZ electrolyte. For the negative electrode, electrolyte and electrode layers were inkjet printed on Ni(O)-YSZ substrate precursors, then sintered. For the positive electrode, porous lanthanum strontium manganite (LSM: La0.8Sr0.2MnO3-δ) was brush-coated over the (gas-tight) YSZ, then sintered to produce complete SOERs: H2O-H2 | Ni(O)-YSZ | YSZ-YSZ pillars | YSZ-LSM | LSM | O2. Results are reported showing that, in the case of solid YSZ pillars, despite interfacial electrode | electrolyte areas being up scaled by factors of 10–150 depending on height (10–150 μm), current densities were predicted to increase by only ca. 1.14 in electrolysis mode and peak power densities were predicted to increase by ca. 1.93 in fuel cell mode. This was due to increased ionic current path length along the pillars, increasing ohmic potential losses relative to faradaic impedances; as expected, such predictions depend strongly on electrode kinetic parameter values. After sintering the porous Ni(O)-YSZ pillars and their subsequent reduction with H2 to nickel, they were assumed to constitute equipotential surfaces, depending on current collector design. Predicted current densities were up to 1011 mA cm−2, far greater than in solid YSZ pillars, ultimately limited by reactant or product mass transport through porous pillars of increasing height

    Global Hopf bifurcation in the ZIP regulatory system

    Get PDF
    Regulation of zinc uptake in roots of Arabidopsis thaliana has recently been modeled by a system of ordinary differential equations based on the uptake of zinc, expression of a transporter protein and the interaction between an activator and inhibitor. For certain parameter choices the steady state of this model becomes unstable upon variation in the external zinc concentration. Numerical results show periodic orbits emerging between two critical values of the external zinc concentration. Here we show the existence of a global Hopf bifurcation with a continuous family of stable periodic orbits between two Hopf bifurcation points. The stability of the orbits in a neighborhood of the bifurcation points is analyzed by deriving the normal form, while the stability of the orbits in the global continuation is shown by calculation of the Floquet multipliers. From a biological point of view, stable periodic orbits lead to potentially toxic zinc peaks in plant cells. Buffering is believed to be an efficient way to deal with strong transient variations in zinc supply. We extend the model by a buffer reaction and analyze the stability of the steady state in dependence of the properties of this reaction. We find that a large enough equilibrium constant of the buffering reaction stabilizes the steady state and prevents the development of oscillations. Hence, our results suggest that buffering has a key role in the dynamics of zinc homeostasis in plant cells.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, uses svjour3.cl

    Media justice: Madeleine McCann, intermediatization and "trial by media" in the British press

    Get PDF
    Three-year-old Madeleine McCann disappeared on 3 May 2007 from a holiday apartment in Portugal. Over five years and multiple investigations that failed to solve this abducted child case, Madeleine and her parents were subject to a process of relentless ‘intermediatization’. Across 24–7 news coverage, websites, documentaries, films, YouTube videos, books, magazines, music and artworks, Madeleine was a mediagenic image of innocence and a lucrative story. In contrast to Madeleine’s media sacralization, the representation of her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, fluctuated between periods of vociferous support and prolonged and libellous ‘trial by media’. This article analyses how the global intermediatization of the ‘Maddie Mystery’ fed into and fuelled the ‘trial by media’ of Kate and Gerry McCann in the UK press. Our theorization of ‘trial by media’ is developed and refined through considering its legal limitations in an era of ‘attack journalism’ and unprecedented official UK inquiries into press misconduct and criminality

    Fluid Particle Accelerations in Fully Developed Turbulence

    Full text link
    The motion of fluid particles as they are pushed along erratic trajectories by fluctuating pressure gradients is fundamental to transport and mixing in turbulence. It is essential in cloud formation and atmospheric transport, processes in stirred chemical reactors and combustion systems, and in the industrial production of nanoparticles. The perspective of particle trajectories has been used successfully to describe mixing and transport in turbulence, but issues of fundamental importance remain unresolved. One such issue is the Heisenberg-Yaglom prediction of fluid particle accelerations, based on the 1941 scaling theory of Kolmogorov (K41). Here we report acceleration measurements using a detector adapted from high-energy physics to track particles in a laboratory water flow at Reynolds numbers up to 63,000. We find that universal K41 scaling of the acceleration variance is attained at high Reynolds numbers. Our data show strong intermittency---particles are observed with accelerations of up to 1,500 times the acceleration of gravity (40 times the root mean square value). Finally, we find that accelerations manifest the anisotropy of the large scale flow at all Reynolds numbers studied.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
    corecore