112 research outputs found
Distribuição espacial de plantas daninhas resistentes a herbicidas no Brasil.
A ocorrĂȘncia de plantas daninhas resistentes a herbicidas no Brasil tem sido um grande problema para os agricultores. O uso continuado de um mesmo herbicida resulta na seleção de biĂłtipos resistentes ao princĂpio ativo e torna o manejo de plantas daninhas mais difĂcil, o que, por sua vez, pode gerar redução de produtividade. A confirmação da resistĂȘncia demanda estudos em condiçÔes controladas, cujos resultados sĂŁo divulgados em literatura especializada. Este trabalho teve por objetivo iniciar um levantamento de ocorrĂȘncias comprovadas de plantas daninhas resistentes a herbicidas no Brasil, para posterior espacialização. Os trabalhos se iniciaram pela mais importante publicação nessa ĂĄrea, a revista Plantas Daninhas, da Sociedade Brasileira de CiĂȘncia das Plantas Daninhas, e abrangeram o perĂodo de 2000 a 2018. Foram publicados 36 artigos que descreviam plantas daninhas resistentes a herbicidas. As informaçÔes contidas nos artigos foram usadas para compor uma base de dados contendo informaçÔes sobre as plantas, os princĂpios ativos, o fator de resistĂȘncia, os grupos de pesquisa, dados geogrĂĄficos e agronĂŽmicos. Nesses artigos foram descritos 145 biĂłtipos de plantas daninhas resistentes, pertencentes a 22 espĂ©cies e 12 gĂȘneros. Os relatos descrevem a resistĂȘncia a 14 princĂpios ativos. O herbicida mais frequente foi o glifosato, com 63 descriçÔes. A maior parte dos biĂłtipos resistentes foi encontrada no estado do ParanĂĄ, em seguida no Rio Grande do Sul, ocorrendo 68 e 50 relatos, respectivamente. Isso se deve, parcialmente, ao maior esforço de pesquisa realizado nesses estados
Gauging the SU(2) Skyrme model
In this paper the SU(2) Skyrme model will be reformulated as a gauge theory
and the hidden symmetry will be investigated and explored in the energy
spectrum computation. To this end we purpose a new constraint conversion
scheme, based on the symplectic framework with the introduction of Wess-Zumino
(WZ) terms in an unambiguous way. It is a positive feature not present on the
BFFT constraint conversion. The Dirac's procedure for the first-class
constraints is employed to quantize this gauge invariant nonlinear system and
the energy spectrum is computed. The finding out shows the power of the
symplectic gauge-invariant formalism when compared with another constraint
conversion procedures present on the literature.Comment: revised version, to appear in Phys.Rev.
Excitation of Magnetic Dipole Transitions at Optical Frequencies
We use the magnetic field distribution of an azimuthally polarized focused laser beam to excite a magnetic dipole transition in Eu3+ ions embedded in a Y2O3 nanoparticle. The absence of the electric field at the focus of an azimuthally polarized beam allows us to unambiguously demonstrate that the nanoparticle is excited by the magnetic dipole transition near 527.5 nm. When the laser wavelength is resonant with the magnetic dipole transition, the nanoparticle maps the local magnetic field distribution, whereas when the laser wavelength is resonant with an electric dipole transition, the nanoparticle is sensitive to the local electric field. Hence, by tuning the excitation wavelength, we can selectively excite magnetic or electric dipole transitions through optical fields
Operatorial quantization of Born-Infeld Skyrmion model and hidden symmetries
The SU(2) collective coordinates expansion of the Born-Infeld\break Skyrmion
Lagrangian is performed. The classical Hamiltonian is computed from this
special Lagrangian in approximative way: it is derived from the expansion of
this non-polynomial Lagrangian up to second-order variable in the collective
coordinates. This second-class constrained model is quantized by Dirac
Hamiltonian method and symplectic formalism. Although it is not expected to
find symmetries on second-class systems, a hidden symmetry is disclosed by
formulating the Born-Infeld Skyrmion %model as a gauge theory. To this end we
developed a new constraint conversion technique based on the symplectic
formalism. Finally, a discussion on the role played by the hidden symmetry on
the computation of the energy spectrum is presented.Comment: A new version of hep-th/9901133. To appear in JP
Trends in ExPEC serogroups in the UK and their significance
We thank the British Society for Antimicrobial
Chemotherapy for kindly providing E. coli bloodstream isolates from
the BSAC Bacteraemia Resistance Surveillance Programme (2011), and
all the staff at PHEâs Gastrointestinal Bacteria Reference Unit for their
guidance and patience during the serogrouping process.
This work was performed as part of a PhD study funded by PHE
Magnetic and luminescent coordination networks based on imidazolium salts and lanthanides for sensitive ratiometric thermometry
The synthesis and characterization of six new lanthanide networks [Ln(L)(ox)(H2O)] with Ln = Eu3+, Gd3+, Tb3+ , Dy3+ , Ho3+ and Yb3+ is reported. They were synthesized by solvo-ionothermal reaction of lanthanide nitrate Ln(NO3)(3)center dot xH(2)O with the 1,3-bis(carboxymethyl)imidazolium [HE] ligand and oxalic acid (H(2)ox) in a water/ethanol solution. The crystal structure of these compounds has been solved on single crystals and the magnetic and luminescent properties have been investigated relying on intrinsic properties of the lanthanide ions. The synthetic strategy has been extended to mixed lanthanide networks leading to four isostructural networks of formula [Tb1-xEux(L)(ox)(H2O)] with x = 0.01, 0.03, 0.05 and 0.10. These materials were assessed as luminescent ratiometric thermometers based on the emission intensities of ligand, Tb3+ and Eu3+ . The best sensitivities were obtained using the ratio between the emission intensities of Eu3+ (D-5(0) -> F-7(2) transition) and of the ligand as the thermometric parameter. [Tb0.97Eu0.03 (L)(ox)(H2O)] was found to be one of the best thermometers among lanthanide-bearing coordination polymers and metal-organic frameworks, operative in the physiological range with a maximum sensitivity of 1.38%.K-1 at 340 K
Plasma concentration of Propionibacterium acnes antibodies and prostate cancer risk: results from an Australian population-based caseâcontrol study
Background:Recent studies in prostatic tissue suggest that Propionibacterium acnes (P. acnes), a bacterium associated with acne that normally lives on the skin, is the most prevalent bacterium in the prostate and in men with benign prostatic hyperplasia. Its prevalence is higher in samples from patients subsequently diagnosed with prostate cancer. The aim of our study was to test whether circulating levels of P. acnes antibodies are associated with prostate cancer risk and tumour characteristics using plasma samples from a population-based case-control study.Methods:We measured plasma concentration of P. acnes antibodies for 809 cases and 584 controls using a recently developed ELISA assay. We compared antibody titres between cases and controls using unconditional logistic regression adjusted for batch and variables associated with the study design (i.e., age, year of selection and centre). The primary analysis included P. acnes titres in the model as a dichotomous variable using the median value for controls as the cut-off value.Results:P. acnes antibody titres for both cases and controls ranged from 1: 16 (i.e., low concentration) to 1: 65 536 (i.e., high concentration; median value1: 1024). The odds ratio for prostate cancer associated with titres at or above the median value was 0.73 (95% CI 0.58-0.91, P0.005). The association appeared to be particularly strong for advanced prostate cancer (AJCC Stage grouping III-IV) for which the odds ratio was 0.59 (95% CI 0.43-0.81, P0.001) but there was insufficient evidence that the association differed by tumour stage (p heterogeneity0.07).Conclusion: These results need to be confirmed in prospective studies but they are consistent with the hypothesis that P. acnes has a role in prostate cancer. © 2010 Cancer Research UK All rights reserved
Three-dimensional lanthanide-organic frameworks based on di-, tetra-, and hexameric clusters
Three-dimensional lanthanide-organic frameworks formulated as (CH3)2NH2[Ln(pydc)2] · 1/2H2O [Ln3+ ) Eu3+ (1a)
or Er3+ (1b); pydc2- corresponds to the diprotonated residue of 2,5-pyridinedicarboxylic acid (H2pydc)], [Er4(OH)4(pydc)4(H2O)3] ·H2O
(2), and [PrIII
2PrIV
1.25O(OH)3(pydc)3] (3) have been isolated from typical solvothermal (1a and 1b in N,N-dimethylformamide -
DMF) and hydrothermal (2 and 3) syntheses. Materials were characterized in the solid state using single-crystal X-ray diffraction,
thermogravimetric analysis, vibrational spectroscopy (FT-IR and FT-Raman), electron microscopy, and CHN elemental analysis.
While synthesis in DMF promotes the formation of centrosymmetric dimeric units, which act as building blocks in the construction
of anionic â
3{[Ln(pydc)2]-} frameworks having the channels filled by the charge-balancing (CH3)2NH2
+ cations generated in situ by
the solvolysis of DMF, the use of water as the solvent medium promotes clustering of the lanthanide centers: structures of 2 and 3
contain instead tetrameric [Er4(Ό3-OH)4]8+ and hexameric |Pr6(Ό3-O)2(Ό3-OH)6| clusters which act as the building blocks of the networks,
and are bridged by the H2-xpydcx- residues. It is demonstrated that this modular approach is reflected in the topological nature of
the materials inducing 4-, 8-, and 14-connected uninodal networks (the nodes being the centers of gravity of the clusters) with
topologies identical to those of diamond (family 1), and framework types bct (for 2) and bcu-x (for 3), respectively. The
thermogravimetric studies of compound 3 further reveal a significant weight increase between ambient temperature and 450 °C with
this being correlated with the uptake of oxygen from the surrounding environment by the praseodymium oxide inorganic core
The spatial and temporal patterns of falciparum and vivax malaria in PerĂș: 1994â2006
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Malaria is the direct cause of approximately one million deaths worldwide each year, though it is both preventable and curable. Increasing the understanding of the transmission dynamics of falciparum and vivax malaria and their relationship could suggest improvements for malaria control efforts. Here the weekly number of malaria cases due to <it>Plasmodium falciparum </it>(1994â2006) and <it>Plasmodium vivax </it>(1999â2006) in PerĂș at different spatial scales in conjunction with associated demographic, geographic and climatological data are analysed.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Malaria periodicity patterns were analysed through wavelet spectral analysis, studied patterns of persistence as a function of community size and assessed spatial heterogeneity via the Lorenz curve and the summary Gini index.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Wavelet time series analyses identified annual cycles in the incidence of both malaria species as the dominant pattern. However, significant spatial heterogeneity was observed across jungle, mountain and coastal regions with slightly higher levels of spatial heterogeneity for <it>P. vivax </it>than <it>P. falciparum</it>. While the incidence of <it>P. falciparum </it>has been declining in recent years across geographic regions, <it>P. vivax </it>incidence has remained relatively steady in jungle and mountain regions with a slight decline in coastal regions. Factors that may be contributing to this decline are discussed. The time series of both malaria species were significantly synchronized in coastal (Ï = 0.9, P < 0.0001) and jungle regions (Ï = 0.76, P < 0.0001) but not in mountain regions. Community size was significantly associated with malaria persistence due to both species in jungle regions, but not in coastal and mountain regions.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Overall, findings highlight the importance of highly refined spatial and temporal data on malaria incidence together with demographic and geographic information in improving the understanding of malaria persistence patterns associated with multiple malaria species in human populations, impact of interventions, detection of heterogeneity and generation of hypotheses.</p
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