173 research outputs found

    Patrones en la distribución de la vegetación en áreas de páramo de colombia: heterogeneidad y dependencia espacial

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    Se realizaron análisis de heterogeneidad y dependencia espacial (auto-correlación) con base en la caracterización y en la distribución de coberturas en diez áreas de páramo en las cordilleras Central y Oriental de Colombia, estas metodologías pertenecen al grupo de análisis exploratorios de datos espaciales (AEDE). De las áreas estudiadas muestran un buen estado de conservación y de conectividad, la alta montaña de la serranía de Perijá, los páramos del Parque Nacional Natural Los Nevados y gran parte del área pertenecientes a los páramos de la jurisdicción de la corporación CORPOGUAVIO. La intervención de origen antrópico, el aumento del cultivo de papa, el cambio en el uso del suelo, principalmente en los páramos de la cordillera Oriental, han afectado la estructura y la distribución natural de los tipos de vegetación y han disminuido sensiblemente la conectividad entre bloques de área con lo cual se hace muy difícil cualquier proceso de re-vegetalización y recuperación. Esta situación se presenta en gran escala en los páramos La Rusia, Belén, Guantiva (hacia la vertiente Oriental), Telecom, Merchán, Tablazo, sector nororiental del páramo de Sumapaz y la vertiente Oriental de los páramos de Carmen de Carupa y sectores aledaños. Para los páramos de Guanacas y Las Delicias (área de influencia del volcán Puracé) la problemática está concentrada hacia el sector noroccidental. Los resultados obtenidos, se pueden aplicar y son útiles en los procesos de restauración y conservación, puesto que proporcionan información detallada acerca de la distribución de los bloques de áreas con los tipos de vegetación, la conectividad y además, pueden utilizarse como indicadores de la salud de los ecosistema

    CLASSY III: The Properties of Starburst-Driven Warm Ionized Outflows

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    We report the results of analyses of galactic outflows in a sample of 45 low-redshift starburst galaxies in the COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopic SurveY (CLASSY), augmented by five additional similar starbursts with COS data. The outflows are traced by blueshifted absorption-lines of metals spanning a wide range of ionization potential. The high quality and broad spectral coverage of CLASSY data enable us to disentangle the absorption due to the static ISM from that due to outflows. We further use different line multiplets and doublets to determine the covering fraction, column density, and ionization state as a function of velocity for each outflow. We measure the outflow's mean velocity and velocity width, and find that both correlate in a highly significant way with the star-formation rate, galaxy mass, and circular velocity over ranges of four orders-of-magnitude for the first two properties. We also estimate outflow rates of metals, mass, momentum, and kinetic energy. We find that, at most, only about 20% of silicon created and ejected by supernovae in the starburst is carried in the warm phase we observe. The outflows' mass-loading factor increases steeply and inversely with both circular and outflow velocity (log-log slope \sim -1.6), and reaches 10\sim 10 for dwarf galaxies. We find that the outflows typically carry about 10 to 100% of the momentum injected by massive stars and about 1 to 20% of the kinetic energy. We show that these results place interesting constraints on, and new insights into, models and simulations of galactic winds.Comment: 34 pages, 16 figures, 6 tables, submitted to Ap

    CLASSY VII Ly\alpha\ Profiles: The Structure and Kinematics of Neutral Gas and Implications for LyC Escape in Reionization-Era Analogs

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    Lyman-alpha line profiles are a powerful probe of ISM structure, outflow speed, and Lyman continuum escape fraction. In this paper, we present the Lyα\alpha line profiles of the COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopic SurveY, a sample rich in spectroscopic analogs of reionization-era galaxies. A large fraction of the spectra show a complex profile, consisting of a double-peaked Lyα\alpha emission profile in the bottom of a damped, Lyα\alpha absorption trough. Such profiles reveal an inhomogeneous interstellar medium (ISM). We successfully fit the damped Lyα\alpha absorption (DLA) and the Lyα\alpha emission profiles separately, but with complementary covering factors, a surprising result because this approach requires no Lyα\alpha exchange between high-NHIN_\mathrm{HI} and low-NHIN_\mathrm{HI} paths. The combined distribution of column densities is qualitatively similar to the bimodal distributions observed in numerical simulations. We find an inverse relation between Lyα\alpha peak separation and the [O III]/[O II] flux ratio, confirming that the covering fraction of Lyman-continuum-thin sightlines increases as the Lyα\alpha peak separation decreases. We combine measurements of Lyα\alpha peak separation and Lyα\alpha red peak asymmetry in a diagnostic diagram which identifies six Lyman continuum leakers in the CLASSY sample. We find a strong correlation between the Lyα\alpha trough velocity and the outflow velocity measured from interstellar absorption lines. We argue that greater vignetting of the blueshifted Lyα\alpha peak, relative to the redshifted peak, is the source of the well-known discrepancy between shell-model parameters and directly measured outflow properties. The CLASSY sample illustrates how scattering of Lyα\alpha photons outside the spectroscopic aperture reshapes Lyα\alpha profiles as the distances to these compact starbursts span a large range.Comment: 40 pages, 19 figures, 5 tables, submitted to ApJ, comments welcom

    Credit Information Sharing and Loan Default in Developing Countries: The Moderating Effect of Banking Market Concentration and National Governance Quality

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    Departing from the existing literature, which associates credit information sharing with improved access to credit in advanced economies, we examine whether credit information sharing can also reduce loan default rate for banks domiciled in developing countries. Using a large dataset covering 879 unique banks from 87 developing countries from every continent, over a nine-year period (i.e., over 6,300 observations), we uncover three new findings. First, we find that credit information sharing reduces loan default rate. Second, we show that the relationship between credit information sharing and loan default rate is conditional on banking market concentration. Third, our findings suggest that governance quality at the country level does not have a strong moderating role on the effect of credit information sharing on loan default rate

    The COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopy SurveY (CLASSY) Treasury Atlas

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    Far-ultraviolet (FUV; ~1200-2000 angstroms) spectra are fundamental to our understanding of star-forming galaxies, providing a unique window on massive stellar populations, chemical evolution, feedback processes, and reionization. The launch of JWST will soon usher in a new era, pushing the UV spectroscopic frontier to higher redshifts than ever before, however, its success hinges on a comprehensive understanding of the massive star populations and gas conditions that power the observed UV spectral features. This requires a level of detail that is only possible with a combination of ample wavelength coverage, signal-to-noise, spectral-resolution, and sample diversity that has not yet been achieved by any FUV spectral database. We present the COS Legacy Spectroscopic SurveY (CLASSY) treasury and its first high level science product, the CLASSY atlas. CLASSY builds on the HST archive to construct the first high-quality (S/N_1500 >~ 5/resel), high-resolution (R~15,000) FUV spectral database of 45 nearby (0.002 < z < 0.182) star-forming galaxies. The CLASSY atlas, available to the public via the CLASSY website, is the result of optimally extracting and coadding 170 archival+new spectra from 312 orbits of HST observations. The CLASSY sample covers a broad range of properties including stellar mass (6.2 < logM_star(M_sol) < 10.1), star formation rate (-2.0 < log SFR (M_sol/yr) < +1.6), direct gas-phase metallicity (7.0 < 12+log(O/H) < 8.8), ionization (0.5 < O_32 < 38.0), reddening (0.02 < E(B-V < 0.67), and nebular density (10 < n_e (cm^-3) < 1120). CLASSY is biased to UV-bright star-forming galaxies, resulting in a sample that is consistent with z~0 mass-metallicity relationship, but is offset to higher SFRs by roughly 2 dex, similar to z >~2 galaxies. This unique set of properties makes the CLASSY atlas the benchmark training set for star-forming galaxies across cosmic time.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap

    Local and Landscape Factors Determining Occurrence of Phyllostomid Bats in Tropical Secondary Forests

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    Neotropical forests are being increasingly replaced by a mosaic of patches of different successional stages, agricultural fields and pasture lands. Consequently, the identification of factors shaping the performance of taxa in anthropogenic landscapes is gaining importance, especially for taxa playing critical roles in ecosystem functioning. As phyllostomid bats provide important ecological services through seed dispersal, pollination and control of animal populations, in this study we assessed the relationships between phyllostomid occurrence and the variation in local and landscape level habitat attributes caused by disturbance. We mist-netted phyllostomids in 12 sites representing 4 successional stages of a tropical dry forest (initial, early, intermediate and late). We also quantitatively characterized the habitat attributes at the local (vegetation structure complexity) and the landscape level (forest cover, area and diversity of patches). Two focal scales were considered for landscape characterization: 500 and 1000 m. During 142 sampling nights, we captured 606 individuals representing 15 species and 4 broad guilds. Variation in phyllostomid assemblages, ensembles and populations was associated with variation in local and landscape habitat attributes, and this association was scale-dependent. Specifically, we found a marked guild-specific response, where the abundance of nectarivores tended to be negatively associated with the mean area of dry forest patches, while the abundance of frugivores was positively associated with the percentage of riparian forest. These results are explained by the prevalence of chiropterophilic species in the dry forest and of chiropterochorous species in the riparian forest. Our results indicate that different vegetation classes, as well as a multi-spatial scale approach must be considered for evaluating bat response to variation in landscape attributes. Moreover, for the long-term conservation of phyllostomids in anthropogenic landscapes, we must realize that the management of the habitat at the landscape level is as important as the conservation of particular forest fragments
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