452 research outputs found
Fungi and lichens recorded during the Cryptogam Symposium on Natural Beech Forests, Slovakia 2011
In September 2011, an international team of cryptogam experts visited seven national nature reserves
in five mountain areas of Slovakia: Havešová and Stužica in the Poloniny Mts., Vihorlat in the
Vihorlatské vrchyMts., Oblík in the Slanské vrchyMts., Dobročský prales and Klenovský Vepor in the
Veporské vrchy Mts. and Badínsky prales in the Kremnické vrchy Mts. The reserves were selected to
represent examples of the best protected old-growth beech forests in the country. The aim was to
study the diversity of wood-inhabiting fungi on fallen beech logs and epiphytic lichens on standing
beech trees. In total, 215 fungal species and 128 lichens were recorded on beech wood and bark, and
27 fungi and 26 lichens on additional substrates. The site of the highest conservation value is Stužica
with 126 fungi and 79 lichens recorded on beech, of which 12 fungi and 19 lichens are indicators of
high nature conservation value. Combined with historical records, a total of 19 non-lichenised fungal
indicators are now reported from the site, making it the highest ranked natural beech forest in Europe.
The second most important reserve for fungal diversity is Havešová with 121 species, including
14 indicator species recorded on beech wood. For lichens, the second most important reserve is
Klenovský Vepor with 69 species including 18 lichen indicators recorded on beech. Nine fungus
species are here reported as new to Slovakia: Asterostroma medium, Entoloma hispidulum,
E. pseudoparasiticum, Gloeohypochnicium analogum, Hohenbuehelia valesiaca, Hymenochaete
ulmicola, Hypocrea parmastoi, Melanomma spiniferum and Scutellinia colensoi. Lichen species
Alyxoria ochrocheila is reported as new to Slovakia and Lecanographa amylacea, which was considered
extinct in the Slovak Red list, was also recorded. This is the first list of wood-inhabiting fungi
and epiphytic lichens of old-growth beech forests in Slovakia, and hence an important contribution
to the exploration of biodiversity in Slovakia
Оптимизация процесса технического контроля
Объектом настоящего исследования является процесс технического контроля ПАО "ЗиО-Подольск".
Предметом исследования являются теоретические и практические вопросы оптимизации технического контроля для улучшения производственной деятельности организации.
Цель работы – оптимизация процесса технического контроля.
В процессе работы проанализирован и структурирован материал по теме технического контроля. Исследован процесс "Оптимизация процесса оформления и учета актов о браке" предприятия, а также был предложен способ оптимизации данного процесса.
Результатом работы является предложение по оптимизации процесса "Оформление и учет актов о браке".The object of this study is the process of technical control of ZiO-Podolsk PJSC.
The subject of the study is the theoretical and practical issues of optimizing technical control to improve the production activities of the organization.
The purpose of the work is to optimize the process of technical control.
In the process, the material on the topic of technical control is analyzed and structured. The process "Optimization of the process of registration and registration of acts of marriage" of the enterprise was investigated, and a method for optimizing this process was also proposed.
The result of the work is a proposal to optimize the process “Registration and registration of marriage certificates”
Hill-Chao numbers allow decomposing gamma multifunctionality into alpha and beta components
Biodiversity-ecosystem functioning (BEF) research has provided strong evidence and mechanistic underpinnings to support positive effects of biodiversity on ecosystem functioning, from single to multiple functions. This research has provided knowledge gained mainly at the local alpha scale (i.e. within ecosystems), but the increasing homogenization of landscapes in the Anthropocene has raised the potential that declining biodiversity at the beta (across ecosystems) and gamma scales is likely to also impact ecosystem functioning. Drawing on biodiversity theory, we propose a new statistical framework based on Hill-Chao numbers. The framework allows decomposition of multifunctionality at gamma scales into alpha and beta components, a critical but hitherto missing tool in BEF research; it also allows weighting of individual ecosystem functions. Through the proposed decomposition, new BEF results for beta and gamma scales are discovered. Our novel approach is applicable across ecosystems and connects local- and landscape-scale BEF assessments from experiments to natural settings
Corresponding States of Structural Glass Formers
The variation with respect to temperature T of transport properties of 58
fragile structural glass forming liquids (68 data sets in total) are analyzed
and shown to exhibit a remarkable degree of universality. In particular,
super-Arrhenius behaviors of all super-cooled liquids appear to collapse to one
parabola for which there is no singular behavior at any finite temperature.
This behavior is bounded by an onset temperature To above which liquid
transport has a much weaker temperature dependence. A similar collapse is also
demonstrated, over the smaller available range, for existing numerical
simulation data.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Updated References, Table Values, Submitted for
Publicatio
Effects of heterogeneity on the ecological diversity and redundancy of forest fauna
Heterogeneity in forests might promote biodiversity not only through an increase in niche volume but also through other processes, such as an increase in resources and their spatial distribution. However, negative relationships between heterogeneity and biodiversity have also been observed, which may indicate that heterogeneity acts as a filter for some species. This study examined the effects of different facets of heterogeneity in forest stands, i.e. deadwood, plant diversity, forest stand structure, and micro-scale topography, on the ecological (functional-phylogenetic) diversity and redundancy of nine animal groups: moths, true bugs, different functional groups of beetles, spiders, birds, and bats. Overall, we found positive effects of heterogeneity on ecological diversity and redundancy. Although the effect of heterogeneity at the local scale was moderate compared with the general effect of region, greater heterogeneity could be beneficial to some species groups and lead to more resilient species communities
Recommended from our members
BioTIME: A database of biodiversity time series for the Anthropocene.
MotivationThe BioTIME database contains raw data on species identities and abundances in ecological assemblages through time. These data enable users to calculate temporal trends in biodiversity within and amongst assemblages using a broad range of metrics. BioTIME is being developed as a community-led open-source database of biodiversity time series. Our goal is to accelerate and facilitate quantitative analysis of temporal patterns of biodiversity in the Anthropocene.Main types of variables includedThe database contains 8,777,413 species abundance records, from assemblages consistently sampled for a minimum of 2 years, which need not necessarily be consecutive. In addition, the database contains metadata relating to sampling methodology and contextual information about each record.Spatial location and grainBioTIME is a global database of 547,161 unique sampling locations spanning the marine, freshwater and terrestrial realms. Grain size varies across datasets from 0.0000000158 km2 (158 cm2) to 100 km2 (1,000,000,000,000 cm2).Time period and grainBioTIME records span from 1874 to 2016. The minimal temporal grain across all datasets in BioTIME is a year.Major taxa and level of measurementBioTIME includes data from 44,440 species across the plant and animal kingdoms, ranging from plants, plankton and terrestrial invertebrates to small and large vertebrates.Software format.csv and .SQL
Impacts of salvage logging on biodiversity: A meta-analysis
Logging to "salvage" economic returns from forests affected by natural disturbances has become increasingly prevalent globally. Despite potential negative effects on biodiversity, salvage logging is often conducted, even in areas otherwise excluded from logging and reserved for nature conservation, inter alia because strategic priorities for post-disturbance management are widely lacking. A review of the existing literature revealed that most studies investigating the effects of salvage logging on biodiversity have been conducted less than 5 years following natural disturbances, and focused on non-saproxylic organisms. A meta-analysis across 24 species groups revealed that salvage logging significantly decreases numbers of species of eight taxonomic groups. Richness of dead wood dependent taxa (i.e. saproxylic organisms) decreased more strongly than richness of non-saproxylic taxa. In contrast, taxonomic groups typically associated with open habitats increased in the number of species after salvage logging. By analysing 134 original species abundance matrices, we demonstrate that salvage logging significantly alters community composition in 7 of 17 species groups, particularly affecting saproxylic assemblages. Synthesis and applications. Our results suggest that salvage logging is not consistent with the management objectives of protected areas. Substantial changes, such as the retention of dead wood in naturally disturbed forests, are needed to support biodiversity. Future research should investigate the amount and spatio-temporal distribution of retained dead wood needed to maintain all components of biodiversity
Approaching disorder-free transport in high-mobility conjugated polymers.
Conjugated polymers enable the production of flexible semiconductor devices that can be processed from solution at low temperatures. Over the past 25 years, device performance has improved greatly as a wide variety of molecular structures have been studied. However, one major limitation has not been overcome; transport properties in polymer films are still limited by pervasive conformational and energetic disorder. This not only limits the rational design of materials with higher performance, but also prevents the study of physical phenomena associated with an extended π-electron delocalization along the polymer backbone. Here we report a comparative transport study of several high-mobility conjugated polymers by field-effect-modulated Seebeck, transistor and sub-bandgap optical absorption measurements. We show that in several of these polymers, most notably in a recently reported, indacenodithiophene-based donor-acceptor copolymer with a near-amorphous microstructure, the charge transport properties approach intrinsic disorder-free limits at which all molecular sites are thermally accessible. Molecular dynamics simulations identify the origin of this long sought-after regime as a planar, torsion-free backbone conformation that is surprisingly resilient to side-chain disorder. Our results provide molecular-design guidelines for 'disorder-free' conjugated polymers.We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) through a programme grant (EP/G060738/1) and the Technology Strategy Board (TSB) (PORSCHED project). D. Venkateshvaran acknowledges financial support from the Cambridge Commonwealth Trust through a Cambridge International Scholarship. K. Broch acknowledges post-doctoral fellowship support from the German Research Foundation (DFG). Mateusz Zelazny acknowledges funding from the NanoDTC in Cambridge. The work in Mons was supported by the European Commission / Région Wallonne (FEDER – Smartfilm RF project), the Interuniversity Attraction Pole program of the Belgian Federal Science Policy Office (PAI 7/05), Programme d’Excellence de la Région Wallonne (OPTI2MAT project) and FNRS-FRFC. D.B. and J.C. are FNRS Research Fellows.This is the accepted manuscript. The final version's available from Nature at http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature13854.html
Reduction of Cross-Reactive Carbohydrate Determinants in Plant Foodstuff: Elucidation of Clinical Relevance and Implications for Allergy Diagnosis
Background: A longstanding debate in allergy is whether or not specific immunoglobulin-E antibodies (sIgE), recognizing cross-reactive carbohydrate determinants (CCD), are able to elicit clinical symptoms. In pollen and food allergy, $20% of patients display in-vitro CCD reactivity based on presence of a1,3-fucose and/or b1,2-xylose residues on N-glycans of plant (xylose/fucose) and insect (fucose) glycoproteins. Because the allergenicity of tomato glycoallergen Lyc e 2 was ascribed to N-glycan chains alone, this study aimed at evaluating clinical relevance of CCD-reduced foodstuff in patients with carbohydrate-specific IgE (CCD-sIgE).
Methodology/Principal Findings: Tomato and/or potato plants with stable reduction of Lyc e 2 (tomato) or CCD formation in general were obtained via RNA interference, and gene-silencing was confirmed by immunoblot analyses. Two different CCD-positive patient groups were compared: one with tomato and/or potato food allergy and another with hymenopteravenom allergy (the latter to distinguish between CCD- and peptide-specific reactions in the food-allergic group). Nonallergic and CCD-negative food-allergic patients served as controls for immunoblot, basophil activation, and ImmunoCAP analyses. Basophil activation tests (BAT) revealed that Lyc e 2 is no key player among other tomato (glyco)allergens. CCDpositive patients showed decreased (re)activity with CCD-reduced foodstuff, most obvious in the hymenoptera venomallergic but less in the food-allergic group, suggesting that in-vivo reactivity is primarily based on peptide- and not CCDsIgE. Peptide epitopes remained unaffected in CCD-reduced plants, because CCD-negative patient sera showed reactivity similar to wild-type. In-house-made ImmunoCAPs, applied to investigate feasibility in routine diagnosis, confirmed BAT results at the sIgE level.
Conclusions/Significance: CCD-positive hymenoptera venom-allergic patients (control group) showed basophil activation despite no allergic symptoms towards tomato and potato. Therefore, this proof-of-principle study demonstrates feasibility of CCD-reduced foodstuff to minimize ‘false-positive results’ in routine serum tests. Despite confirming low clinical relevance of CCD antibodies, we identified one patient with ambiguous in-vitro results, indicating need for further component-resolved diagnosis
Unravelling the role of the interface for spin injection into organic semiconductors
Whereas spintronics brings the spin degree of freedom to electronic devices,
molecular/organic electronics adds the opportunity to play with the chemical
versatility. Here we show how, as a contender to commonly used inorganic
materials, organic/molecular based spintronics devices can exhibit very large
magnetoresistance and lead to tailored spin polarizations. We report on giant
tunnel magnetoresistance of up to 300% in a (La,Sr)MnO3/Alq3/Co nanometer size
magnetic tunnel junction. Moreover, we propose a spin dependent transport model
giving a new understanding of spin injection into organic materials/molecules.
Our findings bring a new insight on how one could tune spin injection by
molecular engineering and paves the way to chemical tailoring of the properties
of spintronics devices.Comment: Original version. Revised version to appear in Nature Physics
- …