14,034 research outputs found
The effect of prolonged cold storage of eland (Taurotragus oryx) cauda epididymides on the spermatozoa: possible implications for the conservation of biodiversity
The objectives of this study were to investigate the effects of prolonged storage of cauda epididymides at 4 °C on spermatozoa, and to determine the practicality of utilising epididymal sperm, harvested from testes collected during routine culling of game animals, in assisted reproductive technologies. Testes from eland (Taurotragus oryx) were collected and epididymides removed and maintained at 4 °C. Sperm motility, viability, morphology and membrane integrity were examined at 12 h intervals for 108 h. Sperm motility and viability were significantly lower at the end of the experiment than at the start (P < 0.05) and there was individual variation in the rate at which motility and viability declined. The total number of normal sperm decreased significantly with prolonged storage at 4 °C. Midpiece defects were the most common and head and tail abnormalities were rare. A significant decrease in acrosomal and nuclear membrane integrity was observed with prolonged cold storage but there was no significant change in cell membrane integrity. However, about 30% of epididymal sperm survived for 3 days at 4 °C and more than 10% survived for 4 days, and it should be possible to use sperm from culled animals in some assisted reproductive technologies
Threshold Photo/Electro Pion Production - Working Group Summary
We summarize the pertinent experimental and theoretical developments in the
field of pion photo- and electroproduction in the threshold region. We discuss
which experiments and which calculations should be done/performed in the
future.Comment: plain TeX (macro included), 6pp, summary talk presented at the
workshop on "Chiral Dynamics: Theory and Experiments", MIT, July 25-29, 199
Lessons from aloes in the Thicket Biome: reconstructing past elephant browsing to understand the present
It is very difficult to quantify elephant-induced change to vegetation in the absence of adequate historical benchmarks. In this commentary, we explore the historical distribution of aloes in the Thicket Biome of South Africa. We contend that the large stands of aesthetically pleasing aloes in the Thicket Biome can be likened to the even-aged stands of tall trees in the riparian forests of Botswana, both being artefacts of the loss of large herbivores through disease and hunting in the past. Elephant browsing on aloes may therefore be the first step in the vegetation reverting to a situation similar to the one prior to excessive hunting in the region
The diet and ecological role of giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis) introduced to the Eastern Cape, South Africa
With an increase in the popularity of wildlife ranching in southern Africa has come the introduction of non-native (extralimital) mammalian herbivores. Financial gain has arguably been at the forefront of these introductions, with little or no assessment of the ecological consequences. The diet of three populations of introduced giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis was assessed by direct observation in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa between January 2002 and October 2003, as the first step towards understanding the ecological role played by giraffe in the region. Similar to the diet of giraffe within their native range, a deciduous species from the genus Acacia (Acacia karroo) was the most important species in the diet. Giraffe in the Eastern Cape Province, however, consumed more evergreen species than those within their native range. The relative lack of deciduous species in the Eastern Cape Province provides a probable explanation for such a result. Seasonal variation in the consumption of the most important species in the diet was evident with members of the genus Rhus being more important in the winter months. This was attributed to the deciduous nature of A. karroo. The potential for giraffe to have a detrimental effect on the indigenous vegetation is discussed. We conclude that the study provides a much-needed list of plant species threatened by giraffe browsing in a region where the vegetation is thought to have evolved in the absence of such a browser
The use of archaeological and ethnographical information to supplement the historical record of the distribution of large mammalian herbivores in South Africa
Introduction: The introduction of animal taxa to areas where they do not naturally occur has the potential to damage severely the native fauna and flora. Introductions, both accidental and intentional, to Australia, New Zealand, Marion Island and other oceanic islands provide spectacular examples of this.1,2 Non-native mammalian herbivores often become invasive in the absence of their natural predators2 and their impact on vegetation, which may include alterations to plant species composition, structure and diversity, is exaggerated, especially if the vegetation has evolved in the absence of similar herbivores.3,4 This influence is not limited to the direct consequence for the vegetation and there may be a cascade effect on ecosystem functioning through, for example, a decline in the amount of available forage for indigenous herbivores,3 a reduction in the breeding efficiency of birds that rely on the vegetation,5,6 and a negative effect on carbon storage by transforming stands of dense vegetative cover to open savannah like systems.7 Nor are these outcomes restricted to non-native herbivores; the re-introduction of a species, such as the elephant (Loxodonta africana), to areas from which it has been absent for many years may have similar consequences.8–11 Additional problems associated with the uncontrolled movement of large mammals include the transmission of disease, such as brucellosis in the United States,3 and a threat to the genetic integrity of a species through hybridization.12 It is thus clear that deliberate introductions of herbivores to areas where they do not naturally occur may not be sound conservation practice
Testing improved actions for dynamical Kogut-Susskind quarks
We extend tests of "Naik" and "fat link" improvements of the Kogut-Susskind
quark action to full QCD simulations, and verify that the improvements
previously demonstrated in the quenched approximation apply also to dynamical
quark simulations. We extend the study of flavor symmetry improvement to the
complete set of pions, and find that the nonlocal pions are significantly
heavier than the local non-Goldstone pion. These results can be used to
estimate the lattice spacing necessary for realistic simulations with this
action.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, PostScript figures include
Radiative pion capture by a nucleon
The differential cross sections for and are computed up to in heavy baryon chiral perturbation
theory (HBChPT). The expressions at and have no free
parameters. There are three unknown parameters at , low energy
constants of the HBChPT Lagrangian, which are determined by fitting to
experimental data. Two acceptable fits are obtained, which can be separated by
comparing with earlier dispersion relation calculations of the inverse process.
Expressions for the multipoles, with emphasis on the p-wave multipoles, are
obtained and evaluated at threshold. Generally the results obtained from the
best of the two fits are in good agreement with the dispersion relation
predictions.Comment: 24 pages, Latex, using RevTe
Generalized polarizabilities and the chiral structure of the nucleon
We discuss the virtual Compton scattering reaction at
low energies. We present results for the generalized polarizabilities of the
nucleon obtained in heavy baryon chiral perturbation theory at .Comment: 5 pages, LaTex file, 1 postscript figure, uses ``espcrc1.sty'', talk
given by S. Scherer at the 15th International Conference on Few Body Problems
in Physics, Groningen, The Netherlands, 22-26 July 1997, to appear in the
proceedings (Nucl. Phys. A
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