1,677 research outputs found
A new species of Prosorhynchoides (Trematoda, Bucephalidae) from the intertidal rocky zone of central Chile
A new bucephalid species, Prosorhynchoides carvajali sp. nov. is described. This parasite was found in three marine fish, Auchenionchus microcirrhis (type-host), A. variolosus and Sicyases sanguineus (other-hosts), collected from the intertidal rocky zones of central Chile. P. carvajali sp. nov. is characterized by a pharynx in a post-equatorial position, a large cirrus sac length (half of the total worm length) and rounded caecum extending dorsally and anteriorly from pharynx. Although Prosorhynchoides carvajali sp. nov. closely resembles P. labiata; the latter has an elongated, narrow and inverted-U-shape caecum, contrasting to P. carvajali sp. nov. which has a larger rounded caecum, directed anteriorly. To our knowledge this is the first known report of Prosorhynchoides on the South American Pacific coast
On the naturality of the Mathai-Quillen formula
We give an alternative proof for the Mathai-Quillen formula for a Thom form
using its natural behaviour with respect to fiberwise integration. We also
study this phenomenon in general context.Comment: 6 page
Multilocus phylogenetic analyses reveal that habitat selection drives the speciation of Didymozoidae (Digenea) parasitizing Pacific and Atlantic bluefin tunas
Parasite communities of wild and reared bluefin tuna display remarkable diversity. Among these, the most prevalent and abundant are the Didymozoidae (Monticelli, 1888) (Trematoda, Digenea), considered one of the most taxonomically complex digenean families. The aim of this study was to evaluate phylogenetic structure of Didymozoidae occurring in Pacific (Thunnus orientalis) and Atlantic bluefin tuna (T. thynnus) in order to increase our knowledge of didymozoid zoogeography and identify species that could successfully be employed as biological tags for stock assessment studies. For the present analyses we used 2 nuclear ribosomal DNA loci, part of the 28S gene and the second internal transcribed spacer (ITS-2) as well as a portion of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 gene (cox1). In most parasitic groups, morphology is the primary factor in the structuring of phylogenetic relationships. In rare examples, however, habitat has been suggested as a primary factor affecting parasite evolution. During their evolution, didymozoids have spread and inhabited a remarkable number of different sites in their hosts, colonizing exterior as well as strictly interior niches. Our data suggest that habitat selection has been the leading force in shaping didymozoid phylogenetic relationships. For 2 didymozoid species (D. wedli and D. palati), cox1 sequences indicate intraspecific differences between Mexican and Adriatic populations
A New Symmetry for QED
We demonstrate that QED exhibits a previously unobserved symmetry. Some
consequences are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, MZ-TH/93-02, DIAS-STP-93-0
Exact ground states of a staggered supersymmetric model for lattice fermions
We study a supersymmetric model for strongly interacting lattice fermions in
the presence of a staggering parameter. The staggering is introduced as a
tunable parameter in the manifestly supersymmetric Hamiltonian. We obtain
analytic expressions for the ground states in the limit of small and large
staggering for the model on the class of doubly decorated lattices. On this
type of lattice there are two ground states, each with a different density. In
one limit we find these ground states to be a simple Wigner crystal and a
valence bond solid (VBS) state. In the other limit we find two types of quantum
liquids. As a special case, we investigate the quantum liquid state on the one
dimensional chain in detail. It is characterized by a massless kink that
separates two types of order.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, v2: largely rewritten version with more emphasis
on physical interpretatio
Chern-Simons Theory on S^1-Bundles: Abelianisation and q-deformed Yang-Mills Theory
We study Chern-Simons theory on 3-manifolds that are circle-bundles over
2-dimensional surfaces and show that the method of Abelianisation,
previously employed for trivial bundles , can be adapted to
this case. This reduces the non-Abelian theory on to a 2-dimensional
Abelian theory on which we identify with q-deformed Yang-Mills theory,
as anticipated by Vafa et al. We compare and contrast our results with those
obtained by Beasley and Witten using the method of non-Abelian localisation,
and determine the surgery and framing presecription implicit in this path
integral evaluation. We also comment on the extension of these methods to BF
theory and other generalisations.Comment: 37 pages; v2: references adde
Torsion cycles as non-local magnetic sources in non-orientable spaces
Non-orientable spaces can appear to carry net magnetic charge, even in the
absence of magnetic sources. It is shown that this effect can be understood as
a physical manifestation of the existence of torsion cycles of codimension one
in the homology of space.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Geometric quantization of Hamiltonian actions of Lie algebroids and Lie groupoids
We construct Hermitian representations of Lie algebroids and associated
unitary representations of Lie groupoids by a geometric quantization procedure.
For this purpose we introduce a new notion of Hamiltonian Lie algebroid
actions. The first step of our procedure consists of the construction of a
prequantization line bundle. Next, we discuss a version of K\"{a}hler
quantization suitable for this setting. We proceed by defining a
Marsden-Weinstein quotient for our setting and prove a ``quantization commutes
with reduction'' theorem. We explain how our geometric quantization procedure
relates to a possible orbit method for Lie groupoids. Our theory encompasses
the geometric quantization of symplectic manifolds, Hamiltonian Lie algebra
actions, actions of families of Lie groups, foliations, as well as some general
constructions from differential geometry.Comment: 40 pages, corrected version 11-01-200
Two new species of Prosorhynchoides (Digenea: Bucephalidae) from Tylosurus crocodilus (Belonidae) from the great barrier reef and French Polynesia
We surveyed 14 individuals of Tylosurus crocodilus Péron & Lesueur 1821 (Belonidae) collected from the waters around Lizard Island and Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Australia, and the waters around Moorea, French Polynesia. We describe two new species of bucephaline trematodes from them, Prosorhynchoides galaktionovi n. sp. and P. kohnae n. sp. They are morphologically distinct from existing Prosorhynchoides spp., with molecular data from 28S and ITS-2 ribosomal DNA, as well as cox1 mitochondrial DNA, further supporting our morphological findings. Neither species has been observed in other belonid fishes. The new species fall into the clade of species of Prosorhynchoides from belonids previously identified in Australian waters. These findings strengthen the observation that groups of bucephaline species have radiated, at least in part, in tight association with host taxa. There are now five species of Prosorhynchoides known from two belonid species in Australian waters. We, therefore, predict further richness in the nine other belonid species present
Exploring trends and challenges in sociological research
This is the first e-special issue for the journal Sociology and its chosen focus is the article ‘The coming crisis of empirical sociology’ by Savage and Burrows (2007). This article challenged sociologists with a variety of questions about the role, relevance and methodological opportunities for sociological research in the 21st century. On publication it stoked the already charged debates on a public sociology (Burawoy, 2004), the role of publicly funded research (ESRC, 2009) and relevance of sociological research in an age of burgeoning social media (Brewer and Hunter, 2006). This e-special provides a reprise of these debates and explores relevant papers in Sociology, as well as alerting readers to recurring themes and new directions on the topic of methods and social research
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