2,975 research outputs found
Analytical designs of a space-borne magnetically-focused klystron amplifier Final report
Design analysis for magnetically focused klystron of satellite television transmission syste
SPATIAL COMPARISONS OF POPULATIONS OF AN INDIGENOUS LIMPET SCUTELLASTRA ARGENVILLEI AND AN ALIEN MUSSEL MYTILUS GALLOPROVINCIALIS ALONG A GRADIENT OF WAVE ENERGY
In the 1970s, the Mediterranean mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis invaded the South African coast and spread rapidly to dominate much of the West Coast, indicating either the opportunity to occupy a vacant niche or its superior competitive capability over indigenous species. In Namaqualand on the West Coast it appears to compete with a large indigenous limpet, Scutellastra argenvillei, which is capable of forming dense, almost monospecific stands low on the shore. A survey on the Namaqualand coast indicated that the abundance of M. galloprovincialis changes with wave exposure. At wave-exposed locations, the mussel covered up to 90% of the primary substratum, whereas in semi-exposed situations it was never abundant. As the cover of M. galloprovincialis increased, the abundance and size of S. argenvillei on rock declined and it became confined to patches within a matrix of mussel bed. Both species were absent from sheltered shores and diminished where wave action was extreme. Comparisons with previous surveys indicated that exposed sites now largely covered by the alien mussel were once dominated by dense populations of the limpet. Therefore, the results of this survey provide circumstantial correlative evidence of a competitive interaction between M. galloprovincialis and S. argenvillei, and suggest that wave action mediates the strength of this interaction. The presence of mussel beds provides a novel settlement and living substratum for recruits and juveniles of S. argenvillei, albeit at much lower densities than in limpet patches. Adult limpets were virtually excluded from the mussel beds owing to their large size, which indicates the unsuitability of this habitat as a replacement substratum after competitive exclusion from primary rock space.Afr. J. mar. Sci. 25: 195–21
TEMPORAL CHANGES IN AN INTERACTION BETWEEN AN INDIGENOUS LIMPET SCUTELLASTRA ARGENVILLEI AND AN ALIEN MUSSEL MYTILUS GALLOPROVINCIALIS: EFFECTS OF WAVE EXPOSURE
A previous survey of 15 sites off the Namaqualand coast on the west coast of South Africa provided evidence of a competitive interaction between an alien mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis and an indigenous limpet Scutellastra argenvillei, and indicated that wave action mediates the strength of this interaction. In this study, the temporal persistence of these patterns was tested by selecting six sites, ranging from sheltered to very exposed, and monitoring them over a two-year period. The patterns remained consistent over time. Both S. argenvillei and M. galloprovincialis were perpetually absent from the most sheltered site. The limpet consistently dominated rock space at the semi-exposed site where mussel cover was always low. At exposed sites, M. galloprovincialis was dominant but its percentage cover varied temporally as a result of wave action, creating free space and allowing temporary expansion of limpet patches. However, with time the mussel recolonized the cleared rock space and repeatedly displaced the limpet from it. This provides additional observational evidence of competition for space between the alien invader and the indigenous limpet. It is concluded that S. argenvillei has a spatial refuge from M. galloprovincialis in areas with moderate wave action. However, the limpet is likely to become locally extinct on exposed shores because mussels outcompete it there and rapidly recolonize patches from which they have been temporarily eliminated by wave action.Afr. J. mar. Sci. 25: 213–22
LONGSHORE MOVEMENTS OF ADULT MALE JASUS LALANDII: EVIDENCE FROM LONG-TERM TAG RECAPTURES
Large-scale longshore movements (>10 km) of adult male Jasus lalandii (>70 mm carapace length) were examined on the west coast of South Africa using tag-recapture information from the period 1968 to 2000. The average rate of recovery of tagged rock lobsters was 15.7% per fishing season. Only 0.48% of 43 885 recaptured rock lobsters moved >10 km, 0.31% southwards and 0.17% northwards. The mean distance moved by those lobsters was 28.6 km and the mean time at liberty was 241.8 days. In recent years, densities of J.lalandii have increased substantially at the south-eastern end of their geographic range. The data indicate that this could not be attributable to a population migration of adult male rock lobsters from the west coast of South Africa. Afr. J. mar. Sci. 25: 387-39
The recoverability of fingerprints on paper exposed to elevated temperatures - Part 2: natural fluorescence
Previous work by the authors [1] investigated the recoverability of fingerprints on paper which had been exposed to elevated temperatures by comparing various chemical enhancement techniques (ninhydrin, 1,8-diazafluoren-9-one (DFO), and physical developer (PD)). During that study, it became apparent, as a consequence of observations made in operational work [2], that fingerprints on paper subjected to 150ËšC fluoresced under examination with green light of waveband 473-548nm with a 549nm viewing filter. This work examined the three types of prints (eccrine, sebaceous, and ungroomed) after 20 min exposure to the temperature range 110ËšC to 190ËšC (in 10ËšC increments) and found that the eccrine fingerprints fluoresced more brightly. This indicated that it was a component of the eccrine deposit which was causing the fluorescence. Luminance measurements found that the maximum fluorescence was experienced at 170ËšC on both types of paper. As a consequence, eccrine heat-treated fingerprints were viewed under violet-blue (350-469nm), blue (352-509nm), and green light (473-548nm) which indicated that the greatest luminance intensities were obtained under blue light and the smallest under green light. In order to determine what component of the eccrine fingerprint was causing this fluorescence, five of the most prevalent amino acids (alanine, aspartic acid, glycine, lysine, and serine) [3-4] were exposed to this temperature range. The luminance measurements were taken under exposure to the green light in order for the minimum fluorescence to be observed, with an assumption that blue-violet or blue illumination will provide brighter fluorescence in practice. The results indicated that four of the amino acids are behaving similarly across the temperature range, but with slightly different luminance measurements, but all are exhibiting some level of fluorescence. Thermal degradation products of alanine and aspartic acid have been suggested by Richmond-Aylor et al. [5]. The structure of these thermal degradation products is cyclic in nature, and as such, there is a possibility that two of these products would fluorescence. Sodium chloride and urea were also exposed to the temperature range and they also fluoresced to some extent. This work shows that eccrine fingerprints that have been exposed to temperatures of between 130ËšC to 180ËšC will fluoresce under violet-blue, blue, and green light. This level of fluorescence for ungroomed fingerprints is much less but this will be dependent on the individual, the more eccrine the deposit, the stronger the fluorescence. This work shows that the amino acids, sodium chloride, and urea present in fingerprint deposits are all contributing to the fluorescence of the print, but may not be the sole contributor as other eccrine components have not yet been tested
AQUARIUM EXPERIMENTS COMPARING THE FEEDING BEHAVIOUR OF ROCK LOBSTER JASUS LALANDII ON ABALONE AND SEA URCHINS AT TWO SITES ON THE WEST COAST OF SOUTH AFRICA
Predation by the rock lobster Jasus lalandii is influential in regulating the composition of shallow-reef communities on the west coast of South Africa. Two previous and independent studies addressing this topic, but conducted 600 km apart (one in Cape Town and the other in Port Nolloth on the west coast of South Africa) and using different experimental protocols, revealed contradictory results regarding the feeding behaviour of J. lalandii. The Port Nolloth study showed that juvenile abalone Haliotis midae hiding under sea urchins Parechinus angulosus were safe from predation by rock lobsters, which seemed to prefer the sea urchins as food. However, the Cape Town study showed that rock lobsters preferentially selected juvenile abalone over sea urchins. Because of the importance of these results to abalone ranching and the South African abalone fishery, the experiments were repeated at the two study sites, using a standardized experimental protocol. Rock lobsters from both sites showed a strong preference for juvenile abalone over sea urchins, even in the presence of kelp Ecklonia maxima. There was no significant difference (F3.92 = 0.09, p > 0.1) in abalone consumption by rock lobsters between the two sites. Therefore, at least in the absence of preferred prey such as mussels, sea urchins appear to provide only limited protection to juvenile abalone from rock lobsters.Afr. J. mar. Sci. 25: 377–38
The Probable Detection of SN 1923A: The Oldest Radio Supernova?
Based upon the results of VLA observations, we report the detection of two
unresolved radio sources that are coincident with the reported optical position
of SN 1923A in M83. For the source closest to the SN position, the flux density
was determined to be 0.30 +/- 0.05 mJy at 20 cm and 0.093 +/- 0.028 mJy at 6
cm. The flux density of the second nearby source was determined to be 0.29 +/-
0.05 at 20 cm and 0.13 +/- 0.028 at 6 cm. Both sources are non-thermal with
spectral indices of alpha = -1.0 +/- 0.30 and -0.69 +/- 0.24, respectively. SN
1923A has been designated as a Type II-P. No Type II-P (other than SN 1987A)
has been detected previously in the radio. The radio emission from both sources
appears to be fading with time. At an age of approximately 68 years when we
observed it, this would be the oldest radio supernova (of known age) yet
detected
Structure of Africa\u27s Southernmost Coral Communities
The structure of Africa\u27s southernmost coral communities, which grow on submerged fossil dune and beachrock systems and do not form true coral reefs, was quantitatively investigated by means of line transects and phototransects. None of the typical geomorphological reef-zones such as lagoons, reef crests or reef slopes were developed. A uniform community structure, differentiated only into two major community-types with three subcommunities, was found, Shallow reefs were dominated by alcyonaceans and differed from scleractinian dominated deep reefs. A high proportion of alcyonaceans was found in shallow communities (40–60%). Subcommunities, which were found on most reefs, were an alcyonacean dominated reef-top community in areas of low sedimentation, dominated by the genera Sinularia and Lobophytum, and a scleractinian dominated gully community (predominantly Montipora and Faviidae), in areas of high sedimentation. A deep sponge-dominated subcommunity existed on the deepest outcrops. The lower limit for most coral growth was between 35 and 40 m
Ignition and Combustion Characteristics of Pure Bulk Metals: Normal-Gravity Test Results
An experimental apparatus has been designed for the study of bulk metal ignition under elevated, normal and reduced gravity environments. The present work describes the technical characteristics of the system, the analytical techniques employed, the results obtained from the ignition of a variety of metals subjected to normal gravity conditions and the first results obtained from experiments under elevated gravity. A 1000 W xenon short-arc lamp is used to irradiate the top surface of a cylindrical metal specimen 4 mm in diameter and 4 mm high in a quiescent pure-oxygen environment at 0.1 MPa. Iron, titanium, zirconium, magnesium, zinc, tin, and copper specimens are investigated. All these metals exhibit ignition and combustion behavior varying in strength and speed. Values of ignition temperatures below, above or in the range of the metal melting point are obtained from the temperature records. The emission spectra from the magnesium-oxygen gas-phase reaction reveals the dynamic evolution of the ignition event. Scanning electron microscope and x-ray spectroscopic analysis provide the sequence of oxide formation on the burning of copper samples. Preliminary results on the effect of higher-than-normal gravity levels on the ignition of titanium specimens is presented
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