1,933 research outputs found
A Farmer-Based Decision Support System for Managing Pasture Quality on Hill Country
Despite considerable effort to promote formal feed budgeting in New Zealand, survey data suggests it is only adopted by 20% of farmers (Nuthall & Bishop-Hurley, 1999). Recent work (Gray et al., 2003) has identified that farmers may use a different approach - micro-budgeting - to manage feed. Rather than operate at a whole farm level, micro-budgeting focuses at the paddock level. This paper describes micro-budgeting as used by a high performing hill country sheep and cattle farmer to manage pasture quality over spring and a decision support model developed to help other farmers undertake this proces
Diurnal variation in harbour porpoise detection – potential implications for management
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Modelling Urine Nitrogen Production and Leaching Losses for Pasture-Based Dairying Systems
Urine from dairy cattle grazing pastures with high crude protein (CP) concentrations is a major source of N lost in drainage water from New Zealand farms. This paper provides predictions of urinary N leaching losses for a range of stocking rates and levels of supplementation
Pulled apart, pushed together: diversity and unity within the Congress of South African Trade Unions
This is a study of horizontal and vertical solidarity within a national labour movement, based on a nationwide survey of members of affiliated unions of the Congress of South African Trade Unions. On the one hand, the survey reveals relatively high levels of vertical and horizontal solidarity, despite the persistence of some cleavages on gender and racial lines. On the other hand, the maintenance and deepening of existing horizontal and vertical linkages in a rapidly changing socio-economic context, represents one of many challenges facing organized labour in an industrializing economy. COSATU’s strength is contingent not only on an effective organizational capacity, and a supportive network linking key actors and interest groupings, but also on the ability to meet the concerns of existing constituencies and those assigned to highly marginalized categories of labour
Exchange Splitting and Charge Carrier Spin Polarization in EuO
High quality thin films of the ferromagnetic semiconductor EuO have been
prepared and were studied using a new form of spin-resolved spectroscopy. We
observed large changes in the electronic structure across the Curie and
metal-insulator transition temperature. We found that these are caused by the
exchange splitting of the conduction band in the ferromagnetic state, which is
as large as 0.6 eV. We also present strong evidence that the bottom of the
conduction band consists mainly of majority spins. This implies that doped
charge carriers in EuO are practically fully spin polarized.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Observation and theoretical description of the pure Fano-effect in the valence-band photo-emission of ferromagnets
The pure Fano-effect in angle-integrated valence-band photo-emission of
ferromagnets has been observed for the first time. A contribution of the
intrinsic spin polarization to the spin polarization of the photo-electrons has
been avoided by an appropriate choice of the experimental parameters. The
theoretical description of the resulting spectra reveals a complete analogy to
the Fano-effect observed before for paramagnetic transition metals. While the
theoretical photo-current and spin difference spectra are found in good
quantitative agreement with experiment in the case of Fe and Co only a
qualitative agreement could be achieved in the case of Ni by calculations on
the basis of plain local spin density approximation (LSDA). Agreement with
experimental data could be improved in this case in a very substantial way by a
treatment of correlation effects on the basis of dynamical mean field theory
(DMFT).Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures accepted by PR
Genetic structure of fragmented November moth (Lepidoptera: Geometridae) populations in farmland
Charge localization at the interface between La1-xSrxMnO3 and the infinite layers cuprate CaCuO2
(CaCuO2)m/(La0.7Sr0.3MnO3)n superlattices, consisting of the infinite layers
cuprate CaCuO2 and the optimally doped manganite La1-xSrxMnO3, were grown by
pulsed laser deposition. The transport properties are dominated by the
manganite block. X-Ray Absorption spectroscopy measurements show a clear
evidence of an orbital reconstruction at the interface, ascribed to the
hybridization between the Cu 3d3z2-r2 and the Mn 3d3z2-r2 orbitals via
interface apical oxygen ions. Such a mechanism localizes holes at the
interfaces, thus preventing charge transfer to the CaCuO2 block. Some charge
(holes) transfer occurs toward the La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 block in strongly oxidized
superlattices, contributing to the suppression of the magnetotransport
properties.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figure
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