16 research outputs found
Inspection time and cognitive abilities in twins aged 7 to 17 years: age-related changes, heritability and genetic covariance
We studied the age-related differences in inspection time and multiple cognitive domains in a group of monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins aged 7 to 17 years. Data from 111 twin pairs and 19 singleton siblings were included. We found clear age-related trends towards more efficient visual information processing in older participants. There were substantial correlations between inspection time and cognitive abilities. The heritability of inspection time was 45%, and ranged from 73% to 85% for cognitive abilities. There were significant non-shared environmental effects on inspection time and Wechsler IQ scores, but no shared environmental effects. The genetic correlation between inspection time and Performance IQ was 0.55 and with Verbal IQ it was 0.28. There was a significant non-shared environmental correlation of 0.24 between inspection time and Verbal IQ. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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Beneficial effects of multi-species mixtures on N2O emissions from intensively managed grassland swards
In a field experiment, annual nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions and grassland yield were measured across different plant communities, comprising systematically varying combinations of monocultures and mixtures of three functional groups (FG): grasses (Lolium perenne, Phleum pratense), legumes (Trifolium pratense, Trifolium repens) and herbs (Cichorium intybus, Plantago lanceolata). Plots received 150 kg ha−1 year−1 nitrogen (N) (150 N), except L. perenne monocultures which received two N levels: 150 N and 300 N. The effect of plant diversity on N2O emissions was derived from linear combinations of species performances' in monoculture (species identity) and not from strong interactions between species in mixtures. Increasing from 150 N to 300 N in L. perenne resulted in a highly significant increase in cumulative N2O emissions from 1.39 to 3.18 kg N2O-N ha−1 year−1. Higher N2O emissions were also associated with the legume FG. Emissions intensities (yield-scaled N2O emissions) from multi-species mixture communities around the equi-proportional mixture were lowered due to interactions among species. For N2O emissions scaled by nitrogen yield in forage, the 6-species mixture was significantly lower than L. perenne at both 300 N and 150 N. In comparison to 300 N L. perenne, the same N yield or DM yield could have been produced with the equi-proportional 6-species mixture (150 N) while reducing N2O losses by 63% and 58% respectively. Compared to 150 N L. perenne, the same N yield or DM yield could have been produced with the 6-species mixture while reducing N2O losses by 41% and 24% respectively. Overall, this study found that multi-species grasslands can potentially reduce both N2O emissions and emissions intensities, contributing to the sustainability of grassland production