2,212 research outputs found
Desirable Host Plant Qualities in Wild Rice \u3ci\u3e(Zizania Palustris)\u3c/i\u3e for Infestation by the Rice Worm \u3ci\u3eApamea Apamiformis\u3c/i\u3e (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
The rate at which an insect infests hosts by ovipositioning and/or subsequent growth of larvae often depends on specific desirable host plant qualities. In this study, we measured the infestation rate of wild rice, Zizania palustris, by the wild rice worm, Apamea apamiformis, D. F. Hardwick (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) and compared it to sediment nitrogen availability, plant biomass, plant density, litter accumulation, and seed carbohydrate and nitrogen concentration. Plant density and litter accumulation had no effect on infestation rates. Infestation rate increased with plant biomass and sediment nitrogen availability. The correlation between infestation rate and sediment nitrogen availability seems to reflect the fact that high nitrogen availability produces larger plants rather than more nutritious seeds as the infestation rate was not correlated with seed glucose content and surprisingly decreased with concentration of nitrogen in seeds. Infestation rate was not related to any other measured quantities. Therefore, Apamea appear to infest larger, rapidly growing host plants which are made possible by high sediment nitrogen availability
Desirable Host Plant Qualities in Wild Rice \u3ci\u3e(Zizania Palustris)\u3c/i\u3e for Infestation by the Rice Worm \u3ci\u3eApamea Apamiformis\u3c/i\u3e (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
The rate at which an insect infests hosts by ovipositioning and/or subsequent growth of larvae often depends on specific desirable host plant qualities. In this study, we measured the infestation rate of wild rice, Zizania palustris, by the wild rice worm, Apamea apamiformis, D. F. Hardwick (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) and compared it to sediment nitrogen availability, plant biomass, plant density, litter accumulation, and seed carbohydrate and nitrogen concentration. Plant density and litter accumulation had no effect on infestation rates. Infestation rate increased with plant biomass and sediment nitrogen availability. The correlation between infestation rate and sediment nitrogen availability seems to reflect the fact that high nitrogen availability produces larger plants rather than more nutritious seeds as the infestation rate was not correlated with seed glucose content and surprisingly decreased with concentration of nitrogen in seeds. Infestation rate was not related to any other measured quantities. Therefore, Apamea appear to infest larger, rapidly growing host plants which are made possible by high sediment nitrogen availability
Weighted maximal regularity estimates and solvability of non-smooth elliptic systems II
We continue the development, by reduction to a first order system for the
conormal gradient, of \textit{a priori} estimates and solvability for
boundary value problems of Dirichlet, regularity, Neumann type for divergence
form second order, complex, elliptic systems. We work here on the unit ball and
more generally its bi-Lipschitz images, assuming a Carleson condition as
introduced by Dahlberg which measures the discrepancy of the coefficients to
their boundary trace near the boundary. We sharpen our estimates by proving a
general result concerning \textit{a priori} almost everywhere non-tangential
convergence at the boundary. Also, compactness of the boundary yields more
solvability results using Fredholm theory. Comparison between classes of
solutions and uniqueness issues are discussed. As a consequence, we are able to
solve a long standing regularity problem for real equations, which may not be
true on the upper half-space, justifying \textit{a posteriori} a separate work
on bounded domains.Comment: 76 pages, new abstract and few typos corrected. The second author has
changed nam
Performance, Politics and Media: How the 2010 British General Election leadership debates generated âtalkâ amongst the electorate.
During the British General Election 2010 a major innovation was introduced in part to improve engagement: a series of three live televised leadership debates took place where the leader of each of the three main parties, Labour, Liberal Democrat and Conservative, answered questions posed by members of the public and subsequently debated issues pertinent to the questions. In this study we consider these potentially ground breaking debates as the kind of event that was likely to generate discussion. We investigate various aspects of the âtalkâ that emerged as a result of watching the debates. As an exploratory study concerned with situated accounts of the participants experiences we take an interpretive perspective. In this paper we outline the meta-narratives (of talk) associated with the viewing of the leadership debates that were identified, concluding our analysis by suggesting that putting a live debate on television and promoting and positioning it as a major innovation is likely to mean that is how the audience will make sense of it â as a media event
Resolvent Estimates in L^p for the Stokes Operator in Lipschitz Domains
We establish the resolvent estimates for the Stokes operator in
Lipschitz domains in , for . The result, in particular, implies that the Stokes operator in a
three-dimensional Lipschitz domain generates a bounded analytic semigroup in
for (3/2)-\varep < p< 3+\epsilon. This gives an affirmative answer to a
conjecture of M. Taylor.Comment: 28 page. Minor revision was made regarding the definition of the
Stokes operator in Lipschitz domain
Null sets of harmonic measure on NTA domains: Lipschitz approximation revisited
We show the David-Jerison construction of big pieces of Lipschitz graphs
inside a corkscrew domain does not require its surface measure be upper Ahlfors
regular. Thus we can study absolute continuity of harmonic measure and surface
measure on NTA domains of locally finite perimeter using Lipschitz
approximations. A partial analogue of the F. and M. Riesz Theorem for simply
connected planar domains is obtained for NTA domains in space. As a consequence
every Wolff snowflake has infinite surface measure.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
MAC OS X Forensics: Password Discovery
OS X provides a password-rich environment in which passwords protect OS X resources and perhaps many other resources accessed through OS X. Every password an investigator discovers in an OS X environment has the potential for use in discovering other such passwords, and any discovered passwords may also be useful in other aspects of an investigation, not directly related to the OS X environment. This research advises the use of multiple attack vectors in approaching the password problem in an OS X system, including the more generally applicable non-OS X-specific techniques such as social engineering or well-known password cracking techniques such as John the Ripper or other versions of dictionary attacks and Rainbow table attacks. In some successful approaches the components of the attack vector will use more OS X specific techniques such as those described here: application-provided password revealing functions, a Javascript attack, an âEvil Websiteâ attack, system file scavenging, exploitation of the keychain, and an OS X install disk attack.
Keywords: OS X, password, password discovery, social engineering, sleepimage, keychai
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Fungal community assembly in drought-stressed sorghum shows stochasticity, selection, and universal ecological dynamics.
Community assembly of crop-associated fungi is thought to be strongly influenced by deterministic selection exerted by the plant host, rather than stochastic processes. Here we use a simple, sorghum system with abundant sampling to show that stochastic forces (drift or stochastic dispersal) act on fungal community assembly in leaves and roots early in host development and when sorghum is drought stressed, conditions when mycobiomes are small. Unexpectedly, we find no signal for stochasticity when drought stress is relieved, likely due to renewed selection by the host. In our experimental system, the host compartment exerts the strongest effects on mycobiome assembly, followed by the timing of plant development and lastly by plant genotype. Using a dissimilarity-overlap approach, we find a universality in the forces of community assembly of the mycobiomes of the different sorghum compartments and in functional guilds of fungi
World report on violence and health
This report examines the types of violence that are present worldwide, in the everyday lives of people, and
that constitute the bulk of the health burden imposed by violence. Accordingly, the information has been
arranged in nine chapters, covering the following topics:
1. Violence â a global public health problem
2. Youth violence
3. Child abuse and neglect by parents and other caregivers
4. Violence by intimate partners 5. Abuse of the elderly
6. Sexual violence
7. Self-directed violence
8. Collective violence
9. The way forward: recommendations for action;
Because it is impossible to cover all types of violence fully and adequately in a single document, each
chapter has a specific focus. For example, the chapter on youth violence examines interpersonal violence
among adolescents and young adults in the community. The chapter on child abuse discusses physical,
sexual and psychological abuse, as well as neglect by parents and other caregivers; other forms of
maltreatment of children, such as child prostitution and the use of children as soldiers, are covered in other
parts of the report. The chapter on abuse of the elderly focuses on abuse by caregivers in domestic and
institutional settings, while that on collective violence discusses violent conflict. The chapters on intimate
partner violence and sexual violence focus primarily on violence against women, though some discussion of
violence directed at men and boys is included in the chapter on sexual violence. The chapter on self-directed
violence focuses primarily on suicidal behaviour. The chapter is included in the report because suicidal
behaviour is one of the external causes of injury and is often the product of many of the same underlying
social, psychological and environmental factors as other types of violence.
The chapters follow a similar structure. Each begins with a brief discussion of definitions for the specific
type of violence covered in the chapter, followed by a summary of current knowledge about the extent of the
problem in different regions of the world. Where possible, country-level data are presented, as well as
findings from a range of research studies. The chapters then describe the causes and consequences of
violence, provide summaries of the interventions and policy responses that have been tried, and make
recommendations for future research and action. Tables, figures and boxes are included to highlight specific
epidemiological patterns and findings, illustrate examples of prevention activities, and draw attention to
specific issues.
The report concludes with two additional sections: a statistical annex and a list of Internet resources. The
statistical annex contains global, regional and country data derived from the WHO mortality and morbidity
database and from Version 1 of the WHO Global Burden of Disease project for 2000. A description of data
sources and methods is provided in the annex to explain how these data were collected and analysed.
The list of Internet resources includes web site addresses for organizations involved in violence research,
prevention and advocacy. The list includes metasites (each site offers access to hundreds of organizations
involved in violence research, prevention and advocacy), web sites that focus on specific types of violence,
web sites that address broader contextual issues related to violence, and web sites that offer surveillance tools
for improving the understanding of violence
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