1,085 research outputs found
Facilitating Private Forestland Management: Relating Landowners’ Experience of their Forestland and their Conceptualization of Forest Management to their Management Behavior
Privately owned forestland accounts for the majority of forested land in the US and provides numerous ecological, economic and social benefits to its owners and society at large. However, numerous issues ranging from fragmentation and parcelization, to pressure from the forest products industry, to increasing land values for development and real estate interests threaten to “unravel” the forest landscape. Active management of forestland is seen as one way to combat such threats. Active management of private forestland has been linked to numerous factors such as private forest landowners’ (PFLs’) general education level and familiarity with forest management, their goals, interests, objectives, attitudes, values, beliefs, and socio-cultural identity and the size and tenure of their ownership, among others. However, despite numerous efforts to understand private forest landowners (PFLs) and their interests, goals and objectives in owning private forestland, and to educate them about, and provide assistance for, private forest management, most privately owned forestland is not managed and most landowners remain unaware of the assistance and information available to them. In addition, the primarily quantitative studies investigating how these factors relate to private forestland management have been criticized for producing diminishing returns and insufficiently updating survey instruments. Using a mixed methods study design, including both quantitative and qualitative approaches, this study, conducted in the Emory-Obed watershed of East Tennessee, examined how the meaning of PFLs’ experience of their forestland and their conceptualization of forest management, two variables previously unaddressed in the literature, relate to PFL management behavior.
Based on their experiences with their land, PFLs were found to form strong personal attachments to their land. Both the strength and the nature of these attachments varied relative to the degree to which PFLs actively engaged in forest management practices. The experience of those who actively engage in forest management activities is focused on the land and its condition, while the experience of those who do not actively engage in forest management activities is focused on themselves and how the experience makes them feel. Private forestland was also experienced as place. When these ways of experiencing forestland were quantified, a set of five components characteristic of the experience of forestland were identified: emotional connection to forestland, connection to nature via forestland, connection to family via forestland, forestland provision of PFL personal and financial gain, and forestland provision of financial investment. The more actively engaged with private forest land management PFLs were, the more strongly they agreed that each of these components was both meaningful and important to them.
Landowners also varied in the ways in which they understood the forest management concept. Landowners simultaneously conceptualized forest management as property maintenance, as creating and enhancing forest habitat and as making money. As with the meaning of PFLs experience of their forestland, the more actively engaged in forest management activities PFLs were, the more strongly they agreed each of these components defined forest management. Lastly, the vast majority of PFLs participating in this study stated they believe they manage their forestland. This is in stark contrast to conclusions reported in the literature concerning the percentage of PFLs actually managing their forestland and is attributed in part to lack of standardization in the operationalization of forest management participation measures reported in the literature. Several implications of the findings for professional forestry practice, research, outreach and education are made based on recognizing the importance of the meaning of landowners’ experience of their forestland and their conceptualization of forest management to their interest in and engagement in forest management activities. For example, as the findings indicate PFLs may not see a relationship between the ways their forestland is meaningful to them and their understanding of what it means to manage their forestland, forest landowner educational opportunities and events capitalizing on the strong personal attachments PFLs feel to their land and utilizing language similar to their own ways of speaking about these attachments such as, “Getting to Know Your Woods”, “The Woods in Your Backyard: What’s There and Why You Should Care” and “Having Your Cake and Eating It Too: Enjoying and Profiting From Your Forestland” may prove more effective than traditional programs
Warping and F-term uplifting
We analyse the effective supergravity model of a warped compactification with
matter on D3 and D7-branes. We find that the main effect of the warp factor is
to modify the F-terms while leaving the D-terms invariant. Hence warped models
with moduli stabilisation and a small positive cosmological constant resulting
from a large warping can only be achieved with an almost vanishing D-term and a
F-term uplifting. By studying string-motivated examples with gaugino
condensation on magnetised D7-branes, we find that even with a vanishing
D-term, it is difficult to achieve a Minkowski minimum for reasonable parameter
choices. When coupled to an ISS sector the AdS vacua is uplifted, resulting in
a small gravitino mass for a warp factor of order 10^-5.Comment: 24 pages, v3: typos, minor clarifications adde
Long-Wavelength Instability in Surface-Tension-Driven Benard Convection
Laboratory studies reveal a deformational instability that leads to a drained
region (dry spot) in an initially flat liquid layer (with a free upper surface)
heated uniformly from below. This long-wavelength instability supplants
hexagonal convection cells as the primary instability in viscous liquid layers
that are sufficiently thin or are in microgravity. The instability occurs at a
temperature gradient 34% smaller than predicted by linear stability theory.
Numerical simulations show a drained region qualitatively similar to that seen
in the experiment.Comment: 4 pages. The RevTeX file has a macro allowing various styles. The
appropriate style is "mypprint" which is the defaul
Solid-state laser system for laser cooling of Sodium
We demonstrate a frequency-stabilized, all-solid laser source at 589 nm with
up to 800 mW output power. The laser relies on sum-frequency generation from
two laser sources at 1064 nm and 1319 nm through a PPKTP crystal in a
doubly-resonant cavity. We obtain conversion efficiency as high as 2 W/W^2
after optimization of the cavity parameters. The output wavelength is tunable
over 60 GHz, which is sufficient to lock on the Sodium D2 line. The robustness,
beam quality, spectral narrowness and tunability of our source make it an
alternative to dye lasers for atomic physics experiments with Sodium atoms
Can three-flavor oscillations solve the solar neutrino problem?
The most promising solution to the solar neutrino problem are neutrino
oscillations, which usually are analyzed within the reduced 2-flavor scheme,
because the solutions found therein reasonably well reproduce the recent data
of Super-Kamiokande about the recoil-electron energy spectrum, zenith-angle and
seasonal variations, and the event rate data of all the neutrino detectors. In
this work, however, a survey of the complete parameter space of 3-flavor
oscillations is performed. Basically eight new additional solutions could be
identified, where the best one with \Delta m(12)^2=2.7x10^(-10) eV^2, \Delta
m(13)^2=1.0x10^(-5) eV^2, \Theta(12)=23, and \Theta(13)=1.3 (denoted SVO) is
slightly more probable than any 2-flavor solution. However, including the
results of the atmospheric neutrino problem excludes all 3-flavour solutions
apart from the SLMA-solution (\Delta m(12)^2=7.9x10^(-6) eV^2, \Delta
m(13)^2=2.5x10^(-4) eV^2, \Theta(12)=1.4, and \Theta(13)=20). Besides, the
ability of SNO and Borexino to discriminate the various 2- and 3-flavor
solutions is investigated. Only with very good statistics in these experiments
the correct solution to the solar neutrino problem can be identified
unambiguously.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, REVTeX, submitted to Phys.Rev.D, article with
better resolved figures available under
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~schlattl/public.htm
Cosmological Creation of D-branes and anti-D-branes
We argue that the early universe may be described by an initial state of
space-filling branes and anti-branes. At high temperature this system is
stable. At low temperature tachyons appear and lead to a phase transition,
dynamics, and the creation of D-branes. These branes are cosmologically
produced in a generic fashion by the Kibble mechanism. From an entropic point
of view, the formation of lower dimensional branes is preferred and
brane-worlds are exponentially more likely to form than higher dimensional
branes. Virtually any brane configuration can be created from such phase
transitions by adjusting the tachyon profile. A lower bound on the number
defects produced is: one D-brane per Hubble volume.Comment: 30 pages, 5 eps figures; v2 more references added; v3 section 4
slightly improve
A core outcome set for neonatal abstinence syndrome: Study protocol for a systematic review, parent interviews and a Delphi survey
Background: The prevalence of neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) is increasing globally resulting in an increased incidence of adverse neonatal outcomes and health system costs. Evidence regarding the effectiveness of NAS prevention and management strategies is very weak and further research initiatives are critically needed to support meta-analysis and clinical practice guidelines. In NAS research, the choice of outcomes and the use of valid, responsive and feasible measurement instruments are crucial. There is currently no consensus and evidence-based core outcome set (COS) for NAS. Methods/design: The development of the NAS-COS will include five stages led by an international Multidisciplinary Steering Committee: (1) qualitative interviews with parents/families and a systematic review (SR) to identify items for inclusion in a COS. The SR will also identify participants for the Delphi survey, (2) a three-round Delphi survey to gain expert opinion on the importance of health outcomes influencing NAS management decisions, (3), a consensus meeting to finalize the items and definitions with experts and COS users, (4) feasibility and pilot testing, development of the COS and explanatory document and (5) implementation planning. Discussion: Since standardized outcome measurement and reporting will improve NAS clinical research consistency, efficacy and impact, this COS will reflect the minimum set of health outcomes which should be measured in trials evaluating interventions for preventing or treating NAS
How generic is cosmic string formation in SUSY GUTs
We study cosmic string formation within supersymmetric grand unified
theories. We consider gauge groups having a rank between 4 and 8. We examine
all possible spontaneous symmetry breaking patterns from the GUT down to the
standard model gauge group. Assuming standard hybrid inflation, we select all
the models which can solve the GUT monopole problem, lead to baryogenesis after
inflation and are consistent with proton lifetime measurements. We conclude
that in all acceptable spontaneous symmetry breaking schemes, cosmic string
formation is unavoidable. The strings which form at the end of inflation have a
mass which is proportional to the inflationary scale. Sometimes, a second
network of strings form at a lower scale. Models based on gauge groups which
have rank greater than 6 can lead to more than one inflationary era; they all
end by cosmic string formation.Comment: 31 pages, Latex, submitted to PR
The Ekpyrotic Universe: Colliding Branes and the Origin of the Hot Big Bang
We propose a cosmological scenario in which the hot big bang universe is
produced by the collision of a brane in the bulk space with a bounding orbifold
plane, beginning from an otherwise cold, vacuous, static universe. The model
addresses the cosmological horizon, flatness and monopole problems and
generates a nearly scale-invariant spectrum of density perturbations without
invoking superluminal expansion (inflation). The scenario relies, instead, on
physical phenomena that arise naturally in theories based on extra dimensions
and branes. As an example, we present our scenario predominantly within the
context of heterotic M-theory. A prediction that distinguishes this scenario
from standard inflationary cosmology is a strongly blue gravitational wave
spectrum, which has consequences for microwave background polarization
experiments and gravitational wave detectors.Comment: 67 pages, 4 figures. v2,v3: minor corrections, references adde
An analysis of growth, differentiation and apoptosis genes with risk of renal cancer
We conducted a case-control study of renal cancer (987 cases and 1298 controls) in Central and Eastern Europe and analyzed genomic DNA for 319 tagging single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 21 genes involved in cellular growth, differentiation and apoptosis using an Illumina Oligo Pool All (OPA). A haplotype-based method (sliding window analysis of consecutive SNPs) was used to identify chromosome regions of interest that remained significant at a false discovery rate of 10%. Subsequently, risk estimates were generated for regions with a high level of signal and individual SNPs by unconditional logistic regression adjusting for age, gender and study center. Three regions containing genes associated with renal cancer were identified: caspase 1/5/4/ 12(CASP 1/5/4/12), epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), and insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3 (IGFBP3). We observed that individuals with CASP1/5/4/12 haplotype (spanning area upstream of CASP1 through exon 2 of CASP5) GGGCTCAGT were at higher risk of renal cancer compared to individuals with the most common haplotype (OR:1.40, 95% CI:1.10-1.78, p-value = 0.007). Analysis of EGFR revealed three strong signals within intron 1, particularly a region centered around rs759158 with a global p = 0.006 (GGG: OR:1.26, 95% CI:1.04-1.53 and ATG: OR:1.55, 95% CI:1.14-2.11). A region in IGFBP3 was also associated with increased risk (global p = 0.04). In addition, the number of statistically significant (p-value 0.05) SNP associations observed within these three genes was higher than would be expected by chance on a gene level. To our knowledge, this is the first study to evaluate these genes in relation to renal cancer and there is need to replicate and extend our findings. The specific regions associated with risk may have particular relevance for gene function and/or carcinogenesis. In conclusion, our evaluation has identified common genetic variants in CASP1, CASP5, EGFR, and IGFBP3 that could be associated with renal cancer risk
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