1,724 research outputs found
Evaluation of infertility
The most important goal of fertility investigation is to identify the cause(s) of infertility and to prescribe adequate therapy. The couple should be treated as a single unit as each partner contributes a share to the infertility potential of the couple. Evaluation should begin with the taking of a detailed history and a complete physical examination of both partners, which may point the investigation in a particular direction. However, other pertinent fertility factors should not be overlooked. A standardized and comprehensive approach to the investigation of infertility is proposed and is presented as a series of flow chart
Evaluation of infertility
The most important goal of fertility investigation is to identify the cause(s) of infertility and to prescribe adequate therapy. The couple should be treated as a single unit as each partner contributes a share to the infertility potential of the couple. Evaluation should begin with the taking of a detailed history and a complete physical examination of both partners, which may point the investigation in a particular direction. However, other pertinent fertility factors should not be overlooked. A standardized and comprehensive approach to the investigation of infertility is proposed and is presented as a series of flow chart
Descriptive study of production factors affecting performance traits in growing-finishing pgis in Spain.
The objective of this study was to build up a data set including productive performance and production factors data of growing-finishing (GF) pigs in Spain in order to perform a representative and reliable description of the traits of Spanish growing-finishing pig industry. Data from 764 batches from 452 farms belonging to nine companies (1,157,212 pigs) were collected between 2008 and 2010 through a survey including five parts: general, facilities, feeding, health status and performance. Most studied farms had only GF pigs on their facilities (94.7%), produced ‘industrial’ pigs (86.7%), had entire male and female (59.5%) and Pietrain-sired pigs (70.0%), housed between 13-20 pigs per pen (87.2%), had 50% of slatted floor (70%), single-space dry feeder (54.0%), nipple drinker (88.7%) and automatic ventilation systems (71.2%). A 75.0% of the farms used three feeding phases using mainly pelleted diets (91.0%), 61.3% performed three or more antibiotic treatments and 36.5% obtained water from the public supply. Continuous variables studied had the following average values: number of pigs placed per batch, 1,515 pigs; initial and final body weight, 19.0 and 108 kg; length of GF period, 136 days; culling rate, 1.4%; barn occupation, 99.7%; feed intake per pig and fattening cycle, 244 kg; daily gain, 0.657 kg; feed conversion ratio, 2.77 kg kg-1 and mortality rate, 4.3%. Data reflecting the practical situation of the Spanish growing and finishing pig production and it may contribute to develop new strategies in order to improve the productive and economic efficiency of GF pig units
Heavy metal tolerance strategies in metallicolous and non-metallicolous populations of mosses: Insights of γ+β-tocopherol regulatory role
As bryophytes present the capacity to colonize a wide range of habitats, including extreme environments (e.g.,
mine areas), we first checked the global response of bryophytes to heavy metals (HM) by a systematic review.
This analysis found i) the lack of studies in a polluted environment and ii) resulted in a global trend of photochemical
efficiency decrease when bryophytes faced heavy metals. Secondly, we characterized the photoprotective
responses of four metallicolous populations of mosses (Lewinskya rupestris, Polytrichum commune,
Ptychostomum compactum and Rhynchostegium confertum) naturally growing in an abandoned mine area by an
experimental field approach. As a result, we found markedly species-specific tolerance patterns: i) less tolerant
species, presenting high pollutants content accompanied by marked dissipative and antioxidative strategies. This
strategy was depicted by the species R. confertum that result to be a good sentinel species due to the high
pollutant content and high physiological sensitivity.; ii) intermediate tolerant species presenting a medium
content of pollutants and less marked photoprotective mechanisms, and iii) most tolerant species minimizing
pollutants content and consequently presenting no changes in their physiological performance. This evidence
support that species’ bryological attributes have a key role in determining species’ tolerance towards environmental
heavy metals, and should be taken into consideration in future studies. The findings of this study also
pointed out that the higher levels of γ + β-tocopherol in metallicolous populations could play a regulatory role in
metal stress tolerance in mosses and it could be a suitable functional responsive trait for environmental response
prediction to heavy metals in polluted environments
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