750 research outputs found

    Les conséquences du déboisement d’un versant sur la morphologie d’un petit cours d’eau

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    Le déboisement d'une partie d'un bassin-versant entraîne souvent une augmentation du débit du cours d'eau, ce qui se traduit par des changements de la morphologie du lit. Il est démontré ici que des changements morphologiques et sédimentaires du lit d'un cours d'eau peuvent se produire sans que le débit ne soit nécessairement augmenté. L'étude porte sur un petit cours d'eau situé en Estrie (Québec). Le cours d'eau passe d'une zone forestière à une zone déboisée, mais d'un seul côté. Dans chacun des milieux, la forme du cours d'eau a été relevée et les débits ont été mesurés. Les débits sont demeurés stables, car la parcelle déboisée est de faible pente, de petite taille et irrégulière en surface. Cependant, la forme de la coupe transversale est modifiée. Ainsi, le lit est symétrique sous forêt et est asymétrique en milieu déboisé. Par contre, la taille du cours d'eau n'a pas changé. Le changement morphologique s'accompagne d'une diminution de la taille des sédiments. Ces effets sont liés à des modifications hydrologiques observées au pied du versant où une zone saturée existe maintenant en permanence. Au cours des précipitations, le ruissellement superficiel érode et entaille les berges. Ces dernières s'affaissent, d'où la forme asymétrique de la coupe transversale.Logging of part of a watershed often yields an increase in discharge and is responsible for important changes of the stream's morphology. In this paper, we show that an increase in discharge following logging operations is not necessary to produce changes in channel form. We have studied a small stream channel located in the Eastern Townships (Québec). The stream flows from a forested to a logged area. Logging took place on one side of the stream. Channel form and water discharge were surveyed in each zone. Discharges are not significantly increased in the logged area. This result is explained by the gentleness and the small size of the logged hillslope. Channel form, however, is modified as a result of logging. The cross-section is symmetrical under forest cover and asymmetrical in the logged area. Particle size also declines from the forested to the logged area. These effects are caused by hydrologie modifications occurring at the foot of the logged hillslope which is permanently saturated. Thus, saturated overland flow is increased in the vicinity of the banks which are eroded by small rills and seapage. As a result, the banks are lowered and the cross-section becomes asymmetrical

    Modelling ecosystem adaptation and dangerous rates of global warming

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Portland Press via the DOI in this recordWe are in a period of relatively rapid climate change. This poses challenges for individual species and threatens the ecosystem services that humanity relies upon. Temperature is a key stressor. In a warming climate, individual organisms may be able to shift their thermal optima through phenotypic plasticity. However, such plasticity is unlikely to be sufficient over the coming centuries. Resilience to warming will also depend on how fast the distribution of traits that define a species can adapt through other methods, in particular through redistribution of the abundance of variants within the population and through genetic evolution. In this paper, we use a simple theoretical ‘trait diffusion’ model to explore how the resilience of a given species to climate change depends on the initial trait diversity (biodiversity), the trait diffusion rate (mutation rate), and the lifetime of the organism. We estimate theoretical dangerous rates of continuous global warming that would exceed the ability of a species to adapt through trait diffusion, and therefore lead to a collapse in the overall productivity of the species. As the rate of adaptation through intraspecies competition and genetic evolution decreases with species lifetime, we find critical rates of change that also depend fundamentally on lifetime. Dangerous rates of warming vary from 1°C per lifetime (at low trait diffusion rate) to 8°C per lifetime (at high trait diffusion rate). We conclude that rapid climate change is liable to favour short-lived organisms (e.g. microbes) rather than longer-lived organisms (e.g. trees).University of ExeterCSSP-Brazi

    Linking phytoplankton community metabolism to the individual size distribution

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    This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this recordQuantifying variation in ecosystem metabolism is critical to predicting the impacts of environmental change on the carbon cycle. We used a metabolic scaling framework to investigate how body size and temperature influence phytoplankton community metabolism. We tested this framework using phytoplankton sampled from an outdoor mesocosm experiment, where communities had been either experimentally warmed (+ 4 °C) for 10 years or left at ambient temperature. Warmed and ambient phytoplankton communities differed substantially in their taxonomic composition and size structure. Despite this, the response of primary production and community respiration to long- and short-term warming could be estimated using a model that accounted for the size- and temperature dependence of individual metabolism, and the community abundance-body size distribution. This work demonstrates that the key metabolic fluxes that determine the carbon balance of planktonic ecosystems can be approximated using metabolic scaling theory, with knowledge of the individual size distribution and environmental temperature.NERC. Grant Number: PASW06

    Environmental fluctuations accelerate molecular evolution of thermal tolerance in a marine diatom

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    This is the final version of the article. Available from Springer Nature via the DOI in this recordThe publisher correction to this article is in ORE at: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/34487Diatoms contribute roughly 20% of global primary production, but the factors determining their ability to adapt to global warming are unknown. Here we quantify the capacity for adaptation to warming in the marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana. We find that evolutionary rescue under severe (32 °C) warming is slow, but adaptation to more realistic scenarios where temperature increases are moderate (26 °C) or fluctuate between benign and severe conditions is rapid and linked to phenotypic changes in metabolic traits and elemental composition. Whole-genome re-sequencing identifies genetic divergence among populations selected in the different warming regimes and between the evolved and ancestral lineages. Consistent with the phenotypic changes, the most rapidly evolving genes are associated with transcriptional regulation, cellular responses to oxidative stress and redox homeostasis. These results demonstrate that the evolution of thermal tolerance in marine diatoms can be rapid, particularly in fluctuating environments, and is underpinned by major genomic and phenotypic change.This study was funded by a Leverhulme Trust research grant (RPG-2013-335). Whole genome re-sequencing was carried out at Exeter Sequencing Service and Computational core facilities at the University of Exeter, where Dr. Karen Moore, Dr. Audrey Farbos, Paul O’Neill, and Dr. Konrad Paszkiewicz lead the handling of the samples. Exeter Squencing Services are supported by Medical Research Council Clinical Infrastructure award (MR/M008924/1), Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund (WT097835MF), Wellcome Trust Multi User Equipment Award (WT101650MA), and BBSRC LOLA award (BB/K003240/1)

    Impact of boundaries on fully connected random geometric networks

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    Many complex networks exhibit a percolation transition involving a macroscopic connected component, with universal features largely independent of the microscopic model and the macroscopic domain geometry. In contrast, we show that the transition to full connectivity is strongly influenced by details of the boundary, but observe an alternative form of universality. Our approach correctly distinguishes connectivity properties of networks in domains with equal bulk contributions. It also facilitates system design to promote or avoid full connectivity for diverse geometries in arbitrary dimension.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Publisher Correction: Environmental fluctuations accelerate molecular evolution of thermal tolerance in a marine diatom

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    The article for which this is the publisher correction is in ORE at: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/32652The PDF version of this Article was updated shortly after publication following an error which resulted in the Φ symbol being omitted from the left hand side of equation 8. The HTML version was correct from the time of publication

    Community-level respiration of prokaryotic microbes may rise with global warming

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    Understanding how the metabolic rates of prokaryotes respond to temperature is fun-damental to our understanding of how ecosystem functioning will be altered by climatechange, as these micro-organisms are major contributors to global carbon efflux. Ecologicalmetabolic theory suggests that species living at higher temperatures evolve higher growthrates than those in cooler niches due to thermodynamic constraints. Here, using a globalprokaryotic dataset, we find that maximal growth rate at thermal optimum increases withtemperature for mesophiles (temperature optima.45â—¦C), but not thermophiles (&45â—¦C).Furthermore, short-term (within-day) thermal responses of prokaryotic metabolic rates aretypically more sensitive to warming than those of eukaryotes. Because climatic warmingwill mostly impact ecosystems in the mesophilic temperature range, we conclude that asmicrobial communities adapt to higher temperatures, their metabolic rates and therefore,biomass-specific CO2production, will inevitably rise. Using a mathematical model, weillustrate the potential global impacts of these findings

    Role of carbon allocation efficiency in the temperature dependence of autotroph growth rate

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    To predict how plant growth rate will respond to temperature requires understanding how temperature drives the underlying metabolic rates. Although past studies have considered the temperature dependences of photosynthesis and respiration rates underlying growth, they have largely overlooked the temperature dependence of carbon allocation efficiency. By combining a mathematical model that links exponential growth rate of a population of photosynthetic cells to photosynthesis, respiration, and carbon allocation; to an experiment on a freshwater alga; and to a database covering a wide range of taxa, we show that allocation efficiency is crucial for predicting how growth rates will respond to temperature change across aquatic and terrestrial autotrophs, at both short and long (evolutionary) timescales

    On Smooth Orthogonal and Octilinear Drawings: Relations, Complexity and Kandinsky Drawings

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    We study two variants of the well-known orthogonal drawing model: (i) the smooth orthogonal, and (ii) the octilinear. Both models form an extension of the orthogonal, by supporting one additional type of edge segments (circular arcs and diagonal segments, respectively). For planar graphs of max-degree 4, we analyze relationships between the graph classes that can be drawn bendless in the two models and we also prove NP-hardness for a restricted version of the bendless drawing problem for both models. For planar graphs of higher degree, we present an algorithm that produces bi-monotone smooth orthogonal drawings with at most two segments per edge, which also guarantees a linear number of edges with exactly one segment.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2017
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