247 research outputs found
Chemical thinning of plums and peaches
DURING the past decade the acreage of Japanese plums in Western Australia has increased by 10 percent, and production has risen by nearly 40 per cent.
Furthermore, almost 30 per cent, of our trees were still classified as non bearing in 1966, so rapid increases in production are certain to be recorded within the next few years
Osteoinductive PolyHIPE Foams as Injectable Bone Grafts
We have recently fabricated biodegradable polyHIPEs as injectable bone grafts and characterized the mechanical properties, pore architecture, and cure rates. In this study, calcium phosphate nanoparticles and demineralized bone matrix (DBM) particles were incorporated into injectable polyHIPE foams to promote osteoblastic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Upon incorporation of each type of particle, stable monoliths were formed with compressive properties comparable to control polyHIPEs. Pore size quantification indicated a negligible effect of all particles on emulsion stability and resulting pore architecture. Alizarin red calcium staining illustrated the incorporation of calcium phosphate particles at the pore surface, while picrosirius red collagen staining illustrated collagen-rich DBM particles within the monoliths. Osteoinductive particles had a negligible effect on the compressive modulus (ā¼30 MPa), which remained comparable to human cancellous bone values. All polyHIPE compositions promoted human MSC viability (ā¼90%) through 2 weeks. Furthermore, gene expression analysis indicated the ability of all polyHIPE compositions to promote osteogenic differentiation through the upregulation of bone-specific markers compared to a time zero control. These findings illustrate the potential for these osteoinductive polyHIPEs to promote osteogenesis and validate future in vivo evaluation. Overall, this work demonstrates the ability to incorporate a range of bioactive components into propylene fumarate dimethacrylate-based injectable polyHIPEs to increase cellular interactions and direct specific behavior without compromising scaffold architecture and resulting properties for various tissue engineering applications
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An approach to designing a national climate service
Climate variability and change are considerably important for a wide range of human activities and natural ecosystems. Climate science has made major advances during the last two decades, yet climate information is neither routinely useful for nor used in planning. What is needed is a mechanism, a national climate service (NCS), to connect climate science to decision-relevant questions and support building capacity to anticipate, plan for, and adapt to climate fluctuations. This article contributes to the national debate for an NCS by describing the rationale for building an NCS, the functions and services it would provide, and how it should be designed and evaluated. The NCS is most effectively achieved as a federal interagency partnership with critically important participation by regional climate centers, state climatologists, the emerging National Integrated Drought Information System, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Regional Integrated Sciences Assessment (RISA) teams in a sustained relationship with a wide variety of stakeholders. Because the NCS is a service, and because evidence indicates that the regional spatial scale is most important for delivering climate services, given subnational geographical/geophysical complexity, attention is focused on lessons learned from the University of Washington Climate Impacts Group's 10 years of experience, the first of the NOAA RISA teams.Keywords: Pacific Northwest climate, regional integrated sciences and assessment
Ground and In-Flight Calibration of the OSIRIS-REx Camera Suite
The OSIRIS-REx Camera Suite (OCAMS) onboard the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is used to study the shape and surface of the missionās target, asteroid (101955) Bennu, in support of the selection of a sampling site. We present calibration methods and results for the three OCAMS camerasāMapCam, PolyCam, and SamCamāusing data from pre-flight and in-flight calibration campaigns. Pre-flight calibrations established a baseline for a variety of camera properties, including bias and dark behavior, flat fields, stray light, and radiometric calibration. In-flight activities updated these calibrations where possible, allowing us to confidently measure Bennuās surface. Accurate calibration is critical not only for establishing a global understanding of Bennu, but also for enabling analyses of potential sampling locations and for providing scientific context for the returned sample
The MBA as Careerist: An Analysis of Early-Career Job Change
This study examined the job changes of 680 early-career business school graduates. Although a number of anecdotal articles characterize MBAs as overly ācareeristā and oriented toward job-hopping, little empirical research has focused on this issue. The research included a direct comparison of job-hopping behavior of MBAs with bachelor S degree graduates, taking into account a number of control variables, including demographic and economic variables. Results indicated that MBAs changed jobs less frequently than bachelor 5 degree graduates, even when a variety of other factors were controlled.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline
Recent radio talks
Recent Rural Radio Talks
Dairy Hygiene is Important; - D.C. Mickle
Farm Water Supplies; - K. Needham
Handling the Apple Crop; - K. Whitely
Renovation of Irrigated Pastures; - Dairying division
More About Lupinosis; - H. W. Bennetts
Progress in Doublegee Control; - Norman Halse
Changing Practices in Tobacco Growing in W.A.; - G. A. Pearce
Progress in doublegee control; - G.A. Pearce
Some Uses of Radio Isotopes in Agriculture; - E. N. Fitzpatrick
Guildford GrassāSign of a Run-Down Pasture; - R. A. Bettenay
Silage and when to feed it; - R. Bettenay
Ants in the Apiary; - R. S. Coleman
Bacterial Canker of Stone Fruits; - Olga M. Goss
Poison Plants in the Home Garden; - R. D. Royce
The Cabbage White Butterfly; - C. F. H. Jenkins
Summer Treatments for San Jose Scale; - C. F. H. Jenkins
Preparations for Fodder Conservation; - H.G. Cariss
Sudan Grass Survived Dry Summer; - R.A. Bettenay
Root Maggot Flies; - J. A. Button
Fallowing for Cropping; - A.S. Wild
Feeding for Milk Quality; - L. C. Snook
The Rabbitā Friend or Foe. A. R. Tomlinso
A 'Multiple Lenses' Approach to Policy Change: the Case of Tobacco Policy in the UK
This article examines a period of rapid policy change following decades of stability in UK tobacco. It seeks to account for such a long period of policy stability, to analyse and qualify the extent of change, and to explain change using a 'multiple lenses' approach. It compares the explanatory value of policy network models such as punctuated equilibrium and the advocacy coalition framework, with models stressing change from 'above and below' such as multi-level governance and policy transfer. A key finding is that the value of these models varies according to the narrative of policy change that we select. The article challenges researchers to be careful about assuming the nature of policy change before embarking on explanation. While the findings of the case study may vary with other policy areas in British politics, the call for clarity and lessons from multiple approaches are widely applicable
A Pilot Study of Abnormal Growth in Autism Spectrum Disorders and Other Childhood Psychiatric Disorders
The aims of the current study were to examine whether early growth abnormalities are (a) comparable in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and other childhood psychiatric disorders, and (b) specific to the brain or generalized to the whole body. Head circumference, height, and weight were measured during the first 19Ā months of life in 129 children with ASD and 59 children with non-ASD psychiatric disorders. Both groups showed comparable abnormal patterns of growth compared to population norms, especially regarding height and head circumference in relation to height. Thus abnormal growth appears to be related to psychiatric disorders in general and is mainly expressed as an accelerated growth of height not matched by an increase in weight or head circumference
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