130 research outputs found
Honey bee foraging distance depends on month and forage type
To investigate the distances at which honey bee foragers collect nectar and pollen, we analysed 5,484 decoded waggle dances made to natural forage sites to determine monthly foraging distance for each forage type. Firstly, we found significantly fewer overall dances made for pollen (16.8 %) than for non-pollen, presumably nectar (83.2 %; P < 2.2 × 10−23). When we analysed distance against month and forage type, there was a significant interaction between the two factors, which demonstrates that in some months, one forage type is collected at farther distances, but this would reverse in other months. Overall, these data suggest that distance, as a proxy for forage availability, is not significantly and consistently driven by need for one type of forage over the other
ADP Ribosylation Factors 1 and 4 and Group VIA Phospholipase A2 Regulate Morphology and Intraorganellar Traffic in the Endoplasmic Reticulum–Golgi Intermediate Compartment
In search of morphological determinants for the endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartment (ERGIC), we found that a concerted action of Arf1, Arf4, and PLA2G6-A controls the architecture of the ERGIC by regulating tubular carriers. This is predicted to impact the rate of transport and destination of cargos in the ERGIC
New evidence for the age of the Athol Formation (Middle Jurassic : Bajocian) in the Tusk-1 and Tusk-2 wells, offshore Carnarvon Basin, Western Australia
The co-occurrence of ammonites with palynomorphs in the Athol Formation of the Tusk-1 and Tusk-2 wells drilled in the offshore Carnarvon Basin, Western Australia confirms the Early Bajocian (Middle Jurassic) age of the Dissiliodinium caddaense dinoflagellate cyst Oppel Zone. The macrofaunas refine this Early Bajocian age to the early Laeviuscula Chronozone. A belemnite from the Tusk-1 well has a strontium isotope (87Sr/86Sr) ratio consistent with the biostratigraphical age. All the identifiable ammonites belong to Pseudotoites robiginosus (Crick). Pseudotoites is prominent in the Early Bajocian of the Indo-Pacific Realm, being known mainly from onshore Western Australia and the Southern Andes, together with rare occurrences in Irian Jaya (west New Guinea); somewhat surprisingly, it is also rarely present in southern Alaska. The palynofloras studied from the Tusk-1 and Tusk-2 wells contain abundant specimens of the marine dinoflagellate cyst Dissiliodinium caddaense, and are assigned to the Dissiliodinium caddaense Oppel Zone. The Athol Formation is a correlative of the Newmarracarra Limestone of the onshore Perth Basin, Western Australia; the distribution of both these units indicates a marine transgression onto the Australian block during the Early Bajocian
A Calorimeter-Based Level-One Electromagnetic Cluster Trigger for LHC
Level-one triggering at LHC will be very challenging. We have studied the problem of recognition of electromagnetic clusters and have developed an algorithm based on the transverse energy distribution in an electromagnetic calorimeter. This receives 8-bit digitised energies from a 4 x 4 window in the calorimeter. Two cluster thresholds and two isolation thesholds are provided, all of which are programmable. The algorithm has been been implemented as a gate array in 0.8 µm CMOS technology, and is performed using pipelined processing at 67 MHz. The gate array has been tested at full speed, and is being incorporated into a small prototype trigger processor to be tested with beam in conjunction with prototype calorimeters
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