2,461 research outputs found

    Bold colouration pattern in southern bottlenose whales, a preliminary assessment of external variation. Scientific Committee document SC/57/SM12, International Whaling Commission, May-June 2005, Ulsan, Korea

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    Insights in the variation in pigmentation patterns and other external features in Hyperoodon planifrons are few, in particular, variability contributed by each of individual, ontogenetic, sexual, and geographic factors. A preliminary assessment is based on two close-up sightings of juveniles during IWC-SOWER Cruises and stranded specimens from South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. Bold, cream-white facial fields separated by a distinct dark blowhole stripe are diagnostic of all juvenile/neonates examined and may persist in subadults. Dark eyepatches may be pronounced or almost absent, a light nuchal band behind the blowhole may be prominent or muted, and the dorsal aspect of flippers may be light or dark. A light flank patch on the tailstock is consistent in juveniles. With maturation the head pattern gradually blurs, apparently because facial fields and the nuchal band gain pigmentation. The slate-grey or dark brownish-grey spinal field in juveniles is appreciably darker than in most adults, in which it varies widely, ranging from brownish-grey (most common), bluish-black to yellowish. Diatoms have been blamed as cause for the brown hue, however the evidence is unclear. Large, almost-white animals have been reported but no such specimens were available for study. Much of the external variation seen may be individual and ontogenetic, however sexual dimorphism and geographic variation remain unassessed due to small samples. A comprehensive morphological study is indicated. The bold features in juvenile H. planifrons are diagnostically distinct from juvenile Tasmacetus shepherdi and Indopacetus pacificus. Non-priority status and long dive durations have allowed scant time for data collection on H. planifrons during Antarctic surveys. This study shows that maximizing opportunistic encounters through allowance for some flexibility in schedules, valuable data can be obtained. A rule-of-thumb is recommended for avoiding ziphiid species identification at distances exceeding 0.8 nmiles

    2004-2005 International Whaling Commission-Southern Ocean Whale and Ecosystem Research (IWC-SOWER) Cruise, Area III

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    We conducted the 27th annual IWC-SOWER (formerly IDCR) Cruise in Area III (000°-070°E) aboard the Japanese Research Vessels Shonan Maru and Shonan Maru No.2. The 65-day cruise departed Cape Town, South Africa on 4 January 2005 and returned to Fremantle, Australia on 9 March 2005. After transiting to the study area, we carried out a minke whale survey and several research experiments from 12 January to 25 February. A systematic minke whale survey was conducted in Area IIIW (000°-035°E) from 12 January until 8 February. The survey design was intentionally similar to that used during the IWC/IDCR second circumpolar series of cruises (CPII) to provide information towards addressing the effect of changing cruise track design on Antarctic minke whale abundance estimates. 000°-020°E was surveyed in two contiguous strata (Northern and Southern), from 64°30'S to the ice edge. Poor weather limited the coverage 020°E-035°E to the Southern Stratum only. A total of 1788.2 nmiles was surveyed (000°-035°E) including 935.5 nmiles in closing mode and 930.3 nmiles in independent observer mode, and a total of 466 minke whales were sighted. Minke whale visual dive time experiments were conducted during the minke whale survey. 35 trials were completed, recording surfacing cues for a total of 45.81 hours. From 10-22 February the ships conducted collaborative studies with the Japanese icebreaker, Shirase to investigate the relationship between minke whale abundance and the sea ice. During this study the SOWER vessels surveyed for minke whales in the near-ice area from 035°-050°E. 575.3 nmiles were covered and a total of 22 minke whales were detected. The Shirase surveyed in the pack ice zone 040°-050°E from 12-15 February. Two methods-testing experiments were carried out during the cruise: Adaptive Line Transect Sampling and ‘BT Mode.’ Adaptive Line Transect Sampling was tested during survey in Area IIIW. BT Mode trials were conducted 22-25 February in the area between 050° and 065°E. A direct electronic data acquisition program was evaluated during the cruise on both ships. Sightings for the entire cruise included: minke whales (237 groups/515 animals); blue whales (13 groups/46 individuals) of which 6 groups (28 individuals) were identified as true blue whales and 3 groups (3 individuals) were identified as pygmy blue whales; fin whales (14/132); humpback whales (251/646); sperm whales (35/49); killer whales (23/217); southern bottlenose whales (32/60); Gray’s beaked whales (1/7); Layard’s beaked whales (2/3); pilot whales (4/265); hourglass dolphins (4/17); striped dolphins (3/435) and common bottlenose dolphins (1/20). Opportunistic research during the cruise included blue whale research on 8 groups/29 animals resulting in 5 biopsies and images of 23 individuals for photo-identification studies. Biopsy samples and photo-ID images were also obtained opportunistically from other species. Biopsies were collected from 6 humpback whales and 1 southern right whale. Photo-ID images were collected from 45 humpback whales, 1 southern right whale and 8 groups of killer whales. Estimated Angle and Distance Training Exercise and Experiment were each completed on both vessels

    Elevated CO2induces a bloom of microphytobenthos within a shell gravel mesocosm

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    The geological storage of carbon dioxide (CO2) is expected to be an important component of future global carbon emission mitigation, but there is a need to understand the impacts of a CO2 leak on the marine environment and to develop monitoring protocols for leakage detection. In the present study, sediment cores were exposed to CO2-acidified seawater at one of five pH levels (8.0, 7.5, 7.0, 6.5 and 6.0) for 10 weeks. A bloom of Spirulina sp. and diatoms appeared on sediment surface exposed to pH 7.0 and 7.5 seawater. Quantitative PCR measurements of the abundance of 16S rRNA also indicated an increase within the pH 7.0 and 7.5 treatments after 10 weeks incubation. More detailed analysis of the microbial communities from the pH 7.0, 7.5 and 8.0 treatments confirmed an increase in the relative abundance of Spirulina sp. and Navicula sp. sequences, with changes in the relative abundance of major archaeal and bacterial groups also detected within the pH 7.0 treatment. A decreased flux of silicate from the sediment at this pH was also detected. Monitoring blooms of microphytobenthos may prove useful as an indicator of CO2 leakage within coastal area

    Discovery of three z>6.5 quasars in the VISTA Kilo-degree Infrared Galaxy (VIKING) survey

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    Studying quasars at the highest redshifts can constrain models of galaxy and black hole formation, and it also probes the intergalactic medium in the early universe. Optical surveys have to date discovered more than 60 quasars up to z~6.4, a limit set by the use of the z-band and CCD detectors. Only one z>6.4 quasar has been discovered, namely the z=7.08 quasar ULAS J1120+0641, using near-infrared imaging. Here we report the discovery of three new z>6.4 quasars in 332 square degrees of the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy Kilo-degree Infrared Galaxy (VIKING) survey, thus extending the number from 1 to 4. The newly discovered quasars have redshifts of z=6.60, 6.75, and 6.89. The absolute magnitudes are between -26.0 and -25.5, 0.6-1.1 mag fainter than ULAS J1120+0641. Near-infrared spectroscopy revealed the MgII emission line in all three objects. The quasars are powered by black holes with masses of ~(1-2)x10^9 M_sun. In our probed redshift range of 6.44<z<7.44 we can set a lower limit on the space density of supermassive black holes of \rho(M_BH>10^9 M_sun) > 1.1x10^(-9) Mpc^(-3). The discovery of three quasars in our survey area is consistent with the z=6 quasar luminosity function when extrapolated to z~7. We do not find evidence for a steeper decline in the space density of quasars with increasing redshift from z=6 to z=7.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. Published in Ap

    Characterization of drug-release kinetics in trabecular bone from titania nanotube implants

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    Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate the application of the three-dimensional bone bioreactor for studying drug-release kinetics and distribution of drugs in the ex vivo cancellous bone environment, and to demonstrate the application of nanoengineered titanium (Ti) wires generated with titania nanotube (TNT) arrays as drug-releasing implants for local drug delivery. Methods: Nanoengineered Ti wires covered with a layer of TNT arrays implanted in bone were used as a drug-releasing implant. Viable bovine trabecular bone was used as the ex vivo bone substrate embedded with the implants and placed in the bone reactor. A hydrophilic fluorescent dye (rhodamine B) was used as the model drug, loaded inside the TNT–Ti implants, to monitor drug release and transport in trabecular bone. The distribution of released model drug in the bone was monitored throughout the bone structure, and concentration profiles at different vertical (0–5 mm) and horizontal (0–10 mm) distances from the implant surface were obtained at a range of release times from 1 hour to 5 days. Results: Scanning electron microscopy confirmed that well-ordered, vertically aligned nanotube arrays were formed on the surface of prepared TNT–Ti wires. Thermogravimetric analysis proved loading of the model drug and fluorescence spectroscopy was used to show drug-release characteristics in-vitro. The drug release from implants inserted into bone ex vivo showed a consistent gradual release of model drug from the TNT–Ti implants, with a characteristic three-dimensional distribution into the surrounding bone, over a period of 5 days. The parameters including the flow rate of bone culture medium, differences in trabecular microarchitecture between bone samples, and mechanical loading were found to have the most significant influence on drug distribution in the bone. Conclusion: These results demonstrate the utility of the Zetos™ system for ex vivo drug-release studies in bone, which can be applied to optimize the delivery of specific therapies and to assist in the design of new drug delivery systems. This method has the potential to provide new knowledge to understand drug distribution in the bone environment and to considerably improve existing technologies for local administration in bone, including solving some critical problems in bone therapy and orthopedic implants.Moom Sinn Aw, Kamarul A Khalid, Karan Gulati, Gerald J Atkins, Peter Pivonka, David M Findlay, Dusan Losi

    Pion emission in 2H, 12C, 27Al, gamma pi+ reactions at threshold

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    The first data from MAX-lab in Lund, Sweden on pion production in photonuclear reactions at threshold energies, is presented. The decrease of the total yield of pi+ in gamma + 12C, 27Al reactions below 200 MeV as well as differential, dsigma/dOmega, cross sections follow essentially predictions from an intranuclear cascade model with an attractive potential for pion-nucleus interaction in its simplest form. Double differential, d2sigma/dOmegadT, cross sections at 176 MeV show, however, deviations from the model, which call for refinements of nuclear and Coulomb potentials and possibly also for coherent pion production mechanisms.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure

    Object Detection Through Exploration With A Foveated Visual Field

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    We present a foveated object detector (FOD) as a biologically-inspired alternative to the sliding window (SW) approach which is the dominant method of search in computer vision object detection. Similar to the human visual system, the FOD has higher resolution at the fovea and lower resolution at the visual periphery. Consequently, more computational resources are allocated at the fovea and relatively fewer at the periphery. The FOD processes the entire scene, uses retino-specific object detection classifiers to guide eye movements, aligns its fovea with regions of interest in the input image and integrates observations across multiple fixations. Our approach combines modern object detectors from computer vision with a recent model of peripheral pooling regions found at the V1 layer of the human visual system. We assessed various eye movement strategies on the PASCAL VOC 2007 dataset and show that the FOD performs on par with the SW detector while bringing significant computational cost savings.Comment: An extended version of this manuscript was published in PLOS Computational Biology (October 2017) at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.100574

    Three-Dimensional FDTD Simulation of Biomaterial Exposure to Electromagnetic Nanopulses

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    Ultra-wideband (UWB) electromagnetic pulses of nanosecond duration, or nanopulses, have been recently approved by the Federal Communications Commission for a number of various applications. They are also being explored for applications in biotechnology and medicine. The simulation of the propagation of a nanopulse through biological matter, previously performed using a two-dimensional finite difference-time domain method (FDTD), has been extended here into a full three-dimensional computation. To account for the UWB frequency range, a geometrical resolution of the exposed sample was 0.25mm0.25 mm, and the dielectric properties of biological matter were accurately described in terms of the Debye model. The results obtained from three-dimensional computation support the previously obtained results: the electromagnetic field inside a biological tissue depends on the incident pulse rise time and width, with increased importance of the rise time as the conductivity increases; no thermal effects are possible for the low pulse repetition rates, supported by recent experiments. New results show that the dielectric sample exposed to nanopulses behaves as a dielectric resonator. For a sample in a cuvette, we obtained the dominant resonant frequency and the QQ-factor of the resonator.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
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