176 research outputs found

    Efeito de duas intensidades de colheita de madeira na estrutura de uma floresta natural na região de Paragominas, Pará.

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    Foram estudadas as mudanças na estrutura de 108ha de uma floresta primária submetida a duas intensidades de colheita de madeira, na Fazenda Rio Capim, pertencente à Cikel Brasil Verde Madeiras Ltda., no município de Paragominas, Pará. Os dados foram coletados, em dois períodos (2003, antes da exploração, e 2004, após a exploração) em 36 parcelas permanentes quadradas de 0,25ha, estabelecidas aleatoriamente na área, sendo12 em floresta não-explorada: Testemunha - T0; 12 em floresta explorada com colheita apenas do fuste comercial das árvores: Tratamento - T1; e 12 em floresta explorada com colheita do fuste e dos resíduos lenhosos: Tratamento - T2. Em 2003 foram registrados 4469 indivíduos com DAP > 10cm, nas 36 parcelas amostradas (9ha). Sete meses após a exploração (2004), foram observados na área 4531 indivíduos com DAP > 10cm, sendo 4330 vivos. Lecythis idatimon, Poecilanthe effusa, Rinorea flavescens, Eschweilera grandiflora, Eschweilera pedicellata, Inga sp., Protium spp., Vouacapoua americana, Guatteria poeppigiana e Eschweilera coriacea foram as dez espécies mais importantes, tanto antes como após a exploração. A estrutura da floresta, tanto no T1 como no T2, sofreu alterações significantes devido à exploração a que foi submetida. Entretanto, não foram verificadas diferenças significativas entre os três tratamentos, sugerindo que com a intensidade de exploração aplicada, mais a retirada adicional dos resíduos, a floresta manteve as características semelhantes à floresta original, apesar do menor estoque de árvores adultas de espécies comerciais. Recomendam-se estudos sobre a regeneração natural (DAP < 10cm), silvicultura pós-colheita e crescimento da floresta

    Effects of experimental warming on carbon sink function of a temperate pristine mire : the PEATWARM project.

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    communication oraleInternational audienceWithin the PEATWARM project, we use Sphagnum peatlands as a model to analyse their vulnerability to climate change using an experimental system (ITEX) that simulates in situ an increase in average temperature. We aim to determine the effects of temperature increase on the vegetation, the balance of above- and belowground gas fluxes (CO2 and CH4), the microbial diversity and activity in Sphagnum mosses and in peat, and the dynamics of labile and recalcitrant organic matter of peat. The ultimate objective is the creation of a biogeochemical model of C coupled with N and S cycles that includes interactions between these key compartments

    Insights into the Molecular Basis of L-Form Formation and Survival in Escherichia coli

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    L-forms have been shown to occur among many species of bacteria and are suspected to be involved in persistent infections. Since their discovery in 1935, numerous studies characterizing L-form morphology, growth, and pathogenic potential have been conducted. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the formation and survival of L-forms remain unknown. Using unstable L-form colonies of Escherichia coli as a model, we performed genome-wide transcriptome analysis and screened a deletion mutant library to study the molecular mechanisms involved in formation and survival of L-forms. Microarray analysis of L-form versus classical colonies revealed many up-regulated genes of unknown function as well as multiple over-expressed stress pathways shared in common with persister cells and biofilms. Mutant screens identified three groups of mutants which displayed varying degrees of defects in L-form colony formation. Group 1 mutants, which showed the strongest defect in L-form colony formation, belonged to pathways involved in cell envelope stress, DNA repair, iron homeostasis, outer membrane biogenesis, and drug efflux/ABC transporters. Four (Group 1) mutants, rcsB, a positive response regulator of colanic acid capsule synthesis, ruvA, a recombinational junction binding protein, fur, a ferric uptake regulator and smpA a small membrane lipoprotein were selected for complementation. Complementation of the mutants using a high-copy overexpression vector failed, while utilization of a low-copy inducible vector successfully restored L-form formation. This work represents the first systematic genetic evaluation of genes and pathways involved in the formation and survival of unstable L-form bacteria. Our findings provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying L-form formation and survival and have implications for understanding the emergence of antibiotic resistance, bacterial persistence and latent infections and designing novel drugs and vaccines

    General-elimination stability

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    General-elimination harmony articulates Gentzen's idea that the elimination-rules are justified if they infer from an assertion no more than can already be inferred from the grounds for making it. Dummett described the rules as not only harmonious but stable if the E-rules allow one to infer no more and no less than the I-rules justify. Pfenning and Davies call the rules locally complete if the E-rules are strong enough to allow one to infer the original judgement. A method is given of generating harmonious general-elimination rules from a collection of I-rules. We show that the general-elimination rules satisfy Pfenning and Davies' test for local completeness, but question whether that is enough to show that they are stable. Alternative conditions for stability are considered, including equivalence between the introduction- and elimination-meanings of a connective, and recovery of the grounds for assertion, finally generalizing the notion of local completeness to capture Dummett's notion of stability satisfactorily. We show that the general-elimination rules meet the last of these conditions, and so are indeed not only harmonious but also stable.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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