4,913 research outputs found
Top-down effect of arthropod predator chinese mitten crab on freshwater nutrient cycling
Aquatic litter decomposition is highly dependent on contributions and interactions at different trophic levels. The invasion of alien aquatic organisms like the channeled apple snail (Pomacea canaliculata) might lead to changes in the decomposition process through new species interactions in the invaded wetland. However, it is not clear how aquatic macroinvertebrate predators like the Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir sinensis) will affect the nutrient cycle in freshwater ecosystems in the face of new benthic invasion. We used the litter bag method to explore the top-down effect of crabs on the freshwater nutrient cycle with the help of soil zymography (a technology previously used in terrestrial ecosystems). The results showed significant feeding effects of crabs and snails on lotus leaf litter and cotton strips. Crabs significantly inhibited the intake of lotus litter and cotton strips and the ability to transform the environment of snails by predation. Crabs promoted the decomposition of various litter substrates by affecting the microbial community structure in the sediment. These results suggest that arthropod predators increase the complexity of detrital food webs through direct and indirect interactions, and consequently have an important impact on the material cycle and stability of freshwater ecosystems. This top-down effect makes macrobenthos play a key role in the biological control and engineering construction of freshwater ecosystems.Sincere thanks to the Jiangsu Provincial Department of Agriculture (JBGS [2021]126), Jiangsu Provincial Department of Science and Technology (BE2019393), Jiangsu Forestry Science and Technology Innovation and Promotion project (LYKJ [2021]16), and Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) through SFRH/BD/119957/2016 scholarship for supporting this study financially. Thanks also to the Jiangsu Provincial Platform for Conservation and Utilization of Agricultural Germplasm for supporting this study
PolarLight: a CubeSat X-ray Polarimeter based on the Gas Pixel Detector
The gas pixel detector (GPD) is designed and developed for high-sensitivity
astronomical X-ray polarimetry, which is a new window about to open in a few
years. Due to the small mass, low power, and compact geometry of the GPD, we
propose a CubeSat mission Polarimeter Light (PolarLight) to demonstrate and
test the technology directly in space. There is no optics but a collimator to
constrain the field of view to 2.3 degrees. Filled with pure dimethyl ether
(DME) at 0.8 atm and sealed by a beryllium window of 100 micron thick, with a
sensitive area of about 1.4 mm by 1.4 mm, PolarLight allows us to observe the
brightest X-ray sources on the sky, with a count rate of, e.g., ~0.2 counts/s
from the Crab nebula. The PolarLight is 1U in size and mounted in a 6U CubeSat,
which was launched into a low Earth Sun-synchronous orbit on October 29, 2018,
and is currently under test. More launches with improved designs are planned in
2019. These tests will help increase the technology readiness for future
missions such as the enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry (eXTP), better
understand the orbital background, and may help constrain the physics with
observations of the brightest objects.Comment: Accepted for publication in Experimental Astronom
Calogero-Sutherland Approach to Defect Blocks
Extended objects such as line or surface operators, interfaces or boundaries
play an important role in conformal field theory. Here we propose a systematic
approach to the relevant conformal blocks which are argued to coincide with the
wave functions of an integrable multi-particle Calogero-Sutherland problem.
This generalizes a recent observation in 1602.01858 and makes extensive
mathematical results from the modern theory of multi-variable hypergeometric
functions available for studies of conformal defects. Applications range from
several new relations with scalar four-point blocks to a Euclidean inversion
formula for defect correlators.Comment: v2: changes for clarit
Internet and gaming addiction: a systematic literature review of neuroimaging studies
In the past decade, research has accumulated suggesting that excessive Internet use can lead to the development of a behavioral addiction. Internet addiction has been considered as a serious threat to mental health and the excessive use of the Internet has been linked to a variety of negative psychosocial consequences. The aim of this review is to identify all empirical studies to date that used neuroimaging techniques to shed light upon the emerging mental health problem of Internet and gaming addiction from a neuroscientific perspective. Neuroimaging studies offer an advantage over traditional survey and behavioral research because with this method, it is possible to distinguish particular brain areas that are involved in the development and maintenance of addiction. A systematic literature search was conducted, identifying 18 studies. These studies provide compelling evidence for the similarities between different types of addictions, notably substance-related addictions and Internet and gaming addiction, on a variety of levels. On the molecular level, Internet addiction is characterized by an overall reward deficiency that entails decreased dopaminergic activity. On the level of neural circuitry, Internet and gaming addiction led to neuroadaptation and structural changes that occur as a consequence of prolonged increased activity in brain areas associated with addiction. On a behavioral level, Internet and gaming addicts appear to be constricted with regards to their cognitive functioning in various domains. The paper shows that understanding the neuronal correlates associated with the development of Internet and gaming addiction will promote future research and will pave the way for the development of addiction treatment approaches
Accurate Atmospheric Parameters at Moderate Resolution Using Spectral Indices: Preliminary Application to the MARVELS Survey
Studies of Galactic chemical and dynamical evolution in the solar
neighborhood depend on the availability of precise atmospheric parameters
(Teff, [Fe/H] and log g) for solar-type stars. Many large-scale spectroscopic
surveys operate at low to moderate spectral resolution for efficiency in
observing large samples, which makes the stellar characterization difficult due
to the high degree of blending of spectral features. While most surveys use
spectral synthesis, in this work we employ an alternative method based on
spectral indices to determine the atmospheric parameters of a sample of nearby
FGK dwarfs and subgiants observed by the MARVELS survey at moderate resolving
power (R~12,000). We have developed three codes to automatically normalize the
observed spectra, measure the equivalent widths of the indices and, through the
comparison of those with values calculated with pre-determined calibrations,
derive the atmospheric parameters of the stars. The calibrations were built
using a sample of 309 stars with precise stellar parameters obtained from the
analysis of high-resolution FEROS spectra. A validation test of the method was
conducted with a sample of 30 MARVELS targets that also have reliable
atmospheric parameters from high-resolution spectroscopic analysis. Our
approach was able to recover the parameters within 80 K for Teff, 0.05 dex for
[Fe/H] and 0.15 dex for log g, values that are lower or equal to the typical
external uncertainties found between different high-resolution analyzes. An
additional test was performed with a subsample of 138 stars from the ELODIE
stellar library and the literature atmospheric parameters were recovered within
125 K for Teff, 0.10 dex for [Fe/H] and 0.29 dex for log g. These results show
that the spectral indices are a competitive tool to characterize stars with the
intermediate resolution spectra.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ. Abstract edited to comply with arXiv
standards regarding the number of character
A survey of cognitive assistants
Cognitive Assistants is a subset area of Personal Assistants focused on ubiquitous and pervasive platforms and services. They are aimed at elderly people’s needs, habits, and emotions by being dynamic, adaptive, sensitive, and responsive. These advances make cognitive assistants a true candidate of being used in real scenarios and help elderly people at home and outside environments. This survey will discuss the cognitive assistants’ emergence in order to provide a list of new projects being developed on this area. We summarize and enumerate the state-of-the-art projects. Moreover, we discuss how technology support the elderly affected by physical or mental disabilities or chronic diseases.Programa Operacional Temático Factores de Competitividade (UID/CEC/00319/2013
Genetic parameters for faecal egg count, packed-cell volume and body-weight in Santa Inês lambs
Worm infection is one of the main factors responsible for economic losses in sheep breeding in Brazil. Random regression analysis was used to estimate genetic parameters for the factors faecal egg-count (FEC), packed-cell volume (PCV) and body weight (BW) in Santa Inês lambs. Data from 119 female, offspring of nine rams, were collected between December, 2005 and December, 2006, from the experimental flock of Embrapa Tabuleiros Costeiros, the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation located in Frei Paulo, SE, Brazil. After weaning, females were drenched until the faecal egg count had dropped to zero. Two natural challenges were undertaken. FEC heritability was extremely variable, this increasing from 0.04 to 0.27 in the first challenge and from 0.01 to 0.52 during the second. PCV heritability peaks were 0.31 and 0.12 in the first and second challenges, respectively. In the second challenge, BW heritability was close to 0.90. The genetic correlations among these traits did not differ from zero. There is the possibility of increasing parasite resistance in Santa Inês by selecting those animals with lower FEC. Selection to increase resistance will not adversely affect lamb-growth, although lambs with a slow growth-rate may be more susceptible to infection
Exploration of the Eucalyptus globulus gene pool
The first Europeans to discover Eucalyptus
globulus were French explorers in 1792. Its seed
was rapidly spread throughout the world in the
19th century and this was the species by which
much of the world first knew the genus.
However, it was in the industrial forests of the
20th century that this species, once considered
the ‘Prince of Eucalypts’, achieved greatest
prominence due to its fast growth and superior
pulp qualities. Formal breeding first commenced
in 1966 in Portugal and in the late 1980’s large
base population trials from open-pollinated seed
collections from native stands were established
in many countries. These trials have provided
unprecedented insights into the quantitative
genetic control of numerous traits of economic
and ecological importance and how this variation
is spatially distributed in the native range of the
species. However with large, fully pedigreed
breeding populations becoming available for
quantitative analysis and the rapidly expanding
knowledge of DNA sequence variation, we are
now at the threshold of a new understanding of
this important eucalypt gene pool. Indications of
the significance of non-additive genetic effects
are becoming available. The E. globulus
chloroplast genome has now been sequenced
and several genome maps have been published.
Studies of the variation in nuclear microsatellites
and the lignin biosynthesis gene CCR confirm
the complex, spatially structured nature of the
native gene pool. Strong spatial structuring of
the chloroplast genome has provided a tool for
tracking seed migration and the geographic
origin of exotic landraces. Highly divergent
lineages of chloroplast DNA have been
discovered and studies of the hypervariable JLA+
region argue that some components of the E.
globulus gene pool have been assimilated from
other species following hybridisation
Quark Number Susceptibility with Finite Chemical Potential in Holographic QCD
We study the quark number susceptibility in holographic QCD with a finite
chemical potential or under an external magnetic field at finite temperature.
We first consider the quark number susceptibility with the chemical potential.
We observe that approaching the critical temperature from high temperature
regime, the quark number susceptibility divided by temperature square develops
a peak as we increase the chemical potential, which confirms recent lattice QCD
results. We discuss this behavior in connection with the existence of the
critical end point in the QCD phase diagram. We also consider the quark number
susceptibility under the external magnetic field. We predict that the quark
number susceptibility exhibits a blow-up behavior at low temperature as we
raise the value of the magnetic field. We finally spell out some limitations of
our study.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figures, published versio
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