678 research outputs found

    Quelles technologies le CIRAD peut-il proposer pour redynamiser la filière cocotier ?

    Get PDF
    Le CIRAD-CP a été amené récemment à préconiser une réorientation des objectifs de la filière cocotier de plusieurs pays producteurs. Cette stratégie repose essentiellement sur une diversification accrue et une plus grande prise en compte des marché locaux, ce qui implique le développement de petites et moyennes unités de transformation sur les lieux de production. La mise en place de telles unités nécessite de pouvoir disposer de technologies pouvant être exploitées efficacement dans de tels contextes et permettant l'obtention de produits de qualité. Dans cette optique, une équipe pluri-disciplinaire du CIRAD a entrepris l'étude de deux procédés relevant des voies humides ou semi-humides : l'extraction après séchage friture, et l'extraction assistée par les enzymes. Les technologies développées sont décrites en détail, et leur adéquation avec les objectifs assignés fait l'objet d'une discussio

    Towards an operational use of benthic foraminifera for organic pollution monitoring in open and enclosed marine environments: case histories from the outer shelf off Congo and the Firth of Clyde in Scotland.

    Get PDF
    Foraminifera are among the most abundant protists in marine benthic environments. Because of their short life cycles, high biodiversity and specific ecological requirements of individual species, foraminifera react quickly to environmental disturbance, and can be successfully employed as bio-indicators of environmental change, such as those brought about by anthropogenic pollution. In the last decennia, foraminifera have been increasingly used to monitor pollution in a wide range of marine environments, such as intertidal mudflats impacted by oil spillages, harbours affected by heavy metal pollution, or eutrophicated continental shelves. Our best examples of anthropogenic eutrophication are 1) a drill cutting disposal sites at the outer continental shelf off Congo, where we observed a zonation of foraminiferal faunas in the 750 m around the discharge point. In the immediate vicinity of the discharge points (within 70 m), faunas are characterised by low foraminiferal densities. Faunas between 70 m and 250 m of the disposal sites have very high foraminiferal densities, with high percentages of opportunistic taxa such as B. aculeata and B. marginata. Between 250 and 750 m, foraminiferal densities decrease, and the percentages of opportunistic species are lower; 2) a sewage sludge disposal on the sea floor in the Firth of Clyde (Scotland) where we used benthic foraminifera and macrofaunal/meiofaunal assemblages to evaluate the impact. These two communities present a very similar distributional pattern around the disposal site. In its immediate vicinity, both groups show impoverished faunas composed exclusively of species tolerant to strong oxygen depletion. This area is surrounded by an aureole of high density faunas dominated by opportunistic species. Still farther away, faunal density decreases, and equilibrium taxa gradually replace opportunistic species. At about 3 Km of the disposal site, both foraminiferal and macro-/meiofaunal taxa become comparable to those found at the reference station. We used these data to develop a quantitative pollution index, values of which are strongly correlated with the distance to the disposal site. This foraminiferal index offers the possibility to quantify the impact of anthropogenic eutrophication in marine environments, but its validity must be tested in wider range of naturally and anthropogenetically impacted marine environments.Foraminifera are among the most abundant protists in marine benthic environments. Because of their short life cycles, high biodiversity and specific ecological requirements of individual species, foraminifera react quickly to environmental disturbance, and can be successfully employed as bio-indicators of environmental change, such as those brought about by anthropogenic pollution. In the last decennia, foraminifera have been increasingly used to monitor pollution in a wide range of marine environments, such as intertidal mudflats impacted by oil spillages, harbours affected by heavy metal pollution, or eutrophicated continental shelves. Our best examples of anthropogenic eutrophication are 1) a drill cutting disposal sites at the outer continental shelf off Congo, where we observed a zonation of foraminiferal faunas in the 750 m around the discharge point. In the immediate vicinity of the discharge points (within 70 m), faunas are characterised by low foraminiferal densities. Faunas between 70 m and 250 m of the disposal sites have very high foraminiferal densities, with high percentages of opportunistic taxa such as B. aculeata and B. marginata. Between 250 and 750 m, foraminiferal densities decrease, and the percentages of opportunistic species are lower; 2) a sewage sludge disposal on the sea floor in the Firth of Clyde (Scotland) where we used benthic foraminifera and macrofaunal/meiofaunal assemblages to evaluate the impact. These two communities present a very similar distributional pattern around the disposal site. In its immediate vicinity, both groups show impoverished faunas composed exclusively of species tolerant to strong oxygen depletion. This area is surrounded by an aureole of high density faunas dominated by opportunistic species. Still farther away, faunal density decreases, and equilibrium taxa gradually replace opportunistic species. At about 3 Km of the disposal site, both foraminiferal and macro-/meiofaunal taxa become comparable to those found at the reference station. We used these data to develop a quantitative pollution index, values of which are strongly correlated with the distance to the disposal site. This foraminiferal index offers the possibility to quantify the impact of anthropogenic eutrophication in marine environments, but its validity must be tested in wider range of naturally and anthropogenetically impacted marine environments

    Discrete Matter, Far Fields, and Dark Matter

    Get PDF
    We show that in cosmology the gravitational action of the far away matter has quite relevant effects, if retardation of the forces and discreteness of matter (with its spatial correlation) are taken into account. The expansion rate is found to be determined by the density of the far away matter, i.e., by the density of matter at remote times. This leads to the introduction of an effective density, which has to be five times larger than the present one, if the present expansion rate is to be accounted for. The force per unit mass on a test particle is found to be of the order of 0.2cH_0. The corresponding contribution to the virial of the forces for a cluster of galaxies is also discussed, and it is shown that it fits the observations if a decorrelation property of the forces at two separated points is assumed. So it appears that the gravitational effects of the far away matter may have the same order of magnitude as the corresponding local effects of dark matter.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure. LaTex documen

    Energy Storage in a Hamiltonian System in Partial Contact with a Heat Bath

    Full text link
    To understand the mechanism allowing for the long-term storage of excess energy in proteins, we study a Hamiltonian system consisting of several coupled pendula in partial contact with a heat bath. It is found that energy storage is possible when the motion of each pendulum switches between oscillatory (vibrational) and rotational (phase-slip) modes. The storage time increases almost exponentially to the square root of the injected energy. The relevance of our mechanism to protein motors is discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to appear in J.Phys.Soc.Jp

    Benthic foraminifera as bio-indicators of drill cutting disposal in tropical east Atlantic outer shelf environments

    Get PDF
    We present a study of benthic foraminiferal faunas from the outer continental shelf off Congo (tropical West Africa), with the aim to determine the impact of the discharge of oily drill cuttings on the sea floor environment, to judge the regenerating capacity of the benthic ecosystem, and to investigate the possibility to develop an environmental monitoring method for open marine continental shelf environments, based on benthic foraminifera. We studied the spatial distribution and microhabitats of living and dead foraminiferal faunas, sampled in April 2003, 4 years after the end of disposal activities, in the upper 3 cm of the sediment at 9 stations (about 180 m depth) offshore Congo, that were subject to various degrees of pollution by oily cuttings from 1993 until 1999. Our results describe a zonation of foraminiferal faunas in the 750 m around the former disposal sites. At the immediate vicinity of the discharge points (within 70 m), faunas are characterized by low foraminiferal densities. Faunas between 70 m and 250 m of the disposal sites have very high foraminiferal densities, with high percentages (about 80%) of opportunistic taxa such as Bulimina aculeata, Bulimina marginata, Textularia sagittula, Trifarina bradyi and Bolivina spp. Between 250 and 750 m from the disposal site, foraminiferal densities decrease, and the percentages of opportunistic species are lower (40–60% of indicator species). These results show that 4 years after the cessation of oily cutting disposal, strong environmental impact is limited to the 250 m around the disposal sites. We used these data to develop a quantitative pollution index, values of which are strongly correlated to distance to the disposal site. This foraminiferal index offers the possibility to quantify the impact of anthropogenic eutrophication in continental shelf environments, but its validity must be tested in other continental shelf environments

    Classical light dispersion theory in a regular lattice

    Get PDF
    We study the dynamics of an infinite regular lattice of classical charged oscillators. Each individual oscillator is described as a point particle subject to a harmonic restoring potential, to the retarded electromagnetic field generated by all the other particles, and to the radiation reaction expressed according to the Lorentz--Dirac equation. Exact normal mode solutions, describing the propagation of plane electromagnetic waves through the lattice, are obtained for the complete linearized system of infinitely many oscillators. At variance with all the available results, our method is valid for any values of the frequency, or of the ratio between wavelength and lattice parameter. A remarkable feature is that the proper inclusion of radiation reaction in the dynamics of the individual oscillators does not give rise to any extinction coefficient for the global normal modes of the lattice. The dispersion relations resulting from our solution are numerically studied for the case of a simple cubic lattice. New predictions are obtained in this way about the behavior of the crystal at frequencies near the proper oscillation frequency of the dipoles.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure; typos correcte
    • …
    corecore