117 research outputs found

    Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineage: a naming of the parts

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    There have been many reports of groups of related Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains described variously as lineages, families or clades. There is no objective definition of these groupings making it impossible to define relationships between those groups with biological advantages. Here we describe two groups of related strains obtained from an epidemiological study in Tanzania which we define as the Kilimanjaro and Meru lineages on the basis of IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), polymorphic GC rich sequence (PGRS) RFLP and mycobacterial interspersed repeat unit (MIRU) typing. We investigated the concordance between each of the typing techniques and the dispersal of the typing profiles from a core pattern. The Meru lineage is more dispersed than the Kilimanjaro lineage and we speculate that the Meru lineage is older. We suggest that this approach provides an objective definition that proves robust in this epidemiological study. Such a framework will permit associations between a lineage and clinical or bacterial phenomenon to be tested objectively. This definition will also enable new putative lineages to be objectively tested

    Magnetoelectric ordering of BiFeO3 from the perspective of crystal chemistry

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    In this paper we examine the role of crystal chemistry factors in creating conditions for formation of magnetoelectric ordering in BiFeO3. It is generally accepted that the main reason of the ferroelectric distortion in BiFeO3 is concerned with a stereochemical activity of the Bi lone pair. However, the lone pair is stereochemically active in the paraelectric orthorhombic beta-phase as well. We demonstrate that a crucial role in emerging of phase transitions of the metal-insulator, paraelectric-ferroelectric and magnetic disorder-order types belongs to the change of the degree of the lone pair stereochemical activity - its consecutive increase with the temperature decrease. Using the structural data, we calculated the sign and strength of magnetic couplings in BiFeO3 in the range from 945 C down to 25 C and found the couplings, which undergo the antiferromagnetic-ferromagnetic transition with the temperature decrease and give rise to the antiferromagnetic ordering and its delay in regard to temperature, as compared to the ferroelectric ordering. We discuss the reasons of emerging of the spatially modulated spin structure and its suppression by doping with La3+.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, 3 table

    Human toxocariasis: contribution by Brazilian researchers

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    In the present paper the main aspects of the natural history of human infection by Toxocara larvae that occasionally result in the occurrence of visceral and/or ocular larva migrans syndrome were reviewed. The contribution by Brazilian researchers was emphasized, especially the staff of the Tropical Medicine Institute of SĂŁo Paulo (IMT)

    Nature’s nations: the shared conservation history of Canada and the USA

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    Historians often study the history of conservation within the confines of national borders, concentrating on the bureaucratic and political manifestations of policy within individual governments. Even studies of the popular expression of conservationist ideas are generally limited to the national or sub-national (province, state, etc.) scale. This paper suggests that conservationist discourse, policy and practice in Canada and the USA were the products of a significant cross-border movement of ideas and initiatives derived from common European sources. In addition, the historical development of common approaches to conservation in North America suggests, contrary to common assumptions, that Canada did not always lag behind the USA in terms of policy innovation. The basic tenets of conservation (i.e. state control over resource, class-based disdain for subsistence hunters and utilitarian approaches to resource management) have instead developed at similar time periods and along parallel ideological paths in Canada and the USA

    Estimating Surface Wetness on Plants

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    Plant surface (leaf, stem, petiole, etc) wetness or leaf wetness is an important agricultural weather variable for the prediction of plant diseases (Yarwood, 1978). The estimation of surface wetness has received considerable attention from a diverse group of scientists but unfortunately, no standard for measuring surface wetness has been widely accepted. Since surface wetness is not a true meteorological variable, as is temperature or precipitation, its measurement has not been routinely made as part of a general observation program by most national meteorological agencies. The main problem of not observing surface wetness on a routine basis has been the lack of agreement about a standard sensor design and protocol for the use of sensors. In addition, most sensors measure surface wetness indirectly and have different physical properties. In order for a sensor to represent a particular crop, plant organ, or environment, the sensor should be calibrated with visual observations of surface wetness. Unfortunately, the collection of visual observations is labor intensive and difficult, since there is no universally accepted definition for plant surface wetness. In this chapter, we will attempt to define surface wetness in physical terms and review methods for determining surface wetness. We also will consider solutions to the lack of surface wetness standardization from both a measurement and simulation perspective. And finally, we will also recommend the most suitable protocols for estimating surface wetness
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