27,643 research outputs found
Short-Term Belowground Responses to Thinning and Burning Treatments in Southwestern Ponderosa Pine Forests of the USA
Microbial-mediated decomposition and nutrient mineralization are major drivers of forest productivity. As landscape-scale fuel reduction treatments are being implemented throughout the fire-prone western United States of America, it is important to evaluate operationally how these wildfire mitigation treatments alter belowground processes. We quantified these important belowground components before and after management-applied fuel treatments of thinning alone, thinning combined with prescribed fire, and prescribed fire in ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) stands at the Southwest Plateau, Fire and Fire Surrogate site, Arizona. Fuel treatments did not alter pH, total carbon and nitrogen (N) concentrations, or base cations of the forest floor (O horizon) or mineral soil (0â5 cm) during this 2-year study. In situ rates of net N mineralization and nitrification in the surface mineral soil (0â15 cm) increased 6 months after thinning with prescribed fire treatments; thinning only resulted in net N immobilization. The rates returned to pre-treatment levels after one year. Based on phospholipid fatty acid composition, microbial communities in treated areas were similar to untreated areas (control) in the surface organic horizon and mineral soil (0â5 cm) after treatments. Soil potential enzyme activities were not significantly altered by any of the three fuel treatments. Our results suggest that a variety of one-time alternative fuel treatments can reduce fire hazard without degrading soil fertility
Sequence-Based Mapping and Genome Editing Reveal Mutations in Stickleback Hps5 Cause Oculocutaneous Albinism and the casper Phenotype.
Here, we present and characterize the spontaneous X-linked recessive mutation casper, which causes oculocutaneous albinism in threespine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus). In humans, Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome results in pigmentation defects due to disrupted formation of the melanin-containing lysosomal-related organelle (LRO), the melanosome. casper mutants display not only reduced pigmentation of melanosomes in melanophores, but also reductions in the iridescent silver color from iridophores, while the yellow pigmentation from xanthophores appears unaffected. We mapped casper using high-throughput sequencing of genomic DNA from bulked casper mutants to a region of the stickleback X chromosome (chromosome 19) near the stickleback ortholog of Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome 5 (Hps5). casper mutants have an insertion of a single nucleotide in the sixth exon of Hps5, predicted to generate an early frameshift. Genome editing using CRISPR/Cas9 induced lesions in Hps5 and phenocopied the casper mutation. Injecting single or paired Hps5 guide RNAs revealed higher incidences of genomic deletions from paired guide RNAs compared to single gRNAs. Stickleback Hps5 provides a genetic system where a hemizygous locus in XY males and a diploid locus in XX females can be used to generate an easily scored visible phenotype, facilitating quantitative studies of different genome editing approaches. Lastly, we show the ability to better visualize patterns of fluorescent transgenic reporters in Hps5 mutant fish. Thus, Hps5 mutations present an opportunity to study pigmented LROs in the emerging stickleback model system, as well as a tool to aid in assaying genome editing and visualizing enhancer activity in transgenic fish
Monopole clusters in Abelian projected gauge theories
We show that the monopole currents which one obtains in the maximally Abelian
gauge of SU(2) fall into two quite distinct classes (when the volume is large
enough). In each field configuration there is precisely one cluster that
permeates the whole lattice volume. It has a current density and a magnetic
screening mass that scale and it produces the whole of the string tension. The
remaining clusters have a number density that follows an approximate power law
proportional to the inverse cube of l where l is the length of the monopole
world line in lattice units. These clusters are localised in space-time with
radii which vary as the square root of l. In terms of the radius r these
`lumps' have a scale-invariant distribution proportional to (dr/r . 1/{r^4}).
Moreover they appear not to contribute at all to the string tension. The fact
that they are scale-invariant at small distances would seem to rule out an
instanton origin.Comment: LaTeX, 31 pages, 11 PostScript figures. Typo in Table 2 correcte
Reducing pitfalls in agricultural development projects: a case for the participatory project management cycle (PPMC)
The management of agricultural development projects is a factor that can contribute to their success or failure. In worst-case scenarios poorly managed projects seem to continue with a life of their own and without clear direction. In the cycle of agricultural development projects, including programmed extension, major pitfalls can occur if the necessary phases are ignored or incorrectly implemented. The argument is that these can be avoided if the Participatory Project Management Cycle (PPMC) is followed. While there are a number of methods available for trained agricultural extensionists these are not readily available for agricultural researchers who do not undergo such training but are often expected to carry out technology transfer. This is often done without the collaboration of trained extensionists. Subsequently, a method had to be developed using the basic project management knowledge that some agricultural researchers had obtained through experience and short courses. Two case studies are used to highlight what happens when the PPMC is followed or not. Case Study One is a project that was implemented to completion without following the Participatory Project Management Cycle. For the purpose of this study the PPMC was used during the ex-post evaluation to identify where and why major pitfalls occurred. Case Study Two concerns a project that was initiated using the PPMC but was temporarily suspended at the beginning of phase four of the cycle. This decision was based on the information obtained while following the PPMC and avoided the unnecessary use of scarce resources. Keywords: participatory project management cycle, agricultural development, case studies, Southern and Eastern Cape South African Journal of Agricultural Extension Vol. 34(1) 2005: 104-12
Structural model optimization using statistical evaluation
The results of research in applying statistical methods to the problem of structural dynamic system identification are presented. The study is in three parts: a review of previous approaches by other researchers, a development of various linear estimators which might find application, and the design and development of a computer program which uses a Bayesian estimator. The method is tried on two models and is successful where the predicted stiffness matrix is a proper model, e.g., a bending beam is represented by a bending model. Difficulties are encountered when the model concept varies. There is also evidence that nonlinearity must be handled properly to speed the convergence
Radiation resistance and comparative performance of ITO/InP and n/p InP homojunction solar cells
The radiation resistance of ITO/InP cells processed by DC magnetron sputtering is compared to that of standard n/p InP and GaAs homojunction cells. After 20 MeV proton irradiations, it is found that the radiation resistance of the present ITO/InP cell is comparable to that of the n/p homojunction InP cell and that both InP cell types have radiation resistance significantly greater than GaAs. The relatively lower radiation resistance, observed at higher fluence, for the InP cell with the deepest junction depth, is attributed to losses in the cells emitter region. Diode parameters obtained from I sub sc - V sub oc plots, data from surface Raman spectroscopy, and determinations of surface conductivity types are used to investigate the configuration of the ITO/InP cells. It is concluded that thesee latter cells are n/p homojunctions, the n-region consisting of a disordered layer at the oxide semiconductor
Massive pulmonary embolism presenting as disseminated intravascular coagulation.
Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) can be defined as evidence of activation of the coagulation mechanism resulting in proteolysis of fibrinogen by thrombin and plasmin and an acute thrombocytopenia. The association of pulmonary embolism (PE) with DIC has recently been reported but in reviewing recent textbooks of hematology, there is no mention of PE as a cause of DIC. Clinicians need to be made aware of this association since it affects the patient who is thought to be autoanticoagulated as well as the patient who has DIC of unknown cause. PE needs to be included in the differential diagnosis of an autoanticoagulated state and in DIC of unknown etiology. In both instances the recommended treatment is full-dose intravenous heparin therapy
The monopole mass in the three-dimensional Georgi-Glashow model
We study the three-dimensional Georgi-Glashow model to demonstrate how
magnetic monopoles can be studied fully non-perturbatively in lattice Monte
Carlo simulations, without any assumptions about the smoothness of the field
configurations. We examine the apparent contradiction between the conjectured
analytic connection of the `broken' and `symmetric' phases, and the
interpretation of the mass (i.e., the free energy) of the fully quantised 't
Hooft-Polyakov monopole as an order parameter to distinguish the phases. We use
Monte Carlo simulations to measure the monopole free energy and its first
derivative with respect to the scalar mass. On small volumes we compare this to
semi-classical predictions for the monopole. On large volumes we show that the
free energy is screened to zero, signalling the formation of a confining
monopole condensate. This screening does not allow the monopole mass to be
interpreted as an order parameter, resolving the paradox.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, uses revtex. Minor changes made to the text to
match with the published version at
http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRD/v65/e12500
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