22,275 research outputs found
Intestinal Microbial Ecology of Broilers Vaccinated and Challenged With Mixed Eimeria Species, and Supplemented with Essential Oil Blends
Intestinal microbiota is an important component in the development of defense mechanisms in the gut mucosa. This project determined the dynamics of intestinal microbial communities (MC) of broilers vaccinated at first day of age with live oocysts of Eimeria species and fed diets supplemented with 2 specific essential oil (EO) blends, Crina Poultry (CP) and Crina Alternate (CA). Five treatments were analyzed: 1) unmedicated-uninfected (UU) control; 2) unmedicated-infected (UI) control; 3) vaccinated with Advent cocci-vaccine and without feed additive (COV) supplements; 4) vaccinated with Advent and supplemented with CP; and 5) vaccinated with Advent and supplemented with CA. The EO blends were added at 100 ppm to the same basal diets. Chicks were gavage-infected at 19 d of age with Eimeria acervulina, Eimeria maxima, and Eimeria tenella. Duodenal, ileal, and cecal samples were taken from 12 birds per treatment just before the infection and 7 d after the challenge, pooled in 6 samples, and frozen. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis was used to examine PCR-amplified fragments of the bacterial 16S ribosomal DNA variable region. Results are presented as percentages of similarity coefficients (SC). Dendrograms of amplicon patterns indicated MC differences due to intestinal location, feed additives, and cocci infection. The EO blends CP and CA did affect MC in all gut sections. The cocci-infection caused drastic MC population shifts in duodenal, ileal, and cecal sections (36.7, 55.4, and 36.2% SC, respectively). The CP-supplemented birds had higher SC between pre- and postchallenge MC in duodenal and ileal (73.3, 81.8%) than COV (66.4, 66.5%). However, COV broilers had the smallest changes in cecal MC after infection (79.5% SC). We concluded that cocci-vaccination causes small changes in intestinal MC, but challenge causes drastic shifts. The EO blend supplementation modulates MC in cocci-vaccinated broilers, avoiding drastic shifts after a mixed coccidia infection. Correlations between MC dynamics and host responses are discussed
Baseline report on the evaluation of Familias en AcciĂłn
This report describes the survey that was carried out in 122 communities in rural Colombia by the consortium formed by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, Econometria and SEI as the baseline for the impact evaluation of Familias en AcciĂłn, a programme to foster the accumulation of human capital in rural Colombia, run by the Colombian government.
In this report, we will not describe in detail the programme or the methodology of the proposed evaluation, as this was done in IFS-Econometria-SEI (2003a). The main aim of the document is to discuss the first, baseline survey that was collected for this evaluation. While the baseline survey cannot, by definition, be used to perform impact evaluation, towards the end of the report we exploit the slightly peculiar way in which the programme was started and
have a first very preliminary glance at some of the impacts that the programme might have.
The methodological caveats on interpreting these results should be taken very seriously.
This report does not contain an extensive âfieldworkâ report. This is included in SEI (2003).
Analogously, we do not discuss extensively the operation of the programme and the evidence that emerged on related issues and on targeting. These issues are covered in IFS-Econometria- SEI (2003b, 2003c). We will be referring to some of the issues raised in those reports, however.
This report is divided into five chapters. In Chapter 1, we briefly summarise the main features of the programme and its proposed evaluation. A more detailed description of both of these aspects is contained in IFS-Econometria-SEI (2003a). Here, however, we give some details on the expansion of the programme and on the features of this expansion that allow a first and preliminary analysis of the impact of the programme. In Chapter 2, we describe the statistical methodology that will be used in the report. This includes the methodology for the data description that constitutes the largest part of the report and for the preliminary impact evaluation. Chapter 3 describes the baseline survey. This chapter is divided into several
sections, each referring to a particular module. In each section, we first describe the âtreatmentâ population â that is, the households eligible for the programme that were living in villages targeted by the programme. We then move on to the population living in âcontrolâ villages â
that is, in villages that were not targeted by the programme and yet are, nonetheless, reasonably similar to the treatment villages. Chapter 4 presents the preliminary impact evaluation
Early evaluation of a new nutrition and education programme in Colombia
From introduction:
In recent years, international financial institutions, policy-makers and economists have paid considerable attention to micro development policies based on cash transfers targeted to poor families and released only if the
potential beneficiaries comply with specific conditions. Such conditional cash transfers have been particularly popular in education and nutrition policies â
that is, in policies whose aim is to foster the accumulation of human capital among young children. In the case of the nutrition interventions, the conditions are often that the mother of the children, who receives the transfers, enrols
them to development and growth check-ups and/or attends hygiene, vaccination and contraception courses. Much of the attention on conditional transfer programmes originated from the perceived success of a large programme of this nature started in rural Mexico in 1998 and evaluated scientifically with semi-experimental methods. Since the evidence on PROGRESA, as the Mexican programme was known, has received much attention, several international organisations have been promoting similar interventions in many developing countries and in particular in Latin America. It should be stressed that while PROGRESA has been widely branded as a success and has surely improved the nutritional and development outcomes of very young children and enrolment for secondary school, the reasons behind this success are not entirely obvious. In particular, it is not completely clear whether the conditionalities imposed by the programme played a role in determining the outcomes and what that role was
Transverse parton momenta in single inclusive hadron production in annihilation processes
We study the transverse momentum distributions of single inclusive hadron
production in annihilation processes. Although the only
available experimental data are scarce and quite old, we find that the
fundamental features of transverse momentum dependent (TMD) evolution,
historically addressed in Drell-Yan processes and, more recently, in
Semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering processes, are visible in annihilations as well. Interesting effects related to its non-perturbative
regime can be observed. We test two different parameterizations for the
dependence of the cross section: the usual Gaussian distribution and
a power-law model. We find the latter to be more appropriate in describing this
particular set of experimental data, over a relatively large range of
values. We use this model to map some of the features of the data within the
framework of TMD evolution, and discuss the caveats of this and other possible
interpretations, related to the one-dimensional nature of the available
experimental data
Spectral gap induced by structural corrugation in armchair graphene nanoribbons
We study the effects of the structural corrugation or rippling on the
electronic properties of undoped armchair graphene nanoribbons (AGNR). First,
reanalyzing the single corrugated graphene layer we find that the two
inequivalent Dirac points (DP), move away one from the other. Otherwise, the
Fermi velocity decrease by increasing rippling. Regarding the AGNRs, whose
metallic behavior depends on their width, we analyze in particular the case of
the zero gap band-structure AGNRs. By solving the Dirac equation with the
adequate boundary condition we show that due to the shifting of the DP a gap
opens in the spectra. This gap scale with the square of the rate between the
high and the wavelength of the deformation. We confirm this prediction by exact
numerical solution of the finite width rippled AGNR. Moreover, we find that the
quantum conductance, calculated by the non equilibrium Green's function
technique vanish when the gap open. The main conclusion of our results is that
a conductance gap should appear for all undoped corrugated AGNR independent of
their width.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
The Orion constellation as an installation - An innovative three dimensional teaching and learning environment
Visualising the three dimensional distribution of stars within a
constellation is highly challenging for both students and educators, but when
carried out in an interactive collaborative way it can create an ideal
environment to explore common misconceptions about size and scale within
astronomy. We present how the common table top activities based upon the Orion
constellation miss out on this opportunity. Transformed into a walk-through
Orion installation that includes the position of our Solar system, it allows
the students to fully immerse themselves within the model and experience
parallax. It enables participants to explore within the installation many other
aspects of astronomy relating to sky culture, stellar evolution, and stellar
timescales establishing an innovative learning and teaching environment.Comment: 2 pages, submitted to The Physics Teacher - Colum
Flexible Parametrization of Generalized Parton Distributions: The Chiral-Odd Sector
We present a physically motivated parameterization of the chiral-odd
generalized parton distributions. The parametrization is an extension of our
previous one in the chiral-even sector which was based on the reggeized diquark
model. While for chiral even generalized distributions a quantitative fit with
uncertainty estimation can be performed using deep inelastic scattering data,
nucleon electromagnetic, axial and pseudoscalar form factors measurements, and
all available deeply virtual Compton scattering data, the chiral-odd sector is
far less constrained. While awaiting the analysis of measurements on
pseudoscalar mesons exclusive electroproduction which are key for the
extraction of chiral odd GPDs, we worked out a connection between the
chiral-even and chiral-odd reduced helicity amplitudes using Parity
transformations. The connection works for a class of models including
two-components models. This relation allows us to estimate the size of the
various chiral odd contributions and it opens the way for future quantitative
fits.Comment: 35 pages, 18 figures, text changes, corrected typos, added fig.
Child health in rural Colombia: determinants and policy interventions
In this paper we study the determinants of child anthropometrics on a sample of poor Colombian
children living in small municipalities. We focus on the influence of household consumption, and
public infrastructure. We take into account the endogeneity of household consumption using two
different sets of instruments: household assets and municipality average wage. We find that household
consumption is an important determinant of child health. The importance of the effect is confirmed by
the two different sets of instruments. We find that using ordinary least squares would lead to conclude
that the importance of household consumption is much smaller than the instrumental variable
estimates suggest. The presence of a public hospital in the municipality positively influences child
health. The extent of the piped water network positively influences the health of children if their
parents have at least some education. The number of hours of growth and development check-ups is
also an important determinant of child health. We find that some of these results only show up once
squared and interaction terms have been included in the regression. Overall, our estimates suggest that
both public and private investments are important to improve child health in poor environments
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