33 research outputs found

    Seasonal Movements and Diving of Ringed Seals, Pusa hispida, in the Western Canadian Arctic, 1999–2001 and 2010–11

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    Satellite-linked time-depth recorders were deployed on 17 ringed seals in early summer in 1999, 2000, and 2010, near the Inuvialuit community of Ulukhaktok, Northwest Territories, Canada. The main objective was to investigate movements and diving behaviour of ringed seals in the Prince Albert Sound (PAS) and eastern Amundsen Gulf (EAG) regions in relation to season, sex, and age-class. Tags performed well on 16 of 17 tagged seals, with average tracking periods of 256 d (SD 69, range: 134 – 352). Adult and subadult ringed seals traveled considerable distances throughout the open water period (mean = 5844 km, range = 1232 – 9473 km), using vast home ranges during this season, shown with 90 Percent Volume Contours (90 PVC) averaging 122 854 km2 for subadults, 76 658 km2 for adult females, and 21 649 km2 for adult males. Overall, adults spent 69.5% of the observed open water days in foraging/resident mode and 22.8% in traveling mode. The majority (75%) of total observed foraging/resident time was spent in PAS and EAG. Eleven of 12 adults made forays outside EAG and PAS to distant areas, including Prince of Wales Strait (7 seals), Viscount Melville Sound (6), Minto Inlet (4), western Amundsen Gulf (4), and six other zones. During open water season, subadults spent 36.8% traveling and 51.4% foraging/ resident, also mainly in EAG and PAS (61%), but they all traveled to distant zones, eight in total. During winter, all tagged adult females, five of seven adult males, and three of four subadults returned to PAS and EAG to occupy winter home ranges that were on average 15% of the size of the open water home range (mean winter ranges = 1299 km2 for adult males, 3599 km2 for adult females, and 30 499 km2 for subadults). The mean size of the winter home ranges varied by as much as a factor of 10 among the three winters examined. Seal movements were most restricted during the winters with extensive fast ice (1999 – 2000 and 2010 – 11) and least restricted during the winter (2000 – 01) when fast ice did not form in EAG. In winter, adult females made more long, deep dives than either adult males or subadults.Des enregistreurs de profondeur temporelle en liaison avec un satellite ont Ă©tĂ© dĂ©ployĂ©s sur 17 phoques annelĂ©s au dĂ©but des Ă©tĂ©s 1999, 2000 et 2010 prĂšs de la collectivitĂ© inuvialuite d’Ulukhaktok, dans les Territoires du Nord-Ouest, au Canada. L’objectif principal consistait Ă  Ă©tudier les dĂ©placements et les comportements de plongĂ©e des phoques annelĂ©s des rĂ©gions du dĂ©troit de Prince-Albert (DPA) et de la partie est du golfe Amundsen (EGA) en fonction de la saison, du sexe et de la classe d’ñge. Les Ă©tiquettes ont donnĂ© des rĂ©sultats valables dans le cas de 16 des 17 phoques Ă©tiquetĂ©s, les pĂ©riodes moyennes de pistage ayant atteint 256 jours (SD 69, Ă©tendue : 134 – 352). Les phoques annelĂ©s adultes et jeunes adultes parcouraient des distances considĂ©rables pendant la pĂ©riode des eaux libres (moyenne = 5 844 km, Ă©tendue = 1 232 – 9 473 km), dans de vastes domaines vitaux au cours de la saison. Les pourcentages du volume des contours de 90 (90 PVC) s’établissaient en moyenne Ă  122 854 km2 pour les jeunes adultes, Ă  76 658 km2 pour les femelles adultes et Ă  21 649 km2 pour les mĂąles adultes. Dans l’ensemble, les adultes ont passĂ© 69,5 % des journĂ©es observĂ©es en eaux libres en mode d’alimentation et de rĂ©sidence, et 22,8 % en mode de dĂ©placement. La majoritĂ© (75 %) du temps total observĂ© en mode d’alimentation et de rĂ©sidence Ă©tait dans le DPA et l’EGA. Onze adultes sur 12 se sont aventurĂ©s en dehors du DPA et de l’EGA pour atteindre des endroits Ă©loignĂ©s, dont le dĂ©troit du Prince-de-Galles (7 phoques), le dĂ©troit du Vicomte de Melville (6), l’anse Mintot (4), l’ouest du golfe Amundsen (4) et six autres zones. Pendant la saison des eaux libres, les jeunes adultes ont passĂ© 36,8 % du temps en mode de dĂ©placement et 51,4 % du temps en mode d’alimentation ou de rĂ©sidence, Ă©galement principalement dans le DPG et l’EGA (61 %), mais ils se sont tous rendus dans des zones Ă©loignĂ©es, huit en tout. Durant l’hiver, toutes les femelles adultes Ă©tiquetĂ©es, cinq mĂąles adultes sur sept et trois jeunes adultes sur quatre sont revenus dans le DPA et l’EGA pour occuper des domaines vitaux hivernaux qui correspondaient, en moyenne, Ă  15 % de la taille du domaine vital en eaux libres (Ă©tendues moyennes des domaines hivernaux = 1 299 km2 pour les mĂąles adultes, 3 599 km2 pour les femelles adultes et 30 499 km2 pour les jeunes adultes). La taille moyenne des domaines vitaux hivernaux a variĂ© en fonction d’un facteur de 10 au cours des trois hivers Ă  l’étude. Le dĂ©placement des phoques Ă©tait plus restreint pendant les hivers oĂč la glace Ă©tait rapide (1999-2000 et 2010-2011) et moins restreint pendant l’hiver (2000-2001) oĂč la glace rapide ne s’est pas formĂ©e dans l’EGA. L’hiver, les femelles adultes faisaient plus de plongĂ©es longues et profondes que les mĂąles adultes ou les jeunes adultes

    The potential of a mobile group blog to support cultural learning among overseas students

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    We explored the use of mobile social software, in the form of a mobile group blog, to assist cultural learning. The potential of using this technology for cultural adaptation among overseas students was examined as those students adapted to the everyday life of studying abroad. Two pilot studies and a successful field study of a mobile group blog as used by UK overseas students are reported. A further study with prospective overseas students witnessing this ‘moblogging’ in China revealed the advantages of communicating through this technology as a form of peer-supported preparation for cultural adaptation. Potential advantages for learning a second language via this system, were highlighted as communication was interweaved with cultural adaptation and exercised in the blog entries. Given mobile internet, the language experience together with cultural observation impressively supported these students' growing confidence with time, space and imagination

    Toward quantifying the increasing role oceanic heat in sea ice loss in the new Arctic

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    Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2015. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 96 (2015): 2079–2105, doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-13-00177.1.The loss of Arctic sea ice has emerged as a leading signal of global warming. This, together with acknowledged impacts on other components of the Earth system, has led to the term “the new Arctic.” Global coupled climate models predict that ice loss will continue through the twenty-first century, with implications for governance, economics, security, and global weather. A wide range in model projections reflects the complex, highly coupled interactions between the polar atmosphere, ocean, and cryosphere, including teleconnections to lower latitudes. This paper summarizes our present understanding of how heat reaches the ice base from the original sources—inflows of Atlantic and Pacific Water, river discharge, and summer sensible heat and shortwave radiative fluxes at the ocean/ice surface—and speculates on how such processes may change in the new Arctic. The complexity of the coupled Arctic system, and the logistic and technological challenges of working in the Arctic Ocean, require a coordinated interdisciplinary and international program that will not only improve understanding of this critical component of global climate but will also provide opportunities to develop human resources with the skills required to tackle related problems in complex climate systems. We propose a research strategy with components that include 1) improved mapping of the upper- and middepth Arctic Ocean, 2) enhanced quantification of important process, 3) expanded long-term monitoring at key heat-flux locations, and 4) development of numerical capabilities that focus on parameterization of heat-flux mechanisms and their interactions.2016-06-0

    International Students’ Perceptions and Experiences of British Drinking Cultures.

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    While the increased scale and importance of international students to the UK Higher Education sector is now well established, little is known about the ways in which students from non-UK countries experience and interact with the heavy drinking culture that predominates on and near many British universities. Drawing on qualitative interviews, this article analyses the perceptions, attitudes and experiences of British drinking cultures held by international students studying on postgraduate courses at a UK university. Students report prior awareness of alcohol consumption being important to British culture and recount both positive and negative experiences of witnessing and, for many, participating in drinking alcohol. Students make ready comparisons with the drinking habits and attitudes of their own culture. Further still, many made a distinction between the public house, or ‘pub’, as a welcoming and friendly social space and bars and nightclubs where a far greater risk of exposure to violence and harassment was perceived. The article provides theoretical insights to support future and more wide-ranging research into mobile drinking cultures and also suggests practical implications to inform stakeholders with interests in the welfare of international students in the UK in relation to the provision of effective and proactive policies which address the impact of British drinking cultures on international student integration and wellbeing

    Chinese students in a UK business school: hearing the student voice in reflective teaching and learning practice.

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    This paper presents the outcomes of a study carried out in 2001-2002 with nine postgraduate students from China, enrolled on taught master's programmes in a UK university business school. The aims of the research were to explore the development of the students' orientations to learning during their year of study in the UK, and to explore how the researcher's interactions with the study group contributed to her professional reflections and influenced her academic practice. The main conclusions of the project were that participants' underlying approaches to learning did not change substantially over the year, owing to the culturally implicit nature of UK academic conventions and that they experienced high levels of emotional isolation and loneliness, which affected their academic confidence

    Into the Market Place, 1979–2010

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    Pharmacies as centres of communication in early modern Venice

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    This article explores a hitherto neglected aspect of the apothecaries’ profession and of their pharmacies’ social and cultural function. In sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Venice, pharmacies were amongst the most important centres for the retrieval and redistribution of information. News was one of the vast array of goods on sale in Venetian pharmacies, and people did not only go there to buy medicines, but also to discuss current affairs, religious beliefs, and political trends. Such activities affected both the Venetians’ perception of pharmacies, and the pharmacies’ physical arrangement. The clientele consisted of a relatively wide cross-section of Venetian society, including both members of the political Ă©lites (Venetian patricians, foreign diplomats, professional informers), and others who were excluded from the formal avenues of politics. The sources examined in this article include Inquisition records, notarial inventories, and above all the reports of the many secret informers in the pay of the Inquisitors of State. (pp. 505–521
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