774 research outputs found
A comparative study of the food habits of the skunk and opossum in Michigan
Master of ScienceForestryUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/114005/1/39015003272526.pd
An Optical Velocity for the Phoenix Dwarf Galaxy
We present the results of a VLT observing program carried out in service mode
using FORS1 on ANTU in Long Slit mode to determine the optical velocities of
nearby low surface brightness galaxies. As part of our program of service
observations we obtained long-slit spectra of several members of the Phoenix
dwarf galaxy from which we derive an optical helio-centric radial velocity of
-13 +/- 9km/s. This agrees very well with the velocity of the most promising of
the HI clouds seen around Phoenix, which has a helio-centric velocity of -23
km/s, but is significantly different to the recently published optical
heliocentric velocity of Phoenix of -52 +/- 6 km/s of Gallart et al. (2001).Comment: Aceepted for publication in MNRA
Probing the link between biodiversity-related knowledge and self-reported pro-conservation behaviour in a global survey of zoo visitors
Many environmental communication interventions are built on the assumption that increased knowledge will lead to changes in proenvironment behaviors. Our study probes the link between biodiversity-related knowledge and self-reported proconservation behavior, based on the largest and most international study of zoo visitors ever conducted. In total, 6,357 visitors to 30 zoos from 19 countries around the globe participated in the study. Biodiversity understanding and knowledge of actions to help protect biodiversity were significantly related, but only 0.6% of the variation in knowledge of actions to help protect biodiversity could be explained by those same respondents’ biodiversity understanding. Biodiversity understanding was only the sixth most important variable in significantly predicting knowledge of actions to help protect biodiversity. Moreover, biodiversity understanding was the least important variable of those that were significantly related to self-reported proconservation behavior. Our study indicates that knowledge is a real, but relatively minor, factor in predicting whether members of the public – zoo visitors in this case – will know about specific proenvironment behaviors they can take, let alone whether they will actually undertake such behaviors
Transmission of mitochondrial DNA following assisted reproduction and nuclear transfer
Review of the articleMitochondria are the organelles responsible for producing the majority of a cell's ATP and also play an essential role in gamete maturation and embryo development. ATP production within the mitochondria is dependent on proteins encoded by both the nuclear and the mitochondrial genomes, therefore co-ordination between the two genomes is vital for cell survival. To assist with this co-ordination, cells normally contain only one type of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) termed homoplasmy. Occasionally, however, two or more types of mtDNA are present termed heteroplasmy. This can result from a combination of mutant and wild-type mtDNA molecules or from a combination of wild-type mtDNA variants. As heteroplasmy can result in mitochondrial disease, various mechanisms exist in the natural fertilization process to ensure the maternal-only transmission of mtDNA and the maintenance of homoplasmy in future generations. However, there is now an increasing use of invasive oocyte reconstruction protocols, which tend to bypass mechanisms for the maintenance of homoplasmy, potentially resulting in the transmission of either form of mtDNA heteroplasmy. Indeed, heteroplasmy caused by combinations of wild-type variants has been reported following cytoplasmic transfer (CT) in the human and following nuclear transfer (NT) in various animal species. Other techniques, such as germinal vesicle transfer and pronuclei transfer, have been proposed as methods of preventing transmission of mitochondrial diseases to future generations. However, resulting embryos and offspring may contain mtDNA heteroplasmy, which itself could result in mitochondrial disease. It is therefore essential that uniparental transmission of mtDNA is ensured before these techniques are used therapeutically
The VISTA ZYJHKs photometric system: Calibration from 2MASS
In this paper we describe the routine photometric calibration of data taken
with the VIRCAM instrument on the ESO VISTA telescope. The broadband ZYJHKs
data are directly calibrated from 2MASS point sources visible in every VISTA
image. We present the empirical transformations between the 2MASS and VISTA,
and WFCAM and VISTA, photometric systems for regions of low reddening. We
investigate the long-term performance of VISTA+VIRCAM. An investigation of the
dependence of the photometric calibration on interstellar reddening leads to
these conclusions: (1) For all broadband filters, a linear colour-dependent
correction compensates the gross effects of reddening where . (2)
For and , there is a significantly larger scatter above E(B-V)=5.0, and
insufficient measurements to adequately constrain the relation beyond this
value. (3) The filters can be corrected to a few percent up to
E(B-V)=10.0. We analyse spatial systematics over month-long timescales, both
inter- and intra-detector and show that these are present only at very low
levels in VISTA. We monitor and remove residual detector-to-detector offsets.
We compare the calibration of the main pipeline products: pawprints and tiles.
We show how variable seeing and transparency affect the final calibration
accuracy of VISTA tiles, and discuss a technique, {\it grouting}, for
mitigating these effects. Comparison between repeated reference fields is used
to demonstrate that the VISTA photometry is precise to better than
for the bands and for the bands. Finally we present
empirically determined offsets to transform VISTA magnitudes into a true Vega
system
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