467 research outputs found

    Exploring close consumer-producer links to maintain and enhance on-farm biodiversity

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    This paper deals with the question of whether local selling of farm products improves on-farm biodiversity. In contrast to the main agricultural trend of farms specialising and increasing in size in response to the national and global markets, increasing numbers of Swedish farmers are instead diverting their efforts towards selling at local markets. Based on a study of six farms, the paper explores the nature of diversity on these farms and identifies factors supporting diversity. The study shows that farmers who interact with consumers are encouraged to diversify their production. The actual crops and varieties grown are determined by a combination of the natural conditions prevailing on the farm and the conditions created by the farmer in terms of marketing strategy for the products

    Effect of Parathion-Methyl on Amazonian fish and freshwater invertebrates: a comparison of sensitivity with temperate data.

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    Parathion-methyl is an organophosphorous insecticide that is widely used in agricultural production sites in the Amazon. The use of this pesticide might pose a potential risk for the biodiversity and abundance of fish and invertebrate species inhabiting aquatic ecosystems adjacent to the agricultural fields. Due to a lack of toxicity data for Amazonian species, safe environmental concentrations used to predict the ecological risks of parathion-methyl in the Amazon are based on tests performed with temperate species, although it is unknown whether the sensitivity of temperate species is representative for those of Amazonian endemic species

    Facilitating Transitions: Postmortem Processing of the Dead at the Carrowkeel Passage Tomb Complex, Ireland (3500–3000 cal. B.C.)

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    This study explores the burial practices and secondary funerary rites at the Carrowkeel Neolithic passage tomb complex in County Sligo in northwest Ireland. An osteological and taphonomic reassessment of cremated and unburned human bones recovered from the complex during an archaeological excavation more than a century ago has produced significant new insights into how the people of Carrowkeel perceived death and how they maintained and manifested social links with their ancestors. In addition to the rite of cremation, a complex postmortem burial practice is further attested by the presence of cut marks on several of the unburned bones, which indicate that the bodies of the dead were dismembered before they were placed in the tombs. It is argued that both cremation and dismemberment (and possible defleshing) may have been physical expressions of similar objectives, relating to excarnation and removal of flesh from the bodies of the deceased. Processing the bodies and thereby assisting the dead to transcend to an extra-bodily realm of existence may have been the main focus of the burial rite. The passage tombs at Carrowkeel should perhaps be viewed as places of curation, transformation, and regeneration of enduring ancestors that enabled both a physical and spiritual interaction with the dead and allowed for their omnipresence among the living

    Plasma Cholinesterase Activity in Patients with Uterine Cervical Cancer during Radiotherapy

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    The objectives of this study were to investigate: 1) the activity of pseudocholinesterase (PChE) in patients with uterine cervical cancer in different stages (uterine cervical carcinoma in stages II b and III and recurrent cervical carcinoma in stages III and IV a,b) and to compare it to the enzyme activity in patients with benign tumour of the uterus, and 2) the effects of radiotherapy on enzyme activity in those patients with uterine cervical carcinoma for which the chosen treatment was radical radiotherapy. Thirty patients with uterine cervical carcinoma in stages II b and III (Group A), sixteen patients with recurrent cervical carcinoma in stages III and IV a,b (Group B) and thirty-eight patients with benign tumours of the uterus (control, Group C) were evaluated and their PChE activity was determined prior to any treatment (pre-therapy enzyme activity). All eighty-four patients were free of any liver disease. The results have shown that the patients of Group A had the pre-therapy PChE activity practically identical to those in group C, but patients of Group B had significantly lower values of PChE with respect to enzyme activities of Groups A and C (p< 0.001).That is to say, PChE activity was influenced by the extent to which the malignancy had spread. Radical radiotherapy (up to 8 weeks in doses higher than 50 Gy into point A; average 80 Gy) which was the chosen treatment only for patients from group A did not cause a significant inhibition of PChE activity in any patients in comparison with their control values. With regard to the role of PChE in hydrolysis of succinylcholine, our results about the influence of the malignant disease and the radiotherapy on PChE activity are clinically significant

    Rites of Passage: Mortuary Practice, Population Dynamics, and Chronology at the Carrowkeel Passage Tomb Complex, Co. Sligo, Ireland

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    ]The first detailed investigation of the human remains from the Carrowkeel passage tomb complex since their excavation in 1911 has revealed several new and important insights about life, death, and mortuary practice in Neolithic Ireland. Osteological analysis provides the first conclusive proof for the occurrence of dismemberment of the dead at Irish passage tombs, practised contemporarily with cremation as one of a suite of funerary treatments. The research also highlights changes in burial tradition at the complex over the course of the Neolithic. Providing a chronology for these changes allows them to be linked to wider trends in monument construction, which may relate to changes in both land use and climate during the period. Multi-isotope analysis hints at the presence of non-local individuals among the interred and the possible existence of different food sourcing areas at the onset of the later Neolithic period. Preliminary results from ancient DNA sequencing of six individuals from Carrowkeel provide evidence for the genetic ancestry of Irish Neolithic populations, demonstrating their Anatolian origins and links along the Atlantic façade

    Sex-Differential Herbivory in Androdioecious Mercurialis annua

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    Males of plants with separate sexes are often more prone to attack by herbivores than females. A common explanation for this pattern is that individuals with a greater male function suffer more from herbivory because they grow more quickly, drawing more heavily on resources for growth that might otherwise be allocated to defence. Here, we test this ‘faster-sex’ hypothesis in a species in which males in fact grow more slowly than hermaphrodites, the wind-pollinated annual herb Mercurialis annua. We expected greater herbivory in the faster-growing hermaphrodites. In contrast, we found that males, the slower sex, were significantly more heavily eaten by snails than hermaphrodites. Our results thus reject the faster-sex hypothesis and point to the importance of a trade-off between defence and reproduction rather than growth
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