477 research outputs found

    Differences in virulence of Diplocarpon earlianum isolates on selected strawberry cultivars

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    Huit isolats de Diplocarpon earlianum ont Ă©tĂ© Ă©valuĂ©s sur 18 cultivars de fraisiers (Fragaria x ananassa) pour leur virulence, laquelle a Ă©tĂ© mesurĂ©e par leur capacitĂ© de causer un pourcentage de surface foliaire portant des symptĂŽmes. Des diffĂ©rences significatives ont Ă©tĂ© observĂ©es entre les isolats et les cultivars, ainsi que pour l'interaction isolat x cultivar. Quatre des huit isolats, sur la moyenne des 18 cultivars de fraisiers, avaient une surface foliaire portant des symptĂŽmes de 6,7-9,6 % et ils ont Ă©tĂ© classifiĂ©s dans le groupe defaible virulence. Les quatre autres isolats avaient une surface portant des symptĂŽmes variant de 25,9-45,8 % et formaient un groupe de forte virulence. Parmi les cultivars testĂ©s, 'Vibrant' Ă©tait rĂ©sistant et 'Micmac' Ă©tait susceptible Ă  tous les isolats dans les deux groupes de virulence; 'Honeyoye', 'Redcoat', 'Scotland', 'St. Clair' et 'Vantage' Ă©taient rĂ©sistants au groupe de faible virulence, mais ils prĂ©sentaient des interactions diffĂ©rentielles envers les isolats du groupe de forte virulence, les 11 autres cultivars Ă©taient sensibles au groupe de forte virulence mais ils dĂ©montraient des interactions diffĂ©rentielles envers les isolats du groupe de faible virulence. Il est suggĂ©rĂ© que plusieurs isolats de l'agent pathogĂšne soient requis pour tester des gĂ©notypes de fraisiers pour leur rĂ©sistance Ă  la tache pourpre. Une mĂ©thode d'essai utilisant des disques foliaires a Ă©tĂ© dĂ©veloppĂ©e et elle peut ĂȘtre utilisĂ©e pour Ă©valuer la susceptibilitĂ© de gĂ©notypes de fraisiers au D. earlianum en laboratoire.Eight isolates of Diplocarpon earlianum were evaluated for virulence, measured as the ability to produce percent leaf area with symptoms (LAS), on 18 cultivars of strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa). Significant differences were observed from isolate and cultivar effects, and isolate x cultivar interaction. Four of the eight isolates, on the average of 18 strawberry cultivars, had LAS ranging from 6.7-9.6%, and were classified as a group of low virulence. The remaining four isolates had LAS ranging from 25.9-45.8% and formed a high virulence group. Of the cultivars tested, 'Vibrant' was resistant and 'Micmac' was susceptible to all isolates in both virulence groups; 'Honeoye', 'Redcoat', 'Scotland', 'St. Clair' and 'Vantage' were resistant to the low virulence group, but had differential interactions to isolates in the high virulence group; the remaining 11 cultivars were susceptible to the high virulence group, but had differential interactions to isolates in the low virulence group. It is suggested that a number of different pathogen isolates are required to test strawberry genotypes for leaf scorch resistance. A leaf disk assay was developed in this study and can be used for laboratory evaluations of strawberry genotypes for susceptibility to D. earlianum

    Glider observations of enhanced deep water upwelling at a shelf break canyon: a mechanism for cross-slope carbon and nutrient exchange

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    Using underwater gliders we have identified canyon driven upwelling across the Celtic Sea shelf-break, in the vicinity of Whittard Canyon. The presence of this upwelling appears to be tied to the direction and strength of the local slope current, which is in itself highly variable. During typical summer time equatorward flow, an unbalanced pressure gradient force and the resulting disruption of geostrophic flow can lead to upwelling along the main axis of two small shelf break canyons. As the slope current reverts to poleward flow, the upwelling stops and the remnants of the upwelled features are mixed into the local shelf water or advected away from the region. The upwelled features are identified by the presence of sub-pycnocline high salinity water on the shelf, and are upwelled from a depth of 300 m on the slope, thus providing a mechanism for the transport of nutrients across the shelf break onto the shelf

    Adventures in boron chemistry – the prediction of novel ultra-flexible boron oxide frameworks

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    We predict a wide range of ultra-flexible low-energy forms of boron oxides in which rigid B–O–B bridges link boron–oxygen heterocycles.</p

    Spatial gradients in the cosmological constant

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    It is possible that there may be differences in the fundamental physical parameters from one side of the observed universe to the other. I show that the cosmological constant is likely to be the most sensitive of the physical parameters to possible spatial variation, because a small variation in any of the other parameters produces a huge variation of the cosmological constant. It therefore provides a very powerful {\em indirect} evidence against spatial gradients or temporal variation in the other fundamental physical parameters, at least 40 orders of magnitude more powerful than direct experimental constraints. Moreover, a gradient may potentially appear in theories where the variability of the cosmological constant is connected to an anthropic selection mechanism, invoked to explain the smallness of this parameter. In the Hubble damping mechanism for anthropic selection, I calculate the possible gradient. While this mechanism demonstrates the existence of this effect, it is too small to be seen experimentally, except possibly if inflation happens around the Planck scale.Comment: 12 page

    Quasi-particle Lifetimes in a d_{x^2-y^2} Superconductor

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    We consider the lifetime of quasi-particles in a d-wave superconductor due to scattering from antiferromagnetic spin-fluctuations, and explicitly separate the contribution from Umklapp processes which determines the electrical conductivity. Results for the temperature dependence of the total scattering rate and the Umklapp scattering rate are compared with relaxation rates obtained from thermal and microwave conductivity measurements, respectively.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Sporting embodiment: sports studies and the (continuing) promise of phenomenology

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    Whilst in recent years sports studies have addressed the calls ‘to bring the body back in’ to theorisations of sport and physical activity, the ‘promise of phenomenology’ remains largely under-realised with regard to sporting embodiment. Relatively few accounts are grounded in the ‘flesh’ of the lived sporting body, and phenomenology offers a powerful framework for such analysis. A wide-ranging, multi-stranded, and interpretatively contested perspective, phenomenology in general has been taken up and utilised in very different ways within different disciplinary fields. The purpose of this article is to consider some selected phenomenological threads, key qualities of the phenomenological method, and the potential for existentialist phenomenology in particular to contribute fresh perspectives to the sociological study of embodiment in sport and exercise. It offers one way to convey the ‘essences’, corporeal immediacy and textured sensuosity of the lived sporting body. The use of Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) is also critically addressed. Key words: phenomenology; existentialist phenomenology; interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA); sporting embodiment; the lived-body; Merleau-Pont

    Comparison of three different methods to estimate the burden of disease of burn injuries in Western Australia in 2011-2018

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    Background: Priority setting and resource allocation in health care, surveillance and interventions is based increasingly on burden of disease. Several methods exist to calculate the non-fatal burden of disease of burns expressed in years lived with disability (YLDs). The aim of this study was to assess the burden of disease due to burns in Western Australia 2011–2018 and compare YLD outcomes between three existing methods. Methods: Data from the Burns Service of Western Australia was used. Three existing methods to assess YLDs were compared: the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) method, a method dedicated to assess injury YLDs (Injury-VIBES), and a method dedica
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