637 research outputs found
Quantifying the frequency and volume of urine deposition by grazing sheep using tri-axial accelerometers
Urine patches deposited in pasture by grazing animals are sites of reactive nitrogen (N) loss to the environment due to high concentrations of N exceeding pasture uptake requirements. In order to upscale N losses from the urine patch, several urination parameters are required, including where, when and how often urination events occur as well as the volume and chemical composition. There are limited data available in this respect, especially for sheep. Here, we seek to address this knowledge gap by using non-invasive sensor-based technology (accelerometers) on ewes grazing in situ, using a Boolean algorithm to detect urination events in the accelerometer signal. We conducted an initial study with penned Welsh Mountain ewes (n = 5), with accelerometers attached to the hind, to derive urine flow rate and to determine whether urine volume could be estimated from ewe squat time. Then accelerometers attached to the hind of Welsh Mountain ewes (n = 30 at each site) were used to investigate the frequency of sheep urination events (n = 35 946) whilst grazing two extensively managed upland pastures (semi-improved and unimproved) across two seasons (spring and autumn) at each site (35–40 days each). Sheep urinated at a frequency of 10.2 ± 0.2 and 8.1 ± 0.3 times per day in the spring and autumn, respectively, while grazing the semi-improved pasture. Urination frequency was greater (19.0 ± 0.4 and 15.3 ± 0.3 times per day in the spring and autumn, respectively) in the unimproved pasture. Ewe squat duration could be reliably used to predict the volume of urine deposited per event and was thus used to estimate mean daily urine production volumes. Sheep urinated at a rate of 16.6 mL/s and, across the entire dataset, sheep squatted for an average of 9.62 ± 0.03 s per squatting event, producing an estimated average individual urine event volume of 159 ± 1 mL (n = 35 946 events), ranging between 17 and 745 mL (for squat durations of 1 to 45 s). The estimated mean daily urine volume was 2.15 ± 0.04 L (n = 2 669 days) across the entire dataset. The data will be useful for modelling studies estimating N losses (e.g. ammonia (NH3) volatilisation, nitrous oxide (N2O) emission via nitrification and denitrification and nitrate (NO3−) leaching) from urine patches
Carbon and ecological footprints as tools for evaluating the environmental impact of coal mine ventilation air
Coal mines ventilation gases are an important source of methane emissions. Common ventilation systems are designed to ensure safe working conditions in the shafts, leading to huge ventilation gas flow rates. Traditionally, low attention has been paid to such emissions because of their low methane concentration. However, it is necessary to take into account that although the concentration of methane is very low (typically <1%), the volume of air that ventilation systems move is large, and therefore these emissions constitute the largest source of greenhouse gases from underground coal mines.
This work proposes the use of ecological and carbon footprints approaches as a tool for determining the relative importance of these emissions in comparison to the other direct and indirect environmental impacts from the coal mining activity. The study has been performed in the main ventilations shafts of the mining company HUNOSA, located at NW Spain (bituminous coal). Results indicate that ventilation air methane is a key fraction of the total emissions of greenhouse gases releases in this activity (60–70%)
Oxygen abundance in local disk and bulge: chemical evolution with a strictly universal IMF
The empirical differential oxygen abundance distribution (EDOD) is deduced
from subsamples related to two different samples involving solar neighbourhood
(SN) thick disk, thin disk, halo, and bulge stars. The EDOD of the SN thick +
thin disk is determined by weighting the mass, for assumed SN thick to thin
disk mass ratio within the range, 0.1-0.9. Inhomogeneous models of chemical
evolution for the SN thick disk, the SN thin disk, the SN thick + thin disk,
the SN halo, and the bulge, are computed assuming the instantaneous recycling
approximation. The EDOD data are fitted, to an acceptable extent, by their TDOD
counterparts provided (i) still undetected, low-oxygen abundance thin disk
stars exist, and (ii) a single oxygen overabundant star is removed from a thin
disk subsample. In any case, the (assumed power-law) stellar initial mass
function (IMF) is universal but gas can be inhibited from, or enhanced in,
forming stars at different rates with respect to a selected reference case.
Models involving a strictly universal IMF (i.e. gas neither inhibited from, nor
enhanced in, forming stars with respect to a selected reference case) can also
reproduce the data. The existence of a strictly universal IMF makes similar
chemical enrichment within active (i.e. undergoing star formation) regions
placed in different environments, but increasing probability of a region being
active passing from SN halo to SN thick + thin disk, SN thin disk, SN thick
disk, and bulge. On the basis of the results, it is realized that the chemical
evolution of the SN thick + thin disk as a whole cannot be excluded.Comment: 26 pages, 10 tables, and 5 figures; tables out of page are splitted
in two parts in Appendix B; sects.4 and 5 rewritten for better understanding
of the results; further references added. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysics & Space Scienc
Milagro limits and HAWC sensitivity for the rate-density of evaporating Primordial Black Holes
postprin
Central infusion of leptin into well-fed and undernourished ewe lambs : effects on feed intake and serum concentrations of growth hormone and luteinizing hormone
International audienc
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