1,897 research outputs found
Comparative biology of different plant pathogens to estimate effects of climate change on crop diseases in Europe
This review describes environmental factors that influence severity of crop disease epidemics, especially in the UK and north-west Europe, in order to assess the effects of climate change on crop growth and yield and severity of disease epidemics. While work on some diseases, such as phoma stem canker of oilseed rape and fusarium ear blight of wheat, that combine crop growth, disease development and climate change models is described in detail, climate-change projections and predictions of the resulting biotic responses to them are complex to predict and detailed models linking climate, crop growth and disease development are not available for many crop-pathogen systems. This review uses a novel approach of comparing pathogen biology according to 'ecotype' (a categorization based on aspects such as epidemic type, dissemination method and infection biology), guided by detailed disease progress models where available to identify potential future research priorities for disease control. Consequences of projected climate change are assessed for factors driving elements of disease cycles of fungal pathogens (nine important pathogens are assessed in detail), viruses, bacteria and phytoplasmas. Other diseases classified according to 'ecotypes' were reviewed and likely changes in their severity used to guide comparable diseases about which less information is available. Both direct and indirect effects of climate change are discussed, with an emphasis on examples from the UK, and considered in the context of other factors that influence diseases and particularly emergence of new diseases, such as changes to farm practices and introductions of exotic material and effects of other environment changes such as elevated CO 2. Good crop disease control will contribute to climate change mitigation by decreasing greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture while sustaining production. Strategies for adaptation to climate change are needed to maintain disease control and crop yields in north-west Europe.Peer reviewe
Recommended from our members
3-D Laser Shaping of Ceramic and Ceramic Composite Materials
A versatile, automated, laser-based system, capable of producing complex threedimensional
shapes of ceramic and ceramic composite materials, through either controlled layer
ablation or solid freeform fabrication, is currently under development. The system comprises
a 1.2 kW C021aser, positioning system, beam scanner, non-contacting positioning sensor, beam
conditioner and CAD/CAM system. This paper reports progress in relating machine parameters
(scan rate, feed, beam power and polarization) to process measurables (material removal rate
and surface roughness), and demonstrates the potential for rapid prototyping and direct
manufacturing of: (a) rotationally symmetric components based on ablative ceramics such as
Si3N4 and (b) graphite fuel cell plenumsMechanical Engineerin
Arable crop disease control, climate change and food security
Copyright Association of Applied BiologistsGlobal food security is threatened by crop diseases that account for average yield losses of 16%. Climate change is exacerbating threats to food security in much of the world, emphasising the need to increase food production in northern European countries such as the UK. However, to mitigate climate change, crops must be grown so as to minimise greenhouse gas emissions (GHG); results with UK oilseed rape demonstrate how disease control in arable crops can contribute to climate change mitigation. However, work examining impacts of climate change on UK epidemics of winter oilseed rape diseases illustrates unexpected, contrasting impacts of climate change on complex plant-disease interactions. In England, phoma stem canker is expected to become more severe whilst light leaf spot is expected to become less severe. Such work can provide guidance for government and industry planning for adaptation to impacts of climate change on crops to ensure future food securityFinal Accepted Versio
S-Duality for Linearized Gravity
We develope the analogue of S-duality for linearized gravity in
(3+1)-dimensions. Our basic idea is to consider the self-dual (anti-self-dual)
curvature tensor for linearized gravity in the context of the
Macdowell-Mansouri formalism. We find that the strong-weak coupling duality for
linearized gravity is an exact symmetry and implies small-large duality for the
cosmological constant.Comment: 18 pages, Latex, to be published in Phys. Lett.
Ariel - Volume 4 Number 6
Editors
David A. Jacoby
Eugenia Miller
Tom Williams
Associate Editors
Paul Bialas
Terry Burt
Michael Leo
Gail Tenikat
Editor Emeritus and Business Manager
Richard J. Bonnano
Movie Editor
Robert Breckenridge
Staff
Richard Blutstein
Mary F. Buechler
J.D. Kanofsky
Rocket Weber
David Maye
On the underlying gauge group structure of D=11 supergravity
The underlying gauge group structure of D=11 supergravity is revisited (see
paper for detailed abstract).Comment: 16 pages, no figure
A renormalization group invariant scalar glueball operator in the (Refined) Gribov-Zwanziger framework
This paper presents a complete algebraic analysis of the renormalizability of
the operator in the Gribov-Zwanziger (GZ) formalism as
well as in the Refined Gribov-Zwanziger (RGZ) version. The GZ formalism offers
a way to deal with gauge copies in the Landau gauge. We explicitly show that
mixes with other gauge variant operators, and we determine
the mixing matrix to all orders, thereby only using algebraic arguments.
The mixing matrix allows us to uncover a renormalization group invariant
including the operator . With this renormalization group
invariant, we have paved the way for the study of the lightest scalar glueball
in the GZ formalism. We discuss how the soft breaking of the BRST symmetry of
the GZ action can influence the glueball correlation function. We expect
non-trivial mass scales, inherent to the GZ approach, to enter the pole
structure of this correlation function.Comment: 27 page
Gravitational Duality in MacDowell-Mansouri Gauge Theory
Strong-weak duality invariance can only be defined for particular sectors of
supersymmetric Yang-Mills theories. Nevertheless, for full non-Abelian
non-supersymmetric theories, dual theories with inverted couplings, have been
found. We show that an analogous procedure allows to find the dual action to
the gauge theory of gravity constructed by the MacDowell-Mansouri model plus
the superposition of a term.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, no figure
Simulations of neutron background in a time projection chamber relevant to dark matter searches
Presented here are results of simulations of neutron background performed for
a time projection chamber acting as a particle dark matter detector in an
underground laboratory. The investigated background includes neutrons from rock
and detector components, generated via spontaneous fission and (alpha, n)
reactions, as well as those due to cosmic-ray muons. Neutrons were propagated
to the sensitive volume of the detector and the nuclear recoil spectra were
calculated. Methods of neutron background suppression were also examined and
limitations to the sensitivity of a gaseous dark matter detector are discussed.
Results indicate that neutrons should not limit sensitivity to WIMP-nucleon
interactions down to a level of (1 - 3) x 10^{-8} pb in a 10 kg detector.Comment: 27 pages (total, including 3 tables and 11 figures). Accepted for
publication in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research - Section
The three-dimensional structure of Saturn's E ring
Saturn's diffuse E ring consists of many tiny (micron and sub-micron) grains
of water ice distributed between the orbits of Mimas and Titan. Various
gravitational and non-gravitational forces perturb these particles' orbits,
causing the ring's local particle density to vary noticeably with distance from
the planet, height above the ring-plane, hour angle and time. Using
remote-sensing data obtained by the Cassini spacecraft in 2005 and 2006, we
investigate the E-ring's three-dimensional structure during a time when the Sun
illuminated the rings from the south at high elevation angles (> 15 degrees).
These observations show that the ring's vertical thickness grows with distance
from Enceladus' orbit and its peak brightness density shifts from south to
north of Saturn's equator plane with increasing distance from the planet. These
data also reveal a localized depletion in particle density near Saturn's
equatorial plane around Enceladus' semi-major axis. Finally, variations are
detected in the radial brightness profile and the vertical thickness of the
ring as a function of longitude relative to the Sun. Possible physical
mechanisms and processes that may be responsible for some of these structures
include solar radiation pressure, variations in the ambient plasma, and
electromagnetic perturbations associated with Saturn's shadow.Comment: 42 Pages, 13 Figures, modified to include minor proof correction
- …