1,139 research outputs found
Effectiveness of Deer Repellents in Connecticut
Browsing by overabundant herds of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) can cause significant economic damage to agricultural crops and landscape plantings. In many instances, for both commercial growers and homeowners, commercially available repellents may be an appealing alternative to physical exclusion and lethal control of animals. We tested 10 different commercially-available repellents (Chew-Not®, Deer Off®, Deer-Away® Big Game Repellent, Plantskydd®, Bobbex®, Liquid Fence®, Deer Solution®, Hinder®, Repellex® systemic tablets, and coyote urine) on yews (Taxus cuspidata Densiformis) at 2 different locations in Connecticut. The study included both positive (fence) and negative (no treatment) controls. We planted yews in 2 blocks at each location in the spring of 2006; each block had 12 groups of 6 yews. We randomly assigned one of the 12 treatments to each group of yews within each block. We applied repellents based on manufacturers’ label recommendations for the 2006 and 2007 growing seasons and recorded application costs. We derived a protection index based on plant size and dry needle weights at the end of the 2007 growing season. In general, repellents that required more frequent application performed better. Bobbex® ranked highest, but was the most expensive repellent treatment. Hinder® performed nearly as well at a fraction of the cost. Yews protected by Repellex®, Deer Solution®, coyote urine, and Plantskydd® were the same size as unprotected controls at both sites and did not have significantly more needles. No repellents prevented 100% of browse damage. The choice of repellent usage is a trade-off among effectiveness, cost, ability to follow recommended reapplication interval, and plant to be protected
Multiyear defoliations in southern New England increases oak mortality
After decades of multiyear defoliation episodes in southern New England, Lymantria dispar dispar (LDD; previously gypsy moth) populations collapsed with the appearance of the LDD fungus in 1989. Multiyear defoliations did not occur again until 2015-2018. To assess the impact of the return of multiyear defoliations, we examined 3095 oaks on 29 permanent study areas in Connecticut and Rhode Island that were established at least eleven years before the latest outbreaks. Pre-defoliation stand level oak mortality averaged 2% (three-year basis). Post-defoliation mortality did not differ between managed and unmanaged stands, but was much higher in severely defoliated stands (36%) than in stands with moderate (7%) or low-no defoliation (1%). Pre-defoliation mortality of individual trees differed among species, was lower for larger diameter trees and on unmanaged than managed stands. Post-defoliation mortality on plots with no to moderate defoliation was similar to pre-defoliation mortality levels. Following multiyear defoliations, white oak mortality was higher than for northern red and black oak. There was weak evidence that mortality was elevated on stands with higher basal area following severe defoliation. Natural resource managers should not assume that oaks that survived earlier multiyear defoliations episodes will survive future multiyear outbreaks, possibly because trees are older
Building the Evryscope: Hardware Design and Performance
The Evryscope is a telescope array designed to open a new parameter space in
optical astronomy, detecting short timescale events across extremely large sky
areas simultaneously. The system consists of a 780 MPix 22-camera array with an
8150 sq. deg. field of view, 13" per pixel sampling, and the ability to detect
objects down to Mg=16 in each 2 minute dark-sky exposure. The Evryscope,
covering 18,400 sq.deg. with hours of high-cadence exposure time each night, is
designed to find the rare events that require all-sky monitoring, including
transiting exoplanets around exotic stars like white dwarfs and hot subdwarfs,
stellar activity of all types within our galaxy, nearby supernovae, and other
transient events such as gamma ray bursts and gravitational-wave
electromagnetic counterparts. The system averages 5000 images per night with
~300,000 sources per image, and to date has taken over 3.0M images, totaling
250TB of raw data. The resulting light curve database has light curves for 9.3M
targets, averaging 32,600 epochs per target through 2018. This paper summarizes
the hardware and performance of the Evryscope, including the lessons learned
during telescope design, electronics design, a procedure for the precision
polar alignment of mounts for Evryscope-like systems, robotic control and
operations, and safety and performance-optimization systems. We measure the
on-sky performance of the Evryscope, discuss its data-analysis pipelines, and
present some example variable star and eclipsing binary discoveries from the
telescope. We also discuss new discoveries of very rare objects including 2 hot
subdwarf eclipsing binaries with late M-dwarf secondaries (HW Vir systems), 2
white dwarf / hot subdwarf short-period binaries, and 4 hot subdwarf reflection
binaries. We conclude with the status of our transit surveys, M-dwarf flare
survey, and transient detection.Comment: 24 pages, 24 figures, accepted PAS
EvryFlare II: Rotation Periods of the Cool Flare Stars in TESS Across Half the Southern Sky
We measure rotation periods and sinusoidal amplitudes in Evryscope light
curves for 122 two-minute K5-M4 TESS targets selected for strong flaring. The
Evryscope array of telescopes has observed all bright nearby stars in the
South, producing two-minute cadence light curves since 2016. Long-term,
high-cadence observations of rotating flare stars probe the complex
relationship between stellar rotation, starspots, and superflares. We detect
periods from 0.3487 to 104 d, and observe amplitudes from 0.008 to 0.216 g'
mag. We find the Evryscope amplitudes are larger than those in TESS with the
effect correlated to stellar mass (p-value=0.01). We compute the Rossby number
(Ro), and find our sample selected for flaring has twice as many intermediate
rotators (0.040.44) rotators; this may
be astrophysical or a result of period-detection sensitivity. We discover 30
fast, 59 intermediate, and 33 slow rotators. We measure a median starspot
coverage of 13% of the stellar hemisphere and constrain the minimum magnetic
field strength consistent with our flare energies and spot coverage to be 500
G, with later-type stars exhibiting lower values than earlier-types. We observe
a possible change in superflare rates at intermediate periods. However, we do
not conclusively confirm the increased activity of intermediate rotators seen
in previous studies. We split all rotators at Ro~0.2 into Prot10
d bins to confirm short-period rotators exhibit higher superflare rates, larger
flare energies, and higher starspot coverage than do long-period rotators, at
p-values of 3.2 X 10^-5, 1.0 X 10^-5, and 0.01, respectively.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables. Ancillary machine-readable files
included. Accepted for publication in ApJ (proofs submitted). Includes
significant new material, including starspot color that depends on stellar
mass, more rotation periods, potential changes in activity during spin-down,
and examples of binary rotator
Variables in the Southern Polar Region Evryscope 2016 Dataset
The regions around the celestial poles offer the ability to find and
characterize long-term variables from ground-based observatories. We used
multi-year Evryscope data to search for high-amplitude (~5% or greater)
variable objects among 160,000 bright stars (Mv < 14.5) near the South
Celestial Pole. We developed a machine learning based spectral classifier to
identify eclipse and transit candidates with M-dwarf or K-dwarf host stars -
and potential low-mass secondary stars or gas giant planets. The large
amplitude transit signals from low-mass companions of smaller dwarf host stars
lessens the photometric precision and systematics removal requirements
necessary for detection, and increases the discoveries from long-term
observations with modest light curve precision. The Evryscope is a robotic
telescope array that observes the Southern sky continuously at 2-minute
cadence, searching for stellar variability, transients, transits around exotic
stars and other observationally challenging astrophysical variables. In this
study, covering all stars 9 < Mv < 14.5, in declinations -75 to -90 deg, we
recover 346 known variables and discover 303 new variables, including 168
eclipsing binaries. We characterize the discoveries and provide the amplitudes,
periods, and variability type. A 1.7 Jupiter radius planet candidate with a
late K-dwarf primary was found and the transit signal was verified with the
PROMPT telescope network. Further followup revealed this object to be a likely
grazing eclipsing binary system with nearly identical primary and secondary K5
stars. Radial velocity measurements from the Goodman Spectrograph on the 4.1
meter SOAR telescope of the likely-lowest-mass targets reveal that six of the
eclipsing binary discoveries are low-mass (.06 - .37 solar mass) secondaries
with K-dwarf primaries, strong candidates for precision mass-radius
measurements.Comment: 32 pages, 17 figures, accepted to PAS
Oxyradical mediated tissue injury
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26080/1/0000156.pd
Neutrophil Adhesion to Human Endothelial Cells is Induced by the Membrane Attack Complex: The Roles of P-Selectin and Platelet Activating Factor
A variety of inflammatory diseases are accompanied by activation of the complement system. We examined the role of the membrane attack complex (MAC) in mediating neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells. To assemble the MAC in endothelial cell monolayers, a C5b-like molecule was created through the treatment of purified C5 with the oxidizing agent chloramine-T, followed by addition of the remaining components (C6-C9) that constitute the MAC. Use of this method abrogated potentially confounding effects mediated by other complement components (e.g., C5a). MAC assembly resulted in a rapid (30 min), concentration-dependent increase in neutrophil adherence. A monoclonal antibody directed against P-selectin inhibited MAC-mediated neutrophil adhesion. A whole cell EIA confirmed P-selectin expression after formation of the MAC. Incubation of neutrophils with the platelet-activating factor receptor antagonist, CF 3988, also significantly decreased adhesion, indicating that PAF plays a role in MAC-mediated adhesion. These results suggest that the MAC can promote neutrophil adhesion through P-selectin and PAF-mediated mechanisms.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/44521/1/10753_2004_Article_415305.pd
Correlating Changes in Spot Filling Factors with Stellar Rotation: The Case of LkCa 4
We present a multi-epoch spectroscopic study of LkCa 4, a heavily spotted
non-accreting T Tauri star. Using SpeX at NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility
(IRTF), 12 spectra were collected over five consecutive nights, spanning
1.5 stellar rotations. Using the IRTF SpeX Spectral Library, we
constructed empirical composite models of spotted stars by combining a warmer
(photosphere) standard star spectrum with a cooler (spot) standard weighted by
the spot filling factor, . The best-fit models spanned two
photospheric component temperatures, = 4100 K (K7V) and 4400 K
(K5V), and one spot component temperature, = 3060 K (M5V) with an
of 0.3. We find values of to vary between 0.77 and 0.94 with
an average uncertainty of 0.04. The variability of is periodic
and correlates with its 3.374 day rotational period. Using a mean value for
to represent the total spot coverage, we calculated spot
corrected values for and . Placing these values alongside
evolutionary models developed for heavily spotted young stars, we infer mass
and age ranges of 0.45-0.6 and 0.50-1.25 Myr, respectively. These
inferred values represent a twofold increase in the mass and a twofold decrease
in the age as compared to standard evolutionary models. Such a result
highlights the need for constraining the contributions of cool and warm regions
of young stellar atmospheres when estimating and to infer
masses and ages as well as the necessity for models to account for the effects
of these regions on the early evolution of low-mass stars.Comment: 21 pages, 9 Figures; Accepted for publication in Ap
Oxygen radicals, inflammation, and tissue injury
Inflammatory reactions often result in the activation and recruitment of phagocytic cells (e.g., neutrophils and/ or tissue macrophages) whose products result in injury to the tissue. In killing of endothelial cells by activated neutrophils as well as in lung injury produced by either activated neutrophils or activated macrophages there is evidence that H2O2 and iron play a role. HO[middle dot] may be a key oxygen product related to the process of injury. Endothelial cells in some vascular compartments may be susceptible to neutrophil mediated injury in a manner that is independent of oxygen radicals. On the basis of in vitro observations, a synergy exits between platelets and neutrophils, resulting in enhanced oxygen radical formation by the latter. Finally, the cytokines, interleukin 1 and tumor necrosis factor, released from macrophages have both direct stimulatory effects on oxygen radical formation in neutrophils and can "prime" macrophages for enhanced oxygen radical responses to other agonists. Cytokines may also alter endothelial cells rendering them more susceptible to oxygen radical mediated injury by neutrophils. This suggests a complex network of interactions between phagocytic cells and peptide mediators, the result of which is acute, oxygen radical mediated tissue injury.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/27560/1/0000604.pd
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