21 research outputs found
The Linguistic Repertoire of a Young Adult, and a Middle Adult of a Ngaju Dayaknese Family in Central Kalimantan
This study is a qualitative study about linguistic repertoire and the subjects are three people from three different ages of a Ngaju Dayaknese family consisting of the mother, the first child and the third child. This study was conducted in order to see the linguistic repertoire of them. In order to reach the research objectives, I used the theories of linguistic repertoire by Milroy and Milroy (1990) and code choice by Holmes (2001). From my study, I found that the linguistic repertoire of the third child is Banjarese language, Indonesian language, and Ngaju Dayaknese language, the linguistic repertoire of the first child is Ngaju Dayaknese language, Indonesian language, and Banjarese language, and the linguistic repertoire of the mother is Ngaju Dayaknese language, Banjarese language, and Indonesian language. It can be concluded that the linguistic repertoire of each subject can be distinguished one from another and it was influenced by the environment he/she was exposed to
Putative degraders of low-density polyethylene-derived compounds are ubiquitous members of plastic associated bacterial communities in the marine environment
Research articleIt remains unknown whether and to what extent marine prokaryotic communities are capable of degrading plastic in the ocean. To address this knowledge gap, we combined enrichment experiments employing low-density polyethylene (LDPE) as the sole carbon source with a comparison of bacterial communities on plastic debris in the Pacific, the North Atlantic and the northern Adriatic Sea. A total of 35 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were enriched in the LDPE-laboratory incubations after 1 year, of which 20 were present with relative abundances > 0.5% in at least one plastic sample collected from the environment. From these, OTUs classified as Cognatiyoonia, Psychrobacter, Roseovarius and Roseobacter were found in the communities of plastics collected at all oceanic sites. Additionally, OTUs classified as Roseobacter, Pseudophaeobacter, Phaeobacter, Marinovum and Cognatiyoonia, also enriched in the LDPE-laboratory incubations, were enriched on LDPE communities compared to the ones associated to glass and polypropylene in in-situ incubations in the northern Adriatic Sea after 1 month of incubation. Some of these enriched OTUs were also related to known alkane and hydrocarbon degraders. Collectively, these results demonstrate that there are prokaryotes capable of surviving with LDPE as the sole carbon source living on plastics in relatively high abundances in different water masses of the global ocean.Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austrian Sciences Fund, University of Viena, German Federal Ministry of Education and Science (BacGeoPac project (03G0248A) and IEO (RADPROF project)Versión del editor5,84
Fabrication of hydrodynamic torque converter impellers by using the selective laser sintering method
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Involvement of the IAA-Regulated ACC Oxidase Gene PnACO3 in Pharbitis Nil Flower Inhibition
Involvement of ABA in flower induction of Pharbitis nil
Flowering of plants is controlled by hormones among which both stimulators and inhibitors are present. The
role of abscisic acid (ABA) in flower induction of the short day plant Pharbitis nil was shown in our experiments
through exogenous applications and endogenous level determination of the hormone in cotyledons of seedlings
grown under special light conditions.
The application of ABA to cotyledons or shoot apices during the first half of a 24-h long inductive night
inhibits flowering. The same compound applied towards the end of or after a 14-h long subinductive night
increases the number of flower buds produced by these plants.
Exposing P. nil seedlings at the beginning of a 24-h long inductive night to far red light (FR) decreases the
level of endogenous abscisic acid in cotyledons and leads to flower inhibition. However, a pulse of red light (R)
reversing the inhibitory effect of far red light on the flowering of P. nil increases the ABA content.
The results obtained confirm previous observations that ABA may play a dual and an important role in the
regulation of floral bud formation in P. nil. The flowering occurs when the level of endogenous abscisic acid is
low at the beginning and is high toward the end of the inductive night