64 research outputs found

    Adaptaciones fisiológicas en el papamoscas cerrojillo (Ficedula hypoleuca): estrés oxidativo, reproducción y desarrollo

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    Tesis Doctoral inédita leída en la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Facultad de Ciencias, Departamento de Ecología. Fecha de lectura: 11-09-2017Esta tesis tiene embargado el acceso al texto completo hasta el 11-03-201

    Consideration of Multi-Phase Criterion in the Differential Protection Algorithm for High-Impedance Grounded Synchronous Generators

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    The generator differential protection is one of the most important electrical protections of synchronous generator stator windings. Its operation principle is based on the comparison of the input current and output current at each phase winding. Unwanted trip commands are usually caused by CT saturation, wrong CT selection, or the fact that they may come from different manufacturers. In generators grounded through high impedance, only phase-to-phase or three-phase faults can be detected by the differential protection. This kind of fault causes differential current to flow in, at least, two phases of the winding. Several cases of unwanted trip commands caused by the appearance of differential current in only one phase of the generator have been reported. In this paper multi-phase criterion is proposed for generator differential protection algorithm when applied to high impedance grounded generators

    New selective earth faults only current directional method for isolated neutral systems

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    In order to achieve total selectivity at electrical distribution networks it is of great importance to analyze the defect currents at ungrounded power systems. This information will help to grant selectivity at electrical distribution networks ensuring that only the defect line or feeder is removed from service. In the present work a new selective and directional protection method for ungrounded power systems is evaluated. The new method measures only defect currents to detect earth faults and works with a directional criterion to determine the line under faulty conditions. The main contribution of this new technique is that it can detect earth faults in outgoing lines at any type of substation avoiding the possible mismatch of traditional directional earth fault relays. This detection technique is based on the comparison of the direction of a reference current to the direction of all earth fault capacitive currents at all the feeders connected to the same bus bars. This new method has been validated through computer simulations. The results for the different cases studied are remarkable, proving total validity and usefulness of the new method

    Males respond to female begging signals of need: A handicapping experiment in the pied flycatcher, Ficedula hypoleuca

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    The 'female nutrition' hypothesis proposes that food provided by males during incubation is an important energy source for females in bird species in which females alone incubate. Females should be able to communicate their needs through begging signals to mates and males may compensate for the energetic limitations of females through their feeding visits, owing to their overlapping reproductive interests. To test whether female begging during incubation is an honest signal of energetic need and whether mates respond to it we experimentally handicapped female pied flycatchers at the beginning of incubation by clipping two primary flight feathers on each wing. Experimental manipulation led females to intensify begging displays arising from condition impairment and males accordingly increased their incubation feeding rates. Female begging intensity explained more than half of the variation in male incubation feeding rate, thereby showing that female nutrition is the main factor explaining male incubation feeding. Moreover, handicapped females consumed a higher proportion of male food deliveries during the first few days after hatching and weighed less at the end of the nestling period than control females. Handicapping had no influence on female incubation behaviour, hatching and breeding success, nestling and male condition or female nestling provisioning. The provisioning rates of males in the late nestling stage were higher in experimental nests. This is the first experimental study showing that males adjust incubation feeding rates to behavioural displays of need by their mates. The ability of females to modify their begging displays according to need may be an important adaptation that allows females to maintain a good energetic condition during incubation. © 2014 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.This study was financed by project CGL2010-19233-C03-02 to J.M. from Spanish MICINN.Peer Reviewe

    Oxidative Stress in Early Life: Associations with Sex, Rearing Conditions, and Parental Physiological Traits in Nestling Pied Flycatchers

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    The chapter IV of the dissertation: López-Arrabé, Jimena. Physiological adaptations in the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca): oxidative stress, reproduction and development (2017), reproduces the manuscript of: López-Arrabé, Jimena ; Cantarero, Alejandro ; Pérez-Rodríguez, Lorenzo ; Palma, Antonio; Moreno, Juan. Oxidative Stress in Early Life: Associations with Sex, Rearing Conditions, and Parental Physiological Traits in Nestling Pied Flycatchers. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 89(2): 83-92(2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/685476. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/130300El capítulo IV de la tesis doctoral: López-Arrabé, Jimena. Physiological adaptations in the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca): oxidative stress, reproduction and development (2017), reproduce la información del artículo: López-Arrabé, Jimena ; Cantarero, Alejandro ; Pérez-Rodríguez, Lorenzo ; Palma, Antonio; Moreno, Juan. Oxidative Stress in Early Life: Associations with Sex, Rearing Conditions, and Parental Physiological Traits in Nestling Pied Flycatchers. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, 89(2): 83-92(2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/685476. http://hdl.handle.net/10261/130300Conditions experienced during juvenile development can affect the fitness of an organism. During early life, oxidative stress levels can be particularly high as a result of the increased metabolism and the relatively immature antioxidant system of the individual, and this may have medium- and long-term fitness consequences. Here we explore variation in levels of oxidative stress measured during early life in relation to sex, rearing conditions (hatching date and brood size), and parental condition and levels of oxidative markers in a wild population of the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) followed for 2 yr. A marker of total antioxidant status (TAS) in plasma and total levels of glutathione (GSH) in red blood cells, as well as a marker of oxidative damage in plasma lipids (malondialdehyde [MDA]), were assessed simultaneously. Our results show that nestling total GSH levels were associated with parental oxidative status, correlating negatively with maternal MDA and positively with total GSH levels of both parents, with a high estimated heritability. This suggests that parental physiology and genes could be determinants for endogenous components of the antioxidant system of the offspring. Moreover, we found that total GSH levels were higher in female than in male nestlings and that hatching date was positively associated with antioxidant defenses (higher TAS and total GSH levels). These results suggest that different components of oxidative balance are related to a variety of environmental and intrinsic—including parental—influencing factors. Future experimental studies must disentangle the relative contribution of each of these on nestling oxidative status and how the resulting oxidative stress at early phases shape adult phenotype and fitness.Peer reviewe

    Sex-specific associations between telomere dynamics and oxidative status in adult and nestling pied flycatchers

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    Oxidative stress can contribute to an acceleration of telomere erosion, leading to cellular senescence and aging. Increased investment in reproduction is known to accelerate senescence, generally resulting in reduced future reproductive potential and survival. To better understand the role played by oxidative status and telomere dynamics in the conflict between maintenance and reproduction, it is important to determine how these factors are related in parents and their offspring. We investigated the relationship between oxidative status and telomere measurements in pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca). Total antioxidant status (TAS) in plasma, total levels of glutathione in red blood cells (RBCs), and oxidative damage in plasma lipids (malondialdehyde [MDA]) were assessed in both parents and nestlings. Telomeres were measured in RBCs in adults. Our results showed sex differences in oxidative variables in adults that are likely to be mediated by sex steroids, with testosterone and estrogens increasing and reducing, respectively, the production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. We found a negative association between telomere length (TL) and MDA in adults in the previous season. Moreover, TL was positively associated with TAS in females, while telomere shortening (ΔTL) correlated positively with MDA in males in the current year. These associations could be reflecting differences between sexes in reproductive physiology. We found a positive correlation between parental ΔTL and nestling MDA, an example of how parental physiological aging could affect offspring quality in terms of oxidative stress that highlights the constraints imposed by higher rates of ΔTL during reproduction and rearing

    Phenotypic plasticity in breeding plumage signals in both sexes of a migratory bird: responses to breeding conditions

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    Adaptive phenotypic plasticity may respond to present ambient conditions. Sexual and social signals in both sexes may express phenotype performance. Plumage signals that change discontinuously allow relating discrete variation to previous performance. Both sexes of the pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca present white patches on the wings and on the forehead, which constitute sexual and social signals. Forehead patches are moulted together with body plumage in Africa, while wing patches are partly moulted in Africa and partly in the breeding area soon after breeding. We studied individual inter‐year changes (corrected for regression to the mean) in the size of forehead and wing patches of both sexes in seven years for females or six years for males in two nearby study areas in central Spain. We found that initial signal extent strongly delimits the possible subsequent changes negatively. There is a negative association of male age with forehead patch changes. Cold and rainy springs are associated in females with decreases in both patch areas and vice versa, while no association with climate is observed in male wing patch changes. Cold pre‐breeding conditions predict positive changes in female wing and male forehead patches. Breeding success is positively associated with forehead patch changes in females. Late‐breeding males experience more positive changes in forehead patch size than early‐breeding males. Some of these trends can be explained by variable costs of breeding in certain conditions for subsequent signal production and/or maintenance, while absence of trends in some cases may be explained by sex differences in costs of breeding and interactions with phenotypic quality of breeders.</p

    Review of Loss of Excitation Protection Setting and Coordination to the Generator Capacity Curve

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    After the liberalization of electricity market the absorption of reactive power by some generator is subsidized in order to support the power system voltage regulation. The setting of the loss of excitation protection is essential to warranties the correct operation of the generator in the under-excited area. A conservative setting does not allow the maximum reactive power absorption. On the other hand a setting which allows the maximum reactive power absorption could be dangerous. This paper presents a review of different settings recommendations for the loss of excitation protection and theirs coordination to the synchronous machine capacity curve. The settings have been validated through computer simulations

    La Hora TutHora: una herramienta de ordenación académica para incrementar la acción tutorial en la Escuela Universitaria de Ingeniería Técnica Industrial de la UPM

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    La reciente puesta en marcha de las titulaciones adaptadas al RD 1393/2007 constituía la oportunidad largamente esperada de implementar una serie de proyectos ilusionantes asociados a la Declaración de Bolonia y a su “nebulosa”. Entre ellos, la mejora del rendimiento en la Acción Tutorial constituye, para la UPM, uno de los aspectos prioritarios. En ese ámbito, la E.U. de Ingeniería Técnica Industrial ha desarrollado, desde el curso 2010/2011, un proyecto denominado “La Hora TutHora”, cuyo objetivo consiste en actuar desde Ordenación Académica para favorecer la mencionada Acción Tutorial. Este artículo expone los resultados que han podido medirse tras un año de vida del proyecto

    La Acción Tutorial incentivada durante los dos últimos cursos académicos con el proyecto de "La Hora Tuthora"

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    La puesta en marcha de las titulaciones adaptadas al RD 1393/2007 constituía la oportunidad largamente esperada de implementar una serie de proyectos ilusionantes asociados a la Declaración de Bolonia y a su “nebulosa”. Entre ellos, la mejora del rendimiento en la Acción Tutorial constituye, para la UPM, uno de los aspectos prioritarios. En ese ámbito, la E.U. de Ingeniería Técnica Industrial ha desarrollado, desde el curso 2010/2011, un proyecto denominado “La Hora TutHora”, cuyo objetivo consiste en actuar desde Ordenación Académica para favorecer la mencionada Acción Tutorial. Este artículo expone los resultados que han podido medirse tras dos años de vida del proyecto, las conclusiones que pueden obtenerse y el planteamiento de propuestas de mejora
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