663 research outputs found

    Hedonic Valuation of Sportfishing Harvest

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    A hedonic valuation strategy is introduced to estimate the marginal value of sportfishing harvest. The strategy uses market prices, thereby avoiding some of the measurement problems associated with the constructed or proxy prices used in common valuation methods. A charter fee hedonic equation is estimated using data from the market for offshore charter fishing in the Gulf of Mexico. The marginal value of sportfishing harvest is identified using spatial variation in harvest rates and fish sizes. A two-stage minimum distance estimator is used to address potential omitted variables and cluster-sampling issues. Our results demonstrate that valid estimates of the marginal value of sportfishing harvest can be derived directly using market prices. The estimated marginal value per fish is consistent with published estimates using alternative methods. Thus, the hedonic approach suggested in this article offers promise as an independent validation of the typical methods used to value sportfishing harvest.Sportfishing, charter boats, hedonic, revealed preference, valuation, Public Economics, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, Q22, Q26, Q51,

    Über einen energieunabhängigen Me2+-H+-Austausch in der Auβenmembran von Rattenlebermitochondrien und seine Beziehungen zum energieunabhängigen Me+-H+-Austausch

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    AbstractIntact mitochondria are able to bind monovalent and divalent metal cations and to release protons in an energy-independent exchange process. Directly accessible binding sites exist in the outer membrane. They seem to be identical for monovalent and divalent metal ions. The inner membrane-matrix-fraction possesses exchange sites after ultrasonic disruption only for monovalent cations, but not for divalent cations

    Über einen energieunabhängigen austausch der alkali-ionen Li+, Na+, K+, Rb+ und Cs+ GEGEN H+ in der membran intakter und desintegrierter rattenlebermitochondrien

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    Abstract1.1. The energy-independent exchange of alkali metal cations against protons was investigated in intact and disintegrated mitochondria. The exchange is not specific for different alkali metal ions.2.2. In intact mitochondria the apparent Km for the energy-independent exchange range from 5 to 25 mM (Cs+, Rb+, K+ 5–10 mM; Na+ 15 mM; Li+ 20 mM). At all ions studied the maximum release of protons was 15–20 nval/mg protein.3.3. In disintegrated mitochondria there are no differences between the alkali metal ions (apparent Km 30 mM; maximum H+-release 50 nval/mg protein).4.4. Directly accessible binding sites seem to exist in the outer membrane. Binding sites in the inner membrane are accessible only after disintegration, but not after addition of valinomycin + rotenone

    A Search for Low Surface Brightness Structure Around Compact Narrow Emission Line Galaxies

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    As the most extreme members of the rapidly evolving faint blue galaxy population at intermediate redshift, the compact narrow emission line galaxies (CNELGs) are intrinsically luminous (-22 < M_B < -18) with narrow emission linewidths (30 < \sigma < 125 km/s). Their nature is heavily debated: they may be low-mass starbursting galaxies that will fade to present-day dwarf galaxies or bursts of star formation temporarily dominating the flux of more massive galaxies, possibly related to in situ bulge formation or the formation of cores of galaxies. We present deep, high-quality (~0.6 - 0.8 arcsec) images with CFHT of 27 CNELGs. One galaxy shows clear evidence for a tidal tail; the others are not unambiguously embedded in galactic disks. Approximately 55% of the CNELGS have sizes consistent with local dwarfs of small-to-intermediate sizes, while 45% have sizes consistent with large dwarfs or disks galaxies. At least 4 CNELGs cannot harbor substantial underlying disk material; they are low-luminosity galaxies at the present epoch (M_B > -18). Conversely, 15 are not blue enough to fade to low-luminosity dwarfs (M_B > -15.2). The majority of the CNELGs are consistent with progenitors of intermediate-luminosity dwarfs and low-luminosity spiral galaxies with small disks. CNELGs are a heterogeneous progenitor population with significant fractions (up to 44%) capable of fading into today's faint dwarfs (M_B > -15.2), while 15 to 85% may only experience an apparently extremely compact CNELG phase at intermediate redshift but remain more luminous galaxies at the present epoch.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, emulateapj, published in Ap

    Empirical ugri-UBVRc Transformations for Galaxies

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    We present empirical color transformations between Sloan Digital Sky Survey ugri and Johnson-Cousins UBVRc photometry for nearby galaxies (D < 11 Mpc). We use the Local Volume Legacy (LVL) galaxy sample where there are 90 galaxies with overlapping observational coverage for these two filter sets. The LVL galaxy sample consists of normal, non-starbursting galaxies. We also examine how well the LVL galaxy colors are described by previous transformations derived from standard calibration stars and model-based galaxy templates. We find significant galaxy color scatter around most of the previous transformation relationships. In addition, the previous transformations show systematic offsets between transformed and observed galaxy colors which are visible in observed color-color trends. The LVL-based galaxygalaxy transformations show no systematic color offsets and reproduce the observed color-color galaxy trends.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (9 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables

    Spitzer Local Volume Legacy (LVL) SEDs and Physical Properties

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    We present the panchromatic spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the Local Volume Legacy (LVL) survey which consists of 258 nearby galaxies (D<D<11 Mpc). The wavelength coverage spans the ultraviolet to the infrared (1500 A˚\textrm{\AA} to 24 μ\mum) which is utilized to derive global physical properties (i.e., star formation rate, stellar mass, internal extinction due to dust.). With these data, we find color-color relationships and correlated trends between observed and physical properties (i.e., optical magnitudes and dust properties, optical color and specific star formation rate, and ultraviolet-infrared color and metallicity). The SEDs are binned by different galaxy properties to reveal how each property affects the observed shape of these SEDs. In addition, due to the volume-limited nature of LVL, we utilize the dwarf-dominated galaxy sample to test star formation relationships established with higher-mass galaxy samples. We find good agreement with the star-forming "main-sequence" relationship, but find a systematic deviation in the infrared "main-sequence" at low luminosities. This deviation is attributed to suppressed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) formation in low metallicity environments and/or the destruction of PAHs in more intense radiation fields occurring near a suggested threshold in sSFR at a value of log(sSFRsSFR) \sim -10.2.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (15 pages, 14 figures, 1 table

    The Spitzer Local Volume Legacy (LVL) Global Optical Photometry

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    We present the global optical photometry of 246 galaxies in the Local Volume Legacy (LVL) survey. The full volume-limited sample consists of 258 nearby (D < 11 Mpc) galaxies whose absolute B-band magnitude span a range of -9.6 < M_B < -20.7 mag. A composite optical (UBVR) data set is constructed from observed UBVR and SDSS ugriz imaging, where the ugriz magnitudes are transformed into UBVR. We present photometry within three galaxy apertures defined at UV, optical, and IR wavelengths. Flux comparisons between these apertures reveal that the traditional optical R25 galaxy apertures do not fully encompass extended sources. Using the larger IR apertures we find color-color relationships where later-type spiral and irregular galaxies tend to be bluer than earlier-type galaxies. These data provide the missing optical emission from which future LVL studies can construct the full panchromatic (UV-optical-IR) spectral energy distributions.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (9 pages, 5 figures, 5 tables
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