8,160 research outputs found
Garlic nieve INTA : plant density and nitrogen fertigation
Se estudió el efecto de tres densidades
de plantación (20 (D20), 30 (D30) y 40 (D40)
plantas m-2) y cinco dosis de fertilización
nitrogenada (0 (N0), 75 (N75), 150 (N150),
225 (N225) y 300 (N300) kg de N ha-1), sobre el
rendimiento y la calidad de ajo (Allium
sativum L.) de la cultivar Nieve INTA (tipo
blanco), bajo riego por goteo.
Se realizó un ensayo en el INTA La Consulta,
Mendoza, Argentina, en un suelo
Torrifluvente típico franco arenoso profundo
(Soil Taxonomy). Se utilizaron cintas de riego
por goteo T-Tape 508-30, colocadas en el
medio de la cama de plantación con un caudal
de 2.7 L m-1 h-1. El máximo rendimiento
(13 t ha-1) de ajo seco y limpio se logró con
una densidad de plantación de 40 plantas
m-2 y con dosis de 225 kg N ha-1. Las relaciones
halladas entre los rendimientos de bulbos
y las dosis de nitrógeno de 0, 75, 150,
225 y 300 kg N ha-1 fueron de tipo cuadrático
(P < 0.001), con r2= 0.89; 0.91 y 0.84 para D 20,
D30 y D40, respectivamente. Se encontró diferencias
significativas (P < 0.05), con respecto
a rendimiento, entre líneas externas e internas
de la cama de plantación en la densidad
de 40 000 plantas ha-1. La línea externa
rindió más que la interna. Los porcentajes en
peso de bulbos comerciales (C5+C6+C7) sobre
el total de bulbos cosechados para las
densidades D20, D30 y D40 fueron de 80.1 %;
66.7 % y 56.1 %, respectivamente.The yield and the quality of garlic (Allium
sativum L.) cv. Nieve INTA under different
densities (20 (D20), 30 (D30) and 40 (D40)
plants m-2) and doses of nitrogen fertilization
(0 (N0), 75 (N75), 150 (N150), 225 (N225) and
300 (N300) kg of N ha-1) was evaluated under
drip irrigation. The experiment was conducted
at La Consulta Experimental Station on
a Torrifluvent typic deep sandy loam soil (Soil
Taxonomy).
The trial was conducted using drip
irrigation with a T-Tape 508-30, in the
middle of the sowing bed with a volume of
2.7 L m-1 h-1. The highest yield (13 t ha-1) was
obtained with a density of plantation of
40 plants m-2 and with rate of 225 kg N ha-1.
The total yields were adjusted to nitrogen
rates by a quadratic model highly significant
(P < 0.001) with r2= 0.89; 0.91 and 0.84 for
D20, D30 and D40, respectively. There were
significant differences between yields of
internal and external lines on D40. The
percentages of commercial bulbs
(C5+C6+C7) with respect to total yield, were
80.1%, 66.7% and 56.1% for D20, D30 y D40
respectively.Fil: Lipinski, Víctor M..Fil: Gaviola, Silvia.
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Departamento de Ingeniería Agrícol
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Live imaging and single-cell analysis reveal differential dynamics of autophagy and apoptosis
Autophagy is induced by many cytotoxic stimuli but it is often unclear whether, under specific conditions, autophagy plays a prosurvival or a prodeath role. To answer this critical question we developed a novel methodology that employs automated live microscopy and image analysis to measure autophagy and apoptosis simultaneously in single cells. We used this approach to perform a systems-level analysis of pathway dynamics for both autophagy and apoptosis. We found that induction of autophagy in response to different stimuli is uniformly unimodal; in contrast, cells induce apoptosis in an all-or-none bimodal fashion. By tracking the fate of single cells we found that autophagy precedes apoptosis, and that within the same population apoptosis is delayed in cells that mount a stronger autophagy response. Inhibition of autophagy by knocking down ATG5 promoted apoptosis, thus confirming that autophagy plays a protective role. We anticipate that our single-cell approach will be a powerful tool for gaining a quantitative understanding of the complex regulation of autophagy, its influence on cell fate decisions and its relationship with other cellular pathways
Drift routes of Cape hake eggs and larvae in the southern Benguela Current system
The aim of this study was to combine observed circulation pattern with data on distribution of hake eggs and larvae in the southern Benguela from a survey in September/October 2005 to investigate drift routes of hake eggs and larvae. Genetic information enabled species-specific information about drift routes of the two hake species (Merluccius capensis and M. paradoxus) to be established. The results showed that both species were transported from spawning areas to nursery areas in the jet current, but differential cross-shelf distribution would most likely lead to species-specific drift routes which could explain why the two species seem to have different nursery areas
Thermodynamic Analyses of Fuel Production Via Solar-Driven Ceria-Based Nonstoichiometric Redox Cycling: A Case Study of the Isothermal Membrane Reactor System
A thermodynamic model of an isothermal ceria-based membrane reactor system is developed for fuel production via solar-driven simultaneous reduction and oxidation reactions. Inert sweep gas is applied on the reduction side of the membrane. The model is based on conservation of mass, species, and energy along with the Gibbs criterion. The maximum thermodynamic solar-to-fuel efficiencies are determined by simultaneous multivariable optimization of operational parameters. The effects of gas heat recovery and reactor flow configurations are investigated. The results show that maximum efficiencies of 1.3% (3.2%) and 0.73% (2.0%) are attainable for water splitting (carbon dioxide splitting) under counter- and parallel-flow configurations, respectively, at an operating temperature of 1900 K and 95% gas heat recovery effectiveness. In addition, insights on potential efficiency improvement for the membrane reactor system are further suggested. The efficiencies reported are found to be much lower than those reported in literature. We demonstrate that the thermodynamic models reported elsewhere can violate the Gibbs criterion and, as a result, lead to unrealistically high efficiencies. The present work offers enhanced understanding of the counter-flow membrane reactor and provides more accurate upper efficiency limits for membrane reactor systems. © 2019 by ASME.Australian Research Council (Wojciech Lipiński, Future Fellowship, Award No. FT140101213, Funder ID. 10.13039/501100000923). China Scholarship Council (Sha Li, Grant No. [2015] 3022, 201506020092, Funder ID. 10.13039/501100004543)
Experimental evidence on promotion of electric and improved biomass cookstoves.
Improved cookstoves (ICS) can deliver "triple wins" by improving household health, local environments, and global climate. Yet their potential is in doubt because of low and slow diffusion, likely because of constraints imposed by differences in culture, geography, institutions, and missing markets. We offer insights about this challenge based on a multiyear, multiphase study with nearly 1,000 households in the Indian Himalayas. In phase I, we combined desk reviews, simulations, and focus groups to diagnose barriers to ICS adoption. In phase II, we implemented a set of pilots to simulate a mature market and designed an intervention that upgraded the supply chain (combining marketing and home delivery), provided rebates and financing to lower income and liquidity constraints, and allowed households a choice among ICS. In phase III, we used findings from these pilots to implement a field experiment to rigorously test whether this combination of upgraded supply and demand promotion stimulates adoption. The experiment showed that, compared with zero purchase in control villages, over half of intervention households bought an ICS, although demand was highly price-sensitive. Demand was at least twice as high for electric stoves relative to biomass ICS. Even among households that received a negligible price discount, the upgraded supply chain alone induced a 28 percentage-point increase in ICS ownership. Although the bundled intervention is resource-intensive, the full costs are lower than the social benefits of ICS promotion. Our findings suggest that market analysis, robust supply chains, and price discounts are critical for ICS diffusion
Reaching the Hard to Reach: Empowering Community Members to Think Differently and Embrace Teens with Substance Use Disorder and Mental Health Challenges During the Time of COVID
Being a teenager is hard, and COVID-19 has made these difficult years even harder. Over the past decade, U.S. teens report feeling increased pressure and stress and those working with this population see the result -- young people with mental health conditions, lack of resiliency skills and many with substance use disorder. The healthy coping mechanisms that used to contribute to mental wellness, like community connection, physical activity and the pursuit of creative outlets has been declining. These trends were happening even before COVID!
Teens with mental health issues often develop substance use disorder. It has been said that the opposite of addiction is not sobriety, it is connection. As the COVID19 pandemic continues, so does the nation’s opioid epidemic. The AMA has expressed concern over the increasing number of reports from national, state and local media suggesting increases in opioid-related overdose deaths. Young people, many of whom were already challenged with mental health conditions are seeking connection and are not finding it because of the social distancing and school closures necessary because of this contagious virus. Those who specialize in behavioral health are warning that a tsunami is about to hit our country in the form of mental health needs. This surge in mental health conditions is predicted to last for years.
Join us for a webinar that will shed some light on teen mental health and substance use disorders. Presenters Stephanie Briody, CEO of Behavioral Health Innovators and Michelle Muffet - Lipinski, Principal of Northshore Recovery High School will share their innovative initiatives and programs that are filling in the gaps in services for teens with mental health and substance use disorders. Learn how you can prepare for this surge in mental health challenges with examples of practices and programs that can be replicated in your community, and that provide the needed connection with teens who are hard to reach.
Learning Objectives: Learn about the PASS program and RecoveryBuild Alternative Peer Groups (APG’s) and how these positive discipline interventions are working to address and treat substance use disorder and other mental health conditions. Learn about recent legislative initiatives that address mental health and substance use disorder. Learn about some virtual connection tools and games you can use to provide expressive therapy using the arts
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The Tabby cat locus maps to feline chromosome B1.
The Tabby markings of the domestic cat are unique coat patterns for which no causative candidate gene has been inferred from other mammals. In this study, a genome scan was performed on a large pedigree of cats that segregated for Tabby coat markings, specifically for the Abyssinian (Ta-) and blotched (tbtb) phenotypes. There was linkage between the Tabby locus and eight markers on cat chromosome B1. The most significant linkage was between marker FCA700 and Tabby (Z = 7.56, theta = 0.03). Two additional markers in the region supported linkage, although not with significant LOD scores. Pairwise analysis of the markers supported the published genetic map of the cat, although additional meioses are required to refine the region. The linked markers cover a 17-cM region and flank an evolutionary breakpoint, suggesting that the Tabby gene has a homologue on either human chromosome 4 or 8. Alternatively, Tabby could be a unique locus in cats
Statistical properties of eigenstate amplitudes in complex quantum systems
We study the eigenstates of quantum systems with large Hilbert spaces, via
their distribution of wavefunction amplitudes in a real-space basis. For
single-particle 'quantum billiards', these real-space amplitudes are known to
have Gaussian distribution for chaotic systems. In this work, we formulate and
address the corresponding question for many-body lattice quantum systems. For
integrable many-body systems, we examine the deviation from Gaussianity and
provide evidence that the distribution generically tends toward power-law
behavior in the limit of large sizes. We relate the deviation from Gaussianity
to the entanglement content of many-body eigenstates. For integrable billiards,
we find several cases where the distribution has power-law tails.Comment: revised version, with appendices; 15 pages, 10 figure
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