15,041 research outputs found
Cold-water coral reef frameworks, megafaunal communities and evidence for coral carbonate mounds on the Hatton Bank, north east Atlantic
Offshore banks and seamounts sustain diverse megafaunal communities, including framework reefs formed by cold-water corals. Few studies have quantified environmental effects on the alpha or beta diversity of these communities. We adopted an interdisciplinary approach that used historical geophysical data to identify topographic highs on Hatton Bank, which were surveyed visually. The resulting photographic data were used to examine relationships between megafaunal communities and macrohabitat, the latter defined into six categories (mud, sand, cobbles, coral rubble, coral framework, rock). The survey stations revealed considerable small-scale variability in macrohabitat from exposed Late Palaeocene lava flows to quiescent muddy habitats and coral-built carbonate mounds. The first reported evidence for coral carbonate mound development in UK waters is presented, which was most pronounced near present-day or former sites of topographic change, suggesting that local current acceleration favoured coral framework growth and mound initiation. Alpha diversity varied significantly across macrohabitats, but not between rock and coral rubble, or between smaller grain sized categories of cobbles, sand and mud. Community composition differed between most macrohabitats, and variation in beta diversity across Hatton Bank was largely explained by fine-scale substratum. Certain megafauna were clearly associated with particular macrohabitats, with stylasterid corals notably associated with cobble and rock habitats and coral habitats characterized by a diverse community of suspension-feeders. The visual surveys also produced novel images of deep-water megafauna including a new photographic record of the gorgonian coral Paragorgia arborea, a species not previously reported from Rockall Plateau. Further interdisciplinary studies are needed to interpret beta diversity across these and other environmental gradients on Hatton Bank. It is clear that efforts are also needed to improve our understanding of the genetic connectivity and biogeography of vulnerable deep-water ecosystems and to develop predictive models of their occurrence that can help inform future conservation measures
High Accuracy Near-infrared Carbon Dioxide Intensity Measurements To Support Remote Sensing
We used two previously described [1,2] cavity ring-down spectroscopy systems to accurately measure line intensities in the following three CO rovibrational bands near 1.6 m: (30012) (00001), (30013) (00001), and (30014) (00001). These bands are commonly used in remote sensing applications, including the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) [3]. We estimate relative combined standard uncertainties for these band intensities of less than 0.1\% and obtain percent-level deviations in the measured intensities relative to those in the literature and several spectroscopic databases. However, we find 0.1\% level agreement with the (30013) and (30014) band intensities given in the HITRAN 2016 [4] database, which were calculated using ab initio dipole moment surfaces. Incorporation of the resulting line intensities into TCCON retrievals leads to significantly reduced biases in the (30012) and (30013) bands. These results indicate that refinements of spectroscopic databases are required to meet increasingly stringent remote sensing uncertainty targets.
[1] Lin, H. et. al. J. Quant. Spectrosc. Radiat. Transfer, 161, 11-20.
[2] Truong, G. W. et. al. (2013) Nat. Photonics, 7(7), 532-534.
[3] Wunch, D. et. al. Philos. Trans. Royal Soc. A, 369(1943), 2087-211
[4] Gordon, I. E., et al. (2017), J. Quant. Spectrosc. Radiat. Transfer, 203, 3-69
Using Proxies for the Short Rate: When are Three Months Like an Instant?
The dynamics of the unobservable "short" or "instantaneous" rate of interest are frequently estimated using a proxy variable. We show the biases resulting from this practice (the "proxy" problem) are related to the derivatives of the proxy with respect to the short rate and the (inverse) function from the proxy to the short rate. Analytic results show that the proxy problem is not economically significant for single- factor affine models, for parameter values consistent with US data. In addition, for the two-factor affine model of Longstaff and Schwartz (1992), the proxy problem is only economically significant for pricing discount bonds with maturities of more than 5 years. We also describe two different procedures which can be used to assess the magnitude of the proxy problem in more general interest rate models. Numerical evaluation of a nonlinear single-factor model suggests that the proxy problem can significantly affect both estimates of the diffusion function and discount bond prices.interest rates, proxies, term structure
Unitarisation of EFT Amplitudes for Dark Matter Searches at the LHC
We propose a new approach to the LHC dark matter search analysis within the
effective field theory (EFT) framework by utilising the K-matrix unitarisation
formalism. This approach provides a reasonable estimate of the dark matter
production cross section at high energies, and hence allows reliable bounds to
be placed on the cut-off scale of relevant operators without running into the
problem of perturbative unitarity violation. We exemplify this procedure for
the effective operator D5 in monojet dark matter searches in the collinear
approximation. We compare our bounds to those obtained using the truncation
method and identify a parameter region where the unitarisation prescription
leads to more stringent bounds.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures. References added and minor corrections made to
match published versio
Strawberry-Flavored Baits for Pharmaceutical Delivery to Feral Swine
More effective methods to control feral swine (Sus scrofa) damage are needed. We evaluated 8 oral delivery systems designed to deliver pharmaceuticals to feral swine on 2 properties in southern Texas, USA. We used modified PIGOUT feral pig bait (Animal Control Technologies Australia P/L, Somerton, Victoria, Australia) throughout our trials to compare species-specific visitation and removal rates. Given our consistent finding of high non-target removal of baits intended for feral swine, we question whether a swine-specific oral delivery system exists for this region
A review of the genus Agapetus Curtis (Trichoptera: Glossosomatidae) in eastern and central North America, with description of 12 new species
Twenty-nine species of caddisflies in the genus Agapetus Curtis in eastern and central North America are reviewed. Twelve are described as new species: Agapetus aphallus (known only from females); Agapetus baueri, Agapetus flinti, Agapetus harrisi, Agapetus hesperus, Agapetus ibis, Agapetus kirchneri, Agapetus meridionalis, Agapetus pegram, Agapetus ruiteri, Agapetus stylifer, and Agapetus tricornutus. Agapetus rossi Denning 1941 is recognized as a junior subjective synonym of Agapetus walkeri (Betten and Mosely 1940), new synonym. A key to males is provided, and speciesā distributions are mapped
Over-expressing the C3 photosynthesis cycle enzyme Sedoheptulose-1-7 Bisphosphatase improves photosynthetic carbon gain and yield under fully open air CO2fumigation (FACE)
Abstract
Background
Biochemical models predict that photosynthesis in C3 plants is most frequently limited by the slower of two processes, the maximum capacity of the enzyme Rubisco to carboxylate RuBP (Vc,max), or the regeneration of RuBP via electron transport (J). At current atmospheric [CO2] levels Rubisco is not saturated; consequently, elevating [CO2] increases the velocity of carboxylation and inhibits the competing oxygenation reaction which is also catalyzed by Rubisco. In the future, leaf photosynthesis (A) should be increasingly limited by RuBP regeneration, as [CO2] is predicted to exceed 550 ppm by 2050. The C3 cycle enzyme sedoheptulose-1,7 bisphosphatase (SBPase, EC 3.1.3.17) has been shown to exert strong metabolic control over RuBP regeneration at light saturation.
Results
We tested the hypothesis that tobacco transformed to overexpressing SBPase will exhibit greater stimulation of A than wild type (WT) tobacco when grown under field conditions at elevated [CO2] (585 ppm) under fully open air fumigation. Growth under elevated [CO2] stimulated instantaneous A and the diurnal photosynthetic integral (A') more in transformants than WT. There was evidence of photosynthetic acclimation to elevated [CO2] via downregulation of Vc,max in both WT and transformants. Nevertheless, greater carbon assimilation and electron transport rates (J and Jmax) for transformants led to greater yield increases than WT at elevated [CO2] compared to ambient grown plants.
Conclusion
These results provide proof of concept that increasing content and activity of a single photosynthesis enzyme can enhance carbon assimilation and yield of C3 crops grown at [CO2] expected by the middle of the 21st century.
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