40 research outputs found

    The „Rothenbuch concept of dead wood and habitat trees“ and its effects on the diversity of structures and biodiversity of beech-forests

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    In einem ausgedehnten Laubwaldgebiet im Hochspessart (Nordwestbayern, Bezirk Unterfranken) wurde 2006 untersucht, ob sich alte Rot-BuchenbestĂ€nde, die seit mehr als 15 Jahren nach dem „Rothenbucher Totholz- und Biotopbaumkonzept“ bewirtschaftet werden, hinsichtlich Struktur-, und Artenvielfalt, von vergleichbaren BestĂ€nden ohne ein derartiges Konzpt unterscheiden. QualitĂ€tsziele des Konzeptes sind: Schutz von HorstbĂ€umen, Belassen von 10 ökologisch besonders wertvollen BĂ€umen pro Hektar, Erhalt und Akkumulation von durchschnittlich 10 m3 Totholz (ohne Stockholz und Kronentotholz) ab 20 Zentimeter pro Hektar auf der gesamten FlĂ€che. Die Umsetzung erfolgt nach dem Grundsatz, dass bei der Auswahl jedes zu entnehmenden Altbaums stets zwischen dem zu erwartenden Holzertrag, der waldbaulichen Notwendigkeit und dem ökologischen Wert abzuwĂ€gen ist. Der Vergleich erfolgte in Rothenbuch, und in einem unmittelbar angrenzenden Gebiet ohne entsprechendes Konzept bei Altenbuch, in jeweils 30 ein Hektar großen Gitterfeldern sowie in je 25 Probekreisen (0,1 Hektar). Vögel wurden zur Brutzeit im Rahmen einer quantitativen Gitterfeldkartierung erhoben. Xylobionte KĂ€fer wurden mit Hilfe von Kreuzfensterfallen und zeitstandardisierten HandfĂ€ngen auf je 25 Probekreisen gefangen. Die Mollusken und Holz bewohnenden Pilze wurden auf je 15 Probekreisen durch standardisierte Aufsammlungen erfasst. In WirtschaftswĂ€ldern seltene Strukturen, die zudem meist geklumpt auftreten (stehendes Totholz, Mulmhöhlen- und sonstige BiotopbĂ€ume), wurden auf den 60 Hektarrastern, hĂ€ufigere und regelmĂ€ĂŸiger verteilte Strukturen wie Stockholz oder liegendes Totholz wurden in den Probekreisen aufgenommen. Folgende Hypothesen wurden getestet: 1. Das Rothenbucher Totholz- und Biotopbaumkonzept hat bisher keine Auswirkungen auf QuantitĂ€t und QualitĂ€t von liegendem und stehendem Totholz und BiotopbĂ€umen. 2. Das Rothenbucher Totholz- und Biotopbaumkonzept hat bisher keine Auswirkungen auf Abundanzen und Artenreichtum von Indikatorgruppen. 3. Das Rothenbucher Totholz- und Biotopbaumkonzept hat bisher keine Auswirkungen auf Abundanzen und Artenreichtum an Habitat- und Strukturtradition gebundener und gefĂ€hrdeter Arten. Es konnte kein Unterschied bei der Anzahl von BiotopbĂ€umen in beiden Gebieten festgestellt werden. Signifikante Unterschiede zugunsten von Rothenbuch ergaben sich bei den Mengen an liegendem und stehendem Totholz und dem Angebot an Totholz stĂ€rkerer Dimensionen. Es wurden in Rothenbuch signifikant mehr Vogelarten und Individuen als in Altenbuch registriert. Besonders deutlich im Vergleich der Avizönosen war der Unterschied bei HöhlenbrĂŒtern, wĂ€hrend die Werte fĂŒr Vogelarten mit Bindung an Holzstrukturen nur einen Trend ergaben. Die Artenindikatoranalyse ergab folgende Arten als signifikant hĂ€ufiger und stetiger im totholzreicheren Rothenbuch: Mittelspecht, Kohlmeise, Rotkehlchen, Grauspecht, Halsband- und TrauerschnĂ€pper, Sumpfmeise und MönchsgrasmĂŒcke. Nur der Buchfink (der im bayerischen Wirtschaftwald hĂ€ufigste Vogel) erwies sich als Charakterart fĂŒr Altenbuch. Die Artenzahl und Abundanzen der Mollusken lag in Rothenbuch signifikant ĂŒber den Werten von Altenbuch. Auch die Anzahl gefĂ€hrdeter Weichtierarten und die entsprechenden Individuenzahlen waren in Rothenbuch höher. Bei xylobionten KĂ€ferarten wurden in Rothenbuch signifikant höhere Artenzahlen aller Arten und der gefĂ€hrdeten Arten festgestellt. Auch die Registrierungen und Artenzahlen von Holz bewohnenden Pilzen pro Probekreis lagen in Rothenbuch signifikant höher. Damit konnte gezeigt werden, dass bezĂŒglich der Totholzmengen bereits nach etwa 15 Jahren deutliche Erfolge erzielt werden können. Das Fehlen von Unterschieden bei BiotopbĂ€umen und wichtiger Indikatorarten der ĂŒbergeordneten Großlandschaft Spessart in den untersuchten BestĂ€nden zeigt aber auch, dass ein Zeitraum von 15 Jahren fĂŒr die Entstehung hochwertiger BiotopbĂ€ume nicht ausreicht. Die Dichte der Totholzstrukturen ist noch unzureichend, um den im Spessart reliktĂ€r vorhandenen, an Urwaldstrukturen gebundenen xylobionten Arten eine Wiederbesiedlung auf grĂ¶ĂŸerer FlĂ€che zu ermöglichen. Inzwischen geht das Schutzkonzept der Bayrischen Staatsforsten (NEFT 2006) konsequent einen Schritt weiter, nĂ€mlich das Erreichen einer Gesamttotholzmenge von mindestens 40 mÂł Totholz pro Hektar fĂŒr ĂŒber 140jĂ€hrige BuchenbestĂ€nde und BestĂ€nde Ă€lter als 180 gĂ€nzlich aus der Nutzung zu nehmen.Investigations were performed in the New Red Sandstone region of the High Spessart in north-west Bavaria (Lower Franconia District), which is famous for extensive beech (Fagus sylvatica) forests on historical woodland sites with continuous tradition of broadleaved tree-cover. Under cool-humid and mild-winter upland conditions (submontane/oceanic) the beech achieves its maximum competitive power and tends to form pure stands of acidic beech forest (Luzuloluzuloidis-Fagetum, upland-form). The main goal was to evaluate the effects of the Rothenbuch concept, only 15 years after its implementation, on the diversity of structures and biodiversity. For this purpose mature stands of Beech (located in Rothenbuch) managed according to the guidelines of the concept were compared with conventionally managed stands (located in Altenbuch). Targets of the concept are protection of trees occupied by eyries of tree-breeding birds, retention of at least 10 ecologically valuable trees per hectare, conservation and accumulation of an average 10 m3 dead wood of over 20 centimeters dbh per hectare (excluding stumps and canopy dead wood). Implementation of the concept in forest management follows the principle “before an old tree is removed, a balance must be made between the estimated yield of timber, silvicultural necessity and the trees ecologicalvalue”. In Rothenbuch and Altenbuch 30 grids of 1ha (bird study; rare forest structures with a clustered distribution) and 25 circular plots of 0.1ha (other groups and more frequent structures) were installed. Birds were surveyed at the time of incubation by quantitative grid mapping. Saproxylic beetles were sampled by flight-interception traps and time-based manual capture. Snails and wood-inhabiting fungi were surveyed by standardized collections on 15 of the 25 circular sample plots. Three null hypotheses were tested: (i) Rothenbuch concept has as yet had no effect on quality and quantity of lying and standing deadwood structures and habitat trees (ii) Rothenbuch concept has as yet had no effects on abundances and species richness of floral and faunal species indicator groups (iii) Rothenbuch concept has as yet had no effects on abundances and species richness of endangered species dependent on temporal continuity of tradition in habitats and structures The follow up study revealed no significant differences between the two sites in terms of the quantity of habitat trees (i.e. living trees with mulm- and rot-holes, rotten crown sections and dead knots, crevices etc.). However, we recorded increased deadwood resources at the Rothenbuch site: lying stems, standing snags and larger diameters. Consequently, more bird species and individuals were present there. We found a particularly pronounced difference in hole-nesters, whereas for birds linked to particular wood structures only a trend was observed. According to a species indicator analysis the following sensitive bird species were found to be significantly more frequent and constantly present at Rothenbuch: middle-spotted woodpecker, great tit, redbreast, grey woodpecker, pied and collared flycatcher, marsh tit and blackcap. On the other hand only common chaffinch proved to be a faithful species in Altenbuch. Species numbers and abundances of terrestrial molluscs and saproxylic beetles were also significantly increased at Rothenbuch, including endangered species listed in red-data books. Moreover, higher numbers of species and abundance of wood-inhabiting fungi were recorded. The results correlated with the increased deadwood resources in Rothenbuch. However, the unchanged low numbers of habitat trees and the lack of important indicator species prove that the period of 15 years was not sufficient for the appearance of habitat trees with suitable microstructures. The frequency of deadwood is furthermore still inadequate for a broader re-colonization by the scattered relict species of virgin forest which are considered to be closely associated with primeval structures and features. In the meantime the concept of the Bavarian state forestry organisation (NEFT 2006) has gone one step further in setting a target dead wood volume of at least 40 m3 per hectare for beech stands older than 140 years, and complete removal of stands older than 180 years from utilization

    Preoperative short-course radiotherapy versus combined radiochemotherapy in locally advanced rectal cancer: a multi-centre prospectively randomised study of the Berlin Cancer Society

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    BACKGROUND: The additional use of radiotherapy has changed the treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) dramatically. But a major achievement has been the development of total mesorectal excision (TME) as a surgical standard and the recognition that the surgeon is the predominant prognostic factor. The benefit of preoperative hypofractionated radiotherapy (SCRT; five fractions each of 5 Gy), initially established by the Swedish Rectal Cancer Trial, has been demonstrated in conjunction with TME by the Dutch Colorectal Cancer Group. The concept of combined neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy (conventional radiation of about 50 Gy with chemotherapy) has not been compared over surgery alone with TME. However, the German Rectal Cancer Study Group recently demonstrated that preoperative radiochemotherapy (RCT) was better than postoperative radiochemotherapy in terms of local control. METHODS: Patients with histological proven rectal cancer staged T2N+ or T3 are randomized to receive either SCRT (25 Gy in five fractions of 5 Gy) plus TME-surgery within 5 days or RCT (50.4 Gy in 28 fractions of 1.8 Gy, continuous infusion 5-fluorouracil) plus TME-surgery 4-6 weeks later. All patients receive adjuvant chemotherapy (12 weeks continuous infusional 5-FU) and are followed up for 5 years. TME-quality is independently documented by the surgeon and the pathologist. Hypothesis of the study is that RCT is superior to SCRT in terms of local recurrence after five years. Secondary endpoints are overall survival, disease-free survival, complete resection rate (R0 resection), rate of sphincter saving resection, acute and late toxicity (radiation related side effects), and quality of life (including long term bowel function). DISCUSSION: Similar long-term survival, local control and late morbidity have been reported for both concepts of preoperative therapy in non-comparative studies. In addition to other ongoing (and recently published) comparative trials we include a larger number of patients for adequate power, apply quality-controlled TME and try to avoid the adjuvant treatment bias by mandatory adjuvant chemotherapy in both groups. Further more, stratification of the initially planned surgical procedure and sphincter-preservation will generate valid evidence whether RCT will allow a less aggressive (sphincter saving) surgical approach

    Preoperative short-course radiotherapy versus combined radiochemotherapy in locally advanced rectal cancer: a multi-centre prospectively randomised study of the Berlin Cancer Society

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    Abstract Background The additional use of radiotherapy has changed the treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) dramatically. But a major achievement has been the development of total mesorectal excision (TME) as a surgical standard and the recognition that the surgeon is the predominant prognostic factor. The benefit of preoperative hypofractionated radiotherapy (SCRT; five fractions each of 5 Gy), initially established by the Swedish Rectal Cancer Trial, has been demonstrated in conjunction with TME by the Dutch Colorectal Cancer Group. The concept of combined neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy (conventional radiation of about 50 Gy with chemotherapy) has not been compared over surgery alone with TME. However, the German Rectal Cancer Study Group recently demonstrated that preoperative radiochemotherapy (RCT) was better than postoperative radiochemotherapy in terms of local control. Methods and design Patients with histological proven rectal cancer staged T2N+ or T3 are randomized to receive either SCRT (25 Gy in five fractions of 5 Gy) plus TME-surgery within 5 days or RCT (50.4 Gy in 28 fractions of 1.8 Gy, continuous infusion 5-fluorouracil) plus TME-surgery 4–6 weeks later. All patients receive adjuvant chemotherapy (12 weeks continuous infusional 5-FU) and are followed up for 5 years. TME-quality is independently documented by the surgeon and the pathologist. Hypothesis of the study is that RCT is superior to SCRT in terms of local recurrence after five years. Secondary endpoints are overall survival, disease-free survival, complete resection rate (R0 resection), rate of sphincter saving resection, acute and late toxicity (radiation related side effects), and quality of life (including long term bowel function). Discussion Similar long-term survival, local control and late morbidity have been reported for both concepts of preoperative therapy in non-comparative studies. In addition to other ongoing (and recently published) comparative trials we include a larger number of patients for adequate power, apply quality-controlled TME and try to avoid the adjuvant treatment bias by mandatory adjuvant chemotherapy in both groups. Further more, stratification of the initially planned surgical procedure and sphincter-preservation will generate valid evidence whether RCT will allow a less aggressive (sphincter saving) surgical approach.</p

    Betulonic Acid Derivatives Interfering with Human Coronavirus 229E Replication via the nsp15 Endoribonuclease.

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    To develop antiviral therapeutics against human coronavirus (HCoV) infections, suitable coronavirus drug targets and corresponding lead molecules must be urgently identified. Here, we describe the discovery of a class of HCoV inhibitors acting on nsp15, a hexameric protein component of the viral replication-transcription complexes, endowed with immune evasion-associated endoribonuclease activity. Structure-activity relationship exploration of these 1,2,3-triazolo-fused betulonic acid derivatives yielded lead molecule 5h as a strong inhibitor (antiviral EC50: 0.6 ÎŒM) of HCoV-229E replication. An nsp15 endoribonuclease active site mutant virus was markedly less sensitive to 5h, and selected resistance to the compound mapped to mutations in the N-terminal part of HCoV-229E nsp15, at an interface between two nsp15 monomers. The biological findings were substantiated by the nsp15 binding mode for 5h, predicted by docking. Hence, besides delivering a distinct class of inhibitors, our study revealed a druggable pocket in the nsp15 hexamer with relevance for anti-coronavirus drug development
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