6,190 research outputs found
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Understanding the Chlorine Isotopic Compositions of Apatites in Lunar Basalts
Extinctions of aculeate pollinators in Britain and the role of large-scale agricultural changes
Pollinators are fundamental to maintaining both biodiversity and agricultural productivity, but habitat destruction, loss of flower resources, and increased use of pesticides are causing declines in their abundance and diversity. Using historical records we assessed the rate of extinction of bee and flower-visiting wasp species in Britain, from the mid 19th century to the present. The most rapid phase of extinction appears to be related to changes in agricultural policy and practice beginning in the 1920s, before the agricultural intensification prompted by the Second World War, often cited as the most important driver of biodiversity loss in Britain. Slowing of the extinction rate from the 1960s onwards may be due to prior loss of the most sensitive species and/or effective conservation programs
Why is timing of bird migration advancing when individuals are not?
Recent advances in spring arrival dates have been reported in many migratory species but the mechanism driving these advances is unknown. As population declines are most widely reported in species that are not advancing migration, there is an urgent need to identify the mechanisms facilitating and constraining these advances. Individual plasticity in timing of migration in response to changing climatic conditions is commonly proposed to drive these advances but plasticity in individual migratory timings is rarely observed. For a shorebird population that has significantly advanced migration in recent decades, we show that individual arrival dates are highly consistent between years, but that the arrival dates of new recruits to the population are significantly earlier now than in previous years. Several mechanisms could drive advances in recruit arrival, none of which require individual plasticity or rapid evolution of migration timings. In particular, advances in nest-laying dates could result in advanced recruit arrival, if benefits of early hatching facilitate early subsequent spring migration. This mechanism could also explain why arrival dates of short-distance migrants, which generally return to breeding sites earlier and have greater scope for advance laying, are advancing more rapidly than long-distance migrants
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Mapping solar irradiance within Schrödinger Basin for future robotic sample return missions
The US National Research Council (NRC) identified eight scientific concepts and thirty-five prioritized investigations to be addressed with continued lunar exploration. These objectives are broadly consistent with those identified throughout the international community. the majority of these objectives require sample return from the Moon. Schrödinger basin has been highlighted as a particularly attractive location to find suitable samples
Saturated hydrocarbon polymeric binder for advanced solid propellant and hybrid solid grains Quarterly report no. 3, 1 May - 31 Jul. 1966
Saturated hydrocarbon polymeric binder for advanced solid propellant and hybrid solid grain
Saturated hydrocarbon polymeric binder for advanced solid propellant and hybrid solid grains Quarterly report no. 2, 1 Feb. - 30 Apr. 1966
Synthesis and analysis of ethylene-neohexene copolymers with other non ketene-imine group free radicals for solid and hybrid grain propellant saturated hydrocarbon binder progra
Critical Exponents of the Four-State Potts Model
The critical exponents of the four-state Potts model are directly derived
from the exact expressions for the latent heat, the spontaneous magnetization,
and the correlation length at the transition temperature of the model.Comment: LaTex, 7 page
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