276 research outputs found

    High-resolution tracking based on scCVD diamond detector for straw tube detector tests

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    Diamond dE-E-ToF-telescope for heavy ion reactions at the Coulomb barrier

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    A diamond start detector array for the HADES pion beam

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    Performance of the straw tube readout based on PADI chip

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    Laser Lithography for Production of Diamond Detectors

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    Low purity IIa scCVD diamond material for high-current heavy-ion experiments in HADES/CBM at FAIR

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    Large Area Continuous Position Sensitive Diamond Detector: First Tests

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    Skewed morph ratios lead to lower genetic diversity of the heterostylous Primula veris in fragmented grasslands

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    Populations of heterostylous plant species are ideally composed of equal frequencies of two (distylous) or three (tristylous) morphologically different floral morphs. Intra-morph incompatibility helps to avoid inbreeding and to maintain genetic diversity, supporting plant fitness and long-term viability. Habitat fragmentation can lead to skewed morph ratios and thereby reduce the abundance of compatible mates. This, in turn, can result in a loss of genetic diversity. We tested whether the genetic diversity of heterostylous plants is affected by morph ratio bias using populations of the distylous grassland plant Primula veris in recently fragmented grasslands. We recorded morph frequencies and population sizes in 30 study populations of P. veris on two Estonian islands characterised by different degrees of habitat fragmentation. Examining variation of thousands of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and heterostyly-specific genetic markers, we quantified overall and morph-specific genetic diversity and differentiation in these populations. Morph frequencies deviated more in smaller populations. Skewed morph ratios had a negative effect on the genetic diversity of P. veris in more fragmented grasslands. In the populations of better-connected grassland systems, genetic differentiation among S-morphs was higher than among L-morphs. Our study shows that deviations from morph balance are stronger in small populations and have a negative impact on the genetic diversity of the distylous plant P. veris. Together with the direct negative effects of habitat loss and decreased population size on the genetic diversity of plants, morph ratio bias may intensify the process of genetic erosion, thus exacerbating the local extinction of heterostylous species

    Development of Heteroepitaxial DoI Plates for Diamond Detectors

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