413 research outputs found

    Modification des traits racinaires le long d’une succession secondaire sur des talus routiers: implications dans la dynamique des communautés et la protection des sols contre l’érosion

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    Les traits fonctionnels des plantes varient au cours des successions secondaires végétales. Alors que certains traits ont été largement étudiés, les variations des traits racinaires au cours des successions restent relativement peu documentées. L’objectif de cette étude vise à mieux comprendre en quoi des variations de traits racinaires le long d’une succession secondaire contribuent à la dynamique de communautés végétales méditerranéennes. Pour cela, quinze communautés végétales, âgées de 0 à 69 ans, ont été repérées sur des talus en bordures de routes, dans le nord Montpelliérain. Sur cette chronoséquence, nous nous intéressons à des traits racinaires morphologiques et architecturaux des espèces dominantes, représentant 70% de l’abondance végétale. Nous faisons l’hypothèse que des traits morphologiques des racines fines (< 2 mm) permettent de mieux comprendre les modifications des stratégies d’acquisition et de conservation des ressources en nutriments et en eau. Des traits architecturaux, tels que la présence d’un pivot, de racines traçantes et/ou adventives, permettent d’étudier le rôle des racines dans l’ancrage et la capacité des espèces à coloniser le milieu en réponse aux contraintes topographiques liées à la pente des talus. Dans cette communication, nous présentons (i) la méthode retenue pour l’étude des traits racinaires morphologiques et architecturaux sur des espèces de formes de croissance diverses (herbacées, buissons, arbres) et (ii) discutons des limites et atouts de ces méthodes. Enfin, nous discutons de l’implication de ces traits racinaires dans la capacité des communautés à limiter l’érosion superficielle des talu

    Effect of temperature induced excess porewater pressures on the shaft bearing capacity of geothermal piles

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    Changes in temperature in clays of low permeability typically induce excess porewater pressures. In the context of geothermal piles this effect has typically been overlooked since most installations have occurred in soils with higher values of permeability. A parametric study is presented that solves the governing differential equations one dimensionally in a pile to study the influence of the various parameters: temperature of the fluid, permeability and soil compressibility. A new shaft resistance reduction ratio has been also defined to illustrate the loss of bearing capacity. The study shows that when the value of permeability is 1E-11 m/s or lower, combined with a soil compressibility in excess of 20,000 MPa, the developed excess porewater pressures can potentially reduce the effective stress locally to very low values. The solution applied to the case of the Lambeth College, London, also provides a plausible explanation to the observed loss of shaft friction of the tested pile

    FIB-SEM investigation and uniaxial compression of flexible graphite

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    Flexible graphite (FG) with 1 - 1.2 g/cm3^3 density is employed as beam energy absorber material in the CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) beam dumping system. However, the increase of energy deposited expected for new HL-LHC (High-Luminosity LHC) design demanded for an improvement in reliability and safety of beam dumping devices, and the need for a calibrated material model suitable for high-level FE simulations has been prioritized. This work sets the basic knowledge to develop a material model for FG suitable to this aim. A review of the FG properties available in literature is first given, followed by FIB-SEM (Focused Ion Beam - Scanning Electron Microscopy) microstructure investigation and monotonic and cyclic uniaxial compression tests. Similarities with other well-known groups of materials such as crushable foams, crumpled materials and compacted powders have been discussed. A simple 1D phenomenological model has been used to fit the experimental stress-strain curves and the accuracy of the result supports the assumptions that the graphite-like microstructure and the crumpled meso-structure play the major role under out-of-plane uniaxial compression.Comment: Pre-print template, 57 pages, 14 figure

    A single dose of antibody-drug conjugate cures a stage 1 model of African trypanosomiasis.

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    Infections of humans and livestock with African trypanosomes are treated with drugs introduced decades ago that are not always fully effective and often have severe side effects. Here, the trypanosome haptoglobin-haemoglobin receptor (HpHbR) has been exploited as a route of uptake for an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) that is completely effective against Trypanosoma brucei in the standard mouse model of infection. Recombinant human anti-HpHbR monoclonal antibodies were isolated and shown to be internalised in a receptor-dependent manner. Antibodies were conjugated to a pyrrolobenzodiazepine (PBD) toxin and killed T. brucei in vitro at picomolar concentrations. A single therapeutic dose (0.25 mg/kg) of a HpHbR antibody-PBD conjugate completely cured a T. brucei mouse infection within 2 days with no re-emergence of infection over a subsequent time course of 77 days. These experiments provide a demonstration of how ADCs can be exploited to treat protozoal diseases that desperately require new therapeutics

    Ecological Specialization and Rarity of Arable Weeds: Insights from a Comprehensive Survey in France

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    The definition of “arable weeds” remains contentious. Although much attention has been devoted to specialized, segetal weeds, many taxa found in arable fields also commonly occur in other habitats. The extent to which adjacent habitats are favorable to the weed flora and act as potential sources of colonizers in arable fields remains unclear. In addition, weeds form assemblages with large spatiotemporal variability, so that many taxa in weed flora are rarely observed in plot-based surveys. We thus addressed the following questions: How often do weeds occur in other habitats than arable fields? How does including field edges extend the taxonomic and ecological diversity of weeds? How does the weed flora vary across surveys at different spatial and temporal scales? We built a comprehensive dataset of weed taxa in France by compiling weed flora, lists of specialized segetal weeds, and plot-based surveys in agricultural fields, with different spatial and temporal coverages. We informed life forms, biogeographical origins and conservation status of these weeds. We also defined a broader dataset of plants occupying open habitats in France and assessed habitat specialization of weeds and of other plant species absent from arable fields. Our results show that many arable weeds are frequently recorded in both arable fields and non-cultivated open habitats and are, on average, more generalist than species absent from arable fields. Surveys encompassing field edges included species also occurring in mesic grasslands and nitrophilous fringes, suggesting spill-over from surrounding habitats. A total of 71.5% of the French weed flora was not captured in plot-based surveys at regional and national scales, and many rare and declining taxa were of Mediterranean origin. This result underlines the importance of implementing conservation measures for specialist plant species that are particularly reliant on arable fields as a habitat, while also pointing out biotic homogenization of agricultural landscapes as a factor in the declining plant diversity of farmed landscapes. Our dataset provides a reference species pool for France, with associated ecological and biogeographical information
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