5 research outputs found
The 8Li Calibration Source for the Sudbury Neutrino Obervatory
A calibration source employing 8Li (t_1/2 = 0.838s) has been developed for
use with the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO). This source creates a spectrum
of beta particles with an energy range similar to that of the SNO 8B solar
neutrino signal. The source is used to test the SNO detector's energy response,
position reconstruction and data reduction algorithms. The 8Li isotope is
created using a deuterium-tritium neutron generator in conjunction with a 11B
target, and is carried to a decay chamber using a gas/aerosol transport system.
The decay chamber detects prompt alpha particles by gas scintillation in
coincidence with the beta particles which exit through a thin stainless steel
wall. A description is given of the production, transport, and tagging
techniques along with a discussion of the performance and application of the
source.Comment: 11 pages plus 9 figures, Sumbitted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods
Understanding early reproductive failure in turtles and tortoises
Turtles and tortoises (Order Testudines) are facing an extinction crisis, and ecosystems are at risk of collapsing with the loss of key roles they play. Hatching failure is a crucial barrier to population growth and persistence, but its causes are poorly understood, and it is unknown whether fertilization rates are declining as many populations become smaller and more female-biased. Here, we show that very few studies of turtle and tortoise hatching success consider fertilization rates, and those that do use unreliable methods to determine egg fertility. We also show that studies of hatching success are biased towards marine turtles, as opposed to freshwater and terrestrial species, and wild rather than captive populations. To address the lack of reliable methods for assessing fertilization rates in turtles and tortoises, a microscopy-based method (originally designed for bird eggs) for detecting perivitelline membrane (PVM) bound sperm and embryonic nuclei in the germinal disc of unhatched eggs has been developed and tested (in turtle and tortoise eggs). We demonstrate that this method provides unequivocal evidence of egg fertilization in five different turtle and tortoise species from both captive and wild populations, even after eggs have been left in wild nests for the full incubation period. This methodological approach represents a valuable tool for monitoring egg fertility and embryo survival rates in turtles and tortoises, with the potential to provide important insights into the underlying drivers of reproductive failure in threatened captive and wild populations