431 research outputs found

    Foreword: Control and Conservation of Lampreys Beyond 2020 – Proceedings from the 3rd Sea Lamprey International Symposium (SLIS III)

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    This special issue summarizes outcomes from the 3rd Sea Lamprey International Symposium (SLIS III; Fig. 1) held 28 July – 2 August 2019 at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A. The first two symposia (SLIS I and SLIS II) were held 30 July – 8 August 1979 at Northern Michigan University in Marquette, Michigan and 14–18 August 2000 at Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, respectively. The published volumes from these symposia in 1980 (Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, Volume 37, Issue 11) and 2003 (Journal of Great Lakes Research Volume 29, Supplement 1) have been invaluable references for the broader scientific community and for management agencies around the Laurentian Great Lakes; cited over 4800 and 3300 times, respectively. SLIS III was attended by over 150 scientists, biologists, resource managers, graduate students, and Commission advisors, including participants from Australia, Canada, China, Japan, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States (Fig. 2). Similar to SLIS I and SLIS II, the goals of SLIS III were to provide a forum to (i) update and publish information on sea lamprey control and research on lampreys since SLIS II, (ii) exchange knowledge and ideas to bring practitioners to a common plateau of understanding, and (iii) develop innovative initiatives and stimulate new vigor in efforts to control sea lamprey in the Great Lakes and to conserve lampreys in their native ranges. The emphasis on conservation of lampreys is unique to SLIS III and reflects a heightened international recognition that scientific and management advances supporting sea lamprey control in the Great Lakes can benefit the global effort to conserve native lampreys and vice versa

    Efeitos de giberelinas no desenvolvimento do algodoeiro (Gossypium hirsutum L. cv.'IAC-RM3')

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    Seedlings of cotton were treated 19 days after the sowing with gibberellins at concentrations of 2, 20 and 200 ppm and the check to verify The effect of the compound on the growth of the plant. The experiment was done under greenhouse conditions in 1974. The main proposal of this work is to study the variation of plant height, net assimilation rate, relative growth rate and the leaf area ratio with application of gibberellins. The growth regulator at concentrations of 2, 20 and 200 ppm increased plant height, respectively in 27, 48 and 65% when compared to the control. Application of gibberellins at concentrations of 2 and 20 ppm promotes increase in the net assimilation rate and in the leaf area ratio of cotton. The relative growth rate was superior in the plots that received gibberelins at concentrations of 2, 20 and 200 ppm. It was verified that gibberellins at 200 ppm has a tendency to promote reduction in the net assimilation rate and slight variation in the leaf area ratio in relation to check.Verificou-se o efeito de giberelinas, quando aplicada sob a forma de pulverização das plântulas, no desenvolvimento do algodoeiro cultivar 'IAC-RM3' em condições de casa-de-vegetação. Estudaram-se as concentrações de 0, 2, 20 e 200 ppm do regulador de crescimento; sendo que os tratamentos aumentaram a altura das plantas em 27, 48 e 65%, com relação ao controle. Aplicações de giberelinas nas dosagens de 2 e 20 ppm promoveram aumento na TAL e na RAF do algodoeiro. A TCR foi superior nas plantas tratadas com giberelinas. Verificou-se ainda que giberelinas a 200 ppm promove redução na TAL e variação mínima na RAF, com relação ao controle

    Sustainability evaluation of a Portuguese “terroir” wine

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    The challenges of sustainability are transversal to all human activities, and the wine sector has its own role to play in the march for a more sustainable development. The proper definition of the most adequate measures and/or policies must be based on an objective and quantitative evaluation of the sustainability of a product or process. In this work the sustainability of a “terroir” wine is assessed taking into account its life cycle and using the following indicators: carbon and water footprint, material intensity, solid waste generated, worker turnover rate, investment in H&S training and EBITDA. All indicators are expressed per functional unit of 0.75 L of wine. The evaluation used data from the company complemented with data/information from the literature or life cycle inventory databases. To account for climatic variability, data from three consecutive years was used. Average values of 3.51 kgCO2eq and 481.4 L per functional unit were obtained for the carbon and water footprint respectively, both values within the range of values reported in the literature

    New Results for the Correlation Functions of the Ising Model and the Transverse Ising Chain

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    In this paper we show how an infinite system of coupled Toda-type nonlinear differential equations derived by one of us can be used efficiently to calculate the time-dependent pair-correlations in the Ising chain in a transverse field. The results are seen to match extremely well long large-time asymptotic expansions newly derived here. For our initial conditions we use new long asymptotic expansions for the equal-time pair correlation functions of the transverse Ising chain, extending an old result of T.T. Wu for the 2d Ising model. Using this one can also study the equal-time wavevector-dependent correlation function of the quantum chain, a.k.a. the q-dependent diagonal susceptibility in the 2d Ising model, in great detail with very little computational effort.Comment: LaTeX 2e, 31 pages, 8 figures (16 eps files). vs2: Two references added and minor changes of style. vs3: Corrections made and reference adde

    Scale in object and process ontologies

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    Scale is of great importance to the analysis of real world phenomena, be they enduring objects or perduring processes. This paper presents a new perspective on the concept of scale by considering it within two complementary ontological views. The first, called SNAP, recognizes enduring entities or objects, the other, called SPAN, perduring entities or processes. Within the meta-theory provided by the complementary SNAP and SPAN ontologies, we apply different theories of formal ontology such as mereology and granular partitions, and ideas derived from hierarchy theory. These theories are applied to objects and processes and form the framework within which we present tentative definitions of scale, which are found to differ between the two ontologies
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