226 research outputs found

    Motivations and Meanings of Environmental Volunteer Experiences at Eco-leisure Destinations in New Zealand

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    Environmental volunteering is becoming more vital and fundamental for the health of community and environment. The purpose of this study is to identify characteristics of environmental volunteers and gain an understanding of the totality of their experiences from multidisciplinary perspectives. A theoretical model was proposed based on the Volunteer Process Model (VPM) which includes relationships between motivations of volunteers, leisure involvement in volunteering, and place attachment to ecoleisure/tourism destinations. This study adopted positivist perspectives, and was conducted through surveys for volunteers at eco-leisure/tourism destinations in the Hauraki Gulf in New Zealand. A total of 396 valid responses were collected and analysed. Results from the sample revealed that some specific socio-demographics were related to participation in environmental volunteering at eco-leisure/tourism settings, such as age, gender, the frequency of volunteering (episodic/ongoing), and the origin of participants (domestic/international). The analysis of socio-demographics identified three dominant groups of environmental volunteers, namely leisure volunteers, ongoing volunteers, and tourist volunteers. An exploratory factor analysis (EFA) for motivation items identified six factors of motivation; values of nature, career, enhancement, protective, social, and leisure. The importance of these factors differed between episodic and ongoing volunteers, as well as between domestic and international volunteers. While ongoing volunteers put importance on values of nature and leisure motives, episodic volunteers were more motivated by enhancement and protective factors. A confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) on leisure involvement scales identified three dimensions as previous research; attraction, centrality, and self-expression. Also the CFA for place attachment scales revealed two dimensions; place identity and place dependence. The importance of these dimensions for environmental volunteers also differed by volunteer attributes. The proposed model showed good fit indices, in which the motivation factors predicted the importance of leisure involvement dimensions, and leisure involvement dimensions affected the strength of place attachment to the volunteering sites. In addition, the results of the structural equation model (SEM) identified that values of nature and social factors had the most positive effect on leisure involvement overall, while leisure and enhancement were relatively important factors for leisure involvement only in the episodic volunteer group. Episodic volunteers were more driven by endogenous motivations, while ongoing volunteers were more driven by exogenous motivations. In addition, the involvement dimension of self-expression had a significant effect on the place attachment felt by ongoing volunteers, while centrality had a more significant effect on the sense of place attachment of episodic volunteers. This study identified three segments of environmental volunteers, with differences in motivations, leisure involvement, and place attachment seen between episodic and ongoing volunteers, as well as between domestic and international volunteers. In addition, this study demonstrated the validity of a new volunteer process model for environmental volunteers including for both episodic and ongoing volunteers. The results of the survey offer new perspectives of leisure environmental volunteering and identify the various volunteer experiences of domestic and international volunteers who choose spend their leisure time in restoration activities. The findings and implications can contribute to a number of organisations in societies, including governmental and non-governmental organisations, non-profit organisations, and tourism operators

    Monitoring Observations of the Jupiter-Family Comet 17P/Holmes during 2014 Perihelion Passage

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    We performed a monitoring observation of a Jupiter-Family comet, 17P/Holmes, during its 2014 perihelion passage to investigate its secular change in activity. The comet has drawn the attention of astronomers since its historic outburst in 2007, and this occasion was its first perihelion passage since then. We analyzed the obtained data using aperture photometry package and derived the Afrho parameter, a proxy for the dust production rate. We found that Afrho showed asymmetric properties with respect to the perihelion passage: it increased moderately from 100 cm at the heliocentric distance r_h=2.6-3.1 AU to a maximal value of 185 cm at r_h = 2.2 AU (near the perihelion) during the inbound orbit, while dropping rapidly to 35 cm at r_h = 3.2 AU during the outbound orbit. We applied a model for characterizing dust production rates as a function of r_h and found that the fractional active area of the cometary nucleus had dropped from 20%-40% in 2008-2011 (around the aphelion) to 0.1%-0.3% in 2014-2015 (around the perihelion). This result suggests that a dust mantle would have developed rapidly in only one orbital revolution around the sun. Although a minor eruption was observed on UT 2015 January 26 at r_h = 3.0 AU, the areas excavated by the 2007 outburst would be covered with a layer of dust (<~ 10 cm depth) which would be enough to insulate the subsurface ice and to keep the nucleus in a state of low activity.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, ApJ accepted on December 29, 201

    Regulation of hepatitis C virus secretion by the Hrs-dependent exosomal pathway

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    AbstractThe molecular mechanisms of assembly and budding of hepatitis C virus (HCV) remain poorly understood. The budding of several enveloped viruses requires an endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT), which is part of the cellular machinery used to form multivesicular bodies (MVBs). Here, we demonstrated that Hrs, an ESCRT-0 component, is critical for the budding of HCV through the exosomal secretion pathway. Hrs depletion caused reduced exosome production, which paralleled with the decrease of HCV replication in the host cell, and that in the culture supernatant. Sucrose-density gradient separation of the culture supernatant of HCV-infected cells revealed the co-existence of HCV core proteins and the exosome marker. Furthermore, both the core protein and an envelope protein of HCV were detected in the intraluminal vesicles of MVBs. These results suggested that HCV secretion from host cells requires Hrs-dependent exosomal pathway in which the viral assembly is also involved

    Genetic and Epigenetic Alterations of Lysophosphatidic Acid Receptor Genes in Rodent Tumors by Experimental Models

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    Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a bioactive mediator and induces several biological effects, including cell proliferation, migration, morphogenesis and differentiation. LPA interacts with at least six G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), including LPA receptor-1 (LPA1), LPA2, LPA3, LPA4, LPA5 and LPA6. These receptors show different biological functions through the binding of LPA, depending on the type of cells. In human malignancies, a high level of LPA production was found in plasma and ascites in ovarian cancer cases. Moreover, aberrant expression levels of LPA receptor genes were detected in some cancer cells. Therefore, it is suggested that LPA receptors may be involved in the pathogenesis of tumor cells as well as LPA per se. Recently, we have reported that alterations of LPA receptor genes also occur in rodent tumors. In this review, we summarize the recent evidence in the investigations of LPA receptor alterations in rodent tumors by experimental models

    Infrequent Mutation of Lysophosphatidic Acid Receptor-1 Gene in Hamster Pancreatic Duct Adenocarcinomas and Established Cell Lines

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    To evaluate the involvement of lysophosphatidic acid receptor-1 (LPA1) gene alteration in pancreatic carcinogenesis, we investigated mutations in the LPA1 gene in hamster pancreatic duct adenocarcinomas (PDAs) and established cell lines. Female Syrian golden hamsters received 30 mg/kg of N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine (BOP) followed by repeated exposure to an augmentation pressure regimen consisting of a choline-deficient diet combined with DL-ethionine and then L-methionine and a further administration of 20 mg/kg BOP. A total of 10 PDAs obtained 10 weeks after beginning the experiment and three cell lines established from subcutaneously transplantable PDAs in syngeneic hamsters were examined for mutations using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformation polymorphism (RT-PCR-SSCP) analysis. A mutation was detected in only one PDA (1/10, 10%) in the form of a GGA to GTA (Gly to Val) transversion at codon 355, and no mutations were detected in the three cell lines. These results suggest that the LPA1 gene mutation may play roles in a limited fraction of BOP-induced pancreatic duct carcinogenesis in hamsters

    Dust from Comet 209P/LINEAR during its 2014 Return: Parent Body of a New Meteor Shower, the May Camelopardalids

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    We report a new observation of the Jupiter-family comet 209P/LINEAR during its 2014 return. The comet is recognized as a dust source of a new meteor shower, the May Camelopardalids. 209P/LINEAR was apparently inactive at a heliocentric distance rh = 1.6 au and showed weak activity at rh < 1.4 au. We found an active region of <0.001% of the entire nuclear surface during the comet's dormant phase. An edge-on image suggests that particles up to 1 cm in size (with an uncertainty of factor 3-5) were ejected following a differential power-law size distribution with index q=-3.25+-0.10. We derived a mass loss rate of 2-10 kg/s during the active phase and a total mass of ~5x10^7 kg during the 2014 return. The ejection terminal velocity of millimeter- to centimeter-sized particles was 1-4 m/s, which is comparable to the escape velocity from the nucleus (1.4 m/s). These results imply that such large meteoric particles marginally escaped from the highly dormant comet nucleus via the gas drag force only within a few months of the perihelion passage.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, accepted on 2014 December 11 for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter

    From carbon nanotubes and silicate layers to graphene platelets for polymer nanocomposites

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    In spite of extensive studies conducted on carbon nanotubes and silicate layers for their polymer-based nanocomposites, the rise of graphene now provides a more promising candidate due to its exceptionally high mechanical performance and electrical and thermal conductivities. The present study developed a facile approach to fabricate epoxy–graphene nanocomposites by thermally expanding a commercial product followed by ultrasonication and solution-compounding with epoxy, and investigated their morphologies, mechanical properties, electrical conductivity and thermal mechanical behaviour. Graphene platelets (GnPs) of 3.5
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