728 research outputs found

    Avian blood parasites in an endangered columbid: Leucocytozoon marchouxi in the Mauritian Pink Pigeon Columba mayeri

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    There is increasing evidence that pathogens can play a significant role in species decline. This study of a complete free-living species reveals a cost of blood parasitism to an endangered host, the Pink Pigeon Columba mayeri, endemic to Mauritius. We investigated the prevalence and effect of infection of the blood parasite, Leucocytozoon marchouxi, in the free-living Pink Pigeon population. Overall, L. marchouxi infection prevalence detected was 18·3%. Juveniles were more likely to be infected than older birds and there was geographical variation in infection prevalence. Survival of birds infected with L. marchouxi was lower than that of uninfected birds to 90 days post-sampling. This study suggests that while common haematozoa are well tolerated in healthy adults, these parasites may have greater pathogenic potential in susceptible juveniles. The study is unusual given its completeness of species sampling (96%) within a short time-period, the accurate host age data, and its focus on blood parasites in a threatened bird species. Species for which long-term life-history data are available for every individual serve as valuable models for dissecting the contribution of particular pathogens to species decline

    An analysis of P\mathbb{P}-invariance and dynamical compensation properties from a control perspective

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    Dynamical compensation (DC) provides robustness to parameter fluctuations. As an example, DC enable control of the functional mass of endocrine or neuronal tissue essential for controlling blood glucose by insulin through a nonlinear feedback loop. Researchers have shown that DC is related to structural unidentifiability and P\mathbb{P}-invariance property, and P\mathbb{P}-invariance property is a sufficient and necessary condition for the DC property. In this article, we discuss DC and P\mathbb{P}-invariancy from an adaptive control perspective. An adaptive controller is a self-tuning controller used to compensate for changes in a dynamical system. To design an adaptive controller with the DC property, it is easier to start with a two-dimensional dynamical model. We introduce a simplified system of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) with the DC property and extend it to a general form. The value of the ideal adaptive control lies in developing methods to synthesize DC to variations in multiple parameters. Then we investigate the stability of the system with time-varying input and disturbance signals, with a focus on the system's P\mathbb{P}-invariance properties. This study provides phase portraits and step-like response graphs to visualize the system's behavior and stability properties

    Multiscale Modeling of a Nanoelectromechanical Shuttle

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    In this article, we report a theoretical analysis of a nanoelectromechanical shuttle based on a multiscale model that combines microscopic electronic structure data with macroscopic dynamics. The microscopic part utilizes a (static) density functional description to obtain the energy levels and orbitals of the shuttling particle together with the forces acting on the particle. The macroscopic part combines stochastic charge dynamics that incorporates the microscopically evaluated tunneling rates with a Newtonian dynamics. We have applied the multiscale model to describe the shuttling of a single copper atom between two gold-like jellium electrodes. We find that energy spectrum and particle surface interaction greatly influence shuttling dynamics; in the specific example that we studied the shuttling is found to involve only charge states Q=0 and Q=+e. The system is found to exhibit two quasi-stable shuttling modes, a fundamental one and an excited one with a larger amplitude of mechanical motion, with random transitions between them.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
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