340 research outputs found
Public Spending and Agricultural Sector Output: A Path Way for growing Nigeria out of Recession
Agriculture has been identified in extant economic literature as a critical sector in an economy. It has a huge potential for promoting and stimulating economic growth, reduce poverty and creating employment for a large number of people especially in developing countries. Thus, the objective of this paper is to empirically examine the effect of public spending on agricultural sector output in Nigeria between 1980 and 2016. Time series data were sourced from secondary sources on Agricultural Sector Output (AGR), Government spending in Agriculture (GEA), Foreign Direct Investment inflow into Agriculture (FIA) and Deposit Money Banks’ Credit to the Agricultural Sector (BCA). The data sets were analysed based on the Auto Regressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) Bounds testing approach for co-integration that estimates the long-run and short-run relationship between variables. The result of the analysis reveals that both short- run and long-run relationship exists between government spending and agricultural sector output in Nigeria. Again, the result also revealed that government spending has a positive insignificant relationship with agricultural sector output in Nigeria within the period under review. The policy implication of this result is that theoretically, government funding can enhance the pace of agricultural development in a country but Nigeria currently does not enjoy such optimal benefit. Based on these findings, the paper recommends that government should increase her budgetary allocation and ensure fiscal discipline regarding spending in the agricultural sector so as to boost economic growth and development, a panacea for growing out of recession
Multiple Orbitoides d’Orbigny lineages in the Maastrichtian? Data from the Central Sakarya Basin (Turkey) and Arabian Platform successions (Southeastern Turkey and Oman)
The standard reconstruction of species of Orbitoides d’Orbigny into a single lineage during the late Santonian to the end of the Maastrichtian is based upon morphometric data from Western Europe. An irreversible increase in the size of the embryonic apparatus, and the formation of a greater number of epi-embryonic chamberlets (EPC) with time, is regarded as the main evolutionary trends used in species discrimination. However, data from Maastrichtian Orbitoides assemblages from Central Turkey and the Arabian Platform margin (Southeastern Turkey and Oman) are not consistent with this record. The Maastrichtian Besni Formation of the Arabian Platform margin in Southeastern Turkey yields invariably biconvex specimens, with small, tri- to quadrilocular embryons and a small number of EPC, comparable to late Campanian Orbitoides medius (d’Archiac). The upper Maastrichtian Taraklı Formation from the Sakarya Basin of Central Turkey contains two distinct, yet closely associated forms of Orbitoides, easily differentiated by both external and internal features. Flat to biconcave specimens possess a small, tri- to quadrilocular embryonic apparatus of Orbitoides medius-type and a small number of EPC, whereas biconvex specimens possess a large, predominantly bilocular embryonic apparatus, and were assigned to Orbitoides ex. interc. gruenbachensis Papp–apiculatus Schlumberger based on morphometry. The flat to biconcave specimens belong to a long overlooked species Orbitoides pamiri Meriç, originally described from the late Maastrichtian of the Tauride Mountains in SW Turkey. This species is herein interpreted to be an offshoot from the main Orbitoides lineage during the Maastrichtian, as are forms that we term Orbitoides ‘medius’, since they recall this species, yet are younger than normal occurrence with the accepted morphometrically defined lineage. The consistent correlation between the external and internal test features in O. pamiri implies that the shape of the test is not an ecophenotypic variation, but appears to be biologically controlled. We, therefore, postulate that more than one lineage of Orbitoides exists during the Maastrichtian, with a lineage that includes O. ‘medius’ and O. pamiri displaying retrograde evolutionary features
Steady late quaternary slip rate on the Cinarcik section of the North Anatolian fault near Istanbul, Turkey
The distribution of plate motion between multiple fault strands and how this distribution may evolve remain poorly understood, despite the key implications for seismic hazards. The North Anatolian Fault in northwest Turkey is a prime example of a multistranded continental transform. Here we present the first constraints on late Quaternary slip rates on its northern branch across the Cinarcik Basin in the eastern Marmara Sea. We use both deep penetration and high‐resolution multichannel seismic reflection data with a stratigraphic age model to show that a depocenter has persisted near the fault bend responsible for that transform basin. Successively older depocenters have been transported westward by fault motion relative to Eurasia, indicating a uniform right‐lateral slip rate of 18.5 mm/yr over the last 500,000 years, compared to overall GPS rates (23–24 mm/yr). Thus, the northern branch has slipped at a nearly constant rate and has accounted for most of the relative plate motion between Eurasia and Anatolia since ~0.5 Ma
An example of secondary fault activity along the North Anatolian Fault on the NE Marmara Sea Shelf, NW Turkey
Seismic data on the NE Marmara Sea Shelf indicate that a NNE-SSW-oriented buried basin and ridge system exist on the sub-marine extension of the Paleozoic Rocks delimited by the northern segment of the North Anatolian Fault (NS-NAF), while seismic and multi-beam bathymetric data imply that four NW-SE-oriented strike-slip faults also exist on the shelf area. Seismic data indicate that NW-SE-oriented strike-slip faults are the youngest structures that dissect the basin-ridge system. One of the NW-SE-oriented faults (F1) is aligned with a rupture of the North Anatolian Fault (NAF) cutting the northern slope of the Cinarcik Basin. This observation indicates that these faults have similar characteristics with the NS-NAF along the Marmara Sea. Therefore, they may have a secondary relation to the NAF since the principle deformation zone of the NAF follows the Marmara Trough in that region. The seismic energy recorded on these secondary faults is much less than that on the NAF in the Marmara Sea. These faults may, however, produce a large earthquake in the long term
Injectable gellan gum-based nanoparticles-loaded system for the local delivery of vancomycin in osteomyelitis treatment
Infection spreading in the skeletal system
leading to osteomyelitis can be prevented by the prolonged
administration of antibiotics in high doses. However systemic
antibiotherapy, besides its inconvenience and often
low efficacy, provokes numerous side effects. Thus, we
formulated a new injectable nanoparticle-loaded system for
the local delivery of vancomycin (Vanc) applied in a
minimally-invasive way. Vanc was encapsulated in poly(Llactide-
co-glycolide) nanoparticles (NPs) by double-emulsification.
The size (258 ± 11 nm), polydispersity index
(0.240 ± 0.003) and surface potential (-25.9 ± 0.2 mV)
of NPs were determined by dynamic light scattering and
capillary electrophoresis measurements. They have a
spherical morphology and a smooth topography as
observed using atomic force microscopy. Vanc loading and
encapsulation efficiencies were 8.8 ± 0.1 and
55.2 ± 0.5 %, respectively, based on fluorescence spectroscopy
assays. In order to ensure injectability, NPs were
suspended in gellan gum and cross-linked with ; also a
portion of dissolved antibiotic was added to the system.
The resulting system was found to be injectable (extrusion
force 11.3 ± 1.1 N), reassembled its structure after
breaking as shown by rheology tests and ensured required
burst release followed by sustained Vanc delivery. The
system was cytocompatible with osteoblast-like MG-63
cells (no significant impact on cells’ viability was detected). Growth of Staphylococcus spp. reference strains
and also those isolated from osteomyelitic joints was
inhibited in contact with the injectable system. As a result
we obtained a biocompatible system displaying ease of
application (low extrusion force), self-healing ability after
disruption, adjustable drug release and antimicrobial
properties
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