513 research outputs found
Forest vegetation management in Europe: current practice and future requirements
The book provides a record of the co-operation within Europe in the field of forest vegetation management through the Cost Action E47. The aims are: i)to provide a summary of the current state of the art' as it applies to forest vegetation management in Europe for scientists, practitioners and policymakers, affiliated to state, non-governmental or private commercial organizations; ii)to document existing forest weed control practices across Europe, and hence provide a resource of alternative solutions for individual countries sharing similar conditions and challenges; and iii)to identify common information gaps and future research needs, and hence potential future areas of collaboration for forest vegetation management scientists across Europe, along with barriers that may need to be overcome to achieve that aim.FORET;PEUPLEMENT FORESTIER;VEGETATION;CONCURRENCE VEGETALE;LUTTE;MODE DE TRAITEMENT;COOPERATION INTERNATIONALE;RECHERCHE DEVELOPPEMENT;DEVELOPPEMENT DURABLE;AMENAGEMENT FORESTIER;MAUVAISE HERBE;CONTROLE DE LA VEGETATION;PESTICIDE;LUTTE PHYTOSANITAIRE;IMPACT SUR L'ENVIRONNEMENT;DYNAMIQUE DE VEGETATION;HERBICIDE;BIODIVERSITE;ECOSYSTEME;HISTOIRE;GESTION FORESTIERE;EUROPE;VEGETATION FORESTIERE;ADVENTICE;ALTERNATIVES AUX HERBICIDES;
Risk factors associated with detailed reproductive phenotypes in dairy and beef cows
peer-reviewedThis article was first published in animal, Volume 8, Issue 05, May 2014, pp 695-703, © The Animal Consortium 2014The objective of this study was to identify detailed fertility traits in dairy and beef cattle from transrectal ultrasonography records
and quantify the associated risk factors. Data were available on 148 947 ultrasound observations of the reproductive tract from
75 949 cows in 843 Irish dairy and beef herds between March 2008 and October 2012. Traits generated included (1) cycling at
time of examination, (2) cystic structures, (3) early ovulation, (4) embryo death and (5) uterine score; the latter was measured on a
scale of 1 (good) to 4 (poor) characterising the tone of the uterine wall and fluid present in the uterus. After editing, 72 773
records from 44 415 dairy and beef cows in 643 herds remained. Factors associated with the logit of the probability of a positive
outcome for each of the binary fertility traits were determined using generalised estimating equations; linear mixed model analysis
was used for the analysis of uterine score. The prevalence of cycling, cystic structures, early ovulation and embryo death was
84.75%, 3.87%, 7.47% and 3.84%, respectively. The occurrence of the uterine heath score of 1, 2, 3 and 4 was 70.63%, 19.75%,
8.36% and 1.26%, respectively. Cows in beef herds had a 0.51 odds (95% CI = 0.41 to 0.63, P<0.001) of cycling at the time of
examination compared with cows in dairy herds; stage of lactation at the time of examination was the same in both herd types.
Furthermore, cows in dairy herds had an inferior uterine score (indicating poorer tone and a greater quantity of uterine fluid
present) compared with cows in beef herds. The likelihood of cycling at the time of examination increased with parity and stage of
lactation, but was reduced in cows that had experienced dystocia in the previous calving. The presence of cystic structures on the
ovaries increased with parity and stage of lactation. The likelihood of embryo/foetal death increased with parity and stage of
lactation. Dystocia was not associated with the presence of cystic structures or embryo death. Uterine score improved with parity
and stage of lactation, while cows that experienced dystocia in the previous calving had an inferior uterine score. Heterosis was
the only factor associated with increased likelihood of early ovulation. The fertility traits identified, and the associated risk factors,
provide useful information on the reproductive status of dairy and beef cows.Funding from the Department of Agriculture, Food and Marine Research Stimulus Fund (RSF 11/S/133) and the OptiMIR project is gratefully acknowledged
Dissecting the Red Sequence--II. Star Formation Histories of Early-Type Galaxies Throughout the Fundamental Plane
This analysis uses spectra of ~16,000 nearby SDSS quiescent galaxies to track
variations in galaxy star formation histories along and perpendicular to the
Fundamental Plane (FP). We sort galaxies by their FP properties (sigma, R_e,
and I_e) and construct high S/N mean galaxy spectra that span the breadth and
thickness of the FP. From these spectra, we determine mean luminosity-weighted
ages, [Fe/H], [Mg/H], and [Mg/Fe] based on single stellar population models
using the method described in Graves & Schiavon (2008). In agreement with
previous work, the star formation histories of early-type galaxies are found to
form a two-parameter family. The major trend is that mean age, [Fe/H], [Mg/H],
and [Mg/Fe] all increase with sigma. However, no stellar population property
shows any dependence on R_e at fixed sigma, suggesting that sigma and not
dynamical mass (M_dyn ~ sigma^2 R_e) is the better predictor of past star
formation history. In addition to the main trend with sigma, galaxies also show
a range of population properties at fixed sigma that are strongly correlated
with surface brightness residuals from the FP, such that higher surface
brightness galaxies have younger mean ages, higher [Fe/H], higher [Mg/H], and
lower [Mg/Fe] than lower-surface brightness galaxies. These latter trends are a
major new constraint on star-formation histories.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures. Accepted to Ap
A Study of a 90° Vortex-Vortex Scattering Process
Following Ruback, we discuss the evidence for scattering at right angle of two vortices in a head-on collision. The evidence is given in terms of the approximate solutions of the equations of motion. This makes it possible to extend the analysis to the case of a small net repulsive force between the corresponding static vortex configurations.The ordinary differential equations, which result from the ansatz for the approximate solutions, are solved by Taylor series at the origin and by asymptotic series at infinity
Genetic parameters of ovarian and uterine reproductive traits in dairy cows
peer-reviewedThe objective of the study was to estimate genetic parameters of detailed reproductive traits derived from ultrasound examination of the reproductive tract as well as their genetic correlations with traditional reproductive traits. A total of 226,141 calving and insemination records as well as 74,134 ultrasound records from Irish dairy cows were used. Traditional reproductive traits included postpartum interval to first service, conception, and next calving, as well as the interval from first to last service; number of inseminations, pregnancy rate to first service, pregnant within 42 d of the herd breeding season, and submission in the first 21 d of the herd breeding season were also available. Detailed reproductive traits included resumed cyclicity at the time of ultrasound examination, incidence of multiple ovulations, incidence of early postpartum ovulation, heat detection, ovarian cystic structures, embryo loss, and uterine score; the latter was a subjectively assessed on a scale of 1 (little fluid with normal uterine tone) to 4 (large quantity of fluid with a flaccid uterine tone). Variance (and covariance) components were estimated using repeatability animal linear mixed models. Heritability for all reproductive traits were generally low (0.001–0.05), with the exception of traits related to cyclicity postpartum, regardless if defined traditionally (0.07; calving to first service) or from ultrasound examination [resumed cyclicity at the time of examination (0.07) or early postpartum ovulation (0.10)]. The genetic correlations among the detailed reproductive traits were generally favorable. The exception was the genetic correlation (0.29) between resumed cyclicity and uterine score; superior genetic merit for cyclicity postpartum was associated with inferior uterine score. Superior genetic merit for most traditional reproductive traits was associated with superior genetic merit for resumed cyclicity (genetic correlations ranged from −0.59 to −0.36 and from 0.56 to 0.70) and uterine score (genetic correlations ranged from −0.47 to 0.32 and from 0.25 to 0.52). Genetic predisposition to an increased incidence of embryo loss was associated with both an inferior uterine score (0.24) and inferior genetic merit for traditional reproductive traits (genetic correlations ranged from −0.52 to −0.42 and from 0.33 to 0.80). The results from the present study indicate that selection based on traditional reproductive traits, such as calving interval or days open, resulted in improved genetic merit of all the detailed reproductive traits evaluated in this study. Additionally, greater accuracy of selection for calving interval is expected for a relatively small progeny group size when detailed reproductive traits are included in a multitrait genetic evaluation
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