488 research outputs found

    Herbesinning oor gesag as „die noodsaaklike voorwaarde van die opvoeding”

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    In elke wetenskap, maar veral in ’n jong wetenskap soos die Opvoedkunde, is dit noodsaaklik dat omskrywings van veral basiese begrippe van tyd tot tyd herondersoek word ten einde hulle geldigheid te verseker en daardeur moontlike afdwaling te verhoed. Veral ’n wetenskap soos die Opvoedkunde, wat as studieveld ’n intieme, tussen-menslike gebeure onder steeds veranderende omstandighede het, moet noodwendig aan toetsing van die houdbaarheid van sy begrippe aandag gee; te meer aangesien sy ontstaan nog maar van onlangse datum is, sodat sy terminologie nog nie die tyd gehad het om uit te kristalliseer tot simbole vir redelik afgebakende inhoude nie

    Evaluating the feasibility of using the red mason bee (Osmia bicornis L.) in different experimental setups

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    Background: Evaluating hazards of pesticides to beneficial insects has become very important for the assessment and registration of pesticides. Test methods for honeybees are well established in the laboratory, under semi-field and field conditions. However, experiences in using other pollinators as model species are limited. Here we present results of various experiments on the red mason bee (Osmia bicornis L.), a solitary, commercially used bee species. The aim was to compare methodologies, to assess test parameters, and to evaluate the feasibility of using O. bicornis in late season, when this bee species would have already finished its life cycle under natural conditions. Results: Hatching times and hatching rates varied depending on temperature and season. Provisioning and reproduction of O. bicornis were very variable, weather-dependent and not always reliably reproducible between seasons. They were higher in early than in late season in the field. In late season cardboard tubes showed greater cell production than wooden boards. Conclusion: O. bicornis is a good study system under semi-field and field conditions: cocoons are easy to handle, and to monitor. Since hatching rate and cell production decreased over time, experiments are most recommended in early to mid season. Cardboard tubes can be used as standardised, inexpensive nesting devices. However, they do not allow continuous observation and pollen sampling, and involve time-consuming handling in the laboratory. Our experiment on nest material was conducted in late season and may not mirror conditions in spring and early summer.Keywords: solitary bees, field experiments, semi-field experiments, reproduction, hatching, nestin

    Cerebral Palsy and Criteria Implicating Intrapartum Hypoxia in Neonatal Encephalopathy – An Obstetric Perspective for the South African Setting

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    The science surrounding cerebral palsy indicates  that it is a complex medical condition with multiple contributing variables and factors, and causal pathways are often extremely difficult to delineate. The pathophysiological processes are often juxtaposed on antenatal factors, genetics, toxins, fetal priming, failure of neuroscientific autoregulatory mechanisms, abnormal biochemistry and abnormal metabolic pathways. Placing this primed compromised compensated brain through the stresses of an intrapartum process could be the final straw in the pathway  to brain injury and later CP.  It is thus simplistic to base causation of cerebral palsy on only an intrapartum perspective with radiological ‘confirmation’, as is often the practice in medicolegal cases in South African courts. The present modalities (MRI and CTG when available) that retrospectively attempt to determine causation in courts are inadequate when used in isolation. Unless a holistic scientific review of the case including all contributing clinical factors (antepartum, intrapartum and neonatal), fetal heart rate monitoring, neonatal MRI if possible (and preferred) or late MRI, and histology (placental histology if performed) are taken into account, success for plaintiff or defendant currently in a court of law will depend on eloquent legal argument rather than true scientific causality. The 10 criteria set out in this document to implicate acute intrapartum hypoxia in hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy/neonatal encephalopathy serve as a guideline in the medicolegal setting

    Evidence for density dependent population regulation in southern elephant seals in the southern Indian Ocean

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    The means by which populations are regulated form a central theme in conservation biology, and much debate has revolved around density dependence as a mechanism driving population change. Marion Island (46o54'S, 37o45'E) is host to a relatively small breeding population of southern elephant seals, which like its counterparts in the southern Indian and southern Pacific Oceans, have declined precipitously over the past few decades. An intensive mark-recapture study, which commenced in 1983, has yielded a long time-series of resight data on this population. We used the program MARK to estimate adult female survival in this population from resight data collected over the period 1986-1999. Including concurrent population counts as covariates significantly improved our mark-recapture models and suggests density dependent population regulation to be operational in the population. Although predation may have been involved, it is far more likely that density dependent regulation has been based on a limited food supply. A significant increase in adult female survival was evident which is likely to have given rise to recent changes in population growth

    The influence of Mn on the tensile properties of SSM-HPDC A1-Cu-Mg-Ag alloy A201

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    Synopsis: A201 aluminium alloy is a high strength casting alloy with a nominal composition of Al-4.6Cu-0.3Mg-0.6Ag. It is strengthened by the Ω(Al2Cu) phase and the θ’(Al2Cu) phase during heat treatment. Further strengthening of this alloy system can be obtained through the addition of transition elements, but care must be taken as other elements might have adverse effects on the mechanical properties. The objective of this study is to determine the influence of Mn on the tensile properties of rheo-processed Al-Cu-Mg-Ag alloy A201. ThermoCalc software was used to predict the different phases that can be expected in the alloys, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) was used to investigate the actual phases that formed. The influence of these phases on tensile properties is quantified. SEM and ThermoCalc revealed that there is an increased amount of the Al20Cu2Mn3 with increasing Mn. The tensile properties showed that high amounts of Mn do have adverse effects on the tensile properties of alloy A201, especially the ductility

    3.13 Tank mixtures of insecticides and fungicides, adjuvants, additives, fertilizers and their effects on honey bees after contact exposure in a spray chamber

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    In agriculture honey bees may be exposed to multiple pesticides. In contrast to single applications of plant protection products (PPP), the effects of tank mixtures of two or more PPP on honey bees are not routinely assessed in the risk assessment of plant protection products. However, tank mixes are often common practice by farmers. Mixtures of practically non-toxic substances can lead to synergistic increase of toxic effects on honey bees, observed for the first time in 19921 in combinations of pyrethroids and azole fungicides. 2004 Iwasa et al. already reported that ergosterol-biosynthesis-inhibiting (EBI) fungicides strongly increase the toxicity of neonicotinoids in laboratory for the contact exposure route. Furthermore, in agricultural practice additives, adjuvants and fertilizers may be added to the spray solution. For these additives usually no informations on potential side effects on bees are available when mixed with plant protection products. Therefore, it is considered necessary to investigate possible additive or synergistic impacts and evaluate potentially critical combinations to ensure protection of bees. Here, we investigated the effects on bees of combinations of insecticides, fungicides and fertilizers under controlled laboratory conditions. A spray chamber was used to evaluate effects following contact exposure by typical field application rates. Subsequently, mortality and behaviour of bees were monitored for at least 48 h following the OECD acute contact toxicity test 2143. Dependencies of synergistic effects and the time intervals between the applications of the mixing partners were evaluated.In agriculture honey bees may be exposed to multiple pesticides. In contrast to single applications of plant protection products (PPP), the effects of tank mixtures of two or more PPP on honey bees are not routinely assessed in the risk assessment of plant protection products. However, tank mixes are often common practice by farmers. Mixtures of practically non-toxic substances can lead to synergistic increase of toxic effects on honey bees, observed for the first time in 19921 in combinations of pyrethroids and azole fungicides. 2004 Iwasa et al. already reported that ergosterol-biosynthesis-inhibiting (EBI) fungicides strongly increase the toxicity of neonicotinoids in laboratory for the contact exposure route. Furthermore, in agricultural practice additives, adjuvants and fertilizers may be added to the spray solution. For these additives usually no informations on potential side effects on bees are available when mixed with plant protection products. Therefore, it is considered necessary to investigate possible additive or synergistic impacts and evaluate potentially critical combinations to ensure protection of bees. Here, we investigated the effects on bees of combinations of insecticides, fungicides and fertilizers under controlled laboratory conditions. A spray chamber was used to evaluate effects following contact exposure by typical field application rates. Subsequently, mortality and behaviour of bees were monitored for at least 48 h following the OECD acute contact toxicity test 2143. Dependencies of synergistic effects and the time intervals between the applications of the mixing partners were evaluated

    Dust in the Wind – Abdrift insektizidhaltiger Stäube – ein Risiko für Honigbienen (Apis mellifera L.)?

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    Dust in the wind - drift of dust containing insecticides - a risk for honey bees (Apis mellifera L.)?ZusammenfassungIm Zuge des Forschungsprogramms des Bundes und der Länder Bayern und Baden-Württemberg zur Bekämpfung des Westlichen Maiswurzelbohrers (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte) fanden 2009 und 2010 großangelegte Versuche zur Staubabdrift während der Aussaat von Clothianidin-haltigem Winterraps- und Maissaatgut statt. Dabei wurden die Kontamination von benachbarten blühenden Bienenweidepflanzen und die Auswirkungen der Drift auf Einzelbienen und Bienenvölker untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass vor allem die Feldrandstrukturen bei Staubabdrift mit für Bienen hochtoxischen Wirkstoffen ein hohes Gefährdungspotential bieten. Weitere Erkenntnisse über die Wirkung der Staubexposition auf Bienenvölker in Abhängigkeit der Applikationsmenge an Staub (0,5 g a.i./ha und 2,0 g a.i./ha Clothianidin; a.i.= active ingredient) konnten aus zwei Halbfreilandversuchen mit gezielter manueller Applikation von praxisorientierten Mengen an Maisbeizstaub-Erd-Gemisch in Phacelia gewonnen werden. Trotz relativ geringem Totenfall konnte nach Applikation von 2 g a.i./ha ein sichtbarer Effekt auf die Mortalität und Populationsentwicklung der Bienenvölker festgestellt werden, während die niedrige Konzentration gegenüber der Kontrollvariante keine Abweichungen aufwies. Stichwörter: Honigbiene (Apis mellifera L.), Bienenvergiftung, Clothianidin, Beizstaub, Abdrift AbstractIn the course of the German Diabrotica research program funded by the Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer protection and the states of Bavaria and Baden-Wuerttemberg large-scale drift trials were conducted during the sowing of winter oilseed rape and maize seeds treated with Clothianidin in 2009 and 2010. In the process the contamination of adjacent flowering bee forage plants and the impact of dust drift on individual bees and colonies were examined. The results show that primarily field edge structures are high risk areas for dust drift with highly toxic ingredients to bees. More data on the impact of exposure of dust on colonies depending on the application amount of dust (0.5 g a.i. / ha and 2.0 g a.i./ ha Clothianidin) were obtained from experimental approaches in tents with manual application of insecticide-loaded dust in Phacelia. Despite an overall low mortality, a visible effect on mortality of the colonies was detected for the higher concentration, whereas the low concentration compared with the untreated control showed no differences.Keywords: honeybee (Apis mellifera L.), bee poisoning, Clothianidin, abrasion dust, drif
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