53 research outputs found

    ONNIA TRIQUETRA (PERS.) IMAZEKI, A PINE ASSOCIATED POLYPORE SPECIES REPORTED FOR THE FIRST TIME FROM HUNGARY

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    Abstract: Onnia triquetra, a Pinus specialist polypore species in Europe, is reported for the first time in Hungary. Historical and recent collections of almost 60 years were examined. The macro- and micromorphological characteristics are given, along with ecological inferences of the species and its hosts in Hungary

    Triangle percolation in mean field random graphs -- with PDE

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    We apply a PDE-based method to deduce the critical time and the size of the giant component of the ``triangle percolation'' on the Erd\H{o}s-R\'enyi random graph process investigated by Palla, Der\'enyi and VicsekComment: Summary of the changes made: We have changed a remark about k-clique percolation in the first paragraph. Two new paragraphs are inserted after equation (4.4) with two applications of the equation. We have changed the names of some variables in our formula

    ModuLand plug-in for Cytoscape: determination of hierarchical layers of overlapping network modules and community centrality

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    Summary: The ModuLand plug-in provides Cytoscape users an algorithm for determining extensively overlapping network modules. Moreover, it identifies several hierarchical layers of modules, where meta-nodes of the higher hierarchical layer represent modules of the lower layer. The tool assigns module cores, which predict the function of the whole module, and determines key nodes bridging two or multiple modules. The plug-in has a detailed JAVA-based graphical interface with various colouring options. The ModuLand tool can run on Windows, Linux, or Mac OS. We demonstrate its use on protein structure and metabolic networks. Availability: The plug-in and its user guide can be downloaded freely from: http://www.linkgroup.hu/modules.php. Contact: [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary information is available at Bioinformatics online.Comment: 39 pages, 1 figure and a Supplement with 9 figures and 10 table

    A preliminary study on the possibilities to indicate the effects of urban stress on maple trees

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    Urban trees have an important role to create a more livable environment. These plants are exposed to various types of environmental stresses that might cause decline in their condition and decorative value. The aim of our preliminary study is to study the effects of urban stress factors, mainly the air pollution and pest damage on maple trees. Three maple species were studied: field maple (Acer campestre), sycamore maple (A. pseudoplatanus) and Norway maple (A. platanoides) in four areas in Budapest, Hungary with different traffic density. The peroxidase (POD) enzyme activity was measured in the leaves by a spectrophotometric method. Phytophagous insects with piercing-sucking mouthparts (Hemiptera) were also collected from the canopy level by beating method. We found that POD activity was generally the highest in field maples and the lowest in Norway maples with sycamore maples between, but we did not find consistent patterns at each sampling site. The abundance of the collected hemipterans showed similar pattern, but showed no consistent tendency at the various sampling sites and therefore, the abundance of hemipterans did not explain the variation of POD activity. In our study the connection between the POD activity, the air pollution and the abundance of hemipterans remained not fully understood. To clarify this relationship further studies are required

    Onnia triquetra (Pers.) Imazeki, a pine associated polypore species reported for the first time from Hungary

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    Onnia triquetra, a Pinus specialist polypore species in Europe, is reported for the first time in Hungary. Historical and recent collections of almost 60 years were examined. The macro- and micromorphological characteristics are given, along with ecological inferences of the species and its hosts in Hungary

    Reduced light and moderate water deficiency sustain nitrogen assimilation and sucrose degradation at low temperature in durum wheat

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    Abstract The rate of carbon and nitrogen assimilation is highly sensitive to stress factors, such as low temperature and drought. Little is known about the role of light in the simultaneous effect of cold and drought. The present study thus focused on the combined effect of mild water deficiency and different light intensities during the early cold hardening in durum wheat (Triticum turgidum ssp. durum L.) cultivars with different levels of cold sensitivity. The results showed that reduced illumination decreased the undesirable effects of photoinhibition in the case of net photosynthesis and nitrate reduction, which may help to sustain these processes at low temperature. Mild water deficiency also had a slight positive effect on the effective quantum efficiency of PSII and the nitrate reductase activity in the cold. Glutamine synthesis was affected by light rather than by water deprivation during cold stress. The invertase activity increased to a greater extent by water deprivation, but an increase in illumination also had a facilitating effect on this enzyme. This suggests that both moderate water deficiency and light have an influence on nitrogen metabolism and sucrose degradation during cold hardening. A possible rise in the soluble sugar content caused by the invertase may compensate for the decline in photosynthetic carbon assimilation indicated by the decrease in net photosynthesis. The changes in the osmotic potential can be also correlated to the enhanced level of invertase activity. Both of them were regulated by light at normal water supply, but not at water deprivation in the cold. However, changes in the metabolic enzyme activities and osmotic adjustment could not be directly contributed to the different levels of cold tolerance of the cultivars in the early acclimation period

    Wide-Field Survey of Emission-line Stars in IC 1396

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    We have made an extensive survey of emission-line stars in the IC 1396 HII region to investigate the low-mass population of pre-main sequence (PMS) stars. A total of 639 H-alpha emission-line stars were detected in an area of 4.2 deg^2 and their i'-photometry was measured. Their spatial distribution exhibits several aggregates near the elephant trunk globule (Rim A) and bright-rimmed clouds at the edge of the HII region (Rim B and SFO 37, 38, 39, 41), and near HD 206267, which is the main exciting star of the HII region. Based on the extinction estimated from the near-infrared (NIR) color-color diagram, we have selected pre-main sequence star candidates associated with IC 1396. The age and mass were derived from the extinction corrected color-magnitude diagram and theoretical pre-main sequence tracks. Most of our PMS candidates have ages of < 3 Myr and masses of 0.2-0.6 Mo. Although it appears that only a few stars were formed in the last 1 Myr in the east region of the exciting star, the age difference among subregions in our surveyed area is not clear from the statistical test. Our results may suggest that massive stars were born after the continuous formation of low-mass stars for 10 Myr. The birth of the exciting star could be the late stage of slow but contiguous star formation in the natal molecular cloud. It may have triggered to form many low-mass stars at the dense inhomogeneity in and around the HII region by a radiation-driven implosion.Comment: 48 pages, 12 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in A

    Quantum equivalence of sigma models related by non Abelian Duality Transformations

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    Coupling constant renormalization is investigated in 2 dimensional sigma models related by non Abelian duality transformations. In this respect it is shown that in the one loop order of perturbation theory the duals of a one parameter family of models, interpolating between the SU(2) principal model and the O(3) sigma model, exhibit the same behaviour as the original models. For the O(3) model also the two loop equivalence is investigated, and is found to be broken just like in the already known example of the principal model.Comment: As a result of the collaboration of new authors the previously overlooked gauge contribution is inserted into eq.(43) changing not so much the formulae as part of the conclusion: for the models considered non Abelian duality is OK in one loo

    Exploring the mobility of mobile phone users

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    Mobile phone datasets allow for the analysis of human behavior on an unprecedented scale. The social network, temporal dynamics and mobile behavior of mobile phone users have often been analyzed independently from each other using mobile phone datasets. In this article, we explore the connections between various features of human behavior extracted from a large mobile phone dataset. Our observations are based on the analysis of communication data of 100000 anonymized and randomly chosen individuals in a dataset of communications in Portugal. We show that clustering and principal component analysis allow for a significant dimension reduction with limited loss of information. The most important features are related to geographical location. In particular, we observe that most people spend most of their time at only a few locations. With the help of clustering methods, we then robustly identify home and office locations and compare the results with official census data. Finally, we analyze the geographic spread of users' frequent locations and show that commuting distances can be reasonably well explained by a gravity model.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figure
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