1,721 research outputs found

    FAKTOR-FAKTOR YANG MEMPENGARUHI EFEKTIVITAS GABUNGAN KELOMPOK TANI (GAPOKTAN) DALAM PROGRAM PENGEMBANGAN USAHA AGRIBISNIS PERDESAAN (PUAP) DI KECAMATAN PEDAN KABUPATEN KLATEN

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    n this paper we give the full classification of curves CC of genus gg such that a Brill--Noether locus Wds(C)W^ s_d(C), strictly contained in the jacobian J(C)J(C) of CC, contains a variety ZZ stable under translations by the elements of a positive dimensional abelian subvariety AJ(C)A\subsetneq J(C) and such that dim(Z)=ddim(A)2s\dim(Z)=d-\dim(A)-2s, i.e., the maximum possible dimension for such a ZZ

    On the Hilbert scheme of curves in higher-dimensional projective space

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    In this paper we prove that, for any n3n\ge 3, there exist infinitely many rNr\in \N and for each of them a smooth, connected curve CrC_r in r\P^r such that CrC_r lies on exactly nn irreducible components of the Hilbert scheme \hilb(\P^r). This is proven by reducing the problem to an analogous statement for the moduli of surfaces of general type.Comment: latex, 12 pages, no figure

    Smoothing semi-smooth stable Godeaux surfaces

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    We show that all the semi-smooth stable complex Godeaux surfaces, classified in [M. Franciosi, R. Pardini and S. Rollenske, Ark. Mat. 56 (2018), no. 2, 299–317], are smoothable and that the moduli stack is smooth of the expected dimension 8 at the corresponding points

    Apparent competition with an invasive plant hastens the extinction of an endangered lupine

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    Invasive plants may compete with native plants by increasing the pressure of native consumers, a mechanism known as apparent competition. Apparent competition can be as strong as or stronger than direct competition, but the role of apparent competition has rarely been examined in biological invasions. We used four years of demographic data and seed-removal experiments to determine if introduced grasses caused elevated levels of seed consumption on native plant species in a coastal dune system in California, USA. We show that the endangered, coastal dune plant Lupinus tidestromii experiences high levels of pre-dispersal seed consumption by the native rodent Peromyscus maniculatus due to its proximity to the invasive grass, Ammophila arenaria. We use stage-structured, stochastic population models to project that two of three study populations will decline toward extinction under ambient levels of consumption. For one of these declining populations, a relatively small decrease in consumption pressure should allow for persistence. We show that apparent competition with an invasive species significantly decreases the population growth rate and persistence of a native species. We expect that apparent competition is an important mechanism in other ecosystems because invasive plants often change habitat structure and plant-consumer interactions. Possible implications of the apparent-competition mechanism include selective extinction of species preferred by seed consumers in the presence of an invasive species and biological homogenization of communities toward non-preferred native plant species
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