155 research outputs found
Seasonal diet changes in elephant and impala in mopane woodland
Elephant and impala as intermediate feeders, having a mixed diet of grass and browse, respond to seasonal fluctuations of forage quality by changing their diet composition. We tested the hypotheses that (1) the decrease in forage quality is accompanied by a change in diet from more monocots in the wet season to more dicots in the dry season and that that change is more pronounced and faster in impala than in elephant; (2) mopane (Colophospermum mopane), the most abundant dicot species, is the most important species in the elephant diet in mopane woodland, whereas impala feed relatively less on mopane due to the high condensed tannin concentration; and (3) impala on nutrient-rich soils have a diet consisting of more grass and change later to diet of more browse than impala on nutrient-poor soils. The phosphorus content and in vitro digestibility of monocots decreased and the NDF content increased significantly towards the end of the wet season, whereas in dicots no significant trend could be detected. We argue that this decreasing monocot quality caused elephant and impala to consume more dicots in the dry season. Elephant changed their diet gradually over a 16-week period from 70% to 25% monocots, whereas impala changed diets rapidly (2-4 weeks) from 95% to 70% monocots. For both elephants and impala, there was a positive correlation between percentage of monocots and dicots in the diet and the in vitro digestibility of these forage items. Mopane was the most important dicot species in the elephant diet and its contribution to the diet increased significantly in the dry season, whereas impala selected other dicot species. On nutrient-rich gabbroic soils, impala ate significantly more monocots than impala from nutrient-poor granitic soils, which was related to the higher in vitro digestibility of the monocots on gabbroic soil. Digestibility of food items appears to be an important determinant of diet change from the wet to the dry season in impala and elephants
Lipopolysaccharide-induced suppression of airway Th2 responses does not require IL-12 production by dendritic cells
The prevalence of atopic asthma, a Th2-dependent disease, is reaching
epidemic proportions partly due to improved hygiene in industrialized
countries. There is an inverse correlation between the level of
environmental endotoxin exposure and the prevalence of atopic
sensitization. As dendritic cells (DC) have been implicated in causing
sensitization to inhaled Ag, we studied the effect of endotoxin on Th2
development induced by bone marrow DC in vitro and by intratracheal
injection in vivo, with particular emphasis on the role played by the
polarizing cytokine IL-12. Bone marrow-derived DC stimulated with
Escherichia coli O26:B6 LPS produced IL-12p70 for a limited period of
time, after which production became refractory to further stimulation with
CD40 ligand, a phenomenon previously called "exhaustion." The level of
IL-12 production of DC did not correlate with Th1 development, as
exhausted OVA-pulsed DC were still capable of shifting the cytokine
pattern of responding OVA-specific Th cells toward Th1 in vitro and in
vivo. When mice were first immunized by intratracheal injection of OVA-DC
and subsequently challenged with OVA aerosol, prior in vitro stimulation
of DC with LPS reduced the development of airway eosinophilia and Th2
cytokine production. Most surprisingly, the capacity of LPS to reduce
Th2-dependent eosinophilic airway inflammation was IL-12-independent
altogether, as IL-12p40 knockout DC had a similar reduced capacity to
prime for Th2 responses. These results suggest that LPS reduces
sensitization to inhaled Ag by reducing DC-driven Th2 development, but
that IL-12 is not necessary for this effect
Wat zijn gebruikers bereid te betalen? Uitbreiding mountainbikeroutes Utrechtse Heuvelrug
In Nationaal Park Utrechtse Heuvelrug ligt een aantal mountainbike routes. Verschillende belangenorganisaties zouden dit netwerk graag uitbreiden. Voor financiering wil men een beroep doen op de gebruikers van de routes Er is onderzocht in hoeverre dit uitgangspunt realistisch is en hoeveel de crossfietsers bereid zijn te betalen
Landbouwperspectieven in Noord-Holland tot 2040 : bouwstenen voor de structuurvisie van de provincie
Dit rapport is het resultaat van een onderzoek naar de landbouwstructuur in de provincie Noord-Holland. Het onderzoek was ondernomen in opdracht van het adviesbureau Decisio B.V., dat in opdracht van de provincie werkt. Doel was om bouwstenen aan te leveren voor de provinciale structuurvisie. In het kader van de nieuwe Wet ruimtelijke ordening moeten alle provincies een dergelijke structuurvisie maken. Het rapport beschrijft de huidige situatie en recente trends in de Noord-Hollandse landbouwsector, en de perspectieven voor de komende decennia. Het accent ligt daarbij op de behoefte aan ruimte, en hoe deze kan worden ingevuld binnen eisen van ruimtelijke kwaliteit. This report is the result of a study into the agricultural structure in the province of Noord-Holland. The study was undertaken on behalf of consultancy firm Decisio B.V., which works for the province. The aim was to supply building blocks for the provincial structural vision. In the framework of the new Spatial Planning Act, all provinces must produce a strong structural vision. The report describes the current situation and recent trends in the agricultural sector in Noord-Holland and the prospects for the coming decades. The emphasis here lies on the need for space and how this can be provided within demands for spatial quality
Parallel ecological networks in ecosystems
In ecosystems, species interact with other species directly and through abiotic factors in multiple ways, often forming complex networks of various types of ecological interaction. Out of this suite of interactions, predator–prey interactions have received most attention. The resulting food webs, however, will always operate simultaneously with networks based on other types of ecological interaction, such as through the activities of ecosystem engineers or mutualistic interactions. Little is known about how to classify, organize and quantify these other ecological networks and their mutual interplay. The aim of this paper is to provide new and testable ideas on how to understand and model ecosystems in which many different types of ecological interaction operate simultaneously. We approach this problem by first identifying six main types of interaction that operate within ecosystems, of which food web interactions are one. Then, we propose that food webs are structured among two main axes of organization: a vertical (classic) axis representing trophic position and a new horizontal ‘ecological stoichiometry’ axis representing decreasing palatability of plant parts and detritus for herbivores and detrivores and slower turnover times. The usefulness of these new ideas is then explored with three very different ecosystems as test cases: temperate intertidal mudflats; temperate short grass prairie; and tropical savannah
- …