591 research outputs found
Landscape of fear visible from space
By linking ecological theory with freely-available Google Earth satellite imagery, landscape-scale footprints of behavioural interactions between predators and prey can be observed remotely. A Google Earth image survey of the lagoon habitat at Heron Island within Australia's Great Barrier Reef revealed distinct halo patterns within algal beds surrounding patch reefs. Ground truth surveys confirmed that, as predicted, algal canopy height increases with distance from reef edges. A grazing assay subsequently demonstrated that herbivore grazing was responsible for this pattern. In conjunction with recent behavioural ecology studies, these findings demonstrate that herbivores' collective antipredator behavioural patterns can shape vegetation distributions on a scale clearly visible from space. By using sequential Google Earth images of specific locations over time, this technique could potentially allow rapid, inexpensive remote monitoring of cascading, indirect effects of predator removals (e.g., fishing; hunting) and/or recovery and reintroductions (e.g., marine or terrestrial reserves) nearly anywhere on earth
Dirac Gauginos, Negative Supertraces and Gauge Mediation
In an attempt to maximize General Gauge Mediated parameter space, I propose
simple models in which gauginos and scalars are generated from disconnected
mechanisms. In my models Dirac gauginos are generated through the supersoft
mechanism, while independent R-symmetric scalar masses are generated through
operators involving non-zero messenger supertrace. I propose several new
methods for generating negative messenger supertraces which result in viable
positive mass squareds for MSSM scalars. The resultant spectra are novel,
compressed and may contain light fermionic SM adjoint fields.Comment: 16 pages 3 figure
Il buio oltre i partiti? Partecipazione dal basso e partecipazione istituzionale ai tempi della politica reticolare
Political participation is living a deep process of transformation. Practices, subjects, meanings and goals of participation are changing. In this article, on the basis of a critical assessment of the patterns of change affecting institutional political actors (mainly political parties) and bottom-up forms of participation in the Italian context, we analyze two major instruments implemented to fill the gap between institutional domain and bottom-up participation: primary elections and participative-deliberative processes. Both instruments produce ambiguous and ambivalent effects in terms of empowerment of citizens: they often appear to be more instruments of manipulation and symbolic legitimization than instrument of participation
General Messenger Gauge Mediation
We discuss theories of gauge mediation in which the hidden sector consists of
two subsectors which are weakly coupled to each other. One sector is made up of
messengers and the other breaks supersymmetry. Each sector by itself may be
strongly coupled. We provide a unifying framework for such theories and discuss
their predictions in different settings. We show how this framework
incorporates all known models of messengers. In the case of weakly-coupled
messengers interacting with spurions through the superpotential, we prove that
the sfermion mass-squared is positive, and furthermore, that there is a lower
bound on the ratio of the sfermion mass to the gaugino mass.Comment: 37 pages; minor change
Genomic insights into neonicotinoid sensitivity in the solitary bee Osmia bicornis
This is the final version. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.The Osmia bicornis whole genome shotgun project has been deposited at DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession MPJT00000000. The RNAseq data generated in this study has been deposited in the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) under accession SRP065762. Accession numbers of the bee P450 genes manually curated in this study are shown in S5 Table. All other relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.The impact of pesticides on the health of bee pollinators is determined in part by the capacity of bee detoxification systems to convert these compounds to less toxic forms. For example, recent work has shown that cytochrome P450s of the CYP9Q subfamily are critically important in defining the sensitivity of honey bees and bumblebees to pesticides, including neonicotinoid insecticides. However, it is currently unclear if solitary bees have functional equivalents of these enzymes with potentially serious implications in relation to their capacity to metabolise certain insecticides. To address this question, we sequenced the genome of the red mason bee, Osmia bicornis, the most abundant and economically important solitary bee species in Central Europe. We show that O. bicornis lacks the CYP9Q subfamily of P450s but, despite this, exhibits low acute toxicity to the N-cyanoamidine neonicotinoid thiacloprid. Functional studies revealed that variation in the sensitivity of O. bicornis to N-cyanoamidine and N-nitroguanidine neonicotinoids does not reside in differences in their affinity for the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor or speed of cuticular penetration. Rather, a P450 within the CYP9BU subfamily, with recent shared ancestry to the Apidae CYP9Q subfamily, metabolises thiacloprid in vitro and confers tolerance in vivo. Our data reveal conserved detoxification pathways in model solitary and eusocial bees despite key differences in the evolution of specific pesticide-metabolising enzymes in the two species groups. The discovery that P450 enzymes of solitary bees can act as metabolic defence systems against certain pesticides can be leveraged to avoid negative pesticide impacts on these important pollinators.Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council (BBSRC)Bayer AGEuropean Research Council (ERC
Assessing the acute toxicity of insecticides to the buff-tailed bumblebee (Bombus terrestris audax)
This is the final version. Available from Elsevier / Academic Press via the DOI in this record. The buff-tailed bumblebee, Bombus terrestris audax is an important pollinator within both landscape ecosystems and agricultural crops. During their lifetime bumblebees are regularly challenged by various environmental stressors including insecticides. Historically the honey bee (Apis mellifera spp.) has been used as an ‘indicator’ species for ‘standard’ ecotoxicological testing, but it has been suggested that it is not always a good proxy for other eusocial or solitary bees. To investigate this, the susceptibility of B. terrestris to selected pesticides within the neonicotinoid, pyrethroid and organophosphate classes was examined using acute insecticide bioassays. Acute oral and topical LD values for B. terrestris against these insecticides were broadly consistent with published results for A. mellifera. For the neonicotinoids, imidacloprid was highly toxic, but thiacloprid and acetamiprid were practically non-toxic. For pyrethroids, deltamethrin was highly toxic, but tau-fluvalinate only slightly toxic. For the organophosphates, chlorpyrifos was highly toxic, but coumaphos practically non-toxic. Bioassays using insecticides with common synergists enhanced the sensitivity of B. terrestris to several insecticides, suggesting detoxification enzymes may provide a level of protection against these compounds. The sensitivity of B. terrestris to compounds within three different insecticide classes is similar to that reported for honey bees, with marked variation in sensitivity to different insecticides within the same insecticide class observed in both species. This finding highlights the need to consider each compound within an insecticide class in isolation rather than extrapolating between different insecticides in the same class or sharing the same mode of action.European Union Horizon 2020Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC
Simplified R-Symmetry Breaking and Low-Scale Gauge Mediation
We argue that some of the difficulties in constructing realistic models of
low-scale gauge mediation are artifacts of the narrow set of models that have
been studied. In particular, much attention has been payed to the scenario in
which the Goldstino superfield in an O'Raifeartaigh model is responsible for
both supersymmetry breaking and R-symmetry breaking. In such models, the
competing problems of generating sufficiently massive gauginos while preserving
an acceptably light gravitino can be quite challenging. We show that by sharing
the burdens of breaking supersymmetry and R-symmetry with a second field, these
problems are easily solved even within the O'Raifeartaigh framework. We present
explicit models realizing minimal gauge mediation with a gravitino mass in the
eV range that are both calculable and falsifiable.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, references added, minor change
LHC Predictions from a Tevatron Anomaly in the Top Quark Forward-Backward Asymmetry
We examine the implications of the recent CDF measurement of the top-quark
forward-backward asymmetry, focusing on a scenario with a new color octet
vector boson at 1-3 TeV. We study several models, as well as a general
effective field theory, and determine the parameter space which provides the
best simultaneous fit to the CDF asymmetry, the Tevatron top pair production
cross section, and the exclusion regions from LHC dijet resonance and contact
interaction searches. Flavor constraints on these models are more subtle and
less severe than the literature indicates. We find a large region of allowed
parameter space at high axigluon mass and a smaller region at low mass; we
match the latter to an SU(3)xSU(3)/SU(3) coset model with a heavy vector-like
fermion. Our scenario produces discoverable effects at the LHC with only 1-2
inverse femtobarns of luminosity at 7-8 TeV. Lastly, we point out that a
Tevatron measurement of the b-quark forward-backward asymmetry would be very
helpful in characterizing the physics underlying the top-quark asymmetry.Comment: 35 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
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