2,133 research outputs found
Mapping of Microseismic Aftershock Sequences Following the 2017 Lincoln, Montana M 5.8 Earthquake
The Rocky Mountains of western Montana have long been experiencing tectonic compression and extension that has shaped much of western North America. This activity consistently produces seismic events, like the 6 July 2017 M 5.8 earthquake 11 km southeast of Lincoln, MT, which can be used to advance understanding of crust and mantle dynamics and structure. Seismic mapping is vital to understanding structure and tectonic activity in western Montana as well as in analogous locations across the world. Recently deployed seismometers from the University of Montana as well as the Montana Regional Seismic Network (MRSN) from the Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology (MBMG) and temporary stations from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) have been collecting continuous data for several years that can be analyzed using the QuakeMigrate software. Continuous waveform data from the University of Montana Seismic Network (UMSN) has not previously been searched for earthquakes (outside of the USGS event catalog) and potentially contains hundreds or thousands of additional small seismic events not previously detected by the more sparsely distributed regional networks. An updated catalog, based on the concentrated deployment of UMSN stations around the Lincoln aftershock sequence, will allow for an updated structural analysis of west-central Montana with unprecedented precision, as well as detailed analyses of aftershock evolution and crustal stress state. Large events, like the Lincoln, Montana event in 2017, garner significant attention but are rare. Smaller events, while they may not be felt at the surface or even register in some seismometers, are much more common and therefore can provide a more thorough understanding of the Earth’s subsurface dynamics and structure, thus motivating the need for a detailed catalog. We are currently using QuakeMigrate to create an earthquake catalog using data from the 12 stations in the UMSN, stations from the MRSN, and temporary USGS stations near Lincoln to detect and locate aftershocks following the M 5.8 Lincoln, Montana mainshock. The catalog will include origin times, hypocentral locations, and magnitudes of earthquakes that have occurred since the Lincoln, Montana mainshock on 6 July 2017. This catalog aims to provide accessible seismic event data for west-central Montana beginning on 6 July 2017 until the conclusion of 2021
A wall shear stress measurement technique using the thermal wakes of small heated spots
Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich.This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively.A new thermo-optical method for the measurement of wall shear stresses is presented. The technique exploits that the surface temperature field and the near wall flow are closely linked by correlating the thermal wakes of small heated spots with the wall shear stress. Numerical as well as experimental results are presented and different correlation and design parameters are examined. In contrast to recent works, where the thermal tuft length is used for a correlation with the wall shear stress, other parameters were found to be much better suited for a skin friction calibration. It is also shown that the new method has the unique capability to not only measure the magnitude of the wall shear stress but also its direction
Ploidy composition in all-hybrid frog populations in relation to ecological conditions
Question: What explains the differences in ratios of diploid (LR) and two types of triploid
frogs (LLR, LRR) among all-hybrid frog populations?
Hypothesis: Ecological conditions favouring one (LL) or the other (RR) parental species also
favour those triploids that carry two copies of the respective genome (dosage effect), whereas
diploids dominate under intermediate conditions.
Organism: European water frog (Pelophylax esculentus).
Field site: Thirty-four natural ponds in the province of Skåne, southern Sweden.
Methods: We caught more than 3000 frogs, determined their genotypes with microsatellites,
and related the ploidy composition to several uncorrelated ecological parameters, including
pond morphology, vegetation, and physical and chemical water parameters.
Conclusions: We found a shift from predominantly LLR in small isolated ponds to more LRR
in large wetland ponds. This parallels the preferences of the parental species LL and RR
for small and large bodies of water, respectively. The effects that pond vegetation and
physico-chemical water parameters exert on the parental species were not found in all-hybrid
populations. This suggests that environmental parameters affect the genotype composition of
all-hybrid populations less than populations containing the parental species. Pond-to-pond
differences in LR, LLR, and LRR proportions seem to be better explained by differences in
gamete production and thus inheritance patterns
Gestión de bosques mixtos de pino y roble en escenarios de incertidumbre climática
The process-based forest growth model 4C (FORESEE - FORESt Ecosystems in a Changing Environment) was used to analyze the growth of a mixed oak-pine stand [Quercus petraea (Mattuschka) Liebl., Pinus sylvestris L.]. The oak-pine stand is typical for the ongoing forest transformation in the north-eastern lowlands. The pine and the oak trees are 104 and 9 years old, respectively. Three different management scenarios (A, B, C) with different thinning grades and a thinning interval of five years were simulated. Every management scenario was simulated under three different climate scenarios (0K, 2K, 3K) compiled by the regional statistical climate model STAR 2.0 (PIK). For each climate scenario 100 different realisations were generated. The realisations of the climate scenarios encompass the period 2036-2060 and exhibit an increase of mean annual temperature of zero, two and three Kelvin until 2060, respectively. We selected 9 model outputs concerning biomass, growth and harvest which were aggregated to a single total performance index (TPI). The TPI was used to assess the management scenarios with regard to three management objectives (carbon sequestration, intermediate, timber yield) under climate change until 2060. We found out that management scenario A led to the highest TPI concerning the carbon sequestration objective and management scenario C performed best concerning the two other objectives. The analysis of variance in the growth related model outputs showed an increase of climate uncertainty with increasing climate warming. Interestingly, the increase of climate induced uncertainty is much higher from 2 to 3 K than from 0 to 2 K.Se ha utilizado un modelo forestal basado en procesos denominado 4C (FORESEE - FORESt Ecosystems in a Changing
Environment) para analizar el crecimiento de un masa forestal con mezcla de Quercus petraea y Pinus sylvestris.
Ésta es una mezcla tÃpica en las áreas de transformación forestal en las zonas bajas del noreste de Alemania. Los
pinos y los robles tienen una edad de 104 y 9 años respectivamente. Se simularon tres escenarios diferentes de manejo
(A, B, C) con diferentes grados de claras e intervalos de clara de 5 años. Cada escenario de manejo fue simulado
bajo tres escenarios climáticos (0K, 2K, 3K) los cuales se calcularon por el modelo regional climático estadÃstico
STAR 2.0 (PIK). Se generaron 100 diferentes realizaciones para cada escenario climático. Las realizaciones incluyen
el perÃodo 2036-2060 y presentan un aumento de la temperatura anual de cero, dos y tres grados Kelvin hasta el año
2060, respectivamente. Seleccionamos 9 salidas del modelo relacionadas con la biomasa, crecimiento y rendimiento
que se combinaron en un único Ãndice de rendimiento total (TPI, total performance index). El TPI fue analizado para
investigar los escenarios de manejo con respecto a tres objetivos de manejo (secuestro de carbono, máximo rendimiento
maderero, y un escenario intermedio a ambos) bajo la influencia de cambio climático hasta el año 2060.
Nuestros resultados indican que el escenario A muestra el TPI más alto con respecto al secuestro de carbono, y el
escenario C tuvo el mejor resultado respecto a los otros dos objetivos. El análisis de varianza en las salidas relativas
al crecimiento mostró que mientras más evoluciona el calentamiento global, más crece la incertidumbre climática.
Cabe destacar que el aumento de la incertidumbre inducida por el clima es mucho mayor al aumentar de 2 a 3 K que
de 0 a 2 K
Embedding Principal Component Analysis for Data Reductionin Structural Health Monitoring on Low-Cost IoT Gateways
Principal component analysis (PCA) is a powerful data reductionmethod for
Structural Health Monitoring. However, its computa-tional cost and data memory
footprint pose a significant challengewhen PCA has to run on limited capability
embedded platformsin low-cost IoT gateways. This paper presents a
memory-efficientparallel implementation of the streaming History PCA
algorithm.On our dataset, it achieves 10x compression factor and 59x
memoryreduction with less than 0.15 dB degradation in the
reconstructedsignal-to-noise ratio (RSNR) compared to standard PCA. More-over,
the algorithm benefits from parallelization on multiple cores,achieving a
maximum speedup of 4.8x on Samsung ARTIK 710
Efficiency comparison of three attractant products against webbing clothes moth Tineola bisselliella (Hummel) (Lepidoptera: Tineidae) using an adapted four arms olfactometer
Contribution to section 2:
Biology, behaviour and detectio
Genome-wide association analysis and functional annotation of positional candidate genes for feed conversion efficiency and growth rate in pigs
This project has received funding from the European Union‘s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration as part of the ECO-FCE project under grant agreement No. 311794.peer-reviewedFeed conversion efficiency is a measure of how well an animal converts feed into live weight and it is typically expressed as feed conversion ratio (FCR). FCR and related traits like growth rate (e.g. days to 110 kg—D110) are of high interest for animal breeders, farmers and society due to implications on animal performance, feeding costs and environmental sustainability. The objective of this study was to identify genomic regions associated with FCR and D110 in pigs. A total of 952 terminal line boars, showing an individual variation in FCR, were genotyped using 60K SNP-Chips. Markers were tested for associations with estimated breeding values (EBV) for FCR and D110. For FCR, the largest number of associated SNPs was located on chromosomes 4 (30 SNPs), 1 (25 SNPs), X (15 SNPs) and 6 (12 SNPs). The most prominent genomic regions for D110 were identified on chromosomes 15 (10 SNPs), 1 and 4 (both 9 SNPs). The most significantly associated SNPs for FCR and D110 mapped 129.8 Kb from METTL11B (chromosome 4) and 32Kb from MBD5 (chromosome 15), respectively. A list of positional genes, closest to significantly associated SNPs, was used to identify enriched pathways and biological functions related to the QTL for both traits. A number of candidate genes were significantly overrepresented in pathways of immune cell trafficking, lymphoid tissue structure, organ morphology, endocrine system function, lipid metabolism, and energy production. After resequencing the coding region of selected positional and functional candidate genes, six SNPs were genotyped in a subset of boars. SNPs in PRKDC, SELL, NR2E1 and AKRIC3 showed significant associations with EBVs for FCR/D110. The study revealed a number of chromosomal regions and candidate genes affecting FCR/D110 and pointed to corresponding biological pathways related to lipid metabolism, olfactory reception, and also immunological status.This project has received funding from the European Union‘s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration as part of the ECO-FCE project under grant agreement No. 311794
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Realizing Mitigation Efficiency of European Commercial Forests by Climate Smart Forestry
European temperate and boreal forests sequester up to 12% of Europe's annual carbon emissions. Forest carbon density can be manipulated through management to maximize its climate mitigation potential, and fast-growing tree species may contribute the most to Climate Smart Forestry (CSF) compared to slow-growing hardwoods. This type of CSF takes into account not only forest resource potentials in sequestering carbon, but also the economic impact of regional forest products and discounts both variables over time. We used the process-based forest model 4 C to simulate European commercial forests' growth conditions and coupled it with an optimization algorithm to simulate the implementation of CSF for 18 European countries encompassing 68.3 million ha of forest (42.4% of total EU-28 forest area). We found a European CSF policy that could sequester 7.3-11.1 billion tons of carbon, projected to be worth 103 to 141 billion euros in the 21st century. An efficient CSF policy would allocate carbon sequestration to European countries with a lower wood price, lower labor costs, high harvest costs, or a mixture thereof to increase its economic efficiency. This policy prioritized the allocation of mitigation efforts to northern, eastern and central European countries and favored fast growing conifers Picea abies and Pinus sylvestris to broadleaves Fagus sylvatica and Quercus species
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