9 research outputs found

    Multiannual infestation patterns of grapevine plant inhabiting Scaphoideus titanus (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) leafhoppers

    Get PDF
    The Nearctic leafhopper Scaphoideus titanus Ball (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) was accidentally introduced in Europe, where it became the vector of the ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma vitis' phytoplasma causing the ‘Flavescence dorée' disease of grapevine plants. A time-varying distributed delay model, simulating the successive occurrences of egg hatching, nymph presence, and adult emergence, is extended here to represent multi-generation infestation patterns of grapevine plants inhabited by eggs, nymphs, and adults. The model extension includes intrinsic mortality, mortality caused by plant dormancy, and low temperatures, development of diapausing and post-diapausing eggs, fecundity rates, and adult longevity. Field observations and published data were used to estimate parameters. The model was validated with five years canopy infestation data from five vineyards not subjected to insecticide treatments and found to have satisfactory explicative and predictive qualities. The model output is most sensitive to a 10% variation in the upper threshold and in the shape parameters of the survivorship function and least sensitive to a 10% variation in the shape parameters of the development function and the survivorship level. Recommendations are made to take into account other factors than temperature and plant phenology and include a wider geographical area in further model developmen

    Spirulina as a nutrient source in diets for growing sturgeon (Acipenser baeri)

    Get PDF
    The e⁄ciency of diets with the inclusion of Spirulina for Siberian sturgeon weaning has been tested. Three isoproteic and isoenergetic diets were formulated with an increasing level of Indian strain Spirulina (SP 40%, SP 50% and SP 60%); the diets were tested against a control diet without microalgae. The results show that Spirulina inclusion improves growth and that an inclusion level of 50% gave the greatest growth rate, a better favourable feed conversion rate and the highest protein e⁄ciency. The fatty acid composition of ¢llets showed diierences between the experimental and control diets: an increase in the Spirulina level induces increases in palmitic and linoleic acids and a decrease in the myristic acid. The control diet was characterized by high levels of eicosapentaenoic and docosahexaenoic acids. At the end of the experiment, statistical diierences appeared in the fatty acid pro¢le of the sturgeon ¢llet, mainly concerning high content of monounsaturated fatty acid and polyunsaturated fatty acid in the sturgeon ¢llets. If the problems related to the high production costs are solved, Spirulina could prove a good partial substitute ¢sh meal

    Climate and landscape composition explain agronomic practices, pesticide use and grape yield in vineyards across Italy

    Get PDF
    Context Worldwide, organic farming is being promoted as one of the main alternatives to intensive conventional farming. However, the benefits of organic agriculture are still controversial and need to be tested across wide environmental gradients. Objective Here, we carried out an observational study to test how agronomic practices, pest management, environmental impact and yield of conventional and organic vineyards changed along wide climatic and landscape gradients across Italy. Methods We used a block design with 38 pairs of conventional and organic vineyards across Italy. Results and conclusions Most agronomic practices did not differ between conventional and organic vineyards. By contrast, landscape composition and climate were strong predictors of management in both systems. First, increasing semi-natural areas around the vineyards reduced pesticide pressure and related environmental impacts, but was also associated with lower yield. Second, irrespective of the farming system, a warm and dry climate was associated with reduced fungicide pressure. Conventional farming had a yield gain of 40% in cold and wet climate compared to organic but the yield gap disappeared in the warmest regions. Significance In both farming systems, we observed a large variability in management practices that was mainly explained by climate and landscape composition. This large variability should be considered when evaluating the benefits and drawbacks of different farming systems under contrasting environmental contexts

    Initial Public Offerings and the Firm Location

    Get PDF
    The firm geographic location matters in IPOs because investors have a strong preference for newly issued local stocks and provide abnormal demand in local offerings. Using equity holdings data for more than 53,000 households, we show the probability to participate to the stock market and the proportion of the equity wealth is abnormally increasing with the volume of the IPOs inside the investor region. Upon nearly the universe of the 167,515 going public and private domestic manufacturing firms, we provide consistent evidence that the isolated private firms have higher probability to go public, larger IPO underpricing cross-sectional average and volatility, and less pronounced long-run under-performance. Similar but opposite evidence holds for the local concentration of the investor wealth. These effects are economically relevant and robust to local delistings, IPO market timing, agglomeration economies, firm location endogeneity, self-selection bias, and information asymmetries, among others. Findings suggest IPO waves have a strong geographic component, highlight that underwriters significantly under-estimate the local demand component thus leaving unexpected money on the table, and support state-contingent but constant investor propensity for risk

    La Ceratitis capitata in Lombardia

    No full text

    Esperienze di confusione sessuale contro carpofagi e ricamatori del melo in Valtellina

    No full text

    Preliminary observations on the biology and management of western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera) in Italy

    No full text
    Preliminary data (obtained in the first research year, i.e. in 2004) on the biology of western corn rootworm (WCR; D. virgifera virgifera), evaluation of different trapping systems and agronomic management measures in Italy are reported. Larvae were found from the end of June until the end of July. The first specimens collected were 2nd and 3rd instar larvae, suggesting that egg hatch had begun in at least the first half of June. Pupae were present from the end of June onwards. Adults appeared at the end of June and continued to be found up to the beginning of October. According to mean captures, flight curves for both pheromone- and kairomone-baited traps showed 3 distinct peaks: at the beginning of July, at the beginning and end of August. Novapher traps (Dvv-n and Dvv-l) showed a similar trend to PAL traps, with less intense fluctuations. The same trend was shown by Novapher Dvv-l traps that were baited with a long-lasting pheromone, set at the beginning of the season and never changed. Csalomon YST traps demonstrated the same trend as PAL and PALs traps. Pherocon AM traps caught up to 20 times more adults than the Csalomon YST traps, exceeding the damage threshold; Csalomon YST catches were always below threshold levels. Crop rotation was confirmed as an efficient control practice for WCR because no adults were caught on the traps in the emerging cages. Some adults were collected in the summer maize, which might indicate that a few eggs can hatch very late in the season

    Recent progress in L-H transition studies at JET: Tritium, Helium, Hydrogen and Deuterium

    No full text
    We present an overview of results from a series of L-II transition experiments undertaken at JET since the installation of the ITER-like-wall (JET-ILW), with beryllium wall tiles and a tungsten divertor. Tritium, helium and deuterium plasmas have been investigated. Initial results in tritium show ohmic L-H transitions at low density and the power threshold for the L-H transition (P-LH) is lower in tritium plasmas than in deuterium ones at low densities, while we still lack contrasted data to provide a scaling at high densities. In helium plasmas there is a notable shift of the density at which the power threshold is minimum ((n) over bar (e,min)) to higher values relative to deuterium and hydrogen references. Above (n) over bar (e,min) (He) the L-H power threshold at high densities is similar for D and He plasmas. Transport modelling in slab geometry shows that in helium neoclassical transport competes with interchange-driven transport, unlike in hydrogen isotopes. Measurements of the radial electric field in deuterium plasmas show that E-r shear is not a good indicator of proximity to the L-H transition. Transport analysis of ion heat flux in deuterium plasmas show a non-linearity as density is decreased below (n) over bar (e,min). Lastly, a regression of the JET-ILW deuterium data is compared to the 2008 ITPA scaling law
    corecore