1,166 research outputs found

    Cambios en las fracciones de fósforo del suelo causado por la agricultura sin reposición de nutrientes. Un caso de estudio

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    Estudios previos en suelos de la región pampeana indicaron que los fosfatos de calcio prevalecen dentro de la compleja mezcla de compuestos de fósforo (P) del suelo. En el presente trabajo, estudiamos las diferentes fracciones de P del suelo en una situación puntual de la región Pampeana. El muestreo fue llevado a cabo en un establecimiento localizado cerca de la ciudad de Junín (-34,585; -60,9589), en un suelo Hapludoll típico, serie Junín. El establecimiento se dedicó al pastoreo y cultivos esporádicos, pero desde hace 30 años cambió a agricultura continua. En ningún momento la fertilización igualó la pérdida de nutrientes causado por los cultivos. Las fracciones de P del suelo fueron determinadas utilizando una versión modificada del método clásico de extracción de Chang y Jackson. El P ligado al calcio disminuyó en términos absolutos y relativos (49,1%) y el fósforo ligado al aluminio y al hierro aumentaron (144,8 y 100,4%, respectivamente). Sin embargo, la proporción de estas últimas fracciones fue afectada por cambios en las fracciones de P orgánico y residual. Si el presente hallazgo puede ser generalizado, indicaría un cambio en la composición de las fracciones de P para los suelos más agriculturizados de la región.Previous studies in soils of the Pampas region indicate the prevalence of calcium phosphates within the very complex mix of phosphorus (P) compounds in the soils. We studied the changes in P fractions in a punctual situation in the Pampas region. The sampling was carried out in a farm located near the city of Junín (-34.585; -60.9589) and the soil was Junín series Typic Hapludoll. The farm was devoted to grazing and sporadic crops, but from the last 30 years changed to continuous agriculture. At no time fertilization matched nutrients removal by crops. The soil P fractions were determined using an improved version of the classical Chang and Jackson method. Phosphorus linked to calcium decreased in absolute and relative terms (49.1%) and P linked to aluminum and iron increased (144.8 and 100.4%, respectively). However, the proportion of latter fractions was affected by the changes in organic and residual P fractions. If present punctual finding could be generalized, it would indicate a change in the composition of P fractions in the most cropped soils of the regionFil: Barresi, O.. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Agronomía; ArgentinaFil: Lavado, Raul Silvio. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biociencias Agrícolas y Ambientales. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Agronomía. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biociencias Agrícolas y Ambientales; ArgentinaFil: Chiocchio, Viviana Monica. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biociencias Agrícolas y Ambientales. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Agronomía. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biociencias Agrícolas y Ambientales; Argentin

    The Elephant Quantum Walk

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    We explore the impact of long-range memory on the properties of a family of quantum walks in a one-dimensional lattice and discrete time, which can be understood as the quantum version of the classical "Elephant Random Walk" non-Markovian process. This Elephant Quantum Walk is robustly superballistic with the standard deviation showing a constant exponent, σt3/2\sigma \propto t^{3/ 2} , whatever the quantum coin operator, on which the diffusion coefficient is dependent. On the one hand, this result indicates that contrarily to the classical case, the degree of superdiffusivity in quantum non- Markovian processes of this kind is mainly ruled by the extension of memory rather than other microscopic parameters that explicitly define the process. On the other hand, these parameters reflect on the diffusion coefficient.Comment: 4 figures, any comments is welcome. Accepted in PR

    Indicators: The Problems of Uncertainty and Quality

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    Pawnee : Song

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    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/4031/thumbnail.jp

    Studying Synaptic Vesicle Pools using Photoconversion of Styryl Dyes

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    The fusion of synaptic vesicles with the plasma membrane (exocytosis) is a required step in neurotransmitter release and neuronal communication. The vesicles are then retrieved from the plasma membrane (endocytosis) and grouped together with the general pool of vesicles within the nerve terminal, until they undergo a new exo- and endocytosis cycle (vesicle recycling). These processes have been studied using a variety of techniques such as electron microscopy, electrophysiology recordings, amperometry and capacitance measurements. Importantly, during the last two decades a number of fluorescently labeled markers emerged, allowing optical techniques to track vesicles in their recycling dynamics. One of the most commonly used markers is the styryl or FM dye 1; structurally, all FM dyes contain a hydrophilic head and a lipophilic tail connected through an aromatic ring and one or more double bonds (Fig. 1B). A classical FM dye experiment to label a pool of vesicles consists in bathing the preparation (Fig. 1Ai) with the dye during the stimulation of the nerve (electrically or with high K+). This induces vesicle recycling and the subsequent loading of the dye into recently endocytosed vesicles (Fig. 1Ai-iii). After loading the vesicles with dye, a second round of stimulation in a dye-free bath would trigger the FM release through exocytosis (Fig. 1Aiv-v), process that can be followed by monitoring the fluorescence intensity decrease (destaining)
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