934 research outputs found
A revision of the genus Astatoreochromis (Teleostei, Cichlidae), East-Africa
A taxonomic revision of the cichlid genus Astatoreochromis is presented. Eighteen meristic and 23 morphometric measurements were taken on 185 individuals, including type specimens. While fin counts separate populations from the Lake Victoria region (Astatoreochromis alluaudi) from those of the Rusizi and Malagarazi rivers in the Lake Tanganyika basin (A. vanderhorsti and A. straeleni respectively), clear differentiation was not detected between the latter two. Mann-Whitney U-tests on specimens of comparable size from the two Tanganyika populations revealed significant differences in specimens 75 mm SL and Astatoreochromis vanderhorsti is herein considered a junior synonym of A. straeleni. A redescription of the two valid species of Astatoreochromis, A. alluaudi and A.straeleni, is provided
FishBase: the on-line answer to ichthyological issues
FishBase was initiated by Daniel Pauly and Rainer Froese as an electronic fact sheets database for the economically most important fish species. From 1987 onwards FishBase was developed at the WorldFish Center (former ICLARM), and subsequently financed by the European Commission between 1989 and 2000. Since 2001, FishBase is supported by a consortium, including the WorldFish Center (Malaysia), FAO (Italy), The Royal Museum for Central Africa (Belgium), the Natural History Museums of Paris (France) and Stockholm (Sweden), the Universities of Kiel (Germany), British Columbia (Canada) and Thessaloniki (Greece), and the Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences (China). At present FishBase is the largest on-line encyclopaedia on fishes, with about 20 - 25 million hits per month.Information on more than 30,000 fish species is available through the FishBase portal (www.fishbase.org) or one of its 6 mirror-sites, including data on the taxonomic position, distribution, morphology and ecology, as well as numerous aspects of aquaculture and fisheries biology. Information is based on scientific publications or provided by experts. Many deep links are provided to other relevant websites such as those of the IUCN (conservation) and GenBank (genetics). The Royal Museum for Central Africa is responsible for the validation and updating of the information on all African fresh- and brackish water fishes and developed in 2007 a portal for the African inland fishes (www.fishbaseforafrica.org).FishBase contains a lot of applications for fish and fisheries scientists, such as tools for fish identification, biogeographical modelling, construction and analysis of trophic pyramids, analysis of fishery and aquaculture statistics, diagnosis of fish diseases, etc. Some of these have already proved their importance to support concepts like ‘fishing down food webs’ (Pauly et al., 1998)
Spontaneous decay rates in active waveguides
We present a new method to measure the guided, radiated and total decay rates
in one-dimensional waveguides. It is also theoretically shown that large
modifications of the total decay rate can be achieved in realistic EDFAs and
EDWAs with effective mode area radii smaller than ~ 1 micrometer.Comment: 3 pages, latex, 2 figures, 1 table, title change, published versio
First record of the round goby, <i>Neogobius melanostomus</i> (Actinopterygii: Perciformes: Gobiidae) in Belgium
Almost six years after the first finding of the round goby Neogobius melanostomus (Gobiidae) in the Netherlands, several specimens of this invasive Ponto-Caspian benthic fish were also recorded in the Belgian part of the River Scheldt and in the Albert Canal. This is the first record of the round goby in Belgium
Broadband enhancement of light emission in silicon slot waveguides
We investigate the light emission properties of electrical dipole emitters inside 2-dimensional (2D) and 3-dimensional (3D) silicon slot waveguides and evaluate the spontaneous emission enhancement (F_p) and waveguide coupling ratio (β). Under realistic conditions, we find that greater than 10-fold enhancement in F_p can be achieved, together with a β as large as 0.95. In contrast to the case of high Q optical resonators, such performance enhancements are obtained over a broad wavelength region, which can cover the entire emission spectrum of popular optical dopants such as Er. The enhanced luminescence efficiency and the strong coupling into a limited set of well-defined waveguide modes enables a new class of power-efficient, CMOS-compatible, waveguide-based light sources
Back to Tanganyika: a case of recent trans-species-flock dispersal in East African haplochromine cichlid fishes
The species flocks of cichlid fishes in the East African Great Lakes are the largest vertebrate adaptive radiations in the world and illustrious textbook examples of convergent evolution between independent species assemblages. Although recent studies suggest some degrees of genetic exchange between riverine taxa and the lake faunas, not a single cichlid species is known from Lakes Tanganyika, Malawi and Victoria that is derived from the radiation associated with another of these lakes. Here, we report the discovery of a haplochromine cichlid species in Lake Tanganyika, which belongs genetically to the species flock of haplochromines of the Lake Victoria region. The new species colonized Lake Tanganyika only recently, suggesting that faunal exchange across watersheds and, hence, between isolated ichthyofaunas, is more common than previously thought
Spontaneous emission rates of dipoles in photonic crystal membranes
We show theoretically that finite two-dimensional (2D) photonic crystals in
thin semiconductor membranes strongly modify the spontaneous emission rate of
embedded dipole emitters. Three-dimensional Finite-Difference Time-Domain
calculations show over 7 times inhibition and 15 times enhancement of the
emission rate compared to the vacuum emission rate for judiciously oriented and
positioned dipoles. The vertical index confinement in membranes strongly
enhances modifications of the emission rate as compared to vertically
unconfined 2D photonic crystals. The emission rate modifications inside the
membrane mimic the local electric field mode density in a simple 2D model. The
inhibition of emission saturates exponentially as the crystal size around the
source is increased, with a length that is inversely proportional to the
bandwidth of the emission gap. We obtain inhibition of emission only close to
the slab center. However, enhancement of emission persists even outside the
membrane, with a distance dependence which dependence can be understood by
analyzing the contributions to the spontaneous emission rate of the different
vertically guided modes of the membrane. Finally we show that the emission
changes can even be observed in experiments with ensembles of randomly oriented
dipoles, despite the contribution of dipoles for which no gap exists
Spectroscopic properties of a two-level atom interacting with a complex spherical nanoshell
Frequency shifts, radiative decay rates, the Ohmic loss contribution to the
nonradiative decay rates, fluorescence yields, and photobleaching of a
two-level atom radiating anywhere inside or outside a complex spherical
nanoshell, i.e. a stratified sphere consisting of alternating silica and gold
concentric spherical shells, are studied. The changes in the spectroscopic
properties of an atom interacting with complex nanoshells are significantly
enhanced, often more than two orders of magnitude, compared to the same atom
interacting with a homogeneous dielectric sphere. The detected fluorescence
intensity can be enhanced by 5 or more orders of magnitude. The changes
strongly depend on the nanoshell parameters and the atom position. When an atom
approaches a metal shell, decay rates are strongly enhanced yet fluorescence
exhibits a well-known quenching. Rather contra-intuitively, the Ohmic loss
contribution to the nonradiative decay rates for an atomic dipole within the
silica core of larger nanoshells may be decreasing when the silica core - inner
gold shell interface is approached. The quasistatic result that the radial
frequency shift in a close proximity of a spherical shell interface is
approximately twice as large as the tangential frequency shift appears to apply
also for complex nanoshells. Significantly modified spectroscopic properties
(see computer program (pending publication of this manuscript) freely available
at http://www.wave-scattering.com) can be observed in a broad band comprising
all (nonresonant) optical and near-infrared wavelengths.Comment: 20 pages plus 63 references and 11 figures, plain LaTex, for more
information see http://www.wave-scattering.com (color of D sphere in figures
2-6 altered, minor typos corrected.
The Low-cost effect: The impact of entry of Low-cost Airlines and how Full-Service Airlines respond
On the equivalence of the Langevin and auxiliary field quantization methods for absorbing dielectrics
Recently two methods have been developed for the quantization of the
electromagnetic field in general dispersing and absorbing linear dielectrics.
The first is based upon the introduction of a quantum Langevin current in
Maxwell's equations [T. Gruner and D.-G. Welsch, Phys. Rev. A 53, 1818 (1996);
Ho Trung Dung, L. Kn\"{o}ll, and D.-G. Welsch, Phys. Rev. A 57, 3931 (1998); S.
Scheel, L. Kn\"{o}ll, and D.-G. Welsch, Phys. Rev. A 58, 700 (1998)], whereas
the second makes use of a set of auxiliary fields, followed by a canonical
quantization procedure [A. Tip, Phys. Rev. A 57, 4818 (1998)]. We show that
both approaches are equivalent.Comment: 7 pages, RevTeX, no figure
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