8,267 research outputs found
Remote sensing and climate data as a key for understanding fasciolosis transmission in the Andes: review and update of an ongoing interdisciplinary project
Fasciolosis caused by Fasciola hepatica in various South American countries located on the slopes of the
Andes has been recognized as an important public health problem. However, the importance of this zoonotic hepatic
parasite was neglected until the last decade. Countries such as Peru and Bolivia are considered to be hyperendemic areas
for human and animal fasciolosis, and other countries such as Chile, Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela are also affected.
At the beginning of the 1990s a multidisciplinary project was launched with the aim to shed light on the problems
related to this parasitic disease in the Northern Bolivian Altiplano. A few years later, a geographic information system
(GIS) was incorporated into this multidisciplinary project analysing the epidemiology of human and animal fasciolosis
in this South American Andean region. Various GIS projects were developed in some Andean regions using climatic
data, climatic forecast indices and remote sensing data. Step by step, all these GIS projects concerning the forecast of
the fasciolosis transmission risk in the Andean mountain range were revised and in some cases updated taking into
account new data. The first of these projects was developed on a regional scale for the central Chilean regions and the
proposed model was validated on a local scale in the Northern Bolivian Altiplano. This validated mixed model, based
on both fasciolosis climatic forecast indices and normalized difference vegetation index values from Advanced Very
High Resolution Radiometer satellite sensor, was extrapolated to other human and/or animal endemic areas of Peru
and Ecuador. The resulting fasciolosis risk maps make it possible to show the known human endemic areas of, mainly,
the Peruvian Altiplano, Cajamarca and Mantaro Peruvian valleys, and some valleys of the Ecuadorian Cotopaxi
province. Nevertheless, more climate and remote sensing data, as well as more accurate epidemiological reports, have
to be incorporated into these GIS projects, which should be considered the key in understanding fasciolosis transmission
in the Andes
Spectroscopic Signatures of Electronic Excitations in Raman Scattering in Thin Films of Rhombohedral Graphite
Rhombohedral graphite features peculiar electronic properties, including
persistence of low-energy surface bands of a topological nature. Here, we study
the contribution of electron-hole excitations towards inelastic light
scattering in thin films of rhombohedral graphite. We show that, in contrast to
the featureless electron-hole contribution towards Raman spectrum of graphitic
films with Bernal stacking, the inelastic light scattering accompanied by
electron-hole excitations in crystals with rhombohedral stacking produces
distinct features in the Raman signal which can be used both to identify the
stacking and to determine the number of layers in the film.Comment: 15 pages in preprint format, 4 figures, accepted versio
Prevalence and diagnostic characteristics of non-clinical mitral regurgitation murmurs in North American Whippets
Risk factors associated with sudden death vs. congestive heart failure or arterial thromboembolism in cats with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Water calcium concentration modifies whole-body calcium uptake in sea bream larvae during short-term adaptation to altered salinities
Whole-body calcium uptake was studied in gilthead sea bream larvae (9–83·mg) in response to changing environmental salinity and [Ca2+]. Calcium uptake increased with increased fish size and salinity. Fish
exposed to calcium-enriched, diluted seawater showed increased calcium uptake compared with fish in diluted seawater alone. Calcium uptake was unchanged in Na+-
enriched, diluted seawater. Overall, [Ca2+], and not salinity/osmolarity per se, appears to be the main factor contributing to calcium uptake. By contrast, drinking was
reduced by a decrease in salinity/osmolarity but was little affected by external [Ca2+]. Calculations of the maximum contribution from drinking-associated calcium uptake
showed that it became almost insignificant (less than 10%) through a strong decrease in drinking rate at low salinities (0–8‰). Diluted seawater enriched in calcium to the
concentration present in full-strength seawater (i.e. constant calcium, decreasing salinity) restored intestinal calcium uptake to normal. Extra-intestinal calcium uptake
also benefited from calcium addition but to a lesser extent
Holonomic quantum computation in the presence of decoherence
We present a scheme to study non-abelian adiabatic holonomies for open
Markovian systems. As an application of our framework, we analyze the
robustness of holonomic quantum computation against decoherence. We pinpoint
the sources of error that must be corrected to achieve a geometric
implementation of quantum computation completely resilient to Markovian
decoherence.Comment: I. F-G. Now publishes under name I. Fuentes-Schuller Published
versio
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