1,516 research outputs found
Aspects of the life history and management of tailor (Pomatomus saltatrix) in Queensland
Tailor (Pomatomus saltatrix) is an important commercial and recreational species. Published and unpublished information on the reproductive biology and seasonal migrations of P. saltatrix in southern Queensland are summarized for 1978-93. Gonad index (GI) data from commercial ocean beach catches gave mean monthly values for fish ≥ 250 LCF (length to caudal fork; n = 389), decreasing from January to April before increasing to a peak in November. R saltatrix taken on Fraser Island in September and on South Stradbroke Island in November had high GI values. Adult fish in spawning condition were captured, tagged and released (n = 7090) on Fraser Island beaches in 1978-80 and 1987-89. Most tagged fish dispersed southward, being recaptured within 400 km of the tagging point. Gonad maturity at tag release and recapture locations and egg concentrations in plankton tows identified a major spawning area for P. saltatrix as the inshore waters between Indian Head and Waddy Point, Fraser Island. Although it is generally accepted that the eggs and/or larvae move southward with the East Australian Current (EAC), distribution and movement of larval P. saltatrix in Queensland waters are not known. Juveniles inhabit and move extensively throughout estuaries to the south of Fraser Island until recruitment as adults on ocean beaches. Recent stock management strategies in Queensland include a minimum legal size of 300 mm (total length), an annual one-month (September) closure to all forms of fishing in the spawning area identified on Fraser Island and input controls on fishing effort of commercial ocean-beach net fishers. Bag limits for recreational anglers may be introduced
Observation of the Curie Transition in Palladium Bionanomaterial Using Muon Spin Rotation Spectroscopy
Palladium bionanomaterial was manufactured using the sulfate-reducing bacterium, Desulfovibrio
desulfuricans, to reduce soluble Pd(II) ions to cell-bound Pd(0). The material was examined using a
Superconducting Quantum Interference Device (SQUID) to observe bulk magnetisation over the
temperature range 10 – 300 K and by Muon Spin Rotation (μSR), which is a probe of the local magnetic
environment inside the sample, over the temperature range 200 – 700 K. Results from SQUID were used
to model the temperature dependence of ferromagnetic and paramagnetic components of the bulk
magnetisation and, by extrapolation, to predict the Curie transition temperature. Results from μSR
confirmed the accuracy of the prediction to within 20 K. The Curie transition, which started at 528 K, was
shown to be spread over a wide ( 100 K) range. This was attributed to dependence of the transition on
particle size and the range of particle sizes in the population. A competing contribution to the overall
magnetisation was observed due to partial thermal decomposition of the organic component of the
material.
When you are citing the document, use the following link http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/3533
Kaon Electromagnetic Production on Nuclei
The formation and excitation of hypernuclei through kaon photoproduction is
reviewed. Basic features of the production process are emphasized. The
possibility of extracting new information on hypernuclear structure and on the
wave function of the bound is discussed. New results are presented
for the quasifree production process . Observables of
this reaction are shown to be sensitive to the -nucleus final state
interaction.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Invited talk given at the International
Conference on Hypernuclear and Strange Particle Physics (HYP97), Brookhaven
National Laboratory, USA, October 13-18, 1997. To be published in Nucl. Phys.
A within farm clinical trial to compare two treatments (parenteral antibacterials and hoof trimming) for sheep lame with footrot
From observational studies, farmers who use parenteral antibacterials to promptly treat all sheep with footrot (FR) or interdigital dermatitis (ID) have a prevalence of lameness of <2% compared with a prevalence of 9% lameness reported by farmers who treat lame sheep by trimming affected feet. We tested the hypothesis that prompt treatment of sheep lame with naturally developing FR or ID with parenteral and topical antibacterials reduces the prevalence and incidence of lameness with these conditions compared with less frequent treatment with trimming of hoof horn and applying topical antibacterials. A further hypothesis was that reduction of ID and FR would improve productivity. A lowland sheep flock with 700 ewes was used to test these hypotheses in an 18-month within farm clinical trial with four groups of ewes: two intervention and two control. The duration and severity of lameness was used to categorise sheep into three weighted scores of lameness (WLS): never lame (WLS0), mildly lame/lame for <6 days (WLS1) and severely or chronically lame (WLS2). The intervention reduced the prevalence of lameness due to FR and ID in ewes and lambs and the incidence of lameness in ewes. The WLS was also significantly lower in sheep in the intervention groups. Ewes with a higher WLS were subsequently significantly more likely to have a body condition score <2.5 and to have lame lambs. Significantly more ewes lambed and successfully reared more lambs that were ready for slaughter at a younger age in the intervention versus control groups. There was an increase in the gross margin of £630/100 ewes mated in the intervention group, including the cost of treatment of £150/100 ewes mated. We conclude that prompt parenteral and topical antibacterial treatment of sheep lame with ID and FR reduced the prevalence and incidence of these infectious conditions and led to improved health, welfare and productivity
The Role of Friction in Compaction and Segregation of Granular Materials
We investigate the role of friction in compaction and segregation of granular
materials by combining Edwards' thermodynamic hypothesis with a simple
mechanical model and mean-field based geometrical calculations. Systems of
single species with large friction coefficients are found to compact less.
Binary mixtures of grains differing in frictional properties are found to
segregate at high compactivities, in contrary to granular mixtures differing in
size, which segregate at low compactivities. A phase diagram for segregation
vs. friction coefficients of the two species is generated. Finally, the
characteristics of segregation are related directly to the volume fraction
without the explicit use of the yet unclear notion of compactivity.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of daily all-over-body application of emollient during the first year of life for preventing atopic eczema in high-risk children (The BEEP trial): protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
BACKGROUND: Atopic eczema (AE) is a common skin problem that impairs quality of life and is associated with the development of other atopic diseases including asthma, food allergy and allergic rhinitis. AE treatment is a significant cost burden for health care providers. The purpose of the trial is to investigate whether daily application of emollients for the first year of life can prevent AE developing in high-risk infants (first-degree relative with asthma, AE or allergic rhinitis). METHODS: This is a protocol for a pragmatic, two-arm, randomised controlled, multicentre trial. Up to 1400 term infants at high risk of developing AE will be recruited through the community, primary and secondary care in England. Participating families will be randomised in a 1:1 ratio to receive general infant skin-care advice, or general skin-care advice plus emollients with advice to apply daily to the infant for the first year of life. Families will not be blinded to treatment allocation. The primary outcome will be a blinded assessment of AE at 24 months of age using the UK Working Party Diagnostic Criteria for Atopic Eczema. Secondary outcomes are other definitions of AE, time to AE onset, severity of AE (EASI and POEM), presence of other allergic diseases including food allergy, asthma and hay fever, allergic sensitisation, quality of life, cost-effectiveness and safety of the emollients. Subgroup analyses are planned for the primary outcome according to filaggrin genotype and the number of first-degree relatives with AE and other atopic diseases. Families will be followed up by online and postal questionnaire at 3, 6, 12 and 18 months with a face-to-face visit at 24 months. Long-term follow-up until 60 months will be via annual questionnaires. DISCUSSION: This trial will demonstrate whether skin-barrier enhancement through daily emollient for the first year of life can prevent AE from developing in high-risk infants. If effective, this simple and cheap intervention has the potential to result in significant cost savings for health care providers throughout the world by preventing AE and possibly other associated allergic diseases. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN registry; ID: ISRCTN21528841 . Registered on 25 July 2014
Agenda-Setting With Local and National Issues
Three factors lead to the hypothesis that agenda-setting should be weaker at the local political level compared to the national level: (1) the more directly observable nature of local political problems, (2) the nature and strength of local interpersonal political communication networks, and (3) the relatively heavier media coverage of national political issues. This hypothesis was supported with data from respondents assigned at random to either local or national issue conditions and from a content analysis of television and newspaper coverage in Toledo, Ohio, of local and national issues. Contrary to the findings of certain previous studies, network television was found to exercise a stronger agenda-setting influence than newspapers at the national level. Newspapers, on the other hand, were the dominant agenda-setter at the local level. The relative agenda-setting influences of television versus newspapers are consistent with other data from this study concerning the relative strengths of the various media as sources of issue information.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/67066/2/10.1177_009365027700400404.pd
Resonances in the three-neutron system
A study of 3-body resonances has been performed in the framework of
configuration space Faddeev equations. The importance of keeping a sufficient
number of terms in the asymptotic expansion of the resonance wave function is
pointed out. We investigated three neutrons interacting in selected force
components taken from realistic nn forces.Comment: 38 pages, 11 tables, 4 figure
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