3,078 research outputs found
Observations of Above-Surface Littoral Foraging in Two Sea Ducks, Barrow's Goldeneye, Bucephala islandica, and Surf Scoter, Melanitta perspicillata, in Coastal Southwestern British Columbia
Barrow's Goldeneyes (Bucephala islandica) and Surf Scoters (Melanitta perspicillata) were observed on four separate occasions, by three different observers, foraging on Bay Mussels (Mytilus trossulus) above the water surface. This unique foraging behaviour could be attributed to diurnal spring tides and reduced lower intertidal mussel abundance
Chemical Weed Control in Crops
This publication provides a diagram showing the stages of growth in small grain and a table with crop varieties, weeds, safest time to spray, chemical, and rate information. Recommendations for the quantity of herbicide required to control various weed species and calculating the amount of chemical to apply per acre are also included
Control and Elimination of Field Bindweed
This publication provides information on various methods to control creeping jenny or field bindweed in fields. Reducing stands with combinations of cultivation, cropping, and chemicals is discussed, as well as recommendations to prevent spreading, using nonselective herbicides, and reducing stands in shelterbelts
Weed Control in Sorghum
This publication provides recommendations for using cultivation such as a rotary hoe or flextine harrow to control weeds in sorghum, as well as the costs of these methods. Guidance is also included for chemical control with 2,4-D, atrazine, propazine, CDAA, as well as information on the estimated cost of herbicide treatment
Weed Control in Corn
This publication provides recommendations for using cultivation such as a rotary hoe or flextine harrow to control weeds in corn, as well as the costs of these methods. Guidance is also included for chemical control with 2,4-D, atrazine, atrazine plus linuron, Ramrod, CDAA and CDAA-T, as well as information on pre-emergence spraying, directed sprays, herbicide-insecticide-fertilizer mixes, and the estimated cost of herbicide treatment
An Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Degree Program in Electronic Commerce
This paper describes an innovative curriculum for an interdisciplinary undergraduate degree program in electronic commerce. Faculty from the disciplines of computer information systems, computer science, operations management, marketing and graphic design collaborated in devising a curriculum that focuses on the business of electronic commerce while providing a solid base of information technology skills. The program includes an integrated junior year experience that gives students business and technical skills in a team-taught environment. During the senior year, students concentrate on technology infrastructure, business processes, or market analysis and development. This paper not only presents a blueprint for an undergraduate curriculum, but also provides a model for faculty cooperation across academic disciplines
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Miocene stable isotopic stratigraphy and magnetostratigraphy of Buff Bay, Jamaica
Previously reported biostratigraphic relationships from middle-upper Miocene sections exposed near Buff Bay, Jamaica (18°N, tropical bioprovince), differ from the subtropical North Atlantic (Sites 563 and 558). Time scales for this interval rely on correlations established at these subtropical sites, and the differences with the tropical section have implications to global correlations. Planktonic foraminiferal Zones N13 and N15 are thick at Buff Bay but are virtually absent at Sites 563 and 558; nannofossil Zone NN9 is associated with Zone N15 and uppermost Zone N14 at Buff Bay but is associated with Zone N16 at the other sites. Magnetostratigraphic data presented here further complicate the interpretation: Zone NN9 is associated with a thick normal magnetozone at Sites 563 and 558; at Buff Bay, it is associated with a thick reversed magnetozone. Although a secondary magnetization at Buff Bay makes it difficult to identify confidently Miocene normal magnetozones, the thick reversed magnetozone most likely represents the paleomagnetic field and correlates with Chron C5r. The magnetobiostratigraphic relationships require either diachrony of taxa or two mutually exclusive hiatuses in Jamaica and the North Atlantic. We address this problem by analyzing benthic foraminiferal δ^18O and δ^13C from the Buff Bay section. These isotopic data allow us to evaluate three hypotheses that reconcile the magneto-, bio-, and isotopic stratigraphic data and conclude that the first and last occurrences of five taxa were diachronous by ~0.3-0.5 m.y. between tropical and subtropical locations. This requires revised age estimates for late middle to early late Miocene biostratigraphic datum levels. We suggest that the ranges of several taxa are useful for endemic tropical or subtropical zonations, but correlations between the low and midlatitudes were affected by an increase in latitudinal thermal gradients during the late middle Miocene. However, we admit that further studies are needed before this issue is resolved
Effects of Fish Populations on Pacific Loon (Gavia pacifica) and Yellow-billed Loon (G. adamsii) Lake Occupancy and Chick Production in Northern Alaska
Predator populations are vulnerable to changes in prey distribution or availability. With warming temperatures, lake ecosystems in the Arctic are predicted to change in terms of hydrologic flow, water levels, and connectivity with other lakes. We surveyed lakes in northern Alaska to understand how shifts in the distribution or availability of fish may affect the occupancy and breeding success of Pacific (Gavia pacifica) and Yellow-billed Loons (G. adamsii). We then modeled the influence of the presence and abundance of five fish species and the physical characteristics of lakes (e.g., hydrologic connectivity) on loon lake occupancy and chick production. The presence of Alaska blackfish (Dallia pectoralis) had a positive influence on Pacific Loon occupancy and chick production, which suggests that small-bodied fish species provide important prey for loon chicks. No characteristics of fish species abundance affected Yellow-billed Loon lake occupancy. Instead, Yellow-billed Loon occupancy was influenced by the physical characteristics of lakes that contribute to persistent fish populations, such as the size of the lake and the proportion of the lake that remained unfrozen over winter. Neither of these variables, however, influenced chick production. The probability of an unoccupied territory becoming occupied in a subsequent year by Yellow-billed Loons was low, and no loon chicks were successfully raised in territories that were previously unoccupied. In contrast, unoccupied territories had a much higher probability of becoming occupied by Pacific Loons, which suggests that Yellow-billed Loons have strict habitat requirements and suitable breeding lakes may be limited. Territories that were occupied had high probabilities of remaining occupied for both loon species.
Les populations de prédateurs sont vulnérables aux changements de répartition ou de disponibilité des proies. En raison du réchauffement des températures, on prévoit que les écosystèmes lacustres de l’Arctique changeront pour ce qui est du régime hydrologique, des niveaux d’eau et de la connectivité avec d’autres lacs. Nous avons examiné des lacs du nord de l’Alaska pour comprendre comment les changements en matière de répartition ou de disponibilité des poissons peuvent avoir des incidences sur le taux d’occupation et sur le succès de reproduction du huart du Pacifique (Gavia pacifica) et du huart à bec blanc (G. adamsii). Ensuite, nous avons modélisé l’influence de la présence et de l’abondance de cinq espèces de poissons de même que les caractéristiques physiques de lacs (comme la connectivité hydrologique) par rapport au taux d’occupation lacustre des huarts et à la production d’oisillons. La présence du dallia (Dallia pectoralis) avait une influence positive sur l’occupation et la production d’oisillons chez le huart du Pacifique, ce qui suggère que les espèces de poissons au petit corps constituent une proie importante pour les oisillons. Aucune caractéristique de l’abondance des espèces de poissons n’a eu d’influence sur l’occupation lacustre du huart à bec blanc. L’occupation du huart à bec blanc a plutôt été influencée par les caractéristiques physiques des lacs qui contribuent aux populations de poissons persistantes, comme la taille du lac et la proportion du lac qui ne gelait pas en hiver. Toutefois, aucune de ces variables n’a exercé d’influence sur la production d’oisillons. La probabilité qu’un territoire inoccupé devienne occupé par le huart au bec blanc au cours d’une année subséquente était faible, et aucun oisillon huart n’a été élevé avec succès dans des territoires d’oisillons anciennement inoccupés. En revanche, les territoires inoccupés avaient une beaucoup plus grande probabilité de devenir occupés par les huarts du Pacifique, ce qui suggère que les huarts à bec blanc ont des exigences strictes en matière d’habitat et que le nombre de lacs convenant à la reproduction risque d’être limité. Les territoires qui étaient occupés avaient de fortes probabilités de rester occupés par les deux espèces de huarts
Radiotherapy versus open surgery versus endolaryngeal surgery (with or without laser) for early laryngeal squamous cell cancer.
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Late Paleocene event chronology: unconformities, not diachrony
The chronology of the events associated with the late Paleocene thermal maximum (LPTM, Chron C24r) has been established through the construction of a composite reference section that involved chemomagnetobiostratigraphic correlations and assumed minimum diachrony of biostratigraphic events. On this basis, discrepancies between correlations in different sections were explained by inferred unconformities. However, diachrony between distant sections cannot be ruled out. We report here on two geographically close sections drilled onshore New Jersey that yield different records of chemomagnetobiostratigraphic correlations in the interval representing Chron C24r. Because of their proximity (approximately 40 km apart), diachrony of biostratigraphic events between the two sections can be ruled out. In contrast, the marked lithologic disconformities in the sections explain well the different records of events. We thus conclude that the current relative chronology for Chron C24r is firmly based and that the upper Paleocene-lower Eocene stratigraphic record yields multiple unconformities, with Subzone NP9b rarely sampled. We examine the implications that undeciphered unconformities may have on the identification of proxies for paleoceanographic reconstruction, in particular with regard to the identification of the carbon isotope excursion (CIE) that reflects a dramatic latest Paleocene disturbance of the carbon cycle. We propose biostratigraphic means (short-lived calcareous nannoplankton and planktonic foraminifera taxa) that permit the unequivocal identification of the CIE not only in the oceanic realm but also in neritic settings
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