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Evaluating the lingering effect of livestock grazing on functional potentials of microbial communities in Tibetan grassland soils
Background and aims: Livestock grazing is a widely practiced land-use regime that can impose lingering effects on global biogeochemical cycles. However, elucidating the mechanisms of related eco-processes, which are largely mediated by the microbial community, remains challenging. Methods: Here, we collected soil samples from two Tibetan grassland sites subjected to grazing in winter followed by a 3-month recovery. We then evaluated functional potentials of microbial communities via a metagenomic tool known as GeoChip 4.0. Results: Significant alterations were detected in post-grazing grassland soils, and further analysis showed that plant diversity was the best indicator of alterations in functional potentials. Relative abundances of labile C degradation genes decreased at the 3400-m site, but those of recalcitrant C degradation genes increased, which could be explained by the higher soil recalcitrant C input owing to their being substantially more forbs species at this site. Nitrification genes decreased at both sites, probably owing to increased soil moisture conducive to oxygen-limiting conditions. Relative abundance of denitrification genes increased at the 3200-m site, concomitant with increased N2O emissions. Conclusions: These results demonstrated that functional gene compositions of the microbial community were altered in post-grazing grassland soils, and linked to soil biogeochemical processes
Obvious enhancement of the total reaction cross sections for P with Si target and the possible relavent mechanisms
The reaction cross sections of P and the corresponding isotones on
Si target were measured at intermediate energies. The measured reaction cross
sections of the N=12 and 13 isotones show an abrupt increase at . The
experimental results for the isotones with as well as P can
be well described by the modified Glauber theory of the optical limit approach.
The enhancement of the reaction cross section for P could be explained
in the modified Glauber theory with an enlarged core. Theoretical analysis with
the modified Glauber theory of the optical limit and few-body approaches
underpredicted the experimental data of P. Our theoretical analysis
shows that an enlarged core together with proton halo are probably the
mechanism responsible for the enhancement of the cross sections for the
reaction of P+Si.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Phys.Rev.
Constraints on Spin-Independent Nucleus Scattering with sub-GeV Weakly Interacting Massive Particle Dark Matter from the CDEX-1B Experiment at the China Jin-Ping Laboratory
We report results on the searches of weakly interacting massive particles
(WIMPs) with sub-GeV masses () via WIMP-nucleus spin-independent
scattering with Migdal effect incorporated. Analysis on time-integrated (TI)
and annual modulation (AM) effects on CDEX-1B data are performed, with 737.1
kgday exposure and 160 eVee threshold for TI analysis, and 1107.5
kgday exposure and 250 eVee threshold for AM analysis. The sensitive
windows in are expanded by an order of magnitude to lower DM masses
with Migdal effect incorporated. New limits on at
90\% confidence level are derived as 1010
for TI analysis at 50180 MeV/, and
1010 for AM analysis at
75 MeV/3.0 GeV/.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Limits on Light Weakly Interacting Massive Particles from the First 102.8 kg day Data of the CDEX-10 Experiment
We report the first results of a light weakly interacting massive particles
(WIMPs) search from the CDEX-10 experiment with a 10 kg germanium detector
array immersed in liquid nitrogen at the China Jinping Underground Laboratory
with a physics data size of 102.8 kg day. At an analysis threshold of 160 eVee,
improved limits of 8 and 3 cm at a
90\% confidence level on spin-independent and spin-dependent WIMP-nucleon cross
sections, respectively, at a WIMP mass () of 5 GeV/ are
achieved. The lower reach of is extended to 2 GeV/.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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