6,642 research outputs found
Nutrient Reserves And Diet Of Breeding Mallards And Blue-winged Teal
Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos; n = 339) and Blue-winged Teal (A. discors; n = 213; hereafter teal) were collected from western (1986) and eastern (1987) Saskatchewan grassland and parkland habitats during egg formation to examine body composition, diets and digestive organ size with respect to hypotheses concerning habitat (this study) and the use of body fat (Drobney 1980; Rohwer 1986a; Ankney and Afton 1988). I predicted that ducks breeding in grassland habitats would rely upon more stored body nutrients, whereas parkland ducks would rely more upon dietary nutrients to form eggs. Body composition including fat, protein and mineral reserves and digestive organ sizes and diets (used to index food consumption) did not differ due to habitat in Mallards or teal. Female Mallards breeding at the western grassland site used 60% less body fat during clutch formation compared with females from other sites. Two potential explanations for this are: (A) food resources at this site were annually most predictable so less fat is needed as insurance against bad years or (B) females breeding at this site were unable to build up sufficient fat reserves during spring migration because they were subordinates and were excluded from food resources.;Body protein of female Mallards and teal did not decline as predicted by the protein-limitation hypothesis (Drobney 1980). Body fat declined seasonally among western female Mallards, eastern male Mallards and male teal just initiating RFG, and remained constant among all other samples. These data do not support Rohwer\u27s (1986a) migration-uncertainty hypothesis because arrival in Mallards and teal is likely not synchronous. Agricultural grains (hereafter grains) and seeds were important components in the diet of breeding mallards whereas aquatic invertebrates, especially gastropods and insects, dominated the diet of teal. I argue that because grains were recently introduced, and energy extraction from seeds is likely inefficient, the diet of Mallards and teal support the lipid-limitation hypothesis (Ankney and Afton 1988), that reliance on stored body fat supplements a lipid poor diet.;Body fat acquired prior to arrival, contributed 41% of clutch fat requirements in female teal and 60%-150% in female Mallards. Male Mallards used stored body fat during the egg formation period whereas male teal used fat only prior to this period. Female Mallards from three of four collection sites used stored minerals to supplement dietary calcium intake, ca. 11-13 grams for a 10 egg clutch, enough for about 1 egg, whereas female teal relied upon dietary sources of calcium
Derivation of supply curves for catchment water effluents meeting specific salinity concentration targets in 2050: linking farm and catchment level models or âFootprints on future salt / water planesâ
The salt burden in a stream reflects the blend of salty and fresh flows from different soil areas in its catchment. Depending not only on long-run rainfall, water yields from a soil are also determined by land cover: lowest if the area is forested and greatest if cleared. Water yields under agro-forestry, lucerne pasture, perennial grass pasture, and annual pasture or cropping options span the range of water yields between the extremes of forested and cleared lands. This study explores quantitative approaches for connecting the hydrologic and economic consequences of farm-level decisions on land cover (productive land uses) to the costs of attaining different catchment level targets of water volumes and salt reaching downstream users; environmental, agricultural, domestic, commercial and industrial. This connection is critical for the resolution of the externality dilemma of meeting downstream demands for water volume and quality. New technology, new products and new markets will expand options for salinity abatement measures in the dryland farming areas of watershed catchments. The development of appropriate policy solutions to address demands for water volumes and quality depends on the possibility of inducing targeted land use change in those catchments or parts of catchments where decreased saline flows or increased fresh water flows can return the best value for money. This study provides such a link.salinity, targets, opportunity cost, concentration, dilution, effluent, externality, supply, demand, policy, water quality, new technology, new markets, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Less government intervention in biodiversity management: risks and opportunities
n a changing global environment, with increasing pressure on ecosystem goods and services, biodiversity conservation is likely to become increasingly important. However, with the current global financial crisis, governments are increasingly trying to stabilise economies through spending cuts aiming to reduce national deficits. Within such an economic climate, the devolution of governance through public participation is an intrinsically appealing concept. We outline a number of challenges that explain why increased participation in biodiversity management has been and may continue to be problematic. Using as a case study the local stakeholder-driven Moray Firth Seal Management Plan in Scotland, we identify four key conditions that were crucial to the successful participatory management of a biodiversity conflict: a local champion, the emergence of a crisis point, the involvement of decision-makers, and long-term financial and institutional support. Three of the four conditions point to the role of direct government involvement, highlighting the risk of devolving responsibility for biodiversity conflict management to local communities. We argue that without an informed debate, the move towards a more participatory approach could pose a danger to hard-won policy gains in relation to public participation, biodiversity conservation and conflict management
Decoupling Crossover in Asymmetric Broadside Coupled Split Ring Resonators at Terahertz Frequencies
We investigate the electromagnetic response of asymmetric broadside coupled
split ring resonators (ABC-SRRs) as a function of the relative in-plane
displacement between the two component SRRs. The asymmetry is defined as the
difference in the capacitive gap widths (\Delta g) between the two resonators
comprising a coupled unit. We characterize the response of ABC-SRRs both
numerically and experimentally via terahertz time-domain spectroscopy. As with
symmetric BC-SRRs (\Delta g=0 \mu m), a large redshift in the LC resonance is
observed with increasing displacement, resulting from changes in the capacitive
and inductive coupling. However, for ABC-SRRs, in-plane shifting between the
two resonators by more than 0.375Lo (Lo=SRR sidelength) results in a transition
to a response with two resonant modes, associated with decoupling in the
ABC-SRRs. For increasing \Delta g, the decoupling transition begins at the same
relative shift (0.375Lo), though with an increase in the oscillator strength of
the new mode. This strongly contrasts with symmetric BC-SRRs which present only
one resonance for shifts up to 0.75Lo. Since all BC-SRRs are effectively
asymmetric when placed on a substrate, an understanding of ABC-SRR behavior is
essential for a complete understanding of BC-SRR based metamaterials
Skh1, the MEK component of the mkh1 signaling pathway in Schizosaccharomyces pombe
Skip to Next Section We previously reported the identification of Mkh1, a MEK kinase in Schizosaccharomyces pombe that is required for cell wall integrity, and we presented genetic evidence that Pmk1/Spm1, a MAP kinase, functions downstream from Mkh1 in the same pathway. Here, we report the identification of Skh1, a MEK (MAP kinase kinase) in S. pombe. The sequence of Skh1 is nearly identical to that of the recently reported Pek1 sequence. We present biochemical and genetic evidence that Skh1 is the MEK component of the Mkh1-Spm1 MAP kinase cascade. Our yeast two-hybrid results indicate that Mkh1, Skh1, and Spm1 physically interact to form a ternary complex. Deletion of mkh1, skh1 or spm1 results in identical phenotypes, including sensitivity to (beta)-glucanase treatment, growth inhibition on media containing KCl, and filamentous growth on medium containing caffeine. Double mutant strains exhibit phenotypes that are identical to the single mutant strains. Furthermore, expression of an activated HA-Skh1(DD)protein suppressed these defects in mkh1(delta) cells, and overexpression of Spm1 suppressed these defects in skh1(delta) cells. We also show that HA-Spm1 is hyper-phosphorylated on tyrosine residues in cells co-expressing the activated HA-Skh1(DD) protein. Furthermore, we found the phosphorylated/activated form of GFP-HA-Spm1 at detectable levels in wild-type cells, but not at appreciable levels in mkh1(delta) or skh1(delta) cells expressing this fusion protein. Together, our results indicate that Mkh1, Skh1 and Spm1 constitute a MAPK cascade in fission yeast
Quantifying methane and nitrous oxide emissions from the UK and Ireland using a national-scale monitoring network
The UK is one of several countries around the world that has enacted legislation to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions. In this study, we present top-down emissions of methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) for the UK and Ireland over the period August 2012 to August 2014. These emissions were inferred using measurements from a network of four sites around the two countries. We used a hierarchical Bayesian inverse framework to infer fluxes as well as a set of covariance parameters that describe uncertainties in the system. We inferred average UK total emissions of 2.09 (1.65â2.67) Tg yrâ1 CH4 and 0.101 (0.068â0.150) Tg yrâ1 N2O and found our derived UK estimates to be generally lower than the a priori emissions, which consisted primarily of anthropogenic sources and with a smaller contribution from natural sources. We used sectoral distributions from the UK National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory (NAEI) to determine whether these discrepancies can be attributed to specific source sectors. Because of the distinct distributions of the two dominant CH4 emissions sectors in the UK, agriculture and waste, we found that the inventory may be overestimated in agricultural CH4 emissions. We found that annual mean N2O emissions were consistent with both the prior and the anthropogenic inventory but we derived a significant seasonal cycle in emissions. This seasonality is likely due to seasonality in fertilizer application and in environmental drivers such as temperature and rainfall, which are not reflected in the annual resolution inventory. Through the hierarchical Bayesian inverse framework, we quantified uncertainty covariance parameters and emphasized their importance for high-resolution emissions estimation. We inferred average model errors of approximately 20 and 0.4 ppb and correlation timescales of 1.0 (0.72â1.43) and 2.6 (1.9â20 3.9) days for CH4 and N2O, respectively. These errors are a combination of transport model errors as well as errors due to unresolved emissions processes in the inventory. We found the largest CH4 errors at the Tacolneston station in eastern England, which may be due to sporadic emissions from landfills and offshore gas in the North Sea
The oxidative costs of reproduction are group-size dependent in a wild cooperative breeder.
Life-history theory assumes that reproduction entails a cost, and research on cooperatively breeding societies suggests that the cooperative sharing of workloads can reduce this cost. However, the physiological mechanisms that underpin both the costs of reproduction and the benefits of cooperation remain poorly understood. It has been hypothesized that reproductive costs may arise in part from oxidative stress, as reproductive investment may elevate exposure to reactive oxygen species, compromising survival and future reproduction and accelerating senescence. However, experimental evidence of oxidative costs of reproduction in the wild remains scarce. Here, we use a clutch-removal experiment to investigate the oxidative costs of reproduction in a wild cooperatively breeding bird, the white-browed sparrow weaver, Plocepasser mahali. Our results reveal costs of reproduction that are dependent on group size: relative to individuals in groups whose eggs were experimentally removed, individuals in groups that raised offspring experienced an associated cost (elevated oxidative damage and reduced body mass), but only if they were in small groups containing fewer or no helpers. Furthermore, during nestling provisioning, individuals that provisioned at higher rates showed greater within-individual declines in body mass and antioxidant protection. Our results provide rare experimental evidence that reproduction can negatively impact both oxidative status and body mass in the wild, and suggest that these costs can be mitigated in cooperative societies by the presence of additional helpers. These findings have implications for our understanding of the energetic and oxidative costs of reproduction, and the benefits of cooperation in animal societies.This study was funded by a BBSRC David Phillips Fellowship and a Royal Society Research Grant to A.J.Y. and an NERC studentship to D.L.C. J.D.B. was supported by a Royal Society University Research Fellowship.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Royal Society Publishing via http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.203
Evaluating aryl esters as bench-stable C(1)-ammonium enolate precursors in catalytic, enantioselective Michael addition-lactonisations
We thank the European Research Council under the European Unionâs Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) ERC Grant Agreement no. 279850 (CMY, JET). ADS thanks the Royal Society for a Wolfson Merit Award. We also thank the EPSRC UK National Mass Spectrometry Facility at Swansea University. The data underpinning this research can be found at DOI: https://doi.org/10.17630/cb133261-b58e-4d72-b380-c877c993dc5dAn evaluation of a range of aryl, alkyl and vinyl esters as prospective C(1)-ammonium enolate precursors in enantioselective Michael addition-lactonisation processes with (E)-trifluoromethylenones using isothiourea catalysis is reported. Electron deficient aryl esters are required for reactivity, with 2,4,6-trichlorophenyl esters providing optimal product yields. Catalyst screening showed that tetramisole was the most effective isothiourea catalyst, giving the desired dihydropyranone product in excellent yield and stereoselectivity (up to 90:10 dr and 98:2 er). The scope and limitations of this process have been evaluated, with a range of diester products being generated after ring-opening with MeOH to give stereodefined dihydropyranones with excellent stereocontrol (10 examples, typically ~90:10 dr and >95:5 er).PostprintPeer reviewe
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