107 research outputs found

    An Experimental Test of a Causal Link between Problem-Solving Performance and Reproductive Success in Wild Great Tits

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    This work was supported by a NSERC grant to A.B., a PICS grant from the CNRS (INEE, n° 31520) to B.D., a PhD writing up grant from the FESP (UdM) and a scholarship from the Biological Sciences Department (UdM) to LC and a mobility grant ERASMUS to M.L. We are also grateful to the ABS, the BOU, the BES, the Frank M. Chapman from AMNH and the Fred Cooke from the SCO for awards and research grants attributed to L.C.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Prospectives

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    Tiré de: Prospectives, vol. 4, no 1 (février 1968)Titre de l'écran-titre (visionné le 24 janv. 2013)Bibliogr

    Prospectives

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    Tiré de: Prospectives, vol. 4, no 4 (sept. 1968)Titre de l'écran-titre (visionné le 24 janv. 2013

    Prospectives

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    Tiré de: Prospectives, vol. 10, no 1, février 1974Titre de l'écran-titre (visionné le 24 janv. 2013

    Prospectives

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    Tiré de: Prospectives, vol. 9, no 2, avril 1973Titre de l'écran-titre (visionné le 24 janv. 2013

    Full Load Efficiency Estimation of Refurbished Induction Machines From No-Load Testing

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    The efficient operation of induction machines and methods to estimate their working efficiency have received increased attention in recent years due to the growing awareness of the demand side energy management programs. Various techniques have been proposed for efficiency estimation with different requirements. Numerous works have also been published in the literature about estimating the efficiency of a machine in situ, under the loaded condition without disturbing its operation. However, very little has been done on estimation of the efficiency of the machines after the refurbishment process in the workshops, which in fact can affect numerous machines in the industry. In this paper, a method is proposed for this purpose, which requires only the no-load test. The proposed method is validated by experimental results with seven different induction machines

    Optimization of temporal versus spatial replication in the development of habitat use models to explain among-reach variations of fish density estimates in rivers

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    Abstract: We evaluated the effects of temporal variation of fish density estimates on the explanatory power of habitat use models. Fish density estimates were obtained using visual surveys (10 visits) in eighteen 100 m reaches over a 7-week period. Physical attributes of reaches were estimated. Field data were used to develop a simulation domain (10 000 reaches) that reflected the spatio-temporal variability of fish density estimates and physical attributes. Simulations indicated that for a sampling effort of approximately 200 surveys, the number of reaches surveyed (25 to 200) and the number of surveys per reach (1 to 8) affected the adjusted R 2 of models by 5% to 42%. The established practice of sampling a maximized number of reaches once did not appear necessarily optimal for developing habitat use models. Analysis of temporal coefficients of variation suggests that species within the same family may require a similar survey design. Hence, for salmonids, it may be more appropriate to sample more reaches once, and for cyprinids, it may be more optimal to repeatedly sample fewer reaches

    Absorption and metabolism of conjugated α-linolenic acid given as free fatty acids or triacylglycerols in rats

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    Background: Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) is a group of polyunsaturated fatty acids which have been extensively studied in the past two decades. However, conjugated octadecatrienoic acid such as cis-9,trans-11,cis-15 and cis-9,trans-13,cis-15, recently identified, have not been extensively investigated. This work presents bioavailability and tissue incorporation of a mixture of conjugated octadecatrienoic (CLnA) acids ingested as free fatty acids (FFA) and triacylglycerols (TAG). Results: Male Wistar rats were fed rumenic acid (RA: cis-9,trans-11 18:2) and a CLnA mixture (cis9,trans-11,cis-15 18:3 and cis-9,trans-13,cis-15 18:3) as FFA and TAG for 8 days. RA and CLnA were both totally absorbed when given as FFA as well as TAG. Both isomers of CLnA as FFA or TAG were incorporated into neutral lipids. Metabolites up to 22:6 conjugated isomers were present in liver and plasma phospholipids of rats fed the CLnA diets. Conclusion: Finally, CLnA are as well absorbed as RA in vivo and their incorporation into tissues and bioconversion are similar when ingested as FFA or as TAG

    Transcriptome, Methylome and Genomic Variations Analysis of Ectopic Thyroid Glands

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    Congenital hypothyroidism from thyroid dysgenesis (CHTD) is predominantly a sporadic disease characterized by defects in the differentiation, migration or growth of thyroid tissue. Of these defects, incomplete migration resulting in ectopic thyroid tissue is the most common (up to 80%). Germinal mutations in the thyroid-related transcription factors NKX2.1, FOXE1, PAX-8, and NKX2.5 have been identified in only 3% of patients with sporadic CHTD. Moreover, a survey of monozygotic twins yielded a discordance rate of 92%, suggesting that somatic events, genetic or epigenetic, probably play an important role in the etiology of CHTD.Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tValidation StudiesSCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Identifying cost-competitive greenhouse gas mitigation potential of French agriculture

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    The agriculture, forestry and other land use sector are responsible for 24% (10–12 Pg CO2e per year) of anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions worldwide, with concomitant opportunities for mitigation. A scientific panel used deliberative methods to identify ten technical measures comprising 26 sub-measures to reduce GHG emissions from agriculture in France. Their abatement potential and cost are compared. The proposed measures concern nitrogen (N) management, management practices that increase carbon stocks in soils and biomass, livestock diets, and energy production and consumption on farms. Results show that the total abatement potential can be divided into three parts. One third of the cumulated abatement potential corresponds to sub-measures that can be implemented at a negative technical cost. These sub-measures focus on increased efficiency in input use including N fertilisers, animal feed and energy. The second third are sub-measures with moderate cost (€25 per metric Mg of avoided CO2e). These require investment with no direct financial return, the purchase of particular inputs, dedicated labour time or involve production losses. Assuming additivity, the cumulated abatement is 32.3 Tg CO2e per year in 2030, but only 10 Tg (i.e. 10% of current agricultural emissions) when calculated under current inventory rules. This study confirms that a significant abatement potential exists in the agricultural sector, with two thirds of this potential at low or even negative cost. This is likely to be an underestimated as it is based on a status quo of the current agricultural system. Results also emphasise the need to upgrade inventory rules so that efforts to reduce emissions can be accounted for
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