16,512 research outputs found

    Origins of neotropical leafy Hepaticae

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    The neotropical hepatic flora, predominantly constituted by members of the Jungermanniales and Metzgeriales, includes a disproportionate number of genera which are endemic (over 38) and a number which evidently originated here but have shown slight and in a geological sense, modern dispersal by solitary species. Endemism is confined almost to the Jungermanniales; it is to a large degree of a unique sort: confined to highly apomorphic derivatives, often extremely reduced, sometimes confervoid or thalloid (aside from 'normal' sexual branches). These endemics are derivatives of basically cool-Gondwanalandic suborders, chiefly Lepidoziineae and Cephaloziineae which, in the Antipodes today include a wide range of plesiomorphic taxa. The highest proportion of endemic genera, often stenotypic (1-3 species each) occurs in the upper montane zone: from upper Andean forest to páramo, to the edge of permanent snow and ice; a smaller number occurs at upper elevations of the Guyana Shield, but more occur in the riverine systems that dissect this shield. The taxa found there (i.a., Zoopsidella, Pteropsiella, Schusterolejeunea, Cephalantholejeunea) are among the most apomorphic of all hepatics. The amount of endemism is shown to be higher than in any comparable region of the globe. It is assumed that this is owing to: (a) isolation, exceeding 40 m.y. and probably exceeding 60 m.y.; (b) continuous tectonic activity, preserving the 'raw' and 'pioneer' habitats which are necessary for the survival of 'fugitive', 'shuttle' and other types of pioneer taxa; (c) the antiquity of the Guyana Shield and its riverine system; (d) creation of striking ecological gradients, many biotic islands; (e) fluctuation in extent and degree of isolation of these 'islands', leading to (f) rapid evolution due to genetic drift and perhaps enhanced selection pressures. It is concluded that part of the complexity of the flora is due to preservation of some elements on the old Guyana Shield but most is due to relatively rapid evolution during Tertiary times. A final contributing element has been the fact that movement of the South American plate has been primarily from east to west, so that the relevant land area has not been rafted into regions with very different climatic parameters: the degree of extinction seen in, e.g., India and Australia is not evident here. It is concluded that the amount of endemism seen, and its extreme kinds, 'need' in excess of the 40-60 m.y. time span which seems available. In particular, the large number of high elevation endemics, some (such as Ruizanthus) very isolated, cannot be satisfactorily explained by assuming their evolution in the few million years available since alpine regions were created by the rise of the Andes. It is almost necessary to conclude that limited 'pre-Andes' must have existed and that the ancestors of the isolated taxa seen today in alpine loci in Colombia and Venezuela originated elsewhere. The other side of the outlined scenario is that with the near-total isolation of tropical America until the Andes were elevated, and until the Pliocene connection to North America arose, one would expect to see few and scattered intruders from cool-Gondwanalandic areas and from Laurasia. The modern flora reflects exactly this

    Antenna beam-shaping apparatus Patent

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    Device for improving efficiency of parabolic horn antenna system for linearly polarized signal

    Method of improving contact bonds in silicon integrated circuits

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    Fabrication method produces stable and reliable metallic systems for interconnections, contact pads, and bonded leads in silicon planar integrated circuits. The method is based on substrate isolation of the interconnection metal from the contact pad and bonded wire

    Parabolic reflector horn feed with spillover correction Patent

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    Device for improving efficiency of parabolic reflector horn for linearly or circularly polarized wave

    Insertion loss measuring apparatus having transformer means connected across a pair of bolometers Patent

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    High impedance alternating current sensing transformer device between two bolometers for measuring insertion loss of test componen

    XPS characterization of silver electrodes and catalyst for oxygen reduction

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    The combined analysis of the silver GDE using an ex-situ surface sensitive technique (XPS) and in-situ electrochemical measurements (EIS, CV) show that the performance of the silver GDE is significantly influenced by the degree of degradation of the electrodes, e. g., the reduction of the active surface due to the decomposition of the PTFE. These findings indicate a different degree of decomposition of the PTFE on the on the GDE

    Host-Parasite Co-evolution and Optimal Mutation Rates for Semi-conservative Quasispecies

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    In this paper, we extend a model of host-parasite co-evolution to incorporate the semi-conservative nature of DNA replication for both the host and the parasite. We find that the optimal mutation rate for the semi-conservative and conservative hosts converge for realistic genome lengths, thus maintaining the admirable agreement between theory and experiment found previously for the conservative model and justifying the conservative approximation in some cases. We demonstrate that, while the optimal mutation rate for a conservative and semi-conservative parasite interacting with a given immune system is similar to that of a conservative parasite, the properties away from this optimum differ significantly. We suspect that this difference, coupled with the requirement that a parasite optimize survival in a range of viable hosts, may help explain why semi-conservative viruses are known to have significantly lower mutation rates than their conservative counterparts

    Pinning control of spatiotemporal chaos

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    Linear control theory is used to develop an improved localized control scheme for spatially extended chaotic systems, which is applied to a coupled map lattice as an example. The optimal arrangement of the control sites is shown to depend on the symmetry properties of the system, while their minimal density depends on the strength of noise in the system. The method is shown to work in any region of parameter space and requires a significantly smaller number of controllers compared to the method proposed earlier by Hu and Qu [Phys. Rev. Lett. 72, 68 (1994)]. A nonlinear generalization of the method for a 1D lattice is also presented
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