785 research outputs found

    Application of ERTS-1 imagery and underflight photography in the detection and monitoring of forest insect infections in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California

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    The author has identified the following significant results. Analysis of ERTS-1 imagery with underflight aerial photo support including U-2, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California, indicates promising possibilities of detecting and monitoring forest insect outbreaks visually with some mechanical support utilizing the VP-8 image analyzer. Visually, it is possible at a scale of 1:1,000,000 to discriminate between large areas of damaged and undamaged forests; timbered and non-timbered areas; pasture land and cultivated fields; desert and riparian vegetation. At a scale of 1:80,000 it is possible to distinguish among three classes of tree mortality; defoliated and undefoliated areas; non-host mixed conifers; and mountain meadows, rock domes, lakes and glaciers. Machine tests showed significant differences in image densities among various bands and mortality areas

    The use of multispectral sensing techniques to detect ponderosa pine trees under stress from insect or pathogenic organisms

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    Application of multispectral sensors to detect insect and disease infestation of ponderosa pine tree

    Seasonal and daily patterns of the mating calls of the oyster toadfish, Opsanus tau.

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    Author Posting. © University of Chicago Press, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of [publisher] for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Van Wert, J. C., & Mensinger, A. F. Seasonal and daily patterns of the mating calls of the oyster toadfish, Opsanus tau. Biological Bulletin, 236(2), (2019):97-107, doi:10.1086/701754.Acoustic communication is vital across many taxa for mating behavior, defense, and social interactions. Male oyster toadfish, Opsanus tau, produce courtship calls, or “boatwhistles,” characterized by an initial broadband segment (30–50 ms) and a longer tone-like second part (200–650 ms) during mating season. Male calls were monitored continuously with an in situ SoundTrap hydrophone that was deployed in Eel Pond, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, during the 2015 mating season. At least 10 vocalizing males were positively identified by their unique acoustic signatures. This resident population was tracked throughout the season, with several individuals tracked for extended periods of time (72 hours). Toadfish began calling in mid-May when water temperature reached 14.6 °C with these early-season “precursor” boatwhistles that were shorter in duration and contained less distinct tonal segments compared to calls later in the season. The resident toadfish stopped calling in mid-August, when water temperature was about 25.5 °C. The pulse repetition rate of the tonal part of the call was significantly related to ambient water temperature during both short-term (hourly) and long-term (weekly) monitoring. This was the first study to monitor individuals in the same population of oyster toadfish in situ continuously throughout the mating season.We thank Emily Cardinal for help with data collection and initial hydrophone setup, the Marine Resources Center at Marine Biological Laboratory for dock space and resources, John Atkins for SoundTrap hydrophone support, and Beth Giuffrida for analysis support. Rosalyn Putland and Jenni Stanley are gratefully acknowledged for coding assistance. We also thank UCSBPSTAT for statistics guidance.We are also grateful to the three anonymous reviewers and the editor for their comments. This study was made possible by National Science Foundation grants IOS 1354745 and DBI 1359230.2020-02-0

    Applications of Transmission Electron Microscopy to Coal

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    Coal consists of a hydrocarbon matrix in which minerals are embedded. The hydrocarbon matter also contains impurities distributed as individual atoms. Thus, coal has phases similar to those in metallic or ceramic alloy systems; a matrix, included precipitates and atoms distributed individually in solid solution. Consequently, techniques of electron microscopy developed to examine metallic and ceramic alloy systems are directly applicable to coal. We report application of microanalytical techniques of electron microscopy to coal using examples of measurements for several coals. Identification and characterization of clays and sulfides is described. Use of x-ray emission spectroscopy for organic element measurement is emphasized

    Lateral line sensitivity in free-swimming toadfish Opsanus tau

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    Author Posting. © The Company of Biologists, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Company of Biologists for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Experimental Biology 222(2) (2019): jeb190587, doi:10.1242/jeb.190587.A longstanding question in aquatic animal sensory physiology is the impact of self-generated movement on lateral line sensitivity. One hypothesis is that efferent modulation of the sensory hair cells cancels self-generated noise and allows fish to sample their surroundings while swimming. In this study, microwire electrodes were chronically implanted into the anterior lateral line nerve of oyster toadfish and neural activity was monitored during forward movement. Fish were allowed to freely swim or were moved by a tethered sled. In all cases, neural activity increased during movement with no evidence of efferent modulation. The anterior lateral line of moving fish responded to a vibrating sphere or the tail oscillations of a robotic fish, indicating that the lateral line also remains sensitive to outside stimulus during self-generated movement. The results suggest that during normal swim speeds, lateral line neuromasts are not saturated and retain the ability to detect external stimuli without efferent modulation.Funding was provided by National Science Foundation grants IOS 1354745 and DBI 1359230 and 1659604.2020-01-2

    Combination of DROOL rules and Protégé knowledge bases in the ONTO-H annotation tool

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    ONTO-H is a semi-automatic collaborative tool for the semantic annotation of documents, built as a Protégé 3.0 tab plug-in. Among its multiple functionalities aimed at easing the document annotation process, ONTO-H uses a rule-based system to create cascading annotations out from a single drag and drop operation from a part of a document into an already existing concept or instance of the domain ontology being used for annotation. It also gives support to the detection of name conflicts and instance duplications in the creation of the annotations. The rule system runs on top of the open source rule engine DROOLS and is connected to the domain ontology used for annotation by means of an ad-hoc programmed Java proxy

    Usefulness of the Lang Stereotest with an infant population

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    Sixty-four healthy full term infants between 6 and 24 months of age were tested using the Lang Stereotest. A full vision examination including visual acuity assessment using the Teller acuity card preferential looking procedure, near point of convergence, Worth test for eccentric fixation, Hirschberg test, and monocular estimate method to measure accommodative posture was performed. Ocular health was also assessed to rule out pathology. Results showed that 90% of the 6.0 to 12.0 month age group, 100% of both the 12.0 to 18.0 and 18.0 to 24.0 month age groups were able to respond positively to at least one stereo image on the Lang Stereotest. Performance showed improvement with age

    Photochemistry in the arctic free troposphere: Ozone budget and its dependence on nitrogen oxides and the production rate of free radicals

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    Abstract. Local ozone production and loss rates for the arctic free troposphere (58–85 ◦ N, 1–6 km, February–May) during the Tropospheric Ozone Production about the Spring Equinox (TOPSE) campaign were calculated using a constrained photochemical box model. Estimates were made to assess the importance of local photochemical ozone production relative to transport in accounting for the springtime maximum in arctic free tropospheric ozone. Ozone production and loss rates from our diel steady-state box model constrained by median observations were first compared to two point box models, one run to instantaneous steady-state and the other run to diel steady-state. A consistent picture of local ozone photochemistry was derived by all three box models suggesting that differences between the approaches were not critical. Our model-derived ozone production rates increased by a factor of 28 in the 1–3 km layer and a factor of 7 in the 3–6 km layer between February and May. The arctic ozone budget required net import of ozone into the arctic free troposphere throughout the campaign; however, the transport term exceeded the photochemical production only in the lower free troposphere (1–3 km) between February and March. Gross ozone production rates were calculated to increase linearly with NOx mixing ratios up to ∼300 pptv in February and for NOx mixing ratio
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