249 research outputs found

    Alquimia poética na Casa de Galicia

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    Sin resume

    Terrorismo de género en los medios de comunicación: la imagen de la violencia frente a la violencia de la imagen

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    Actas del Primer Congreso Internacional sobre Imagen, Cultura y Tecnología celebrado del 3 al 5 de septiembre de 2008 en la Universidad Carlos III de Madri

    Reforço e reabilitação de vigas de madeira por pré-esforço com laminados FRP

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    Tese de mestrado. Reabilitação do património Edificado. Faculdade de Engenharia. Universidade do Porto, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia. Universidade Nova de Lisboa. 200

    Conclusiones y perspectivas futuras: bases para el control

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    Este libro ha sido financiado por la Acción Complementaria AC2014-00004-00-00 del Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), dentro del Plan Nacional de Investigación Científica, Desarrollo e Innovación 2013-2016, por el Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) y por el Ayuntamiento de Gijón, a través de Divertia. También ha contado con la colaboración de Zerep Carbónicas y Aguas S.A.Peer reviewe

    Diagnosis of tuberculosis in wildlife: a systematic review

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    [EN] Animal tuberculosis (TB) is a multi-host disease caused by members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC). Due to its impact on economy, sanitary standards of milk and meat industry, public health and conservation, TB control is an actively ongoing research subject. Several wildlife species are involved in the maintenance and transmission of TB, so that new approaches to wildlife TB diagnosis have gained relevance in recent years. Diagnosis is a paramount step for screening, epidemiological investigation, as well as for ensuring the success of control strategies such as vaccination trials. This is the first review that systematically addresses data available for the diagnosis of TB in wildlife following the Preferred Reporting Items of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. The article also gives an overview of the factors related to host, environment, sampling, and diagnostic techniques which can affect test performance. After three screenings, 124 articles were considered for systematic review. Literature indicates that post-mortem examination and culture are useful methods for disease surveillance, but immunological diagnostic tests based on cellular and humoral immune response detection are gaining importance in wildlife TB diagnosis. Among them, serological tests are especially useful in wildlife because they are relatively inexpensive and easy to perform, facilitate large-scale surveillance and can be used both ante- and post-mortem. Currently available studies assessed test performance mostly in cervids, European badgers, wild suids and wild bovids. Research to improve diagnostic tests for wildlife TB diagnosis is still needed in order to reach accurate, rapid and cost-effective diagnostic techniques adequate to a broad range of target species and consistent over space and time to allow proper disease monitoring.SIThis work has been funded by project MYCOTRAINING SBPLY/19/180501/000174 (Junta de Castilla-La Mancha), Agencia Estatal de Investigación grant WildDriver CGL2017-89866 (MINECO, Spain and EU FEDER), project RTI2018-096010-B-C21 (MCIU and AEI; FEDER co-funded), and PCTI 2018–2020 (GRUPIN: IDI2018-000237) (Gobierno del Principado de Asturias and FEDER). J. Thomas was supported by a grant from the Indian Council of Agricultural Research-International Fellowship 2014–2015 (ICAR-IF 2014–2015)

    Wolves contribute to disease control in a multi-host system

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    We combine model results with field data for a system of wolves (Canis lupus) that prey on wild boar (Sus scrofa), a wildlife reservoir of tuberculosis, to examine how predation may contribute to disease control in multi-host systems. Results show that predation can lead to a marked reduction in the prevalence of infection without leading to a reduction in host population density since mortality due to predation can be compensated by a reduction in disease induced mortality. A key finding therefore is that a population that harbours a virulent infection can be regulated at a similar density by disease at high prevalence or by predation at low prevalence. Predators may therefore provide a key ecosystem service which should be recognised when considering human-carnivore conflicts and the conservation and re-establishment of carnivore populations

    The genome sequence of the emerging common midwife toad virus identifies an evolutionary intermediate within ranaviruses

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    Worldwide amphibian population declines have been ascribed to global warming, increasing pollution levels, and other factors directly related to human activities. These factors may additionally be favoring the emergence of novel pathogens. In this report, we have determined the complete genome sequence of the emerging common midwife toad ranavirus (CMTV), which has caused fatal disease in several amphibian species across Europe. Phylogenetic and gene content analyses of the first complete genomic sequence from a ranavirus isolated in Europe show that CMTV is an amphibian-like ranavirus (ALRV). However, the CMTV genome structure is novel and represents an intermediate evolutionary stage between the two previously described ALRV groups. We find that CMTV clusters with several other ranaviruses isolated from different hosts and locations which might also be included in this novel ranavirus group. This work sheds light on the phylogenetic relationships within this complex group of emerging, disease-causing viruses. © 2012, American Society for Microbiology.Peer Reviewe
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