198 research outputs found
VIDEO SURVEILLANCE OF NESTING WHOOPING CRANES
The primary objective of the whooping crane (Grus americana) recovery plan is to establish and maintain 3 selfsustaining wild populations, 1 being a non-migratory Florida population. From 1993 to 2005, we released 289 captive cranes in central Florida, with 31 surviving as of 1 June 2008. From 1995 to 2008 we monitored 68 nests of the Florida population; from those, only 32 chicks hatched and 9 fledged. It often was not apparent why nests failed, and it was not practical to conduct labor-intensive observations at nests; therefore, we collected behavioral data using 12-volt VHS video surveillance cameras at 13 nests from 2000 to 2008. We positioned cameras and time-lapse video recorders 200-500 m from each nest. We programmed 1-3 days/tape of recording to occur from 1 hour before sunrise to 1 hour after sunset. Seven of 13 nests were successful in hatching chicks, while the remainder failed during the incubation period. Relevant events recorded on the videotapes included: incubation durations, frequency of adults switching off during incubation, frequency of standing and egg turning, duration eggs were not incubated while adults were away, and possible causes of nest failure. Summary statistics relating to these behaviors and also to their possible implications regarding nest survival will be discussed. Video surveillance was a valuable tool for the efficient gathering of behavioral data at whooping crane nests
Reproductive Health of the Florida Flock of Introduced Whooping Cranes
We examined the reproductive parameters of the introduced non-migratory flock of whooping cranes in Florida. Of 289 cranes introduced, 67 males and 65 females survived at least 3 years. The first behavioral pairs appeared in 1995, and eggs were first laid in 1999. In total, eggs were laid in 47 nests, 17 chicks hatched, and 4 young fledged by 2005. Severe drought conditions through 2001 were thought to be the reason for low reproductive nest success. In 2003 nesting conditions improved and 71% of nests with eggs, hatched chicks. During the next 2 years, with continued wet conditions, the proportion of pairs that laid eggs increased, but only 17% of those nests hatched. Embryos could not be seen in most of the decomposed eggs that were examined. In an effort to determine the cause for the low reproductive success of the flock, we examined the effects of behavioral pair formation, mortality, gonad size and histology, age, egg laying, hatching success, egg size, fertility, and egg microbial culture results on nesting success. When compared with the natural wild Aransas/Wood Buffalo flock, the productivity of birds reaching 8 years (100% egg laying, hatching, 60% fledging) was very low. When compared with the originating captive flock, however, evidence of fertility was similar. Productivity did however, increase in the captive flock beyond 8 years of age. At the time of this report, the reproductive birds in the Florida resident flock remain relatively young when compared with the captive flock. Therefore there may be improvement of reproductive success as the Florida flock ages
INTERACTIONS OF SANDHILL CRANES AND WHOOPING CRANES WITH FOREIGN OBJECTS IN FLORIDA
During studies of Florida sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis pralensis), greater sandhill cranes (G. c. tabida), and whooping cranes (G. americana) in Florida, we documented cases where these birds were in contact with human-produced objects that resulted in injury or death. We describe \u3e40 instances in which cranes collided with powerlines or fences, became entangled in string or fishing line, or ingested foreign objects. The effect of human-produced objects on crane populations, particularly small populations, may be significant
Instability of the O(5) multicritical behavior in the SO(5) theory of high-Tc superconductors
We study the nature of the multicritical point in the three-dimensional
O(3)+O(2) symmetric Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson theory, which describes the
competition of two order parameters that are O(3) and O(2) symmetric,
respectively. This study is relevant for the SO(5) theory of high-Tc
superconductors, which predicts the existence of a multicritical point in the
temperature-doping phase diagram, where the antiferromagnetic and
superconducting transition lines meet.
We investigate whether the O(3)+O(2) symmetry gets effectively enlarged to
O(5) approaching the multicritical point. For this purpose, we study the
stability of the O(5) fixed point. By means of a Monte Carlo simulation, we
show that the O(5) fixed point is unstable with respect to the spin-4 quartic
perturbation with the crossover exponent , in substantial
agreement with recent field-theoretical results. This estimate is much larger
than the one-loop -expansion estimate , which has
often been used in the literature to discuss the multicritical behavior within
the SO(5) theory. Therefore, no symmetry enlargement is generically expected at
the multicritical transition.
We also perform a five-loop field-theoretical analysis of the
renormalization-group flow. It shows that bicritical systems are not in the
attraction domain of the stable decoupled fixed point. Thus, in these
systems--high-Tc cuprates should belong to this class--the multicritical point
corresponds to a first-order transition.Comment: 18 page
ASPECTS OF REPRODUCTION AND PAIR BONDS IN FLORIDA SANDHILL CRANES
From 1980-98 we captured and uniquely marked more than 400 Florida sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis prafensis). Age ratios of the marked population, excluding juveniles, was 66% adult and 33% subadult, and the sex ratio was 49% male and 51% female. Average clutch size for 210 nests checked from 1983-97 was 1.78 ± 0.18 (SD) and frequency of l-egg clutches varied among years. Average post-fledging brood size from 1991 to 1997 was 1.27 ± 0.17 (SD), included a 3-chick brood. Average percent ofYOlmg from 2 study areas, 1991-97 was 11.9 ± 3.23 (SD). We observed renesting up to 3 times, even after chicks had been hatched and reared for up to 16 days. Re-pairing following death or divorce was documented and was particularly noteworthy in a female that oscillated between 2 males during 4 years of observation
Relaxational dynamics in 3D randomly diluted Ising models
We study the purely relaxational dynamics (model A) at criticality in
three-dimensional disordered Ising systems whose static critical behaviour
belongs to the randomly diluted Ising universality class. We consider the
site-diluted and bond-diluted Ising models, and the +- J Ising model along the
paramagnetic-ferromagnetic transition line. We perform Monte Carlo simulations
at the critical point using the Metropolis algorithm and study the dynamic
behaviour in equilibrium at various values of the disorder parameter. The
results provide a robust evidence of the existence of a unique model-A dynamic
universality class which describes the relaxational critical dynamics in all
considered models. In particular, the analysis of the size-dependence of
suitably defined autocorrelation times at the critical point provides the
estimate z=2.35(2) for the universal dynamic critical exponent. We also study
the off-equilibrium relaxational dynamics following a quench from T=\infty to
T=T_c. In agreement with the field-theory scenario, the analysis of the
off-equilibrium dynamic critical behavior gives an estimate of z that is
perfectly consistent with the equilibrium estimate z=2.35(2).Comment: 38 page
The control of attentional target selection in a colour/colour conjunction task
To investigate the time course of attentional object selection processes in visual search tasks where targets are defined by a combination of features from the same dimension, we measured the N2pc component as an electrophysiological marker of attentional object selection during colour/colour conjunction search. In Experiment 1, participants searched for targets defined by a combination of two colours, while ignoring distractor objects that matched only one of these colours. Reliable N2pc components were triggered by targets and also by partially matching distractors, even when these distractors were accompanied by a target in the same display. The target N2pc was initially equal in size to the sum of the two N2pc components to the two different types of partially matching distractors, and became superadditive from about 250 ms after search display onset. Experiment 2 demonstrated that the superadditivity of the target N2pc was not due to a selective disengagement of attention from task-irrelevant partially matching distractors. These results indicate that attention was initially deployed separately and in parallel to all target-matching colours, before attentional allocation processes became sensitive to the presence of both matching colours within the same object. They suggest that attention can be controlled simultaneously and independently by multiple features from the same dimension, and that feature-guided attentional selection processes operate in parallel for different target-matching objects in the visual field
Aeolianite and barrier dune construction spanning the last two glacial-interglacial cycles from the southern Cape coast, South Africa
The southern Cape region of South Africa has extensive coastal aeolianites and barrier dunes. Whilst previously reported, limited knowledge of their age has precluded an understanding of their relationship with the climatic and sea-level fluctuations that have taken place during the Late Quaternary. Sedimentological and geomorphological studies combined with an optical dating programme reveal aeolianite development and barrier dune construction spanning at least the last two glacial–interglacial cycles. Aeolianite deposition has occurred on the southern Cape coast at ca 67–80, 88–90, 104–128, 160–189 and >200 ka before the present. Using this and other published data coupled with a better understanding of Late Quaternary sea-level fluctuations and palaeocoastline configurations, it is concluded that these depositional phases appear to be controlled by interglacial and subsequent interstadial sea-level high stands. These marine transgressions and regressions allowed onshore carbonate-rich sediment movement and subsequent aeolian reworking to occur at similar points in the landscape on a number of occasions. The lack of carbonates in more recent dunes (Oxygen Isotope Stages 1/2 and 4/5) is attributed not to leaching but to changes to carbonate production in the sediment source area caused by increased terrigenous material and/or changes in the balance between the warm Agulhas and nutrient-rich Benguela ocean current
Quantum-Statistical Current Correlations in Multi-Lead Chaotic Cavities
Quantum mechanics requires that identical particles are treated as
indistinguishable. This requirement leads to correlations in the fluctuating
properties of a system. Theoretical predictions are made for an experiment on a
multi-lead chaotic quantum dot which can identify exchange effects in
electronic current-current correlations. Interestingly, we find that the
ensemble averaged exchange effects are of the order of the channel number, and
are insensitive to dephasing.Comment: 4 pages REVTEX, including two figure
Extreme sensitivity of the spin-splitting and 0.7 anomaly to confining potential in one-dimensional nanoelectronic devices
Quantum point contacts (QPCs) have shown promise as nanoscale spin-selective
components for spintronic applications and are of fundamental interest in the
study of electron many-body effects such as the 0.7 x 2e^2/h anomaly. We report
on the dependence of the 1D Lande g-factor g* and 0.7 anomaly on electron
density and confinement in QPCs with two different top-gate architectures. We
obtain g* values up to 2.8 for the lowest 1D subband, significantly exceeding
previous in-plane g-factor values in AlGaAs/GaAs QPCs, and approaching that in
InGaAs/InP QPCs. We show that g* is highly sensitive to confinement potential,
particularly for the lowest 1D subband. This suggests careful management of the
QPC's confinement potential may enable the high g* desirable for spintronic
applications without resorting to narrow-gap materials such as InAs or InSb.
The 0.7 anomaly and zero-bias peak are also highly sensitive to confining
potential, explaining the conflicting density dependencies of the 0.7 anomaly
in the literature.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figure
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