1,534 research outputs found
The use of webcams to monitor the prolonged autumn attendance of guillemots on the Isle of May in 2015
Although Guillemots at the southern edge of the range are known to return to the colonies in
autumn, usually only opportunistic observations of this behaviour are available. In the autumn of
2015 we took advantage of the live interactive cameras on the Isle of May, Fife to make systematic
checks of Guillemot colony attendance. Birds were recorded at dawn on 59 consecutive mornings
between 23 October and 20 December after which webcam images ceased due to lack of power on
the island. This prolonged period of attendance covered several periods of stormy weather and
appears unprecedented at this colony. Presumably local feeding conditions must have been
extremely favourable to enable the birds to spend so much time ashore
The status of the gannet in Scotland in 2013-14
All 16 Gannet colonies in Scotland were counted in 2013–14. Combined colony totals indicated
that Scotland currently holds 243,505 apparently occupied sites (58% and 46% of the east
Atlantic and world populations, respectively). Numbers were divided very unevenly between the
colonies with Bass Rock (now the world’s largest colony), St Kilda and Ailsa Craig together holding
70% of the Scottish population. Gannets started to nest on Barra Head, Berneray in 2007 and
breeding may now be regular on Rockall. Numbers at St Kilda, Sule Stack and Scar Rocks were
stable, but all other colonies had increased, some spectacularly. Overall the Scottish population
increased by 33% between 2003–04 and 2013–14 at an average rate of increase of 2.9% per
annum. Although the Gannet appears less vulnerable to climate change than many other UK
seabirds, the proposed construction of major offshore wind farms close to colonies in the North
Sea and the imminent ban on fishery discards, could pose future threats to this species
Gannet surveys in north-west Scotland in 2013
A photographic survey of the Gannet colonies off the north-west coast of Scotland in 2013 found
60,290 Apparently Occupied Sites (AOS) on St Kilda, 11,230 AOS on Sula Sgeir, 5,280 AOS on
the Flannan Islands, 4,550 AOS on Sule Stack and 1,870 AOS on Sule Skerry. Since 2004,
numbers had increased rapidly at Sule Skerry and the Flannan Islands (47.4% per annum (pa)
and 7.5% pa respectively), but had changed little at Sule Stack and St Kilda. The harvested colony
on Sula Sgeir increased by 2.2% pa, reversing the trend over the previous 10 years during which
the population declined at 1.2% pa
Nocturnal colony attendance by common guillemots Uria aalge at colony in Shetland during the pre-breeding season
No abstract available
Nocturnal colony attendance by common guillemots Uria aalge at colony in Shetland during the pre-breeding season
No abstract available
Order induced by dipolar interactions in a geometrically frustrated antiferromagnet
We study the classical Heisenberg model for spins on a pyrochlore lattice
interacting via long range dipole-dipole forces and nearest neighbor exchange.
Antiferromagnetic exchange alone is known not to induce ordering in this
system. We analyze low temperature order resulting from the combined
interactions, both by using a mean-field approach and by examining the energy
cost of fluctuations about an ordered state. We discuss behavior as a function
of the ratio of the dipolar and exchange interaction strengths and find two
types of ordered phase. We relate our results to the recent experimental work
and reproduce and extend the theoretical calculations on the pyrochlore
compound, GdTiO, by Raju \textit{et al.}, Phys. Rev. B {\bf 59},
14489 (1999).Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, AMSLaTe
An aerial survey of gannets on Westray, Orkney, in August 2016
An aerial survey of the Gannet colony on Westray, Orkney, was made for the first time on 16
August 2016 and found 1,560 AOS, contrasting with a land survey made on 30 May 2016, which
found 1,020 AON. The aerial survey photographs show areas of the cliffs that are hidden from
land. This, and the different count units used, are the main reasons for the higher aerial survey
figure. A third population estimate was made by combining breeding productivity figures from an
RSPB monitoring plot with chicks visible in the aerial photographs, which gave a calculated
estimate of 1,306 AON. Whichever population estimate is used, it is clear that the colony is
expanding rapidly. Future land counts will likely underestimate numbers so would best be
combined with an occasional aerial survey to more precisely define colony size
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Dome growth, collapse, and valley fill at Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat, from 1995 to 2013: Contributions from satellite radar measurements of topographic change
Frequent high-resolution measurements of topography at active volcanoes can provide important information for assessing the distribution and rate of emplacement of volcanic deposits and their influence on hazard. At dome-building volcanoes, monitoring techniques such as LiDAR and photogrammetry often provide a limited view of the area affected by the eruption. Here, we show the ability of satellite radar observations to image the lava dome and pyroclastic density current deposits that resulted from 15 years of eruptive activity at Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat, from 1995 to 2010. We present the first geodetic measurements of the complete subaerial deposition field on Montserrat, including the lava dome. Synthetic aperture radar observations from the Advanced Land Observation Satellite (ALOS) and TanDEM-X mission are used to map the distribution and magnitude of elevation changes. We estimate a net dense-rock equivalent volume increase of 108 ± 15M m3 of the lava dome and 300 ± 220M m3 of talus and subaerial pyroclastic density current deposits. We also show variations in deposit distribution during different phases of the eruption, with greatest on-land deposition to the south and west, from 1995 to 2005, and the thickest deposits to the west and north after 2005. We conclude by assessing the potential of using radar-derived topographic measurements as a tool for monitoring and hazard assessment during eruptions at dome-building volcanoes
On the nature of progress
15th International Conference, OPODIS 2011, Toulouse, France, December 13-16, 2011. ProceedingsWe identify a simple relationship that unifies seemingly unrelated progress conditions ranging from the deadlock-free and starvation-free properties common to lock-based systems, to non-blocking conditions such as obstruction-freedom, lock-freedom, and wait-freedom.
Properties can be classified along two dimensions based on the demands they make on the operating system scheduler. A gap in the classification reveals a new non-blocking progress condition, weaker than obstruction-freedom, which we call clash-freedom.
The classification provides an intuitively-appealing explanation why programmers continue to devise data structures that mix both blocking and non-blocking progress conditions. It also explains why the wait-free property is a natural basis for the consensus hierarchy: a theory of shared-memory computation requires an independent progress condition, not one that makes demands of the operating system scheduler
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