8,111 research outputs found
The time course of corticosterone responses in kororā (little penguin, Eudyptula minor) : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Master of Science in Zoology at Massey University
When birds and other vertebrates perceive a situation to be threatening the hypothalamopituitary-
adrenal (HPA) axis is activated and glucocorticoid hormones are secreted from the
adrenal gland. Activation of the HPA axis in response to a stimulus perceived to be
threatening is called a stress response. The main glucocorticoid hormone in birds is
corticosterone. Corticosterone responses of birds are typically measured by the collection of
an initial blood sample when a bird is captured or picked up, then the collection of further
blood samples until 30 to 60 minutes has elapsed, at which time the bird is released. Whilst
this standard sampling protocol provides information on the size of the corticosterone
response, it does not provide any indication of how long it takes for corticosterone
concentrations to return to initial values. The main objective of this thesis was to characterise
the total duration of the corticosterone response of free-living kororā (little penguins,
Eudyptula minor).
Little penguins at Oamaru were picked up from their nestboxes and initial blood samples
collected. Birds were handled and then restrained by being placed in a box. Further blood
samples were collected 15, 30 and 60 min after the birds were first picked up. Birds were
then returned to their nest boxes and an additional blood sample collected 15, 30, 60, 120,
240, or 360 min later. Mean corticosterone concentrations declined to initial values two
hours after birds were returned to nest boxes. The rates at which corticosterone
concentrations increased when a stressor was present and then decreased when the stressor
was no longer present were positively correlated. Seasonal changes in corticosterone
responses in little penguins were also investigated in this study. Mean corticosterone
responses were similar in winter and in the pre-laying period, whereas mean responses were
lower in birds during early chick rearing. Corticosterone responses during the pre-laying
period were greater in male than female little penguins. The current study is the first to
document the complete corticosterone responses of free-living penguins and provides
information about changes of corticosterone concentrations after a stressor is removed from
the free-living individuals. It is also the first to reveal that free-living penguins with relatively
high corticosterone responses to a stressor had relatively high rates of corticosterone decline
Control of a lane-drop bottleneck through variable speed limits
In this study, we formulate the VSL control problem for the traffic system in
a zone upstream to a lane-drop bottleneck based on two traffic flow models: the
Lighthill-Whitham-Richards (LWR) model, which is an infinite-dimensional
partial differential equation, and the link queue model, which is a
finite-dimensional ordinary differential equation. In both models, the
discharging flow-rate is determined by a recently developed model of capacity
drop, and the upstream in-flux is regulated by the speed limit in the VSL zone.
Since the link queue model approximates the LWR model and is much simpler, we
first analyze the control problem and develop effective VSL strategies based on
the former. First for an open-loop control system with a constant speed limit,
we prove that a constant speed limit can introduce an uncongested equilibrium
state, in addition to a congested one with capacity drop, but the congested
equilibrium state is always exponentially stable. Then we apply a feedback
proportional-integral (PI) controller to form a closed-loop control system, in
which the congested equilibrium state and, therefore, capacity drop can be
removed by the I-controller. Both analytical and numerical results show that,
with appropriately chosen controller parameters, the closed-loop control system
is stable, effect, and robust. Finally, we show that the VSL strategies based
on I- and PI-controllers are also stable, effective, and robust for the LWR
model. Since the properties of the control system are transferable between the
two models, we establish a dual approach for studying the control problems of
nonlinear traffic flow systems. We also confirm that the VSL strategy is
effective only if capacity drop occurs. The obtained method and insights can be
useful for future studies on other traffic control methods and implementations
of VSL strategies.Comment: 31 pages, 14 figure
Resonance Identities for Closed Characteristics on Compact Star-shaped Hypersurfaces in
Resonance relations among periodic orbits on given energy hypersurfaces are
very important for getting deeper understanding of the dynamics of the
corresponding Hamiltonian systems. In this paper, we establish two new
resonance identities for closed characteristics on every compact star-shaped
hypersurface in when the number of geometrically
distinct closed characteristics on is finite, which extend those
identities established by C. Viterbo in 1989 for star-shaped hypersurfaces
assuming in addition that all the closed characteristics and their iterates are
non-degenerate, and that by W. Wang, X. Hu and Y. Long in 2007 for strictly
convex hypersurfaces in .Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:math/0701608.
To appear in Journal of Functional Analysis, this is the final versio
The existence of two non-contractible closed geodesics on every bumpy Finsler compact space form
Let and be a nontrivial element of finite order in
, where the integer , is a finite group which acts
freely and isometrically on the -sphere and therefore is diffeomorphic
to a compact space form. In this paper, we establish first the resonance
identity for non-contractible homologically visible minimal closed geodesics of
the class on every Finsler compact space form when there exist
only finitely many distinct non-contractible closed geodesics of the class
on . Then as an application of this resonance identity, we prove
the existence of at least two distinct non-contractible closed geodesics of the
class on with a bumpy Finsler metric, which improves a result of
Taimanov in [Taimanov 2016] by removing some additional conditions. Also our
results extend the resonance identity and multiplicity results on
in [arXiv:1607.02746] to general compact space forms.Comment: 33 pages, All comments are welcome. arXiv admin note: substantial
text overlap with arXiv:1607.0274
Collective modes of a harmonically trapped one-dimensional Bose gas: the effects of finite particle number and nonzero temperature
Following the idea of the density functional approach, we develop a
generalized Bogoliubov theory of an interacting Bose gas confined in a
one-dimensional harmonic trap, by using a local chemical potential - calculated
with the Lieb-Liniger exact solution - as the exchange energy. At zero
temperature, we use the theory to describe collective modes of a
finite-particle system in all interaction regimes from the ideal gas limit, to
the mean-field Thomas-Fermi regime, and to the strongly interacting
Tonks-Girardeau regime. At finite temperature, we investigate the temperature
dependence of collective modes in the weak-coupling regime by means of a
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov theory with Popov approximation. By emphasizing the
effects of finite particle number and nonzero temperature on collective mode
frequencies, we make comparisons of our results with the recent experimental
measurement [E. Haller et al., Science 325, 1224 (2009)] and some previous
theoretical predictions. We show that the experimental data are still not fully
explained within current theoretical framework.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
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