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Documentation Related to a 1991 Observation of Sturgeon in the Rio Grande – RÃo Bravo, USA (Texas) and Mexico (Coahuila)
This digital archive provides a compilation of previously unpublished information regarding a 1991 observation of a live sturgeon (Family Acipenseridae) in the Rio Grande-RÃo Bravo of the USA and Mexico. Though a few specimens collected in the 19th century support occurrence of sturgeon in this river basin, lack of credible, recent records has often led to this species not being recognized as part of the basin’s native fish fauna, and certainly not part of its modern fish community.
The second and third authors of this document manage the Fishes of Texas Project (Hendrickson, Dean A., & Cohen, Adam E. (2015). Fishes of Texas Project Database (version 2.0). Texas Advanced Computing Center, University of Texas at Austin. http://doi.org/10.17603/C3WC70) and knew of the unpublished 1991 observation of sturgeon reported here. They requested the content provided here from first author (Platania) who provided what follows below (verbatim as received in April 2018) and permission to archive it for public access.Integrative Biolog
Full Sky Study of Diffuse Galactic Emission at Decimeter Wavelengths
A detailed knowledge of the Galactic radio continuum is of high interest for
studies of the dynamics and structure of the Galaxy as well as for the problem
of foreground removal in Cosmic Microwave Background measurements. In this work
we present a full-sky study of the diffuse Galactic emission at frequencies of
few GHz, where synchrotron radiation is by far the dominant component. We
perform a detailed combined analysis of the extended surveys at 408, 1420 and
2326 MHz (by Haslam et al. 1982, Reich 1982, Reich & Reich, 1986 and Jonas et
al. 1998, respectively). Using the technique applied by Schlegel et al. (1998)
to the IRAS data, we produce destriped versions of the three maps. This allows
us to construct a nearly-full-sky map of the spectral index and of the
normalization factor with sub-degree angular resolution. The resulting
distribution of the spectral indices has an average of beta = 2.695 and
dispersion sigma_{beta} = 0.120. This is representative for the Galactic
diffuse synchrotron emission, with only minor effects from free-free emission
and point sources.Comment: 10 pages, 16 jpeg figures, accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysics,
Comments and figure adde
Extirpation of N otropis simus simus (Cope) and N otropis orca Woolman (Pisces: Cyprinidae) from the Rio Grande in New Mexico, with Notes on Their Life History
The Rio Grande bluntnose shiner, Notropis simus simus, and the phantom shiner, Notropis orca, once occupied warm water reaches of the Rio Grande in New Mexico, but have not been collected there since 1964 and 1949, respectively. Notropis s. simus was widespread and common until 1950; N. orca was apparently never abundant. Our collections indicated that both forms are extirpated from New Mexico, and each may be extinct. Two other cyprinids, Rio Grande shiner, Notropis jemezanus, and speckled chub, Hybopsis aestivalis, also disappeared from the Rio Grande around 1949 and 1964, respectively. A fifth cyprinid, the Rio Grande silvery minnow, Hybognathus amarus, is presently reduced in distribution and abundance. Irrigation withdrawals and mainstream dams altered natural discharge patterns of the Rio Grande prior to 1930 and probably reduced populations of this suite of mainstream fishes. Drought and increased water withdrawal after 1950 periodically dried extensive reaches of warm water Rio Grande habitat and probably eliminated remaining small populations of the aforementioned species except H. amarus. Life history attributes of N. s. simus, and the distribution and habitat of all of the other extirpated forms do not indicate special requirements other than a flowing mainstream environment. Short-lived fishes that occupy exclusively mainstream riverine environments are especially susceptible to extirpation when flow regimes are altered
Comparing the emerging psychological meaning of tattoos in drug-addicted and not drug-addicted adults: A look inside health risks
Although tattoos have been historically characteristic of criminals and drug addicts therefore carrying negative associations, it is now an accepted and appreciated form of body modification. Tattoos could be considered as a projective psychological test, most people use their body as blackboard to represent the most varied meanings related to the way they perceive themselves. It is also true that tattoos can assume the role of diagnostic indicators for a possible abuse of psychoactive substances, as well as their aggregating and communicative functions within the group of drug addicts. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to explore the relation among personality traits, self-efficacy, locus of control and motivations for tattooing. The sample consisted of 150 subjects, 50 tattooed adults, 50 tattooed drug addicted adults, and 50 non-tattooed adults. Data were collected by using the Big Five Questionnaire (BFQ), the Perceived Self- efficacy Test, the Mini Locus of Control scale and a Tattoos Inventory. Results of the present study contribute to a deeper understanding of the new meaning of tattoos, they no longer represent personality traits, they rather have the function of reinforcing beliefs about how to perceive oneself, this happens especially in drug addicts in which the presence of tattoos reinforces the illusory belief of self-esteem and internal locus of control. Given the rising presence of tattoos today, this could be useful to get a better understanding of the existential unease of certain populations
Recent and subfossil diatom assemblages as indicators of environmental change (including fish introduction) in a high-mountain lake
We investigated modern-littoral and subfossil sediment-core diatoms in the shallow (max depth 6.4 m) high-mountain Lake Balma in the Orsiera Rocciavrè Nature Park (Italian Western Alps). Our study provided evidence that might be related to the response of diatom assemblages to fish introduction, in particular the decreasing of the nutrient-enrichment sensitive low-profile life-form/ecological guild and the increase in species known to react positively to the augmented nutrient availability due to fish excretions (e.g., Fragilaria nanana, Pseudostaurosira brevistriata, Staurosirella neopinnata). We are, however, aware that some of these effects could as well have been caused by pastures and cattle watering, and by increased temperatures due to global warming, and we acknowledge the typical complex-interaction pattern among different stressors. High-mountain lakes are ‘‘early warning systems’’ for the whole alpine system and can contribute valuable information also on the interactions between environmental global changes and anthropogenic impacts. Benthic diatoms, in particular, can provide useful indications on the deleterious effects of non-native fish introduction, cattle grazing, and global warming, and thus support an adaptive and sustainable management of high-mountain lakes for the sake of nature conservation
Imaging the first light: experimental challenges and future perspectives in the observation of the Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy
Measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) allow high precision
observation of the Last Scattering Surface at redshift 1100. After the
success of the NASA satellite COBE, that in 1992 provided the first detection
of the CMB anisotropy, results from many ground-based and balloon-borne
experiments have showed a remarkable consistency between different results and
provided quantitative estimates of fundamental cosmological properties. During
2003 the team of the NASA WMAP satellite has released the first improved
full-sky maps of the CMB since COBE, leading to a deeper insight into the
origin and evolution of the Universe. The ESA satellite Planck, scheduled for
launch in 2007, is designed to provide the ultimate measurement of the CMB
temperature anisotropy over the full sky, with an accuracy that will be limited
only by astrophysical foregrounds, and robust detection of polarisation
anisotropy. In this paper we review the experimental challenges in high
precision CMB experiments and discuss the future perspectives opened by second
and third generation space missions like WMAP and Planck.Comment: To be published in "Recent Research Developments in Astronomy &
Astrophysics Astrophysiscs" - Vol I
A radio continuum survey of the southern sky at 1420 MHz. Observations and data reduction
We describe the equipment, observational method and reduction procedure of an
absolutely calibrated radio continuum survey of the South Celestial Hemisphere
at a frequency of 1420 MHz. These observations cover the area 0h < R.A. < 24h
for declinations less than -10 degree. The sensitivity is about 50 mK T_B (full
beam brightness) and the angular resolution (HPBW) is 35.4', which matches the
existing northern sky survey at the same frequency.Comment: 9 pages with 9 figures, A&A, in pres
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