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Bleaching in foraminifera with algal symbionts: implications for reef monitoring and risk assessment
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Playing with numbers: Using Top Trumps as an ice-breaker and introduction to quantitative methods
Statistics anxiety has been widely documented among both postgraduate and undergraduate social science students and shown to be an obstacle in engaging students in quantitative methods. This article builds on previous studies that have highlighted the utility of fun and games in productive learning and overcoming anxiety. A personalised version of the game Top Trumps was developed for use with a class of postgraduate sociology students in the UK. This game provides an ideal way for students to inductively learn about basic statistical concepts, such as range and dispersion. The game also creates opportunities to engage students in critical discussion of measurement and social categorisation. The article suggests that the employment of such hands-on learning exercises, especially when used in the first week of a quantitative methods module, can stimulate student interest, ameliorate statistics anxiety and encourage critical discussion, thereby positively impacting learning goals in the rest of the module. The article ends by briefly outlining how to adapt the game for use within an undergraduate module
Identifying multiple coral reef regimes and their drivers across the Hawaiian archipelago
Loss of coral reef resilience can lead to dramatic changes in benthic structure, often called regime shifts, which significantly alter ecosystem processes and functioning. In the face of global change and increasing direct human impacts, there is an urgent need to anticipate and prevent undesirable regime shifts and, conversely, to reverse shifts in already degraded reef systems. Such challenges require a better understanding of the human and natural drivers that support or undermine different reef regimes. The Hawaiian archipelago extends across a wide gradient of natural and anthropogenic conditions and provides us a unique opportunity to investigate the relationships between multiple reef regimes, their dynamics and potential drivers. We applied a combination of exploratory ordination methods and inferential statistics to one of the most comprehensive coral reef datasets available in order to detect, visualize and define potential multiple ecosystem regimes. This study demonstrates the existence of three distinct reef regimes dominated by hard corals, turf algae or macroalgae. Results from boosted regression trees show nonlinear patterns among predictors that help to explain the occurrence of these regimes, and highlight herbivore biomass as the key driver in addition to effluent, latitude and depth
Electronic structure, exchange interactions and Curie temperature in diluted III-V magnetic semiconductors: (GaCr)As, (GaMn)As, (GaFe)As
We complete our earlier (Phys. Rev. B, {\bf 66}, 134435 (2002)) study of the
electronic structure, exchange interactions and Curie temperature in (GaMn)As
and extend the study to two other diluted magnetic semiconductors (GaCr)As and
(GaFe)As. Four concentrations of the 3d impurities are studied: 25%, 12.5%,
6.25%, 3.125%. (GaCr)As and (GaMn)As are found to possess a number of similar
features. Both are semi-metallic and ferromagnetic, with similar properties of
the interatomic exchange interactions and the same scale of the Curie
temperature. In both systems the presence of the charge carriers is crucial for
establishing the ferromagnetic order. An important difference between two
systems is in the character of the dependence on the variation of the number of
carriers. The ferromagnetism in (GaMn)As is found to be very sensitive to the
presence of the donor defects, like As antisites. On the other hand,
the Curie temperature of (GaCr)As depends rather weakly on the presence of this
type of defects but decreases strongly with decreasing number of electrons. We
find the exchange interactions between 3d atoms that make a major contribution
into the ferromagnetism of (GaCr)As and (GaMn)As and propose an exchange path
responsible for these interactions. The properties of (GaFe)As are found to
differ crucially from the properties of (GaCr)As and (GaMn)As. (GaFe)As does
not show a trend to ferromagnetism and is not half-metallic that makes this
system unsuitable for the use in spintronic semiconductor devices
Magnetic exchange coupling and Curie temperature of Ni(1+x)MnSb (x=0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1) from first principles
We study the dependence of magnetic interactions and Curie temperature in
Ni(1+x)MnSb system on the Ni concentration within the framework of the
density-functional theory. The calculation of the exchange parameters is based
on the super-cell and frozen-magnon approaches. The Curie temperatures, Tc, are
calculated within the random-phase approximation. In agreement with experiment
we obtain decrease of the Curie temperature with increasing Ni content.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
Modelling spatial and inter-annual variations of nitrous oxide emissions from UK cropland and grasslands using DailyDayCent
This work contributes to the Defra funded projects AC0116: ‘Improving the nitrous oxide inventory’, and AC0114: ‘Data Synthesis, Management and Modelling’. Funding for this work was provided by the UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) AC0116 and AC0114, the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs for Northern Ireland, the Scottish Government and the Welsh Government. Rothamsted Research receives strategic funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. This study also contributes to the projects: N-Circle (BB/N013484/1), U-GRASS (NE/M016900/1) and GREENHOUSE (NE/K002589/1).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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