1,042 research outputs found
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Water-level data from observation wells in the southern High Plains of Texas, 1965-70
By A. Wayne Wyatt and the staff members of the Water Levels SectionUT Librarie
Recommended from our members
Water-level data from observation wells in the northern panhandle of Texas
By A. Wayne Wyatt and the staff members of the Water Levels SectionUT Librarie
The Roles of Labor and Profitability in Choosing a Grazing Strategy for Beef Production in the U.S. Gulf Coast Region
Comparisons are made concerning labor required and profitability associated with continuous grazing at three stocking rates and rotational grazing at a high stocking rate in the U.S. Gulf Coast region. A unique data set was collected using a time and motion study method to determine labor requirements. Profits are lowest for low stocking rate– continuous grazing and high stocking rate–rotational grazing. Total labor and labor in three specific categories are greater on per acre and/or per cow bases with rotational-grazing than with continuous-grazing strategies. These results help to explain relatively low adoption rates of rotational grazing in the region.labor requirements, rotational grazing, stocking rate, time and motion study, Agribusiness, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Industrial Organization, Labor and Human Capital, Livestock Production/Industries, Q12, Q24,
The Economics of Rotational Grazing in the Gulf Coast Region: Costs, Returns, and Labor Considerations, Phase II
Profitability and labor associated with rotational grazing at three stocking rates and continuous grazing at a medium stocking rate are compared. On a per-acre basis, profits are lowest for low stocking rate rotational grazing. Labor is greatest on both per-acre and per-cow bases with high stocking rate rotational grazing.Time and Motion Study, Conservation, Louisiana, Cow-Calf, Farm Management, Production Economics, Q16,
New sub-millimeter limits on dust in the 55 Cancri planetary system
We present new, high-sensitivity sub-millimeter observations towards 55
Cancri, a nearby G8 star with one, or possibly two, known planetary
companion(s). Our 850 m map, obtained with the SCUBA instrument on the
James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, shows three peaks of emission at the 2.5 mJy
level in the vicinity of the star's position. However, the observed peaks are
25\arcsec--40\arcsec away from the star and a deep -band optical image
reveals faint point sources that coincide with two of the sub-millimeter peaks.
Thus, we do not find evidence for dust emission spatially associated with 55
Cancri. The excess 60 m emission detected with ISO may originate from one
or more of the 850 m peaks that we attribute to background sources. Our
new results, together with the HST/NICMOS coronographic images in the
near-infrared, place stringent limits on the amount of dust in this planetary
system, and argue against the existence of a detectable circumstellar dust disk
around 55 Cnc.Comment: 11 pages, 2 PostScript figures, to appear in The Astrophysical
Journal Letter
Historical Mammal Extinction on Christmas Island (Indian Ocean) Correlates with Introduced Infectious Disease
It is now widely accepted that novel infectious disease can be a leading cause of serious population decline and even outright extinction in some invertebrate and vertebrate groups (e.g., amphibians). In the case of mammals, however, there are still no well-corroborated instances of such diseases having caused or significantly contributed to the complete collapse of species. A case in point is the extinction of the endemic Christmas Island rat (Rattus macleari): although it has been argued that its disappearance ca. AD 1900 may have been partly or wholly caused by a pathogenic trypanosome carried by fleas hosted on recently-introduced black rats (Rattus rattus), no decisive evidence for this scenario has ever been adduced. Using ancient DNA methods on samples from museum specimens of these rodents collected during the extinction window (AD 1888–1908), we were able to resolve unambiguously sequence evidence of murid trypanosomes in both endemic and invasive rats. Importantly, endemic rats collected prior to the introduction of black rats were devoid of trypanosome signal. Hybridization between endemic and black rats was also previously hypothesized, but we found no evidence of this in examined specimens, and conclude that hybridization cannot account for the disappearance of the endemic species. This is the first molecular evidence for a pathogen emerging in a naïve mammal species immediately prior to its final collapse
Resolving debris discs in the far-infrared: early highlights from the DEBRIS survey
We present results from the earliest observations of DEBRIS, a Herschel Key
Programme to conduct a volume- and flux-limited survey for debris discs in
A-type through M-type stars. PACS images (from chop/nod or scan-mode
observations) at 100 and 160 micron are presented toward two A-type stars and
one F-type star: beta Leo, beta UMa and eta Corvi. All three stars are known
disc hosts. Herschel spatially resolves the dust emission around all three
stars (marginally, in the case of beta UMa), providing new information about
discs as close as 11 pc with sizes comparable to that of the Solar System. We
have combined these data with existing flux density measurements of the discs
to refine the SEDs and derive estimates of the fractional luminosities,
temperatures and radii of the discs.Comment: to be published in A&A, 5 pages, 2 color figure
PET Imaging of Extracellular pH in Tumors with \u3csup\u3e64\u3c/sup\u3eCu- and \u3csup\u3e18\u3c/sup\u3eF-Labeled pHLIP Peptides: A Structure–Activity Optimization Study
pH (low) insertion peptides (pHLIP peptides) target acidic extracellular environments in vivo due to pH-dependent cellular membrane insertion. Two variants (Var3 and Var7) and wild-type (WT) pHLIP peptides have shown promise for in vivo imaging of breast cancer. Two positron emitting radionuclides (64Cu and 18F) were used to label the NOTA- and NO2A-derivatized Var3, Var7, and WT peptides for in vivo biodistribution studies in 4T1 orthotopic tumor-bearing BALB/c mice. All of the constructs were radiolabeled with 64Cu or [18F]-AlF in good yield. The in vivo biodistribution of the 12 constructs in 4T1 orthotopic allografted female BALB/c mice indicated that NO2A-cysVar3, radiolabeled with either 18F (4T1 uptake; 8.9 ± 1.7%ID/g at 4 h p.i.) or 64Cu (4T1 uptake; 8.2 ± 0.9%ID/g at 4 h p.i. and 19.2 ± 1.8% ID/g at 24 h p.i.), shows the most promise for clinical translation. Additional studies to investigate other tumor models (melanoma, prostate, and brain tumor models) indicated the universality of tumor targeting of these tracers. From this study, future clinical translation will focus on 18F- or 64Cu-labeled NO2A-cysVar3
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