490 research outputs found
Feasibility study for a Scanning Celestial Attitude Determination System /SCADS/ for three axis attitude determination at a Command and Data Acquisition /CDA/ station Final report
Scanning Celestial Attitude Determination System /SCADS/ for three axis attitude determination at Command and Data Acquisition /CDA/ statio
Reductions in global biodiversity loss predicted from conservation spending
Halting global biodiversity loss is central to both the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)1,2, but success to date has been very limited3–5. A critical determinant of overall strategic success (or failure) is the financing committed to biodiversity6–9; however, financing decisions are still hindered by considerable uncertainty over what any investment is likely to achieve6–9.. For greater effectiveness, we need an evidence-based model (EBM)10–12 showing how conservation spending quantitatively reduces the rate of loss. Here, we empirically quantify how i$14.4 billion of conservation investment reduced biodiversity loss across 109 signatory countries between 1996 and 2008, by an average 29% per country. We also show that biodiversity change in signatory countries can be predicted with high accuracy, using a dual model that combines the positive impact of conservation investment with the negative impact of economic, agricultural and population growth (i.e. human development pressures)13–18. Decision-makers can use this dual model to forecast the improvement that any proposed biodiversity budget would achieve under various scenarios of human development pressure, comparing those forecasts to any chosen policy target (including the CBD and SDGs). Importantly, we further find that spending impacts shrink as human development pressures grow, implying that funding may need to increase over time. The model therefore offers a flexible tool for balancing the SDGs of human development and biodiversity, by predicting the dynamic changes needed in conservation finance as human development proceeds
Clades and clans: a comparison study of two evolutionary models
The Yule-Harding-Kingman (YHK) model and the proportional to distinguishable
arrangements (PDA) model are two binary tree generating models that are widely
used in evolutionary biology. Understanding the distributions of clade sizes
under these two models provides valuable insights into macro-evolutionary
processes, and is important in hypothesis testing and Bayesian analyses in
phylogenetics. Here we show that these distributions are log-convex, which
implies that very large clades or very small clades are more likely to occur
under these two models. Moreover, we prove that there exists a critical value
for each such that for a given clade with size ,
the probability that this clade is contained in a random tree with leaves
generated under the YHK model is higher than that under the PDA model if
, and lower if . Finally, we extend our results
to binary unrooted trees, and obtain similar results for the distributions of
clan sizes.Comment: 21page
A new balance index for phylogenetic trees
Several indices that measure the degree of balance of a rooted phylogenetic
tree have been proposed so far in the literature. In this work we define and
study a new index of this kind, which we call the total cophenetic index: the
sum, over all pairs of different leaves, of the depth of their least common
ancestor. This index makes sense for arbitrary trees, can be computed in linear
time and it has a larger range of values and a greater resolution power than
other indices like Colless' or Sackin's. We compute its maximum and minimum
values for arbitrary and binary trees, as well as exact formulas for its
expected value for binary trees under the Yule and the uniform models of
evolution. As a byproduct of this study, we obtain an exact formula for the
expected value of the Sackin index under the uniform model, a result that seems
to be new in the literature.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures, preliminary version presented at the JBI 201
Alien Registration- Mooers, Murray A. (Wade, Aroostook County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/32734/thumbnail.jp
Can sexual selection drive female life histories? A comparative study on Galliform birds
Sexual selection is an important driver of many of the most spectacular morphological traits that we find in the animal kingdom (for example see Andersson, 1994). As such, sexual selection is most often emphasized as
Scaling properties of protein family phylogenies
One of the classical questions in evolutionary biology is how evolutionary
processes are coupled at the gene and species level. With this motivation, we
compare the topological properties (mainly the depth scaling, as a
characterization of balance) of a large set of protein phylogenies with a set
of species phylogenies. The comparative analysis shows that both sets of
phylogenies share remarkably similar scaling behavior, suggesting the
universality of branching rules and of the evolutionary processes that drive
biological diversification from gene to species level. In order to explain such
generality, we propose a simple model which allows us to estimate the
proportion of evolvability/robustness needed to approximate the scaling
behavior observed in the phylogenies, highlighting the relevance of the
robustness of a biological system (species or protein) in the scaling
properties of the phylogenetic trees. Thus, the rules that govern the
incapability of a biological system to diversify are equally relevant both at
the gene and at the species level.Comment: Replaced with final published versio
Amphibian Species’ Traits, Evolutionary History, and Environment Predict Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis Infection Patterns, but not Extinction Risk
Critical analysis of the influence of transnational capitalism on institutions and organizations
This paper aims to analyze the development of capitalism and its influences on institutions and organizations from its beginnings to reach the highest stage in the processes of neoliberal economic globalization and the New Economy version with support of information and communication technologies. In raising this development from a critical analysis, it examines the impacts and effects on individuals, communities and the nation state. Subsequently it is questioned the scope of the imposed transnational neoliberal capitalism model. Finally, it is concluded that it needs a cultural transformation for not accepting the forms of domination, power and alignment of globalizing capitalism and to reconstruct the identity of communities through individual action and asserting collective self-determination, independence and self-management
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