4,529 research outputs found
DEVELOPMENT OF THE AGRICULTURAL CROPS TRADE SECTOR OF SUDAN UNDER THE INCREASING WORLD FOOD PRICES
The agricultural trade of the Sudan is expected to develop under the recent dramatic increase of world food prices. Sudan as one of the developing countries and as price taker on the world agricultural market has been affected greatly by the world price increase. This paper aims at studying the impact of the increasing world food prices on developments of the agricultural crops trade sector of Sudan. In this paper a multimarket model is used as the main tool to estimate the increase of the world food prices on the crop trade sector. Multi-market analysis is a tool for simulating the effects of agricultural price policies on outcomes considered of interest to policy makers. The model under consideration takes the normal specification of a standard partial equilibrium model; it is static and consists of a set of demand and supply equations for each commodity with the level of production and demand determined by factors including prices, income, and demand and supply-shift variables, in addition to various other assumptions about policies. Price transmission equations in the model establish links between the domestic price, the producer price (for producers of exportable products and of import-substitute products), the consumer price and the world market price. The model has been developed to calculate the impact of high food prices on the main economy variables including supply and demand of the major agricultural commodities. The scenario of high world food prices showed on one hand, an increase in farmers' incentives resulting in higher levels of production of agricultural commodities, on the other hand, consumers demand has decreased significantly, and trade indicators reflect a positive effect on the agricultural crop trade sector.Trade, Multi-market model, Sudan, International Development, International Relations/Trade,
European populations of Diabrotica virgifera virgifera are resistant to aldrin, but not to methyl-parathion
The western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), is a major pest of cultivated corn in North America and has recently begun to invade Europe. In addition to crop rotation, chemical control is an important option for D. v. virgifera management. However, resistance to chemical insecticides has evolved repeatedly in the USA. In Europe, chemical control strategies have yet to be harmonized and no surveys of insecticide resistance have been carried out. We investigated the resistance to methyl-parathion and aldrin of samples from nine D. v. virgifera field populations originating from two European outbreaks thought to have originated from two independent introductions from North America. Diagnostic concentration bioassays revealed that all nine D. v. virgifera field populations were resistant to aldrin but susceptible to methyl-parathion. Aldrin resistance was probably introduced independently, at least twice, from North America into Europe, as there is no evident selection pressure to account for an increase of frequency of aldrin resistance in each of the invasive outbreaks in Europe. Our results suggest that organophosphates, such as methyl-parathion, may still provide effective control of both larval and adult D. v. virgifera in the European invasive outbreaks studied
Non-linear rheology of active particle suspensions: Insights from an analytical approach
We consider active suspensions in the isotropic phase subjected to a shear
flow. Using a set of extended hydrodynamic equations we derive a variety of
{\em analytical} expressions for rheological quantities such as shear viscosity
and normal stress differences. In agreement to full-blown numerical
calculations and experiments we find a shear thickening or -thinning behaviour
depending on whether the particles are contractile or extensile. Moreover, our
analytical approach predicts that the normal stress differences can change
their sign in contrast to passive suspensions.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, appear in PR
Bent crystal spectrometer for both frequency and wavenumber resolved x-ray scattering at a seeded free-electron laser
We present a cylindrically curved GaAs x-ray spectrometer with energy
resolution and wave-number resolution of
, allowing plasmon scattering at the resolution
limits of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) x-ray free-electron laser. It
spans scattering wavenumbers of 3.6 to \AA\ in 100 separate bins, with
only 0.34\% wavenumber blurring. The dispersion of 0.418~eV/m agrees
with predictions within 1.3\%. The reflection homogeneity over the entire
wavenumber range was measured and used to normalize the amplitude of scattering
spectra. The proposed spectrometer is superior to a mosaic HAPG spectrometer
when the energy resolution needs to be comparable to the LCLS seeded bandwidth
of 1~eV and a significant range of wavenumbers must be covered in one exposure
Flow reversals in thermally driven turbulence
We analyze the reversals of the large scale flow in Rayleigh-B\'enard
convection both through particle image velocimetry flow visualization and
direct numerical simulations (DNS) of the underlying Boussinesq equations in a
(quasi) two-dimensional, rectangular geometry of aspect ratio 1. For medium
Prandtl number there is a diagonal large scale convection roll and two smaller
secondary rolls in the two remaining corners diagonally opposing each other.
These corner flow rolls play a crucial role for the large scale wind reversal:
They grow in kinetic energy and thus also in size thanks to plume detachments
from the boundary layers up to the time that they take over the main, large
scale diagonal flow, thus leading to reversal. Based on this mechanism we
identify a typical time scale for the reversals. We map out the Rayleigh number
vs Prandtl number phase space and find that the occurrence of reversals very
sensitively depends on these parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Разработка установки гидродинамической очистки аппаратов воздушного охлаждения станций подземного хранения газа
Role of a gamma-aminobutryic acid (GABA) receptor mutation in the evolution and spread of Diabrotica virgifera virgifera resistance to cyclodiene insecticides
The western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, is a damaging pest of cultivated corn that was controlled by applications of cyclodiene insecticides from the late 1940s until resistance evolved ∼10 years later. Range expansion from the western plains into eastern USA coincides with resistance development. An alanine to serine amino acid substitution within the Rdl subunit of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor confers resistance to cyclodiene insecticides in many species. We found that the non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) G/T at the GABA receptor cDNA position 838 (G/T838) of D. v. virgifera resulted in the alanine to serine change, and the codominant SNP allele T838 was genetically linked to survival of beetles in aldrin bioassays. A phenotypic gradient of decreasing susceptibility from west to east was correlated with higher frequencies of the resistance-conferring T838 allele in the eastern-most populations. This pattern exists in opposition to perceived selective pressures since the more eastern and most resistant populations probably experienced reduced exposure. The reasons for the observed distribution are uncertain, but historical records of the range expansion combined with the distribution of susceptible and resistant phenotypes and genotypes provide an opportunity to better understand factors affecting the species\u27 range expansion
Fermi surface of MoO2 studied by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, de Haas-van Alphen measurements, and electronic structure calculations
A comprehensive study of the electronic properties of monoclinic MoO2 from
both an experimental and a theoretical point of view is presented. We focus on
the investigation of the Fermi body and the band structure using angle resolved
photoemission spectroscopy, de Haas-van Alphen measurements, and electronic
structure calculations. For the latter, the new full-potential augmented
spherical wave (ASW) method has been applied. Very good agreement between the
experimental and theoretical results is found. In particular, all Fermi surface
sheets are correctly identified by all three approaches. Previous controversies
concerning additional hole-like surfaces centered around the Z- and B-point
could be resolved; these surfaces were an artefact of the atomic-sphere
approximation used in the old calculations. Our results underline the
importance of electronic structure calculations for the understanding of MoO2
and the neighbouring rutile-type early transition-metal dioxides. This includes
the low-temperature insulating phases of VO2 and NbO2, which have crystal
structures very similar to that of molybdenum dioxide and display the
well-known prominent metal-insulator transitions.Comment: 17 pages, 21 figures, more information at
http://www.physik.uni-augsburg.de/~eyert
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