4,963 research outputs found
Macrofauna assemblages in a XVIIth century shipwreck: comparison with those on natural reefs and sandy bottoms
The macrofauna assemblages of a XVIIth century shipwreck off southern Portugal were studied and
compared with those of nearby natural reefs and sandy bottoms, by underwater visual census. A total
of 11 173 specimens of 224 different fauna taxa and 12 phyla were recorded. Natural reefs had the
highest density of specimens (35 122 / 1000 m2) followed by the shipwreck (21 392 / 1000 m2) and
the sandy bottoms (3771 / 1000 m2). Three biodiversity indices were estimated (Margalef, Shannon-
Wiener and Pielou), with the natural reefs showing the highest values. However, the shipwreck
presented values relatively similar to those of the natural reefs for the Shannon-Wiener and Pielou
indices. The three habitats were clearly distinguishable by multivariate statistical analysis, with the
average dissimilarity between sand and shipwreck, and between sand and natural reefs being much
higher than that between the shipwreck and the natural reefs. The shipwreck had higher abundances
of some commercially important species, such as the pouting Trisopterus luscus, European conger
Conger conger, and common spider crab Maja squinado, as well as some vulnerable and threatened
species such as the pink seafan Eunicella verrucosa. The results presented emphasize the importance
of this habitat on the southern Portuguese coast.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Phase Transition Study of Superconducting Microstructures
The presented results are part of a feasibility study of superheated
superconducting microstructure detectors. The microstructures (dots) were
fabricated using thin film patterning techniques with diameters ranging from
m up to m and thickness of m. We used arrays and single
dots to study the dynamics of the superheating and supercooling phase
transitions in a magnetic field parallel to the dot surface. The phase transi-
tions were produced by either varying the applied magnetic field strength at a
constant temperature or changing the bath temperature at a constant field.
Preliminary results on the dynamics of the phase transitions of arrays and
single indium dots will be reported.Comment: 7pages in LaTex format, five figures available upon request by
[email protected], preprint Bu-He 93/
Free radical 5-exo-dig cyclization as the key step in the synthesis of bis-butyrolactone natural products: experimental and theoretical studies
Radical cyclization reactions were performed by 5-exo-dig mode to yield cis-fused bicyclic systems, leading to the synthesis of bis-butyrolactone class of natural products. The study was aimed at understanding the impact of alkyl side chains of furanoside ring systems in L-ara configuration on the radical cyclization. It was amply demonstrated by experimental studies that the increase in the length of the alkyl side chain has an effect on the cyclization: while efficient cyclization reactions could be realized with methyl and ethyl side chains, the yields were significantly reduced in the case of n-pentyl side chain. Theoretical studies using DFT and (RO)MP2 methods were carried out to analyze the influence of the substitution pattern on the cyclization barriers
Macrofauna assemblages in a XVIIth century shipwreck: comparison with those on natural reefs and sandy bottoms
The macrofauna assemblages of a XVIIth century shipwreck off southern Portugal were studied and
compared with those of nearby natural reefs and sandy bottoms, by underwater visual census. A total
of 11 173 specimens of 224 different fauna taxa and 12 phyla were recorded. Natural reefs had the
highest density of specimens (35 122 / 1000 m2) followed by the shipwreck (21 392 / 1000 m2) and
the sandy bottoms (3771 / 1000 m2). Three biodiversity indices were estimated (Margalef, Shannon-
Wiener and Pielou), with the natural reefs showing the highest values. However, the shipwreck
presented values relatively similar to those of the natural reefs for the Shannon-Wiener and Pielou
indices. The three habitats were clearly distinguishable by multivariate statistical analysis, with the
average dissimilarity between sand and shipwreck, and between sand and natural reefs being much
higher than that between the shipwreck and the natural reefs. The shipwreck had higher abundances
of some commercially important species, such as the pouting Trisopterus luscus, European conger
Conger conger, and common spider crab Maja squinado, as well as some vulnerable and threatened
species such as the pink seafan Eunicella verrucosa. The results presented emphasize the importance
of this habitat on the southern Portuguese coast.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Community cleavages: gay and bisexual men's perceptions of gay and mainstream community acceptance in the post-AIDS, post-rights era
Changes in gay and bisexual men's connectedness to the gay community are related to the declining public visibility of HIV/AIDS and greater acceptance for homosexuality and bisexuality in mainstream society. Little work, however, has focused on perceived acceptance for subgroups within the gay community or broader society. Using interviews (n = 20) and a survey (n = 202) of gay and bisexual men in a mid-sized Canadian city, we find perceived hierarchies of acceptance for the various subgroups as well as an age effect wherein middle-aged men perceive the least acceptance for all groups. These differences are linked with the uneven impact of social, political, and institutional changes relevant to gay and bisexual men in Canada
Towards modelling language innovation acceptance in online social networks
Language change and innovation is constant in online and offline communication, and has led to new words entering people’s lexicon and even entering modern day dictionaries, with recent additions of ‘e-cig’ and ‘vape’. However the manual work required to identify these ‘innovations’ is both time consuming and subjective. In this work we demonstrate how such innovations in language can be identified across two different OSN’s (Online Social Networks) through the operationalisation of known language acceptance models that incorporate relatively simplistic statistical tests. From grounding our work in language theory, we identified three statistical tests that can be applied, variation in; frequency, form and meaning; each showing different success rates across the two networks (Geo-bound Twitter sample and a sample of Reddit). These tests were also applied to different community levels within the two networks allow- ing for different innovations to be identified across different community structures over the two networks, for instance: identifying regional variation across Twitter, and variation across groupings of Subreddits, where identified example in- novations included ‘casualidad’ and ‘cym’
Patterns of subnet usage reveal distinct scales of regulation in the transcriptional regulatory network of Escherichia coli
The set of regulatory interactions between genes, mediated by transcription
factors, forms a species' transcriptional regulatory network (TRN). By
comparing this network with measured gene expression data one can identify
functional properties of the TRN and gain general insight into transcriptional
control. We define the subnet of a node as the subgraph consisting of all nodes
topologically downstream of the node, including itself. Using a large set of
microarray expression data of the bacterium Escherichia coli, we find that the
gene expression in different subnets exhibits a structured pattern in response
to environmental changes and genotypic mutation. Subnets with less changes in
their expression pattern have a higher fraction of feed-forward loop motifs and
a lower fraction of small RNA targets within them. Our study implies that the
TRN consists of several scales of regulatory organization: 1) subnets with more
varying gene expression controlled by both transcription factors and
post-transcriptional RNA regulation, and 2) subnets with less varying gene
expression having more feed-forward loops and less post-transcriptional RNA
regulation.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, to be published in PLoS Computational Biolog
To the editor:: Community-acquired versus Nosocomial Klebsiella pneumonia Bacteremia: Clinical Features, Treatment Outcomes, and Clinical Implication of Antimicrobial Resistance
The contribution of Fermi-2LAC blazars to the diffuse TeV-PeV neutrino flux
The recent discovery of a diffuse cosmic neutrino flux extending up to PeV
energies raises the question of which astrophysical sources generate this
signal. One class of extragalactic sources which may produce such high-energy
neutrinos are blazars. We present a likelihood analysis searching for
cumulative neutrino emission from blazars in the 2nd Fermi-LAT AGN catalogue
(2LAC) using an IceCube neutrino dataset 2009-12 which was optimised for the
detection of individual sources. In contrast to previous searches with IceCube,
the populations investigated contain up to hundreds of sources, the largest one
being the entire blazar sample in the 2LAC catalogue. No significant excess is
observed and upper limits for the cumulative flux from these populations are
obtained. These constrain the maximum contribution of the 2LAC blazars to the
observed astrophysical neutrino flux to be or less between around 10
TeV and 2 PeV, assuming equipartition of flavours at Earth and a single
power-law spectrum with a spectral index of . We can still exclude that
the 2LAC blazars (and sub-populations) emit more than of the observed
neutrinos up to a spectral index as hard as in the same energy range.
Our result takes into account that the neutrino source count distribution is
unknown, and it does not assume strict proportionality of the neutrino flux to
the measured 2LAC -ray signal for each source. Additionally, we
constrain recent models for neutrino emission by blazars.Comment: 18 pages, 22 figure
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