6,847 research outputs found
World Agriculture and Climate Change: Economic Adaptations
Recent studies suggest that possible global increases in temperature and changes in precipitation patterns during the next century will affect world agriculture. Because of the ability of farmers to adapt , however, these changes are not likely to imperil world food production. Nevertheless, world production of all goods and services may decline, if climate change is severe enough or if cropland expansion is hindered. Impacts are not equally distributed around the world.climate change, world agriculture, Environmental Economics and Policy,
Heteranthery in Clarkia: pollen performance of dimorphic anthers contradicts expectations.
Premise of the studyWild plant species that require the services of pollen-feeding insects for reliable pollination may evolve features that attract and reward their mutualistic partners. Heterantherous species have been proposed to exhibit a "division of labor" whereby "feeding anthers" (which produce pollen that may be consumed by an insect) are distinguished from "reproductive anthers" (which produce pollen more likely to contribute to reproduction). In some heterantherous species, including Clarkia unguiculata (Onagraceae), these two anther types differ with respect to stamen length, anther size, pollen production, and pollen color.MethodsThe primary goal of this study was to test one component of the "division of labor" hypothesis by comparing the performance of the pollen produced by each type of anther in C. unguiculata. To achieve this goal, under greenhouse conditions, we hand pollinated and assessed pollen performance (using epifluorescence microscopy) within ~228 flowers.Key resultsThe pollen produced by the two anther types differed significantly with respect to both stigma and style penetration. The inner series of anthers produce pollen with higher performance than the outer series of longer, dark red anthers.ConclusionsThese findings contradict previous descriptions of the genus, reporting that the inner diminutive series of anthers in Clarkia produce "abortive and nonfunctional" pollen. We outline the future research required to demonstrate the ecological function of heteranthery in this iconic wildflower group
Langevin dynamics in crossed magnetic and electric fields: Hall and diamagnetic fluctuations
Based on the classical Langevin equation, we have re-visited the problem of
orbital motion of a charged particle in two dimensions for a normal magnetic
field crossed with or without an in-plane electric bias. We are led to two
interesting fluctuation effects: First, we obtain not only a longitudinal
"work-fluctuation" relation as expected for a barotropic type system, but also
a transverse work-fluctuation relation perpendicular to the electric bias. This
"Hall fluctuation" involves the product of the electric and the magnetic
fields. And second, for the case of harmonic confinement without bias, the
calculated probability density for the orbital magnetic moment gives non-zero
even moments, not derivable as field derivatives of the classical free energy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revised versio
Shifting with
Precision measurements at the resonance agree well with the standard
model. However, there is still a hint of a discrepancy, not so much in by
itself (which has received a great deal of attention in the past several years)
but in the forward-backward asymmetry together with . The two
are of course correlated. We explore the possibilty that these and other
effects are due to the mixing of and with one or more heavy quarks.Comment: 11 pages, 1 Figure, LaTex fil
A New Class of Solutions to the Strong CP Problem with a Small Two-Loop theta
We present a new class of models which produce zero theta (QCD} angle at the
tree and one-loop level due to hermiticity of sub-blocks in the extended quark
mass matrices. The structure can be maintained typically by non-abelian
generation symmetry. Two examples are given for this class of solutions.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Integrating Species Traits into Species Pools
Despite decades of research on the species‐pool concept and the recent explosion of interest in trait‐based frameworks in ecology and biogeography, surprisingly little is known about how spatial and temporal changes in species‐pool functional diversity (SPFD) influence biodiversity and the processes underlying community assembly. Current trait‐based frameworks focus primarily on community assembly from a static regional species pool, without considering how spatial or temporal variation in SPFD alters the relative importance of deterministic and stochastic assembly processes. Likewise, species‐pool concepts primarily focus on how the number of species in the species pool influences local biodiversity. However, species pools with similar richness can vary substantially in functional‐trait diversity, which can strongly influence community assembly and biodiversity responses to environmental change. Here, we integrate recent advances in community ecology, trait‐based ecology, and biogeography to provide a more comprehensive framework that explicitly considers how variation in SPFD, among regions and within regions through time, influences the relative importance of community assembly processes and patterns of biodiversity. First, we provide a brief overview of the primary ecological and evolutionary processes that create differences in SPFD among regions and within regions through time. We then illustrate how SPFD may influence fundamental processes of local community assembly (dispersal, ecological drift, niche selection). Higher SPFD may increase the relative importance of deterministic community assembly when greater functional diversity in the species pool increases niche selection across environmental gradients. In contrast, lower SPFD may increase the relative importance of stochastic community assembly when high functional redundancy in the species pool increases the influence of dispersal history or ecological drift. Next, we outline experimental and observational approaches for testing the influence of SPFD on assembly processes and biodiversity. Finally, we highlight applications of this framework for restoration and conservation. This species‐pool functional diversity framework has the potential to advance our understanding of how local‐ and regional‐scale processes jointly influence patterns of biodiversity across biogeographic regions, changes in biodiversity within regions over time, and restoration outcomes and conservation efforts in ecosystems altered by environmental change
Laue diffraction lenses for astrophysics: Theoretical concepts
Beyond the present technologies, Laue diffraction lenses are very promising tools in the field of gamma-ray astrophysics. The theoretical concepts of this kind of instruments are based on the Laue diffraction in crystals, discovered almost 100 years ago. Though they are commonly used in crystallography, their application to γ-ray focusing in astrophysics requires some specific developments, e.g. in terms of energy and imaging responses. The present article describes the physics of X-ray diffraction in crystals. In the context of the Darwin model of mosaic crystals, some peculiar aspects, relevant to the astrophysical observation, are discussed. The evaluation and optimization of diffraction efficiency are discussed, especially with rigards to the crystal's mosaicity and thickness, its spatial extent and deviations to the “ideally imperfect” Darwin model
Analisis Produksi, Ekspor Tembaga Indonesia ke Jepang dan Pertumbuhan Ekonomi Sektor Pertambanganindonesia
The study aims to determine and analyze (1)the influence of price of copper, interest rate, domestic consumption of copper,capital and exports to copper production,(2) the influence of price of copper, interest rate, consumption domestic of copper, GDP Japan and copper production to exports,(3) the influence of domestic consumption of copper, capital and exports to Indonesian economic growthin mining sector,(4)Prospect the exports of copper Indonesian to Japan in 2014-2019 to Indonesian economic growthin mining sector. This study utilize a model of simultaneous equation by means of Two-Stage Least Square (TSLS) from 1979-2011. The study concluded that (1) price of copper, interest rate, domestic consumption of copper, capital and exports significantly affect the copper production.(2) price of copper, interest rate, domestic consumption of copper, GDP Jepang and copper productionsignificantly affect the exports.(3) domestic consumption of copper, capital and exports significantly affect the Indonesian economic growth in mining sector. (4) Prospect the exports of copper Indonesian to Japan in 2014-2019 have significantly affect the Indonesian economic growthin mining sector
Untangling the Conceptual Isssues Raised in Reydon and Scholz’s Critique of Organizational Ecology and Darwinian Populations
Reydon and Scholz raise doubts about the Darwinian status of organizational ecology by arguing that Darwinian principles are not applicable to organizational populations. Although their critique of organizational ecology’s typological essentialism is correct, they go on to reject the Darwinian status of organizational populations. This paper claims that the distinction between replicators and interactors, raised in modern philosophy of biology but not discussed by Reydon and Scholz, points the way forward for organizational ecologists. It is possible to conceptualise evolving Darwinian populations providing the inheritance mechanism is appropriately specified. By this approach, adaptation and selection are no longer dichotomised, and the evolutionary significance of knowledge transmission is highlightedPeer reviewe
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