1,959 research outputs found
Flow and chemical characteristics of the St. Johns River at Jacksonville, Florida
This report will be of substantial value to water managers in developing the
St. Johns River as a multiple resource. Evaluation of the capacity of the river to
accept pollutants without adversely affecting other uses requires detailed data of
flow and chemical characteristics and an understanding of how they interact. (66 page document
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1. I\u27ve heard stories that once you get to heaven you sit in front of everyone you know and they replay your life so everyone can see. It\u27s movie hour. I imagine all those folding chairs, the murmurs of anticipation, the projector warming for the arrival
Assessment Error in the Valuation of Owner-Occupied Housing
Assessed values of owner-occupied housing have been analyzed in this study to determine whether there is systematic error in the property valuation process by assessors. Sources of systematic error are identified for three countries in the Puget Sound area of Washington State. A method is developed to correct assessed values for systematic error to provide better estimates of market values. The results of the study may be useful for using assessed values as predictors of market values.
Paravasation with cyclophosphamide - Case report of tissue necrosis in a patient with primary breast cancer
Background: Paravasation is a rare but severe complication of treatment with cytotoxic agents. Some anticancer drugs are considered to be of high toxicity (vesicant), some are merely irritant, and some are regarded as nearly non-toxic to healthy tissue as is the case with cyclophosphamide. Case Report: In this report, we present the first case of severe tissue damage caused by a paravasation of cyclophosphamide in a breast cancer patient receiving chemotherapy. Conclusion: Therefore, every attending oncological physician should be aware of the possibility of severe tissue damage as a consequence of cyclophosphamide paravasation
Brokerage Firm Competition in Real Estate Commission Rates
This paper attempts to provide an explanation for the variance in real estate commission rates by analyzing the interaction of the real estate commission and the selling price of properties. The data presented here strongly suggest that there is competition in the rate of commission charged by real estate brokerage firms.
What do chloroplast sequences tell us about the identity of the commonly named Guineagrass, an invasive Poaceae in the southern United States?
The commonly named Guinea grass of the Poaceace family is a native African grass that has been extensively and successfully introduced as a source of animal fodder to other tropical areas of both hemispheres. On a global scale but particularly in the southern United States, the Caribbean and Hawaii, it is becoming a serious threat to biodiversity not only due to its invasiveness but also because it produces high fuel loads for fires. For the first time, a biological control program is being attempted in Texas. Source populations of the Texan invasion have to be identified in the native range in order to facilitate the search for potential biological control agents. This raises the critical issue of a proper taxonomic identification for this taxon with a history of taxonomic revisions, multiple scenarios of massive introductions and hybridization and polyploidisation events. Guinea grass in the strict sense should refer to Megathyrsus maximus (Jacq.), also known as Panicum maximum and Urochloa maxima. To unravel the taxonomic identification and the evolutionary history of this controversial taxon, we have begun to analyze sequences of two chloroplast regions in modern African and Texan samples as well as historical specimens in the CIRAD collection, some dating back to 1944, prior all extensive improvement programs in Africa. None of the sequences matched the sequence of a voucher specimen of Megathyrsus maximus (Jacq.). Results provided evidence of two different maternal lineages, one distributed from eastern Africa to southeastern Africa and Texas that fully matched the sequence of a voucher specimen of Megathyrsus infestus (Andersson) and one distributed across western/central Africa and French Guiana that do not belong to Megathyrsus genus. Future programs of exploration and collection of natural enemies are to be reviewed in light of these findings
Biological Control of Giant Reed (Arundo donax): Economic Aspects
Arundo donax is a large, invasive weed consuming large quantities of water in the riparian area of the Texas Rio Grande Basin. With water availability a concern to the area, the USDA-ARS is investigating biological control agents to increase available water, creating a benefit to both the region’s economy and society in general.Arundo donax, Giant Reed, Water, Economics, Invasive, Environmental Economics and Policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Continental comparisons of the interaction between climate and the herbivorous mite, Floracarus perrepae (Acari : Eriophyidae)
The Old World climbing fern, Lygodium microphyllum, is an invasive weed in the Florida Everglades and the leaf roll galling mite, Floracarus perrepae, is a proposed biological control agent. Field studies were conducted for one to two years at sites in its native range in Australia, New Caledonia, and India to evaluate the effect of climate on F perrepae. Monthly counts of the proportion of L. microphyllum subpinnae (leaflets) with leaf roll galls were used to measure the incidence of damage caused by F perrepae. Between sites the most significant weather variable was rainfall 14 to 28 days prior to sampling, with higher levels having a depressive effect on the incidence of leaf rolls. Within sites the mean maximum temperature was the only significant weather variable, showing a decrease in the incidence of leaf rolls above 27 degrees C, and it was predicted that no leaf rolls would form above 35 degrees C. The weather parameters in Homestead, Florida for 2002 were within the range of those evaluated in the eight native range field sites. Thus, we do not predict that climate will prevent the establishment of this biological control agent for L. microphyllum in southern Florida
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