Biological Equilibrium

2021 ◽  
pp. 677-677
1994 ◽  
Vol 44 (11) ◽  
pp. 1279-1287 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. M. Diks ◽  
S. P. P. Ottengraf ◽  
S. Vrijlnad

2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. 3761-3769 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haidong Feng ◽  
Kun Zhang ◽  
Jin Wang

Transition state or Kramers' rate theory has been used to quantify the kinetic speed of many chemical, physical and biological equilibrium processes successfully.


Oryx ◽  
1956 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 199-199
Author(s):  
G. Dennler De La Tour

Maintaining the balance of nature means keeping up the biological equilibrium; that is the quantitative balance between living beings, animals and plants. The term should refer to an area which can be defined fairly clearly, preferably from a biological standpoint.


1963 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 202-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Torsten S:son Frey

Parasitology ◽  
1934 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Lyndhurst Duke

1. The following strains produced no infection in any of the laboratorybred Glossina used in their examination; the total number of flies dissected is given for each strain:T. gambiense, strain V, Uganda, isolated in 1926 … … … 548T. gambiense, strain Adero, Uganda, isolated in Jan. 1933 … 1642T. rhodesiense, Liverpool, isolated in Jan. 1933 …. … … 750T. rhodesiense, Liverpool, arsenic-fast variant … … … … 1166T. brucei, “Hamburg alt” from Berlin; isolated over 30 years ago 2452Some of the flies used in testing each of these strains were kept at 95–97° F. during their infecting feeds.2. T. gambiense, strain “Braun,” isolated in February, 1920, gave two “gut only” infections in 1137 flies. T. gambiense, strain “McA,” isolated in 1921, produced one very light infection, of the intestinal tract only, in 1410 flies employed. This infected fly died on the 27th day after its infecting feed.T. brucei, strain “Hornby mild,” isolated at the end of 1930, gave three infections of the intestinal tract only in 1443 flies used. Some of the flies employed on these three strains were kept during their infecting feeds at 95–97° F., but the infected flies came from boxes kept at room temperature throughout.It will be seen that all the strains hitherto summarised are, as far as these tests are concerned, non-transmissible by Glossina, and the majority are no longer capable of infecting even the intestine of the fly.3. T. brucei, strain “Hornby virulent,” isolated in April, 1927, from a heifer, and found by Corson in 1931 to be readily transmissible by G. morsitans or G. pallidipes (or both), 4½ years after its first isolation (Corson, 1932). A month or so later this strain was found at Entebbe to be still feebly transmissible by G. palpalis and somewhat more readily by G. morsitans, although much less so than in Corson's experiments.4. Strain “Br,” considered by Prof. J. G. Thomson to be a T. gambiense showing some resemblances to T. rhodesiense, when examined at Entebbe some three years after its isolation from a European in West Africa, proved to be still infective to both G. palpalis and G. morsitans through only very feebly transmissible. 4272 laboratory-bred flies were used in the examination of this strain: 74 of these developed infection of the intestine, and only one a gland infection—a G. palpalis dying on the 40th day after its infecting feed. Flagellates were numerous in the glands of this fly.5. The behaviour of the “Hornby virulent” strain of T. brucei and of strain “Br” suggests that completion of the cycle in the fly may be delayed beyond the 25–30 days usually sufficient for East African strains, and it is possible that this delay may be a feature characteristic of strains whose transmissibility by tsetse is undergoing reduction. On the other hand, the solitary infective fly obtained with strain “Br” had a heavy gland infection which had in all probability been present at least for several days before the death of this insect.6. A strain freshly isolated from a native who was infected on or near the northern shores of Lake Victoria failed to infect any of 1642 G. palpalis used in its examination, although a number of these flies were kept at 95–97° F. during their infecting feeds.7. The results of the investigations described in this paper lend some support to the opinion already formed as the result of numerous experiments with the polymorphic group of trypanosomes, namely that T. brucei (and, as far as can be seen, T. rhodesiense) is less prone than T. gambiense to lose touch with Glossina.It may be that the stability of this character in T. brucei is an expression of a more perfect adjustment to environment than is possessed by T. gambiense; the latter trypanosome, which is essentially dependent on man, having not yet attained biological equilibrium in this its principal mammalian host.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-28
Author(s):  
Rusdianto Ibrahim ◽  
Lailany Yahya ◽  
Emli Rahmi ◽  
Resmawan Resmawan

This article studies the dynamics of a Gause-type predator-prey model with infectious disease in the prey. The constructed model is a deterministic model which assumes the prey is divided into two compartments i.e. susceptible prey and infected prey, and both of them are hunted by predator bilinearly. It is investigated that there exist five biological equilibrium points such as all population extinction point, infected prey and predator extinction point, infected prey extinction point, predator extinction point, and co-existence point. We find that all population extinction point always unstable while others are conditionally locally asymptotically stable. Numerical simulations, as well as the phase portraits, are given to support the analytical results.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 215
Author(s):  
José Eduardo De Oliveira Lima ◽  
Cristiane Almeida Baldini Cardoso ◽  
Gladis Benjamina Grazziotin ◽  
Heitor Marques Honório ◽  
Ronize Fátima Pigosso Mocelini ◽  
...  

AIM: To verify the incidence of dental caries in a multicentric prevention program applied in pediatric dentistry clinics from different regions of Brazil for 10 years, and compare with results obtained by previous studies. MATERIAL AND METHODS: 697 children of both genders, ranging from 30 months to 15 years, were included in a primary preventive strategy program for mechanical control of dental plaque through professional prophylaxis (sodium bicarbonate jet on a monthly schedule). Diagnosis of carious lesions was assessed by monthly clinical examinations and annual radiographs. This procedure aimed to provide a biological equilibrium without producing undesirable side effects.  RESULTS: The average age of children at beginning of the program was 81.71 months. Before entering the program the children presented an average of 2.66 lesions/surface, while during the program the average was 0.20 lesions/surface; the incidence rate of caries per year before starting the program was on average 0.62 lesions/surface while during the program it was 0.05 lesions/surface; the time of permanence in the program was on average 44.15 months and the absence rate was 0.14 per year. CONCLUSION: The results confirm the effectiveness of the program, even when applied by different professionals and in different groups of children, turning it into an indispensible method for the control of dental caries.


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