scholarly journals The rise of 3D cellular spheroids: efficient culture via upward growth from a superamphiphobic surface

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 1068-1069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul J Dyson
2015 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-42
Author(s):  
Grazielle Cavalcante de Souza Carneiro ◽  
Lívia Maria Correia de Morais ◽  
Leidiane Francis de Araújo Costa ◽  
Talita Helena Monteiro de Moura ◽  
Marly Javorski ◽  
...  

This study aimed to describe the growth during the introduction of complementary feeding to infants assisted in the nursing appointment in childcare. It is a descriptive, cross-sectional, quantitative study developed through research in 51 medical records of children aged 4-8 months, from September to October 2012 in a university hospital in the city of Recife, PE. Data were analyzed using Epi Info software, version 6.04 and described in simple and relative frequencies. It was found that for 33% of the children. complementary foods were introduced at six months. Of these, 88.2%, 69.2% and 57.1% showed ascending weight-for-age growth curves, and 88.2%, 66.7% and 71.4% ascending length-for-age growth curves at six, seven and eight months respectively. Children with appropriate and timely introduction of complementary feeding showed upward growth curves and adequate nutritional status.


Author(s):  
I. Nagelkerken ◽  
G. van der Velde ◽  
P.H. van Avesaath

Scanning electron microscopy was used to study the microstructure and internal growth lines of the temperate ahermatypic coral Caryophyllia smithi (Cnidaria: Anthozoa). The arrangement of internal growth lines in combination with the orientation of aragonite crystals were used to describe the pattern of skeletal development in C. smithi. The observed pattern was verified using observations from another study on skeletal development in C. smithi, but which was based only on external observations of skeletons of living and dead specimens in different stages of development. The pattern of skeletal development in C. smithi is suggested to be subdivided into three stages, based on the deposition of specific skeletal elements during the development of the skeleton. In the first ‘juvenile’ stage, various primary skeletal elements are formed: the basal plate, the septa and a primary and secondary septotheca. The second ‘half full grown’ stage is characterized by development of apparently only an extended basal attachment, which enlarges the attachment area to the substratum. In the third ‘full grown’ stage, the edge zone of the polyp tissue is retracted from the extended basal attachment to the calice, and upward growth of the coral predominates followed by lateral thickening of the septotheca, costae, septa and columella. Internal growth lines were found throughout the skeleton and may be composed of, or resulting from the presence of organic matter. The septotheca and the extended basal attachment, which are important for a strong skeletal structure and a strong attachment to the substratum, respectively, are probably thickened faster than the other skeletal elements. Attachment scars were found in areas where attachment of the coral tissue to the skeleton is critical.


2020 ◽  
Vol 130 (4) ◽  
pp. 416-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wahyu Ramadhan ◽  
Yuki Ohama ◽  
Kosuke Minamihata ◽  
Kousuke Moriyama ◽  
Rie Wakabayashi ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 33 ◽  
pp. 02041 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga Popova ◽  
Julia Glebova ◽  
Irina Karakozova

The article presents the results of a complex experimental-analytical research of residential development energy parameters - survey of construction sites and determination of calculated energy parameters (resistance to heat transfer) considering their technical condition. The authors suggest a methodology for assessing residential development energy parameters on the basis of construction project’s structural analysis with the use of advanced intelligent collection systems, processing (self-organizing maps - SOM) and data visualization (geo-informational systems - GIS). SOM clustering permitted to divide the housing stock (on the example of Arkhangelsk city) into groups with similar technical-operational and energy parameters. It is also possible to measure energy parameters of construction project of each cluster by comparing them with reference (normative) measures and also with each other. The authors propose mechanisms for increasing the area’s energy stability level by implementing a set of reproduction activities for residential development of various groups. The analysis showed that modern multilevel and high-rise construction buildings have the least heat losses. At present, however, ow-rise wood buildings is the dominant styles of buildings of Arkhangelsk city. Data visualisation on the created heat map showed that such housing stock covers the largest urban area. The development strategies for depressed areas is in a high-rise building, which show the economic, social and environmental benefits of upward growth of the city. An urban regeneration programme for severely rundown urban housing estates is in a high-rise construction building, which show the economic, social and environmental benefits of upward growth of the city.


2015 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 220-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markes E. Johnson ◽  
B. Gudveig Baarli

The 1831–1836 voyage of H.M.S. Beagle under Captain Robert FitzRoy launched Charles Darwin's entry into the world of geology with two pioneering publications on oceanic islands to his credit. Best known is Darwin's 1842 contribution on the theory of atoll development from the subsidence of volcanic islands and coeval upward growth of coral reefs. This work can be linked, in part, to the ten days during which the Beagle visited the Keeling (Cocos) Islands. The subsequent and lesser known of Darwin's parallel contributions is his 1844 summary on all the volcanic islands visited during the expedition, including Santiago (Cape Verde Islands), Terceira (Azores), St. Paul's Rocks, Fernando Noronha, Ascension, St. Helena, the Galápagos Islands, Tahiti, and Mauritius. Ostensibly, the centerpiece of the 1844 volume is Darwin's extensive coverage of Ascension based on the five days spent there in 1836. However, Darwin had many more days at his disposal in the Galápagos and ‘St. Jago’ (Santiago), where the Beagle stopped in the Cape Verde Islands at the outset and again near the end of the voyage. The volcanic islands where Darwin spent the most time were in the Galápagos (thirty-five days) and the Cape Verdes (twenty-nine days). In particular, those island groups make an interesting comparison with respect to the development of Darwin's ideas on tectonic uplift based on basalt flows with inter-bedded limestone formations. Chance played a huge role in what Darwin saw and did not see during his island travels. The initial visit to the Cape Verde islands was instrumental in shaping Darwin's earliest vision of a book on volcanic islands, but his time there was entirely fortuitous due to a forced change in FitzRoy's plan for a stay in the Canary Islands. Although Darwin was on the look out for limestone formations in the Galápagos islands comparable to those on Santiago in the Cape Verdes, he missed finding them due only to the vagaries of FitzRoy's charting schedule in the Galápagos. This overview looks at limestone distribution in the Cape Verde and Galápagos archipelagos as now understood and speculates on how a wider knowledge of both regions may have influenced Darwin's thinking on global patterns of island uplift and subsidence.


Microatolls, those coral colonies with dead, flat tops and living perimeters, result from a restriction of upward growth by the air/water interface. The principal growth direction is horizontal and is recorded in the internal structure, though fluctuations in water depth can influence the surface morphology producing a terraced effect. The morphology of the basal surface of the colony is controlled by the sand/water interface such that the thickness of the coral records the depth of water in which it lived. In open water at the margin of reefs in the Northern Province of the Great Barrier Reef, tall-sided uneven-topped microatolls live, whereas, on the reef flats in rampart-bounded moats and ponds, thin flat-topped and terraced microatolls are abundant. Because water in moats can be ponded to levels as high as high water neaps (1.6 m above datum at Cairns) and still have daily water replenishment, microatolls on reef flats can grow to levels 1.1 m higher than open-water microatolls (which grow up to a maximum elevation of low water springs, i.e. 0.5 m above datum). This imposes a major constraint on the use of microatolls in establishing sea level history. The two factors controlling pond height during one sea stand (relative to the reef) are tidal range (which governs the height of high water neaps) and wave energy (which governs the height of ramparts which enclose moats). Dating and levelling fossil microatolls exposed on the reefs show that 4000 years (a) B.P., high water neaps was at least 0.7 m higher than it is at present.


2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 800-807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon Mattix ◽  
Timothy R. Olsen ◽  
Thomas Moore ◽  
Megan Casco ◽  
Dan Simionescu ◽  
...  

1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (10) ◽  
pp. 1965-1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alastair D. Macdonald ◽  
Rolf Sattler

Two bracteoles form by divisions in the second layer of cells on the transversal flanks of the floral apex. Four stamens form in the male by cell divisions in the third layer of cells; one develops opposite each bracteole and two form in the median plane on either side of the floral apex. In the female bud a girdling gynoecial primordium forms by periclinal divisions in the second layer. Growth becomes localized in two or three zones in the gynoecial primordium; upward growth results in the formation of two or three stigmas. The gynoecial wall forms by intercalary growth above and below the region of bracteole attachment. The ovule develops by the resumption of growth of the floral apex. A single vascularized integument, formed at first by periclinal divisions in the protoderm, encloses the nucellus. The development and pattern of the vascular tissue is described. Four conceptual frameworks regarding the morphological nature of the flower are outlined and the data derived from this study are analyzed in relation to each framework. The interpretations are conflicting and it is considered that this is due, in part, to an a priori establishment of mutually exclusive categories.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 1700447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Wang ◽  
Yong Miao ◽  
Yong Huang ◽  
Bojie Lin ◽  
Xiaomin Liu ◽  
...  

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