The tropical backyard: performing environmental difference

2019 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 331-343
Author(s):  
Lisa Law
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 2903 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sun Kyeong Choi ◽  
Hyun-Ju Oh ◽  
Suk-Hyun Yun ◽  
Hyuk Je Lee ◽  
Kyounghoon Lee ◽  
...  

Since 2015, troublesome masses of floating Sargassum horneri have been introduced via ocean currents and winds to the southwestern coastline of Korea, including Jeju Island. These massive mats have caused considerable damage to the aquaculture industry, tourism, and the marine ecosystem. Most previous studies of S. horneri have focused on cultivation, the development of gene markers, and photosynthetic activity, but few data on population dynamics are available. We investigated the population dynamics of native S. horneri off the southwestern coast of Korea with the aim of predicting the formation of golden tides. Populations at two sites had obligate annual life cycles. Thalli were recruited during the period September–November, grew during the period December–April, and senesced by July. This pattern reflected seasonal trends in water temperature. Specific growth rates and heights of the thalli at Munseom were significantly higher than those at Jindo. The greatest environmental difference between the two sites is probably the degree of exposure to wave action. Mortality density (thalli lost per unit area) in the Munseom population was highest during the period December–January (i.e., 2–3 months after recruitment) and in March. Most thalli in the Jindo population died off in July when water temperatures increased. The maximum average biomass of S. horneri thalli detaching from the substrata reached 1.6 kg fresh weight m–2 during January and March. Thus, large-scale drifting mats were formed by S. horneri detachment from the substrata. Despite the differences in space and environment between China and Korea, our findings will enable quantitative assessments of the overall floating Sargassum biomass in the East China and Yellow Seas.


1980 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-134
Author(s):  
Glenn White ◽  
Kate Grieshaber

It was theorized that measures of objective difference tones found in a previous experiment were artifacts of test instrumentation. In an experiment that eliminated most of the possible error-producing instrumentation, no environmental difference tones were detected, although perceptual ones were. A recommendation is made that future research regarding combination tones be conducted using complex tones rather than sine tones, which do not occur in music.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongrong Qiu ◽  
Zhijian Zhao ◽  
David Klindt ◽  
Magdalena Kautzky ◽  
Klaudia P. Szatko ◽  
...  

SummaryPressures for survival drive sensory circuit adaption to a species’ habitat, making it essential to statistically characterise natural scenes. Mice, a prominent visual system model, are dichromatic with enhanced sensitivity to green and UV. Their visual environment, however, is rarely considered. Here, we built a UV-green camera to record footage from mouse habitats. We found chromatic contrast to greatly diverge in the upper but not the lower visual field, an environmental difference that may underlie the species’ superior colour discrimination in the upper visual field. Moreover, training an autoencoder on upper but not lower visual field scenes was sufficient for the emergence of colour-opponent filters. Furthermore, the upper visual field was biased towards dark UV contrasts, paralleled by more light-offset-sensitive cells in the ventral retina. Finally, footage recorded at twilight suggests that UV promotes aerial predator detection. Our findings support that natural scene statistics shaped early visual processing in evolution.Lead contactFurther information and requests for resources and reagents should be directed to and will be fulfilled by the Lead Contact, Thomas Euler ([email protected])


1889 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 297-330 ◽  

The following paper forms part of an investigation of the relation between the variations of animals and the conditions under which they live. It appears to me necessary that any investigation of this problem should be begun by the examination of cases in which difference in environment is known to exist, and that variations should then be sought for among the forms of life subjected to these conditions. If by this examination any variations can be shown to occur regularly with the change of conditions, or in any way in proportion to their intensity, it is so far evidence that there is a relation of cause and effect between them. By thus first approaching the question from the point of view of the conditions, many difficulties are obviated which occur in any attempt which begins by ascertaining the variations in the animal, in the hope of afterwards finding an environmental change to which they may be traced. Such attempts to trace back variations to some environmental cause have often been made, and have, in general, been unsuccessful. In the case of species which have varied in isolated situations not apparently differing from each other, the failure to find points of environmental difference has been held to be evidence that the variations in question did not arise from such causes at all. This appears likely, and is probably true of the variations in question; but it must be borne in mind that the fact that no palpable difference can be found between the conditions in the several localities is no proof that they do not exist. While these differences in condition are usually evasive and hard to detect, it is best to begin to investigate their relation to variations in animals by selecting cases in which the change in conditions is unequivocal, and proceed from this starting point to seek for correlated variation in the forms of life subjected to them.


2001 ◽  
Vol 15 (28n30) ◽  
pp. 3901-3903 ◽  
Author(s):  
JUN-ICHI NIITSUMA ◽  
TORU FUJIMURA ◽  
TADASHI ITOH ◽  
HITOSHI KASAI ◽  
SHUJI OKADA ◽  
...  

Perylene microcrystals are known to show characteristic change in the exciton fluorescence spectra depending on the crystal size less than about 200nm. However, the origin of the size-dependence is not yet clear. In this work, we have studied on individual microcrystals by a scanning near-field optical microscope (SNOM). The samples were prepared by a modified technique based on reprecipitation method. As a result, we could successfully measure the topographic and fluorescence images of perylene microcrystals with the size of ~200nm by SNOM at room temperature. In the fluorescence spectra of the single microcrystals, free and self-trapped exciton bands were successfully observed but they did not show any critical difference from that of the bulk crystals. Some possibility of environmental difference is discussed.


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