Length–biomass allometry in primary producers: predominantly bidimensional seaweeds differ from the “universal” interspecific trend defined by microalgae and vascular plants

2006 ◽  
Vol 84 (7) ◽  
pp. 1159-1166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo Scrosati

This study tests whether the value (0.25, or 1/4) of the interspecific allometric exponent currently thought to be universal for the length–biomass relationship for primary producers (based on data for vascular plants and unicellular microalgae) also applies to macroalgae. Length and dry biomass were measured for four phylogenetically distinct seaweed species, Chondrus crispus Stackhouse, Pterocladiella capillacea (Gmelin) Santelices & Hommersand, Fucus vesiculosus Linnaeus, and Laminaria saccharina (Linnaeus) J.V. Lamouroux, which are representatives of four different orders: Gigartinales and Gelidiales (Rhodophyta) and Fucales and Laminariales (Phaeophyceae). The interspecific exponent found for these seaweeds (0.47) differs significantly from the interspecific “universal” value stated above. The 95% confidence interval for the interspecific exponent for these seaweeds includes 0.5 (or 1/2), a value that is related to an idealized form of bidimensional growth. While vascular plants and unicellular microalgae can be viewed as clearly growing in three dimensions, the studied seaweeds are predominantly flat, which thus seems to explain their divergent allometry. The present study indicates that the comprehensive understanding of allometric trends for primary producers should be based on studies covering the morphological diversity that different groups of primary producers display.

1944 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. A93-A100
Author(s):  
Ascher H. Shapiro

Abstract Flow patterns for compressible fluids at supersonic velocities are discussed, and it is shown that shock fronts form when neighboring Mach lines (envelopes of wave fronts originating from point disturbances) intersect. A criterion for divergence of Mach lines is developed for cases in which the passage is symmetrical in two or three dimensions and has a straight axis. This criterion is used as the basis for designing supersonic nozzles and diffusers. The analysis indicates that only a nozzle of infinite length can discharge a parallel stream into a tube of constant cross section without the formation of shock fronts. Methods are presented for designing nozzles of finite length, with the intensity of shock fronts reduced to as small a value as possible, and it is shown that nozzles of reasonable length may be designed so that shock fronts are insignificant. Experimental observations indicate that the proposed method of nozzle design is a practical one. With regard to supersonic diffusers having a straight axis, it is shown that shock fronts cannot be avoided, even though the diffuser is of infinite length. However, the methods of this paper may be used as an aid in determining the best diffuser design.


Geology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maciej J. Bojanowski ◽  
Magdalena Goryl ◽  
Barbara Kremer ◽  
Beata Marciniak-Maliszewska ◽  
Leszek Marynowski ◽  
...  

Abstract Ediacaran siderite-bearing sedimentary rocks from the western part of the East European craton exhibit features typical of redoximorphic paleosols, including pedogenic siderite (e.g., sphaerosiderite) with uniform and negative δ18O and highly variable δ13C values. The siderite precipitated in water-logged soils in a hot and humid climate, and represents a rare example of pedogenic siderite formed before the rise of vascular plants. Morphology of soil microorganisms was preserved in three dimensions due to the early siderite precipitation. These are mainly filamentous and tube-like threads, which might belong to cyanobacteria or fungi, and spherical structures resembling green algae. This microbial life fostered development of strongly reducing soils in tropical wetlands on the Baltica paleocontinent. The Ediacaran sediments of the western East European craton, traditionally regarded as marine, are reinterpreted as containing sections affected by freshwater conditions, documenting the presence of microbial life on the Ediacaran land.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-85
Author(s):  
Marta Dinata ◽  
Fitridawati Fitridawati ◽  
Lusi Dwi Putri

The location of the study of Potential tree species for Peripheral Forest Development is determined by Lancang Kuning University, which is on Yos Sudarso road KM 8 Rumbai Pekanbaru, which is a fragmented habitat. The method used is census through measurement of area, structure observation, population enumeration, measurement of three dimensions. Calculating tree species diversity (H '), Assessing the suitability criteria of a type of tree for each type of green edge path area refers to the method of analyzing an integrated research plan, the important value index for the highest vegetation is acacia (Acacia auriculiformis) with a value amounting to 73.11. Acacia (Acacia auriculiformis) type of tree is less suitable. This is because the population is too high, where the debris that falls hard to decompose causes a thick pile when trampled slipperily and endangers safety, which eventually leaves litter accumulation causing soil conditions on the slopes to become soft because it is moist and has the potential to become landslides.


Traditional Thai house, called “Ruean Thai”, is a local wisdom in Thai architecture which is unique style in Thailand and it is very important and valuable knowledge to be passed from generation to generation. However, with the massive changes of latest technology, children or young people pay less attention to Thai wisdom and culture. Therefore, this research aims to preserve the Thai wisdom and cultural learning in Thai house by using gamification techniques and Thai house models in three dimensions to solve the above problems. This Thai house game application is a game based learning program to assemble Thai house models in three dimensions for entertainment and learning about the components of Thai houses of each region. In our project, students interact with a Thai house game application based gamification technique and able to learn and take challenges through gaming to expand and test their knowledge. The result shown that using Thai house game application enhances a more comprehensive understanding and engage student to raise their time learning and enjoyment during the experimental process.


Geosciences ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keyron Hickman-Lewis ◽  
Pascale Gautret ◽  
Laurent Arbaret ◽  
Stéphanie Sorieul ◽  
Rutger De Wit ◽  
...  

Morphologically diverse organo-sedimentary structures (including microbial mats and stromatolites) provide a palaeobiological record through more than three billion years of Earth history. Since understanding much of the Archaean fossil record is contingent upon proving the biogenicity of such structures, mechanistic interpretations of well-preserved fossil microbialites can reinforce our understanding of their biogeochemistry and distinguish unambiguous biological characteristics in these structures, which represent some of the earliest records of life. Mechanistic morphogenetic understanding relies upon the analysis of geomicrobiological experiments. Herein, we report morphological-biogeochemical comparisons between micromorphologies observed in growth experiments using photosynthetic mats built by the cyanobacterium Coleofasciculus chthonoplastes (formerly Microcoleus) and green anoxygenic phototrophic Chloroflexus spp. (i.e., Coleofasciculus–Chloroflexus mats), and Precambrian organo-sedimentary structures, demonstrating parallels between them. In elevated ambient concentrations of Cu (toxic to Coleofasciculus), Coleofasciculus–Chloroflexus mats respond by forming centimetre-scale pinnacle-like structures (supra-lamina complexities) associated with large quantities of EPS at their surfaces. µPIXE mapping shows that Cu and other metals become concentrated within surficial sheath-EPS-Chloroflexus-rich layers, producing density-differential micromorphologies with distinct fabric orientations that are detectable using X-ray computed micro-tomography (X-ray µCT). Similar micromorphologies are also detectable in stromatolites from the 3.481 Ga Dresser Formation (Pilbara, Western Australia). The cause and response link between the presence of toxic elements (geochemical stress) and the development of multi-layered topographical complexities in organo-sedimentary structures may thus be considered an indicator of biogenicity, being an indisputably biological and predictable morphogenetic response reflecting, in this case, the differential responses of Coleofasciculus and Chloroflexus to Cu. Growth models for microbialite morphogenesis rely upon linking morphology to intrinsic (biological) and extrinsic (environmental) influences. Since the pinnacles of Coleofasciculus–Chloroflexus mats have an unambiguously biological origin linked to extrinsic geochemistry, we suggest that similar micromorphologies observed in ancient organo-sedimentary structures are indicative of biogenesis. An identical Coleofasciculus–Chloroflexus community subjected to salinity stress also produced supra-lamina complexities (tufts) but did not produce identifiable micromorphologies in three dimensions since salinity seems not to negatively impact either organism, and therefore cannot be used as a morphogenetic tool for the interpretation of density-homogeneous micro-tufted mats—for example, those of the 3.472 Ga Middle Marker horizon. Thus, although correlative microscopy is the keystone to confirming the biogenicity of certain Precambrian stromatolites, it remains crucial to separately interrogate each putative trace of ancient life, ideally using three-dimensional analyses, to determine, where possible, palaeoenvironmental influences on morphologies. Widespread volcanism and hydrothermal effusion into the early oceans likely concentrated toxic elements in early biomes. Morphological diversity in fossil microbialites could, therefore, reflect either (or both of) differential exposure to ambient fluids enriched in toxic elements and/or changing ecosystem structure and tolerance to elements through evolutionary time—for example, after incorporation into enzymes. Proof of biogenicity by deducing morphogenesis (i.e., a process preserved in the fossil record) overcomes many of the shortcomings inherent to the proof of biogenicity by descriptions of morphology alone.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Leavy

Purpose In his new book Better, Simpler Strategy: A Value-Based Guide to Exceptional Performance, Felix Oberholzer-Gee offers business leaders and strategists guidance on a basic idea: unless an initiative creates value for customers, employees or suppliers, it is a waste of time and resources. Design/methodology/approach In this interview with S&L contributing editor Brian Leavy, Prof. Felix Oberholzer-Gee explains: “All you need to ask is, ‘Can my organization create differentiated value, can we raise customer willingness-to-pay (WTP) or lower employee and supplier willingness-to-sell (WTS)?’”. Findings Value-based strategy is “back-to-basics” in the sense that the approach insists on value creation as the foundation for every activity in the business. Practical/implications A comprehensive understanding of employees’ work lives is likely to reveal many chances to create value. Originality/value The interview explains why and how firms should seek to exceed expectations where it counts, and sustain excellence by diverting resources from lower-ranked value drivers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 181353
Author(s):  
Qingfa Chen ◽  
Tingchang Yin

In rock engineering projects, professionals assess the overall rock mass qualities using a sole value. However, the true qualities of partial rock masses are incompatible with such a value. To address this problem, the idea of regionally classifying rock mass qualities is proposed and the associated procedure presented. To achieve this goal, the probabilistic and deterministic joints within the study area were determined, and a three-dimensional joint network model was created. Then, the three-dimensional joint network model was discretized into interlocking subdomains, and the modified blockiness index ( MB i ) was used to finely identify the homogeneous structural regions, together with the k -means algorithm and the sum of squared errors (SSE). A synthetic model comprising homogeneous structural regions was developed and validated with respect to the extracted cross-sections. Next, an improved rock mass rating system ( RMR mbi ) was introduced, and the viability of RMR mbi was supported through a significant amount of theoretical cases and several real cases. Finally, visualization of regional RMR mbi classification results was performed. Results show that: (i) the homogeneous structural regions are finely demarcated in three dimensions, and (ii) the proposed idea can overcome the problem of rock mass quality classification using the conventional approach often leading to ‘overgeneralization’.


Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (8) ◽  
pp. 2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack O’ Connor ◽  
Steve Meaney ◽  
Gwilym A. Williams ◽  
Maria Hayes

Seaweeds are a rich source of protein and can contain up to 47% on the dry weight basis. It is challenging to extract proteins from the raw biomass of seaweed due to resilient cell-wall complexes. Four species of macroalgae were used in this study-two brown, Fucus vesiculosus and Alaria esculenta, and two red, Palmaria palmata and Chondrus crispus. Three treatments were applied individually to the macroalgal species: (I) high-pressure processing (HPP); (II) laboratory autoclave processing and (III) a classical sonication and salting out method. The protein, ash and lipid contents of the resulting extracts were estimated. Yields of protein recovered ranged from 3.2% for Fucus vesiculosus pre-treated with high pressure processing to 28.9% protein recovered for Chondrus crispus treated with the classical method. The yields of protein recovered using the classical, HPP and autoclave pre-treatments applied to Fucus vesiculosus were 35.1, 23.7% and 24.3%, respectively; yields from Alaria esculenta were 18.2%, 15.0% and 17.1% respectively; yields from Palmaria palmata were 12.5%, 14.9% and 21.5% respectively, and finally, yields from Chondrus crispus were 35.2%, 16.1% and 21.9%, respectively. These results demonstrate that while macroalgal proteins may be extracted using either physical or enzymatic methods, the specific extraction procedure should be tailored to individual species.


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