scholarly journals Movements of a male greater spotted eagle (Clanga clanga) during its 2nd and 3rd calendar years

2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mike Mcgrady ◽  
Matthias Schmidt ◽  
Georgina Andersen ◽  
Christiane Meyburg ◽  
Ülo Väli ◽  
...  

Abstract The greater spotted eagle (Clanga clanga) is poorly known compared to other European eagles. We tracked an immature greater spotted eagle during 2018–2020 within the eastern European part of the species’ distribution, west of the Ural Mountains. Because so little is published about the annual movements of this species, especially from that region, tracking data from this single individual are valuable. 95% kernel density estimator (KDE) range sizes for the two complete winters in Yemen were 4,009 km2 (2018), 1,889 km2 (2019); 95% dynamic Brownian bridge movement models (dBBMM) encompassed 1,309 km2 (2018) and 1,517 km2 (2019). It returned to the same wintering area every year. During summer 2018, it settled into a small area (95% KDE = 126 km2; 95% dBBMM = 21 km2) near Birsk, eastern European Russia; in 2019 it wandered over a huge area (95% dBBMM = 66,304 km2) of western Kazakhstan and southern Russia, south west of Yekaterinburg. Spring migration 2018 was west of the Caspian Sea; during 2019 it was east of it. Mean speed of spring migration was 160±120 km/day during 2018, and 132±109 km/day during 2019. Autumn migration passed east of the Caspian in both years, and the mean speed of migration was 62 ± 78 km/day in 2018, and 84 ± 95 km/day in 2019. During both spring and autumn migrations, the eagle made stopovers, mostly lasting 1–2 days. The eastern Alborz Mountains in northeastern Iran appeared to be an important stopover locale, where autumn stopovers lasted 19 days (2018) and 27 days (2019). These and other data suggest that most greater spotted eagles that spend summers west of about 42°E, winter in southern Europe, Asian Turkey, the Levant and Africa, and those that summer to the east of that meridian winter in southern Asia, including Arabia.

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Isabel Carvalho Gonçalves ◽  
Renata Santoro de Sousa-Lima ◽  
Niel Nascimento Teixeira ◽  
Gustavo Henrique Carvalho ◽  
Daniel Danilewicz ◽  
...  

Abstract: The population of humpback whales from breeding stock A is increasing, and little is known about the routes used by humpbacks that move north of the main calving area of Brazil, the Abrolhos Bank. The aim of this study was to describe the movements of humpback whales in a reoccupation wintering area (Serra Grande, Bahia state, Brazil) based on land-based surveys to test if movement patterns change during the season and between years, due to group composition, behavioral state, and distance to the coast. The mean leg speed of the groups sighted was 6.88 (±2.92) km/h, and leg speed was positively correlated with distance to the coast. There was an increase in leg speed and distance to the coast with increasing number of escorts in the groups with calves. The mean linearity value for group trajectory was 0.81 (±0.19) and the mean reorientation rate was 25.72 (±19.09) º/min. We observed a predominance of trajectories heading south throughout the study. Groups exhibiting more erratic movements early in the season, and groups moving south showed more linear trajectories than groups moving north, indicating the beginning of their migration back to the feeding grounds. Energy conserving strategies and social context affect the movements of humpback whales in Serra Grande, resulting in the observed patterns of the reoccupation of available and suitable habitat north of Abrolhos. Thereby, special attention should be given managing activities with the potential to disturb or displace whales using the region to calve and breed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alisa Medvedeva ◽  
Igor Medvedev

<p>A regional model of tsunami seismic sources in the zone of the Main Caucasian thrust has been developed. The parameters of probable models of seismic sources and their uncertainties were estimated based on the available data on historical earthquakes and active faults of the region. The scenario modeling technique was used for the tsunami zoning of the Caspian Sea coast. The time period covered by the model catalog of earthquakes used to calculate the generation and propagation of tsunamis is about 20 000 years, which is longer than the recurrence periods of the strongest possible earthquakes. The recurrence graphs of the calculated maximum tsunami heights for the entire sea coast were plotted. On their basis, the maximum heights of tsunami waves on the coast were calculated with recurrence periods of 250, 500, 1000 and 5000 years and the corresponding survey maps of the tsunami zoning of the Caspian Sea were created. The algorithm for calculating the tsunami run-up on the coast is improved, taking into account the residual (postseismic) displacements of the bottom and land relief. Estimates of tsunami hazard for the coast near the city of Kaspiysk were carried out: within the framework of the deterministic approach, the maximum wave heights and run-up distance were calculated. It is shown that the deterministic approach slightly overestimates the maximum heights of tsunami waves with certain return periods. It is shown that changes in the mean sea level can affect the features of the propagation of tsunami waves in the Caspian Sea. Thus, at an average sea level of -25-26 m, the Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay is linked with the entire sea through a narrow strait. It leads to the propagation of tsunami waves into the water area of the bay and a decrease in wave height on the eastern coast of the sea. When the mean sea level decreases below -27 m, the positive depths in the strait disappear and water exchange through the strait stops, and the wave height in this part of the sea increases.</p>


Cultura ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-172
Author(s):  
Liudmila Baeva ◽  
Anna Romanova

1997 ◽  
Vol 75 (11) ◽  
pp. 1923-1933 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison S. Craig ◽  
Louis M. Herman

Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) perform extensive seasonal migrations between high-latitude summer feeding grounds and low-latitude winter reproductive grounds. To investigate gender-related site fidelity to the Hawaiian Islands, an important wintering area for North Pacific humpback whales, photographically based resight histories of 224 females and 416 males observed in Hawai'i from 1976 through 1991 were compiled. Results indicated that the mean number of years in which they were seen was higher for males than for females, that the probability of an individual being resighted across years was higher for males than for females, and that more males than females were seen in consecutive years. Potential sources of bias favoring the photographic capture of males were considered, but none were judged to be significant contributors to the results obtained. It was proposed instead that not all females undertake or complete the migration to the winter grounds each year. Because of the high energy costs of migration and reproduction, some females may overwinter in high latitudes, while others may become pregnant en route to the area traditionally associated with breeding and return to the feeding grounds before arriving at the terminal winter destination.


2015 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 973-988 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emilie Coupechoux ◽  
Marc Lelarge

We consider a threshold epidemic model on a clustered random graph model obtained from local transformations in an alternating branching process that approximates a bipartite graph. In other words, our epidemic model is such that an individual becomes infected as soon as the proportion of his/her infected neighbors exceeds the threshold q of the epidemic. In our random graph model, each individual can belong to several communities. The distributions for the community sizes and the number of communities an individual belongs to are arbitrary. We consider the case where the epidemic starts from a single individual, and we prove a phase transition (when the parameter q of the model varies) for the appearance of a cascade, i.e. when the epidemic can be propagated to an infinite part of the population. More precisely, we show that our epidemic is entirely described by a multi-type (and alternating) branching process, and then we apply Sevastyanov's theorem about the phase transition of multi-type Galton-Watson branching processes. In addition, we compute the entries of the mean progeny matrix corresponding to the epidemic. The phase transition for the contagion is given in terms of the largest eigenvalue of this matrix.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (8) ◽  
pp. 1595-1603 ◽  
Author(s):  
François Potvin ◽  
Hélène Jolicoeur ◽  
Laurier Breton ◽  
Rolland Lemieux

From 1984 to 1986, 56 wolves were removed by aerial shooting from two reduction blocks in Papineau-Labelle Reserve: the mean reduction rate was 71% in RB1 and 40% in RB2, compared with 17 and 9% for two untreated blocks (UB1 and UB2). Corresponding mean wolf densities in the four blocks at the end of winter were 0.6, 1.2, 1.6, and 1.7 wolves/100 km2, respectively. Each year, wolf numbers returned to their former level in the subsequent winter in RB1, mainly through immigration. Three blocks were each associated with a large deer wintering area containing 1400–1700 animals before the wolf reduction. The deer yard in RB1 reached a population of 4200 deer, a 1.32% finite rate of increase per year, compared with annual rates of 1.15–1.18% in UB1 and RB2. The harvest of bucks was not affected by the wolf reduction. The number of fawns per 100 does in the harvest was higher in RB1 than in UB1 in 1985 and 1986. We do not recommend wolf reduction as a management tool in the current context, as deer numbers increased markedly, even where no control was applied, as a consequence of mild winters.


1990 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 223-231
Author(s):  
A. K. Hosni ◽  
M. M. El-Fahham

Using kernel estimates of Yamato type the effect of dependent observations is studied. The mean integreated square error of the Fourier integral estimator is considered.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 4959-4959
Author(s):  
Jitender Khunger ◽  
Monica Malhotra ◽  
Nitin Kumar ◽  
VPS Punia ◽  
Mohan Agarwal

Introduction: The metabolic syndrome is a complex disorder characterized by the presence of a clustering of metabolic risk factors usually in a single individual associated with the presence of central obesity and a strong association with diabetes and cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality. It is a fast spreading global pandemic & emerging as a public health problem with poor outcome and Quality of life thus more predilection is towards preventive than curative treatment. According to WHO Clinical Criteria, Metabolic syndrome is defined as insulin resistance, identified by 1 of the following, Type 2 diabetes, fasting blood glucose more than 110 mg/dl plus any 2 of the following: antihypertensive medication and /or high blood pressure > 140 mm systolic or >90 mm diastolic, plasma triglyceride (TG) level more than 150 mg/dl (1.7 mmol/L), high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol level less than 35 mg/dl (0.9 mmol/L) in men or less than 39 (1.0 mmol/L)in women , BMI >30 kg/m2 and/or waist:hip ratio >0.9 in men, > 0.85 in women, Urinary albumen excretion rate > 20 mcg/min or albumin:creatinine ratio>30mg/g Aims & Objectives: To investigate the coagulation profile derangements in metabolic syndrome. To study the relationship of various components of metabolic syndrome with coagulation parameters. Material & Methods: This was a prospective cross-sectional study carried out in Haematology & Medicine Deptt of SafdarJang Hospital, New Delhi. After taking consent from the Hospital Ethics Committee, a total of 50 cases of metabolic syndrome presenting as outpatient or inpatient were included in the study. 50 age & sex matched controls were selected which did not satisfy the criteria for metabolic syndrome. Observation & Results: In our study we found that the cases with metabolic syndrome have significantly increased levels of Fibrinogen, Factor VIII and Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor1 (PAI1). PT & APTT were shorter in cases with metabolic syndrome. The mean value of fibrinogen in cases was 402.24 ± 66.92 mg/dl while that in control was 261.5 ± 41.95 mg/dl with a P value of <.0001 which was statistically significant. The mean value of Factor VIII in cases was 152.66 ± 7.54 IU/dl while that in control was 131.44 ± 6.24 IU/dl with a P value of <.0001 which was statistically significant. The mean value of Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor1 (PAI1) in cases was 49.99 ± 5.34 ng/ml while that in control was 36.75 ± 3.35 ng/ml with a P value of <.0001 which was statistically significant. Prothrombin Time (PT) values in cases were 9.79 ± 0.74 seconds and in controls were 12.04 ± 0.7 seconds & this difference was statistically significant (p<.0001). Activated partial Thromboplastin Time (APTT) values in cases were 28.96 ± 0.92 seconds and in controls were 32.6 ± 1.34 seconds & this difference was statistically significant (p<.0001). Conclusions: The coagulation parameters studied correlated significantly with the components of metabolic syndrome. The values varied significantly with increased number of features of metabolic syndrome. Thus we can conclude that metabolic syndrome is a hypercoagulable state and further studies are required for further evaluation of the consequences of this hypercoagulable state.. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agata Skrzat-Klapaczyńska ◽  
Kerstin Kase ◽  
Anna Vassilenko ◽  
Arjan Harxhi ◽  
Botond Lakatos ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: A novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) causing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) was detected at the end of 2019 in China. There are many COVID-19 studies in progress however, little is known about the course of COVID-19 in people living with HIV (PLWH). The aim of our study was to describe epidemiology and clinical characteristics of PLWH diagnosed with COVID-19 reported form Central and Eastern European Countries.Methods: On-line survey was sent to Euroguidelines in Central and Eastern Europe (ECEE) Network Group. Analysis included all confirmed COVID-19 cases between March 11 and June 26 2020 among PLWH in 12 countries: Albania, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland , Romania, Russia, and Serbia.Results: In total 34 cases were reported. The mean age of those patients was 42.7 years (IQR=35.8-48.5) and most of the patients were male (70.6% vs 29.4%). The mean CD4+ T-cell count prior COVID-19 diagnosis was 558 cells/mm3 (IQR=312-719) and HIV RNA viral load (VL) was undetectable in 18 of 34 (53%) cases, the data about most recent HIV RNA VL was not available in three cases (8,8%). Comorbidities were observed in 19 (55.9%) patients, mostly cardiovascular disease (27,8%), and in 10 (29.4%) patients had coinfection, mostly chronic hepatitis C (87.5%). The clinical course of COVID-19 was asymptomatic in 4 (12%) cases, mild disease without hospitalization was reported in 11 (32%) cases. Stable patients with respiratory and/or systemic symptoms have been documented in 14 (41%) cases; 5 (15%) patients were clinically unstable with respiratory failure. Full recovery was reported in 31 (91%) cases, two patients died. In one case the data was not available.Conclusion: This study from 12 countries in Central and Eastern Europe region indicates no alarming signals of increased morbidity or mortality from COVID-19 among HIV-positive persons there is a need for further research.


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