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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pinku Yadav ◽  
Olivier Rigo ◽  
Corinne Arvieu ◽  
Eric Lacoste

Abstract AlSi7Mg0.6 alloy is the most widely used cast alloy for aerospace and automotive applications. Therefore, it is essential to explore the effect of scanning strategies parameters on the final part properties in the L-PBF process. The effect of stripes and chessboard strategies parameters such as stripes length, rotation angle, and chessboard island size on mechanical and microstructural properties of L-PBF processed AlSi7Mg0.6 alloy is studied. The evolution of the residual stresses is also investigated in the longitudinal and transverse directions. Cooling rates are also estimated using the cell size within the melt pool. Three distinct regions (i.e., fine, coarse, and heat affected zone) within the melt pool corresponding to different cooling rates could be identified based on Si morphology. The texture of the final material can be tailored by changing the scanning strategies. This study comprehensively presents the results concerning porosity, mechanical properties, crystallographic texture, cooling rates, grain morphology, and residual stresses for additively manufactured AlSi7Mg0.6 alloy.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-fei Lin ◽  
Wei-An Liu ◽  
Yu-Ching Liu ◽  
Hsin-Han Lee ◽  
Yen-Ju Lin ◽  
...  

The ability to correlate the functional relationship between microbial communities and their environment is critical to understanding microbial ecology. There is emerging knowledge on island biogeography of microbes but how island characteristics influence functions of microbial community remain elusive. Here, we explored soil mycobiomes from nine islands adjacent to Taiwan using ITS2 amplicon sequencing. Geographical distances and island size were positively correlated to dissimilarity in mycobiomes, and we identified 56 zero-radius operational taxonomic units (zOTUs) that were ubiquitously present across all islands, and as few as five Mortierella zOTUs dominate more than half of mycobiomes. Correlation network analyses revealed that seven of the 45 hub species were part of the ubiquitous zOTUs belonging to Mortierella, Trichoderma, Aspergillus, Clonostachys and Staphylotrichum. We sequenced and annotated the genomes of seven Mortierella isolates, and comparative predictions of KEGG orthologues using PICRUSt2 database updated with new genomes increased sequence reads coverage by 62.9% at the genus level. In addition, genes associated with carbohydrate and lipid metabolisms were differentially abundant between islands which remained undetected in the original database. Predicted functional pathways were similar across islands despite their geographical separation, difference in differentially abundant genes and composition. Our approach demonstrated the incorporation of the key taxa genomic data can improve functional gene prediction results and can be readily applied to investigate other niches of interests.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean M Mahoney ◽  
Madison D. Oud ◽  
Claudie Pageau ◽  
Marcio Argollo de Menezes ◽  
Nathan Smith ◽  
...  

Plumage coloration is an important trait involved communication and is shaped by a variety of ecological pressures. Island residency has the potential to change the evolutionary trajectory of plumage colour by differences in habitat and resources, or by altering predation pressure and social selection intensity. Latitude, island size, and isolation may further influence colour evolution by biasing colonization. Therefore, general patterns of plumage evolution are difficult to disentangle. We used phylogenetically controlled analyses to assess the influence of island residency on plumage colouration, by calculating chromaticity values from red, blue, green scores extracted from photos of Order Passeriformes birds. Importantly, we controlled for ecological factors hypothesized to influence colour evolution and assessed family-level effects. We found 1) colour varied between islands and mainlands in females, but not males, and both sexes were affected by several ecological factors; 2) patterns of colour evolution varied among families; 3) island size and distance to the mainland and other islands significantly influenced colour; and 4) interactions between ecological factors and latitude were consistently influenced colour, supporting a latitudinal gradient hypothesis. Our results indicate although island residency influences female colour evolution, a myriad of ecological factors drive plumage colour and the patterns vary among families.


Author(s):  
Anggi Kurniawan ◽  
Hiroaki Tsutsui

Fast-ions confinement is a prominent subject in developing nuclear fusion reactors due to its importance in sustaining the burning plasma and keeping energy production. However, confining them has proven to be difficult until now, and one of the reasons is that the inherent discrete magnetic field produces a magnetic ripple. A better understanding of fast-ions transport using appropriate numerical calculation tools needs to be developed to overcome such a challenge in the engineering aspect. This study revisited data collection of fast ion transport simulated under the ripple presence in a nuclear fusion device. The ion trajectories were followed using two orbit-following equation schemes, and the ripple-resonance island size in the Poincaré section was compared. The result showed that the island size obtained by each scheme was different when the particle resonates with a stronger ripple field and, proportionally, the diffusion coefficients are different. The physical meaning and consequence behind this discovery were discussed in this paper.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luisa Conti ◽  
Francisco E. Mendez-Castro ◽  
Milan Chytry ◽  
Lars Goetzenberger ◽  
Michal Hajek ◽  
...  

Aim: Trait-based approaches are increasingly implemented in island biogeography, providing key insights into the eco-evolutionary dynamics of insular systems. However, what determines persistence of plant species once they have arrived and established in an island remains largely unexplored. Here, we examined links between non-acquisitive persistence strategies and insularity across three terrestrial edaphic island systems, hypothesising that insularity promotes strategies for local persistence. Location: Europe: Western Carpathians, Moravia, and Cantabrian Range. Time period: Present. Major taxa studied: Vascular plants. Methods: For each system, we used linear models at the island scale to test whether persistence-related plant trait patterns (average trait values and diversity) depend on three insularity metrics (island size, isolation and target effect). We focused on patterns of edaphic island specialists because, in contrast to matrix-derived species, their presence is confined to the edaphic islands. Results: We found that insularity metrics explained large proportions in the variation of the average and diversity of persistence-related traits of edaphic island specialists. Insularity was associated with a decline in the proportion of island specialists that have clonal abilities, yet it affected trait values of specialists towards enhanced abilities to persist locally (e.g. more extensive lateral spread) while reducing trait variability. Higher degrees of insularity within the systems were translated to stronger effects on functional trait patterns. Main conclusions: Insularity affects plant species diversity, distribution and forms in terrestrial island-like systems, similarly as it is assumed for true islands. Insularity, measured using a single (island size, isolation) or combined (target effect) predictors, may operate selecting for enhanced and less diverse persistence strategies. Ultimately, this process, which we call insularity forcing, operates as a selective process to promote species ability to avoid local extinction and to persist on terrestrial islands.


2021 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandro Geraldini ◽  
M. Landreman ◽  
E. Paul

An adjoint method to calculate the gradient of island width in stellarators is presented and applied to a set of magnetic field configurations. The underlying method for calculation of the island width is that of Cary & Hanson (Phys. Fluids B, vol. 3, issue 4, 1991, pp. 1006–1014) (with a minor modification), and requires that the residue of the island centre be small. Therefore, the gradient of the residue is calculated in addition. Both the island width and the gradient calculations are verified using an analytical magnetic field configuration introduced by Reiman & Greenside (Comput. Phys. Commun., vol. 43, issue 1, 1986, pp. 157–167). The method is also applied to the calculation of the shape gradient of the width of a magnetic island in a National Compact Stellarator Experiment (NCSX) vacuum configuration with respect to positions on a coil. A gradient-based optimization is applied to a magnetic field configuration studied by Hanson & Cary (Phys. Fluids, vol. 27, issue 4, 1984, pp. 767–769) to minimize stochasticity by adding perturbations to a pair of helical coils. Although only vacuum magnetic fields and an analytical magnetic field model are considered in this work, the adjoint calculation of the island width gradient could also be applied to a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equilibrium if the derivative of the magnetic field, with respect to the equilibrium parameters, is known. Using the island width gradient calculation presented here, more general gradient-based optimization methods can be applied to design stellarators with small magnetic islands. Moreover, the sensitivity of the island size may itself be optimized to ensure that coil tolerances, with respect to island size, are kept as high as possible.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damian W. Rivett ◽  
Shorok B. Mombrikotb ◽  
Hyun S. Gweon ◽  
Thomas Bell ◽  
Christopher van der Gast

AbstractPatterns of species diversity provide fundamental insights into the underlying mechanisms and processes that regulate biodiversity. The species–time relationship (STR) has the potential to be one such pattern; in a comparable manner to its more extensively studied spatial analogue, the species–area relationship (SAR), which has been pivotal in the development of ecological models and theories. We sought to determine the mechanisms and processes that underpin STR patterns of temporal turnover by sampling bacterial communities within ten water-filled tree-holes on the same European beech tree through the course of a year. We took this natural model system to represent an archipelago of islands of varying sizes and with shared common immigration sources. We observed an inverse relationship between STR-derived turnover rates and island size. Further, turnover was related to island size and not island isolation within the study system as indicated by a low frequency of dispersal limitation and high homogenizing dispersal. Compared to SARs, STRs are understudied, as such, the findings from the current study should provide a renewed interest in STR-based patterns and processes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy Bird ◽  
Bradley K Woodworth ◽  
Richard A Fuller ◽  
Justine D Shaw

Population estimates are commonly generated and used in conservation science. All estimates carry inherent uncertainty, but little attention has been given to when and how this uncertainty limits their use. This requires an understanding of the specific purposes for which population estimates are intended, an assessment of the level of uncertainty each purpose can tolerate, and information on current uncertainty. We conducted a review and meta-analysis for a widespread group of seabirds, the petrels, to better understand how and why population estimates are being used. Globally petrels are highly threatened, and aspects of their ecology make them difficult to survey, introducing high levels of uncertainty into population estimates. We found that by far the most common intended use of population estimates was to inform status and trend assessments, while less common uses were trialling methods to improve estimates, and assessing threat impacts and conservation outcomes. The mean coefficient of variation for published estimates was 0.17 (SD = 0.14), with no evidence that uncertainty has been reduced through time. As a consequence of this high uncertainty, when we simulated declines equivalent to thresholds commonly used to trigger management, only 5% of studies could detect significant differences between population estimates collected 10 years apart for populations declining at a rate of 30% over three generations. Reporting of uncertainty was variable with no dispersion statistics reported with 38% of population estimates and most not reporting key underlying parameters: nest numbers/density and nest occupancy. We also found no correlation between population estimates and either island size, body size or species threat status - potential predictors of uncertainty. Synthesis and applications: Key recommendations for managers are to be mindful of uncertainty in past population estimates if aiming to collect contemporary estimates for comparison, to report uncertainty clearly for new estimates, and to give careful consideration to whether a proposed estimate is likely to achieve the requisite level of certainty for the investment in its generation to be warranted. We recommend a practitioner-based Value of Information assessment to confirm where there is value in reducing uncertainty.


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