3 resultados para 24-month-old Infants

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


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- Context: Pinus pinea L. presents serious problems of natural regeneration in managed forest of Central Spain. The species exhibits specific traits linked to frugivore activity. Therefore, information on plant–animal interactions may be crucial to understand regeneration failure. - Aims: Determining the spatio-temporal pattern of P. pinea seed predation by Apodemus sylvaticus L. and the factors involved. Exploring the importance of A. sylvaticus L. as a disperser of P. pinea. Identifying other frugivores and their seasonal patterns. - Methods: An intensive 24-month seed predation trial was carried out. The probability of seeds escaping predation was modelled through a zero-inflated binomial mixed model. Experiments on seed dispersal by A. sylvaticus were conducted. Cameras were set up to identify other potential frugivores. - Results: Decreasing rodent population in summer and masting enhances seed survival. Seeds were exploited more rapidly nearby parent trees and shelters. A. sylvaticus dispersal activity was found to be scarce. Corvids marginally preyed upon P. pinea seeds. - Conclusions: Survival of P. pinea seeds is climate-controlled through the timing of the dry period together with masting occurrence. Should germination not take place during the survival period, establishment may be limited. A. sylvaticus mediated dispersal does not modify the seed shadow. Seasonality of corvid activity points to a role of corvids in dispersal.

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Cuando el cineasta y periodista Rem Koolhaas aterriza con 24 años de edad, en 1968, en el terreno de la arquitectura, lo hace con un objetivo todavía pendiente: liberar a la arquitectura de la propia arquitectura. Arropándose con el título del Proyecto de Graduación que Rem Koolhaas entrega en 1972 en la Architectural Association, Exodus or the Voluntary Prisoners of the Architecture (en adelante Exodus), proyecto sobre el que el autor de este trabajo realizó la Tesis fin de Máster, bajo el marco académico del Máster en Proyectos Arquitectónicos Avanzados en la ETSA de Madrid, este trabajo se presenta como una continuación y ampliación del anterior, aunque con objetivos complementarios. Así pues, si antes Atlas de Exodus consistía en el profundo análisis de un proyecto de relevancia capital, que servía para entender las intenciones proyectuales de Rem Koolhaas en su desarrollo profesional posterior en Office for Metropolitan Architecture, ahora ese análisis se extiende retrospectivamente a los años previos a la entrega de este proyecto, centrándose en torno a 1968 y 1972. La hipótesis de este trabajo es que Rem Koolhaas quiere liberar a la arquitectura de la propia arquitectura o, aprovechando el juego de palabras, desea provocar el éxodo de la arquitectura hacia el terreno lo infraordinario.2 Este rastreo, durante el transcurso narrativo de la tesis, abstrae las herramientas de liberación utilizadas para la consecución de este objetivo. Herramientas que se compilan, clasifican y enumeran como conclusiones del Atlas del éxodo de la arquitectura y que dejan la puerta abierta para la continuación de esta empresa en los días actuales. La hipótesis alarga su vigencia hasta el momento presente, ya que en opinión del autor, Rem Koolhaas no ha conseguido lo que se proponía y existen evidencias de que no desiste en su búsqueda. Atlas de Exodus se centra más en lo que el arquitecto no ha conseguido que en lo que sí. ABSTRACT When the filmmaker and journalist Rem Koolhaas lands, with 24 years old, in 1968, in the architecture field, he does it with an ambition that still is pending: liberate architecture from the architecture. Using the title fo the Graduation Project that Rem Koolhaas deliver in 1972, at the Architectural Association, named “Exodus or the Voluntary Prisoners of Architecture”, project on which the author of this dissertation developed his Final Master’s Thesis, under the academic frame of the Máster en Proyectos Arquitectónicos Avanzados in the ETSAM, this work is introduced as a continuation and an extension of the former one, but with complementary goals. So, if before Atlas of Exodus was focused on Rem Koolhaas’ Graduation project on 1972, now it is extended retrospectively to 1968. The hypothesis of the dissertation is that Rem Koolhaas wanted and wants to liberate architecture from architecture, or using the pun, he wants to provoque the exodus of architecture to the terrain of the infra-ordinary.4 During the narrative course of the dissertation it abstracts the Liberation Tools that Rem Koolhaas used in order to achieve this goal. This tools that are compiled, classified and listed as the conclusions of this Atlas. They leave an open door for a practical continuation of this issue in the present days. The hypothesis extends its validity to the present time because, in the opinion of the author, Rem Koolhaas didn´t achieve what he wanted in the beginning of his career as an architect, and there are evidences that he didn´t give up in his goal. Atlas of Exodus is focused more in what the architect didn´t get than in what he really got.

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We studied the influence of pre-incubation weight of eggs (EW) laid by 24 wk-old brown laying breeders on egg production from 18 (start of egg production) to 22 wk of age (average egg production across EW treatments of 87.8%). The experiment consisted in 7 treatments based on the initial EW (47 to 53 g with 1 g difference between groups) Average BW of the extreme groups varied at hatching from 32.5 to 35.4 g, respectively. Feed intake, egg production, and egg weight were recorded weekly by replicate as well as for the entire experiment (18 to 22 wk of age). Hens were weighed by replicate at the beginning and at the end of the experiment. From these data, ADFI, egg production, egg weight, egg mass, feed conversion ratio per kilogram of eggs and per dozen of eggs, and BW gain were calculated by week and for the entire experiment. Also, the number of dirty, broken, and shell-less eggs was recorded daily by replicate in all eggs produced. Data were analyzed as a completely randomized design with 7 treatments differing in the initial pre-hatching EW. Effects of EW on the variables studied were partitioned into linear and quadratic components. EW did not affect the age at which pullets reached 50% egg production, cumulative egg production, or BW gain of the hens from 18 to 22 wk of age. Egg weight and the proportion of dirty, broken, and shell-less eggs were not affected by the BW of the pullets at hatching. In summary, small eggs (>47 g) laid by young, healthy laying breeders, can be used successfully to produce high quality pullets