722 resultados para Generative organs, Female
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Published as an article in: Journal of Population Economics, 2004, vol. 17, issue 1, pages 1-16.
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11 p.
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Under the regional programme Fisheries and HIV/AIDS in Africa: Investing in Sustainable Solutions, the WorldFish Center conducted this study on access to health services and vulnerabilities of female fish traders in the Kafue Flats floodplains in Zambia. This report outlines and analyses the particular vulnerabilities of female fish traders in the Kafue Flats fishery and formulates recommendations to facilitate stakeholder uptake of strategic responses to tackle the drivers of the epidemic in fishing communities and improve the livelihoods of fisher folk and fish traders in the Kafue Flats and other fisheries in Zambia. (pdf contains 55 pages)
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Diversos estudos que abordam as repercussões das cirurgias ginecológicas na vida da mulher apontam para uma relação existente com aspectos subjetivos, em virtude da construção social da identidade feminina, indicando que a perda de órgãos ginecológicos pode interferir na maneira da mulher se perceber e se relacionar com o mundo. O presente estudo tem como objeto o processo de interação da mulher no contexto das cirurgias ginecológicas. Para isso foram formulados os objetivos: Descrever os significados da cirurgia ginecológica para a mulher submetida a este procedimento e Analisar o processo de interação da mulher com ela mesma e com o seu núcleo social a partir dos significados por ela atribuídos à cirurgia ginecológica, considerando o fenômeno da mutilação. O estudo de natureza qualitativa, do tipo descritivo-exploratório, teve como referencial teórico-metodológico o Interacionismo Simbólico e a Grounded Theory, que subsidiaram uma interpretação da ação e das relações das mulheres no contexto da cirurgia ginecológica e da mutilação, baseados na definição e interpretação de significados por elas atribuídos. Dos resultados emergiram quatro categorias: Investigando a doença e decidindo aceitar a cirurgia, A passagem pela cirurgia: vivendo o processo de resolução do problema, Enfrentando as mudanças impostas pela cirurgia e Valorizando a vida. Evidenciou-se que ao receber o diagnóstico da doença, a mulher interage com dúvidas, medos, a busca por informação e pelos benefícios da cirurgia, e por fim decide aceitá-la. Ao passar pela cirurgia, vivencia incômodos, complicações, compreende que perdeu uma parte do corpo e procura conformar-se, tentando crer que foi o único caminho. As diversas mudanças que ocorrem fazem-na construir novos significados e mudar a percepção de si e do seu meio social, a partir da interação consigo mesma e com este meio, fazendo-a refletir sobre a sexualidade, seus relacionamentos, sua saúde, a diferença no corpo e em si mesma, nas funções que desempenha e sobre a mutilação provocada pela cirurgia. O desenvolvimento de mecanismos de enfrentamento, como comparar sua cirurgia e histórias com outras, identificar aprendizados com a experiência, buscar formas de superação e resignar-se resultaram na valorização da vida e na vontade de viver melhor. Percebe-se a importância da enfermeira estabelecer um cuidado multidimensional, que identifique as necessidades que vão além do corpo biológico, respeitando as particularidades e a individualidade no momento do cuidado e contribuindo para o bem-estar físico, psíquico, social e espiritual das mulheres.
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This paper attempts to review the literature on Gammarus and examine how it allocates its internal resources when producing eggs. There is an extensive literature on the fecundity of freshwater species but almost nothing is known about the sizes and energy contents of the eggs. More is known for saltwater species, in which the mean number of eggs per brood is inversely proportional to mean egg size and directly proportional to the female's body size. Theoretical aspects of egg size, numbers and reproductive effort are examined, along with the relation between sizes of eggs, broods and female body size. The reproductive effort and breeding cycles of both saltwater and freshwater species are reviewed, and reproductive strategies assessed.
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Morphogenesis is a phenomenon of intricate balance and dynamic interplay between processes occurring at a wide range of scales (spatial, temporal and energetic). During development, a variety of physical mechanisms are employed by tissues to simultaneously pattern, move, and differentiate based on information exchange between constituent cells, perhaps more than at any other time during an organism's life. To fully understand such events, a combined theoretical and experimental framework is required to assist in deciphering the correlations at both structural and functional levels at scales that include the intracellular and tissue levels as well as organs and organ systems. Microscopy, especially diffraction-limited light microscopy, has emerged as a central tool to capture the spatio-temporal context of life processes. Imaging has the unique advantage of watching biological events as they unfold over time at single-cell resolution in the intact animal. In this work I present a range of problems in morphogenesis, each unique in its requirements for novel quantitative imaging both in terms of the technique and analysis. Understanding the molecular basis for a developmental process involves investigating how genes and their products- mRNA and proteins-function in the context of a cell. Structural information holds the key to insights into mechanisms and imaging fixed specimens paves the first step towards deciphering gene function. The work presented in this thesis starts with the demonstration that the fluorescent signal from the challenging environment of whole-mount imaging, obtained by in situ hybridization chain reaction (HCR), scales linearly with the number of copies of target mRNA to provide quantitative sub-cellular mapping of mRNA expression within intact vertebrate embryos. The work then progresses to address aspects of imaging live embryonic development in a number of species. While processes such as avian cartilage growth require high spatial resolution and lower time resolution, dynamic events during zebrafish somitogenesis require higher time resolution to capture the protein localization as the somites mature. The requirements on imaging are even more stringent in case of the embryonic zebrafish heart that beats with a frequency of ~ 2-2.5 Hz, thereby requiring very fast imaging techniques based on two-photon light sheet microscope to capture its dynamics. In each of the hitherto-mentioned cases, ranging from the level of molecules to organs, an imaging framework is developed, both in terms of technique and analysis to allow quantitative assessment of the process in vivo. Overall the work presented in this thesis combines new quantitative tools with novel microscopy for the precise understanding of processes in embryonic development.
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Females of different species might exert female mate choice for different reasons, one of them the aim of avoiding inbreeding. In this study I examine the implication of inbreeding avoidance as a mechanism driving female mate choice in Verreaux’s sifaka lemurs (Propithecus verreauxi). In fact, in this species females are dominant and appear to be able to choose certain males to mate with, while observations indicate that rank, body size, canine size and proportions of fights won are not factors influencing female mate choice. So I hypothesized that females mate choice is driven by inbreeding avoidance in Verreaux’s sifaka lemurs. Tissue and fecal samples were collected in the Kirindy Mitea National Park in western Madagascar as a source of DNA. Parentage was assigned for a sample of the population and relatedness coefficients between dams and sires were estimated and compared to those of between random female and male pairs, dams and other candidate sires within the population and within the groups were the offspring were conceived. I found that there were no significant differences in none of the comparisons which means that Verreaux’s sifaka females do not mate more with males that are more distantly related to them. I concluded that inbreeding avoidance does not appear to be the main force driving female mate choice in Verreaux’s sifaka lemurs and I addressed explanations for these findings. With this study I contribute to our knowledge of female mate choice in lemurs.