922 resultados para Paleontology -- Queensland


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Climate change has been taking place at unprecedented rates over the past decades. These fast alterations caused by human activities are leading to a global warming of the planet. Warmer temperatures are going to have important effects on vegetation and especially on tropical forests. Insects as well will be affected by climate change. This study tested the hypothesis that higher temperatures lead to a higher insect pressure on vegetation. Visual estimations of leaf damage were recorded and used to assess the extent of herbivory in nine 0.1ha plots along an altitudinal gradient, and therefore a temperature gradient. These estimations were made at both a community level and a species level, on 2 target species. Leaf toughness tests were performed on samples from the target species from each plot. Results showed a strong evidence of increasing insect damage along increasing temperature, with no significant effect from the leaf toughness.

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Queensland experiences considerable inter-annual and decadal rainfall variability, which impacts water-resource management, agriculture and infrastructure. To understand the mechanisms by which large-scale atmospheric and coupled air–sea processes drive these variations, empirical orthogonal teleconnection (EOT) analysis is applied to 1900–2010 seasonal Queensland rainfall. Fields from observations and the 20th Century Reanalysis are regressed onto the EOT timeseries to associate the EOTs with large-scale drivers. In winter, spring and summer the leading, state-wide EOTs are highly correlated with the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO); the Inter-decadal Pacific Oscillation modulates the summer ENSO teleconnection. In autumn, the leading EOT is associated with locally driven, late-season monsoon variations, while ENSO affects only tropical northern Queensland. Examining EOTs beyond the first, southeastern Queensland and the Cape York peninsula emerge as regions of coherent rainfall variability. In the southeast, rainfall anomalies respond to the strength and moisture content of onshore easterlies, controlled by Tasman Sea blocking. The summer EOT associated with onshore flow and blocking has been negative since 1970, consistent with the observed decline in rainfall along the heavily populated coast. The southeastern Queensland EOTs show considerable multi-decadal variability, which is independent of large-scale drivers. Summer rainfall in Cape York is associated with tropical-cyclone activity.

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A realidade de mudanças no agronegócios requer novas ferramentas gerenciais dos proprietários rurais e o conhecimento ganha importância como fator gerador de diferencial competitivo. O objetivo desta tese é desenvolver um método dinâmico de análise da criação de conhecimento para o elo da produção no agronegócios no Brasil e na Austrália com base no modelo de Nonaka e Takeuchi (1997). A presente pesquisa caracteriza-se por um estudo descritivo de caráter qualitativo, complementada por dados quantitativos. É realizado um estudo de dois casos, utilizando-se de documentação e observação in loco, questionário, entrevista e focus group. As realidades estudadas localizam-se no Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil, e em Queensland, na Austrália. Os dados da pesquisa possibilitaram o desenvolvimento de uma figura representativa do modo como ocorre a criação de conhecimento nas duas realidades. Da figura foi feito um desdobramento e desenvolveu-se um método dinâmico de análise da criação de conhecimento para o elo da produção no agronegócios. Os resultados demonstraram haver significativas similaridades e diferenças entre as realidades, sendo, no Brasil, os produtores rurais inseridos num contexto cooperativo (Cooperativa Tritícola Mista Alto Jacuí – Cotrijal) e, na Austrália, os negócios conduzidos individualmente. Para a ocorrência da criação de conhecimento é necessária a existência de grupos de relacionamento e de certa liderança em nível de propriedade, de comunidades de prática (CoPs) ou da cooperativa. O aspecto cultural e o estilo das relações pareceram exercer forte influência para que as trocas ocorram e para a maior ampliação da atuação das CoPs, as quais podem ser suporte para a criação de conhecimentos.As CoPs não se constituem num processo tecnológico e, sim, num processo social e cognitivo; assim, sua formação nas CoPs não parece depender somente de tecnologia, mas do estabelecimento de relações informais, nas quais as pessoas podem utilizar esses ambientes para definir suas verdades quanto às suas posturas frente aos processos de mudança. A forma de conduzir os negócios pode afetar o modo como se dá a criação de conhecimento, pois, numa propriedade onde as pessoas buscam socializar, questionar e inovar constantemente, evidencia-se haver maior espaço para transformar conhecimento tácito em explícito; assim, pessoas mais abertas ao novo e ao questionamento de suas práticas demonstram apresentar maiores possibilidades para criar um campo de interação para que o conhecimento seja criado. O estudo mostrou que há um grande percurso entre o produtor rural ter conhecimento e a capacidade de torná-lo uma atitude que possibilite trazer bons resultados nos negócios.

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A sample of 608 adult pigs from Cape York and adjacent islands was examined for parasites and their serum tested for livestock diseases associated with the Queensland tropics. Feral pigs from North Queensland pose a significant health threat to humans with the incidence of Spargana (the plerocercoid of Spirometra erinacei) through the consumption of undercooked pork. Meliodosis (Pseudomonas pseudomalleO. Leptospirosis (L. yar. pomona). and Brucellosis (Brucella suis) are capable of infecting humans directly during unhygienic butchering of infected carcasses. In North Queensland, the widespread intermingled distribution of feral pigs and cattle increases the potential for the transmission of Actinobacillus, Leptospirosis, and Brucellosis from feral pigs to cattle. Both Europeans and Aborigines on Cape York also raise wild-caught feral pigs for meat. It is important to realize that parasites and diseases are present in young pigs and that poor husbandry practices increase the risk of infection from several parasites, i.e., Lungworm (Metastrongylus sp.) Stomach worm (Physocephalus sexalatus. Hvostrongvlus rubidus). Thorny headed worm (Macracanthorrhynchus hirudinaceus) and Kidney worm (Stephanurus dentatus). Heavy infection of these parasites reduce growth rates and cause unthriftiness in infected ani¬mals.

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We describe an additional saurischian specimen from the Caturrita Formation (Norian) of the Parana Basin, southern Brazil. This material was collected in the 1950s and remained unstudied due to its fragmentary condition. Detailed comparisons with other saurischians worldwide reveal that some characters of the ilium, including the low ventral projection of the medial wall of the acetabulum and its concave ventral margin, together with the short triangular shape of the pre-acetabular process and its mound-like dorsocaudal edge, resemble those of sauropodomorphs such as Plateosaurus and Riojasaurus. This set of traits suggests that MN 1326-V has affinities with basal Sauropodomorpha, probably closer to plateosaurians than to Saturnalia-like taxa. Previous records of this clade in the Caturrita Formation include Unaysaurus, which has been related to Plateosaurus within Plateosauridae. Alternative schemes suggest that plateosaurids include Plateosaurus plus the Argentinean 'prosauropods' Coloradisaurus and Riojasaurus. Both hypotheses raise biogeographic questions, as a close relationship between faunas from South America and Europe excluding Africa and North America is not supported by geological and biostratigraphical evidence. Additionally, the absence of plateosaurids in other continents suggests that the geographical distribution of this taxon is inconsistent with the geological history of western Pangaea, and this demands further investigations of the phylogeny of sauropodomorphs or improved sampling.

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Among the Scrupocellaria species previously reported from Queensland, three are here redescribed - S. cervicornis, S. curvata and S. diadema; two other species, S. frondis and S. sinuosa, are recorded from the area for the first time; three new species, S. hamata n. sp., S. prolata n. sp. and S. peltata n. sp., are also described, and the remainder are discussed. The need for the re-examination of specimens assigned to this genus is highlighted. The geographic range of some Scrupocellaria species is far more limited than once thought.