979 resultados para Shelley, Frances, Lady, 1787-1873.
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Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Biologia Celular e Molecular) - IBRC
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O Porto de Vila do Conde, situado no município de Barcarena/PA, vêm sofrendo diversos desastres ambientais nos últimos anos o que pode eventualmente acarretar no desequilíbrio do uso que os recursos aquáticos fazem do ambiente e no ecossistema como um todo. A pesca artesanal nesta região é bastante relevante, destacando Plagioscion squamosissimus e P. surinamensis que são importantes como fontes de renda e de alimento para a população. O objetivo deste estudo foi descrever as áreas de concentração e a biologia reprodutiva de P. squamosissimus e P. surinamensis na área adjacente ao Porto de Vila do Conde, destacando a importância da utilização destes ambientes para reprodução. Para identificar a época e os pesqueiros de maior abundância foram realizados cálculos de CPUE (Kg/viagem) por meio de dados obtidos no período de junho de 2007 a maio de 2008. A determinação do uso da área para reprodução e a descrição da biologia reprodutiva foi efetuada através da coleta de 40 a 53 indivíduos de cada espécie por bimestre, obtidos pela pesca comercial. Em laboratório, foram obtidos valores de peso e comprimento e as gônadas foram retiradas para a determinação do estágio de maturidade. A abundância de P. squamosissimus é máxima entre setembro a fevereiro e P. surinamensis ocorreu principalmente entre março a maio. A relação peso-comprimento mostrou isometria para as fêmeas de P. squamosissimus e ambos os sexos de P. surinamensis. Apenas os machos da espécie P. squamosissimus apresentaram alometria positiva. A proporção sexual foi favorável aos machos de P. surinamensis (1,05macho: 1fêmea) e favorável às fêmeas (1,11fêmea: 1macho) para P. squamosissimus. O valor de L50 (Tamanho de primeira maturidade) para P. squamosissimus foi 16,14 cm para fêmeas e 21,43 cm para machos. P. surinamensis apresentou valor de L50 de 27,65 cm para fêmeas e 27,13 cm para os machos. O percentual de indivíduos em reprodução da P. squamisissimus é relevante. O pico da reprodução desta espécie (outubro/novembro e fevereiro/março) coincide com o pico de abundância, indicando que esta espécie está na área para reprodução. P. surinamensis apresentou maior porcentagem de indivíduos nos estádios imaturo e em maturação, indicando que a mesma utiliza esta área principalmente como área de criadouro. Os indivíduos que estavam reproduzindo foram mais numerosos entre agosto/setembro e outubro/novembro.
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Pós-graduação em Psicologia - FCLAS
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Entomologia Agrícola) - FCAV
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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The Frances Lander Spain Papers consists of correspondence, clippings, photographs, memorabilia, and copies of her publications relating to her involvement with professional library organizations such as the American Library Association; her library work in Thailand as a Fulbright and Rockefeller Foundation grantee (1951-1952 and 1964-1965); and her work as coordinator of children’s services at the N.Y. Public Library (1953-1961). Correspondents include librarian Louis Round Wilson. There is also a family history which includes the family names Chambers, Collier, Cook, Crossland, Dantzler, Gran, Hardeman, Lander, McDaniel, McPherson, Miller, Pearce, Pierce, Schenk, Snead, Spain, Sparks, Warlick and Zimmerman.
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The Frances Anderson Gilmer Papers consists of electrostatic photocopies of the following: genealogical records; biographical sketches; Records relating to the Sons of the American Revolution (SAR) and Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR); copy of the “The Revolutionary Soldiers of Catholic Presbyterian Church of Chester County, South Carolina" by Mary Wylie Strange; Diary of S. T. Anderson: Confederate Prisoner of War 1864-1865 by Margaret Anderson Harden (1908). Lt. Samuel Thompson of Anderson (1838-1894) was a Confederate soldier during the American Civil War in Co. D 1st South Carolina Cavalry. The genealogical records relate to the following families: Anderson, Wylie. McCalla, McKown, Yeamans, Moore (i.e., Governor James Moore) and Adair.
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The Martha Francis Morgan Papers includes teaching aids, reading lists and tests relating to her teaching; together with constitutions, correspondence, photographs, program notes, and newspaper clippings concerning her involvement with the many clubs and organizations in which she participated.
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In her October 11, 2012 interview with Robert Ryals, Frances Case details her experience at Winthrop from 1947-1951. In particular, Case provides insight into the many rules and regulations students had to follow concerning dress, the Blue Line, curfew, cars, and smoking. Case speaks about student and dorm life, and her experience as a graduate student at Columbia University in New York City. Case concludes her interview by discussing her involvement with Winthrop since she graduated. This interview was conducted for inclusion into the Louise Pettus Archives and Special Collections Oral History Program.
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Ticks are classified into three families: Argasidae, Ixodidae, and Nutalliellidae. The taxonomy and phylogeny within Ixodidae are still discussed by the specialists, thus requiring further studies. Amblyomma cajennese and Amblyomma aureolatum (Brazil) belong to two species complexes known as “cajennese” and “ovale”, respectively, and are directly related to the transmission of the Brazilian spotted fever. This confirms the medical and veterinary significance of these species, as well as the need for further morphological studies that will bring a better understanding of their taxonomy, phylogeny, and control. In this context, the present study aimed to characterize the morphology of the male reproductive system of A. cajennese and A. aureolatum when unfed and after 4 days of feeding, thereby seeking to: (a) distinguish the two species or “complexes”, and (b) study an internal system which has the potential to be targeted by acaricides. Therefore, males from both species (unfed and after 4 days of feeding) were cold-anesthetized, dissected, and had their reproductive systems removed for histological analysis. The results showed that the morphology of the male reproductive system is generally similar between both species, like in other Ixodidae ticks, exhibiting a multilobed accessory gland complex related to seminal fluid secretion, a pair of vasa deferentia and a pair of testes housing germ cells (spermatocytes) in different stages. The main differences were found in the development of the accessory gland complex cells and germ cells, showing that the maturation of the male reproductive system starts later in A. aureolatum, when compared to A. cajennese. However, during the blood meal, A. aureolatum development is increased, thus making germ cell maturation and gland complex activity higher than in A. cajennese. This study shows the differences in the development of the male reproductive systems of both species, while providing information that can assist in the establishment of new control methods.
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A reassessment of the taxonomic status of Amblyomma cajennense based on the morphological analyses of ticks from the whole distribution area of the species resulted in the redescription of A. cajennense, the validation of 2 species which had been reduced to synonymy in the past, Amblyomma mixtum and Amblyomma sculptum, and the description and definition of 3 new species, Amblyomma tonelliae n. sp., Amblyomma interandinum n. sp., and Amblyomma patinoi n. sp. This study provides descriptions and redescriptions, scanning electron microscopic and stereomicroscopic images, updated synonymies, information on geographical distributions, and host associations for each of the 6 species. Amblyomma cajennense s.s. is found in the Amazonian region of South America, A. interandinum is reported from the northern part of the Inter-Andean valley of Peru, A. mixtum is present from Texas (U.S.A.) to western Ecuador, A. patinoi occurs in the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia, A. tonelliae is associated with the dry areas of the Chaco region which spans from central-northern Argentina to Bolivia and Paraguay, whereas A. sculptum is distributed from the humid areas of northern Argentina, to the contiguous regions of Bolivia and Paraguay and the coastal and central-western states of Brazil.