967 resultados para Standard fire tests
Resumo:
It is generally accepted by fish culturists that salmonid eggs are sensitive to mechanical shock and that the sensitivity varies with the stage of development of the eggs. In general, the period of greatest sensitivity is thought to occur between fertilization and ”eyeing”. However, it is reasonable to expect that, during a period (perhaps of several hours) following fertilization, sensitivity will be low because in nature during this period the eggs may be subject to some mechanical shock caused by the parent fish covering them with gravel. In 1983-4 and 1984-5 experiments were performed on brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) eggs to examine the effect of a standard mechanical shock (c. 2,500 eggs in 1983-4 and c. 8,400 eggs in 1984-5) at various stages of development upon survival to hatching and time of hatching.The results of these experiments are reported in this study.
Resumo:
Sub-lethal toxicity tests, such as the scope-for-growth test, reveal simple relationships between measures of contaminant concentration and effect on respiratory and feeding physiology. Simple models are presented to investigate the potential impact of different mechanisms of chronic sub-lethal toxicity on these physiological processes. Since environmental quality is variable, even in unimpacted environments, toxicants may have differentially greater impacts in poor compared to higher quality environments. The models illustrate the implications of different degrees and mechanisms of toxicity in response to variability in the quality of the feeding environment, and variability in standard metabolic rate. The models suggest that the relationships between measured degrees of toxic stress, and the maintenance ration required to maintain zero scope-for-growth, may be highly nonlinear. In addition it may be possible to define critical levels of sub-lethal toxic effect above which no environment is of sufficient quality to permit prolonged survival.
Resumo:
O objetivo desse trabalho foi avaliar as alterações no tecido cardíaco e pulmonar de camundongos dislipidêmicos, esquistossomóticos e seus controles que haviam sido eutanasiados com 9 (fase aguda) e 17 (fase crônica) semanas de infecção. Foram estudados quatro grupos de camundongos, segundo a dieta e tempo de infecção: dieta padrão (SCa e SCc), dieta hiperlipídica (HFCa e HFCc), dieta padrão infectados (ISCa e ISCc) e dieta hiperlipídica infectados (IHFCa e IHFCc). O coração e o pulmão foram retirados, seccionados e os fragmentos foram submetidos a processamento histológico e corados com Hematoxilina e Eosina e Picrosirius red. Foram realizadas análises histopatológicas dos dois órgãos, além de estudos estereológico (dissector óptico) e morfométrico (vasos, cardiomiócitos e quantificação de colágeno) do coração. Os grupos foram comparados pelos Testes T de Student e/ou ANOVA. Todos os animais com dieta hiperlipídica, infectados ou não, apresentaram menor densidade de número e número total de cardiomiócitos (p<0,05), além de vasos intramiocárdicos com lúmen mais reduzido e paredes mais espessas que os controles, independente da semana em que foram eutanasiados. Os cardiomiócitos dos grupos IHFCa e IHFCc estavam mais hiperplásicos (p<0,0001) e continham mais colágeno ao redor (p<0,05) que os dos demais grupos estudados. Os corações dos grupos IHFC, nas duas fases, apresentaram maior quantidade de nichos inflamatórios, inúmeras regiões contendo coagulação de fibras cardíacas, maior número de áreas com desaparecimento de fibras e proliferação de fibroblastos quando comparados aos grupos ISC. Os pulmões de camundongos do grupo IHFCc apresentaram aumento do número de reações granulomatosas e infiltrados perivasculares quando comparados aos demais grupos infectados. Esses dados sugerem que a infecção por S. mansoni causa danos às estruturas miocárdica e pulmonar que se intensificam com a interação com a dieta rica em lipídios.
Resumo:
A new supervised burned area mapping software named BAMS (Burned Area Mapping Software) is presented in this paper. The tool was built from standard ArcGIS (TM) libraries. It computes several of the spectral indexes most commonly used in burned area detection and implements a two-phase supervised strategy to map areas burned between two Landsat multitemporal images. The only input required from the user is the visual delimitation of a few burned areas, from which burned perimeters are extracted. After the discrimination of burned patches, the user can visually assess the results, and iteratively select additional sampling burned areas to improve the extent of the burned patches. The final result of the BAMS program is a polygon vector layer containing three categories: (a) burned perimeters, (b) unburned areas, and (c) non-observed areas. The latter refer to clouds or sensor observation errors. Outputs of the BAMS code meet the requirements of file formats and structure of standard validation protocols. This paper presents the tool's structure and technical basis. The program has been tested in six areas located in the United States, for various ecosystems and land covers, and then compared against the National Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) Burned Area Boundaries Dataset.
Resumo:
From a special issue: A Brief History of the Charles Darwin Foundation for the Galapagos Islands 1959-1988
Resumo:
Adapting a test between cultures or languages requires taking into account legal, linguistic, metric, and use-related considerations. Significantly more attention has been paid to the methodological aspects involved in the study of metric equivalence than to judgmental-analytical procedures prior to the empirical confirmation stage. However, considering the latter is crucial in the adaptation process. Along these lines, this paper seeks to describe and focus on the relevance of the previous stages, thereby offering a systematization process that comprises ten sections. This approach contributes to ensuring the construction of a test adapted and equivalent in as much as possible to the original. This process is exemplified by means of a Spanish language adaptation of a cognitive test originally designed in Portuguese for the Portuguese population, the Reasoning Test Battery. Copyright (C) 2013, Konrad Lorenz University Foundation. Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L.U.