991 resultados para Apollo 15 lunar soil


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Le Programme vaudois de dépistage du cancer du sein promeut, organise et mène depuis 1999 une action de prévention auprès de la population féminine du canton âgée de 50 à 69 ans. Premier programme organisé de dépistage du cancer en Suisse, et généralisation d'un projet pilote (1993-1998), le Programme vaudois a grandement contribué au développement d'initiatives similaires dans d'autres cantons. Il demeure aujourd'hui, notamment par son bassin populationnel, le programme suisse qui génère le plus important volume annuel de mammographies de dépistage. Des évaluations indépendantes et régulières permettent de s'assurer que la qualité et l'efficacité d'un programme de dépistage répondent à des normes internationalement admises et périodiquement révisées. Le présent rapport évalue, après 15 ans d'activité (1999-2013), l'évolution temporelle de l'activité de dépistage (chapitre 2), de l'utilisation (chapitre 3) et des performances du programme vaudois de dépistage du cancer du sein (chapitre 4). Couvrant 240'000 mammographies et près de 80'000 femmes, ce rapport s'intéresse aussi, au-delà des indicateurs classiques de performance, à mieux évaluer certains effets indésirables du dépistage comme les résultats faussement positifs ou les cancers survenant entre 2 examens de dépistage (dits cancers d'intervalle), auxquels une section entière est dédiée (chapitre 5). Enfin, la compilation (en annexe) des publications récentes ou les plus significatives liées au programme vaudois et à ses résultats souligne sa visibilité et son implication dans le contexte international, ainsi que son rôle phare en Suisse dans la recherche « evidence-based » sur le dépistage du cancer du sein. [...] [Auteurs, p. 7]

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Plants influence the behavior of and modify community composition of soil-dwelling organisms through the exudation of organic molecules. Given the chemical complexity of the soil matrix, soil-dwelling organisms have evolved the ability to detect and respond to these cues for successful foraging. A key question is how specific these responses are and how they may evolve. Here, we review and discuss the ecology and evolution of chemotaxis of soil nematodes. Soil nematodes are a group of diverse functional and taxonomic types, which may reveal a variety of responses. We predicted that nematodes of different feeding guilds use host-specific cues for chemotaxis. However, the examination of a comprehensive nematode phylogeny revealed that distantly related nematodes, and nematodes from different feeding guilds, can exploit the same signals for positive orientation. Carbon dioxide (CO(2)), which is ubiquitous in soil and indicates biological activity, is widely used as such a cue. The use of the same signals by a variety of species and species groups suggests that parts of the chemo-sensory machinery have remained highly conserved during the radiation of nematodes. However, besides CO(2), many other chemical compounds, belonging to different chemical classes, have been shown to induce chemotaxis in nematodes. Plants surrounded by a complex nematode community, including beneficial entomopathogenic nematodes, plant-parasitic nematodes, as well as microbial feeders, are thus under diffuse selection for producing specific molecules in the rhizosphere that maximize their fitness. However, it is largely unknown how selection may operate and how belowground signaling may evolve. Given the paucity of data for certain groups of nematodes, future work is needed to better understand the evolutionary mechanisms of communication between plant roots and soil biota.

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A cultivation-independent approach based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified partial small subunit rRNA genes was used to characterize bacterial populations in the surface soil of a commercial pear orchard consisting of different pear cultivars during two consecutive growing seasons. Pyrus communis L. cvs Blanquilla, Conference, and Williams are among the most widely cultivated cultivars in Europe and account for the majority of pear production in Northeastern Spain. To assess the heterogeneity of the community structure in response to environmental variables and tree phenology, bacterial populations were examined using PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) followed by cluster analysis of the 16S ribosomal DNA profiles by means of the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic means. Similarity analysis of the band patterns failed to identify characteristic fingerprints associated with the pear cultivars. Both environmentally and biologically based principal-component analyses showed that the microbial communities changed significantly throughout the year depending on temperature and, to a lesser extent, on tree phenology and rainfall. Prominent DGGE bands were excised and sequenced to gain insight into the identities of the predominant bacterial populations. Most DGGE band sequences were related to bacterial phyla, such as Bacteroidetes, Cyanobacteria, Acidobacteria, Proteobacteria, Nitrospirae, and Gemmatimonadetes, previously associated with typical agronomic crop environments