scholarly journals New record of podocopid ostracods from Cretaceous amber

PeerJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. e10134 ◽  
Author(s):  
He Wang ◽  
Mario Schädel ◽  
Benjamin Sames ◽  
David J. Horne

Burmese Cretaceous amber (∼99 Ma, Myanmar) is famous for the preservation of a wide range of fauna and flora, including representatives of marine, freshwater and terrestrial groups. Here, we report on three ostracod specimens, that came visible as syninclusions to an aquatic isopod. The three specimens represent three different taxa, that were found preserved in a single piece of amber. One of the described specimens was studied using µCT scanning data. On the basis of general carapace morphology we assign all three to the group Podocopida, and (tentatively) its ingroup Cypridocopina. A lack of visibility of more particular diagnostic features such as adductor muscle scars and details of the marginal zone precludes a further identification, but we discuss possible affinities with either the marine-brackish group Pontocypridoidea or the non-marine group Cypridoidea. The taphonomy indicates that the studied ostracods had been subject to limited (if any) post-mortem transport, which could be consistent with marginal marine environments.

Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 347
Author(s):  
Carsten Laukamp ◽  
Andrew Rodger ◽  
Monica LeGras ◽  
Heta Lampinen ◽  
Ian C. Lau ◽  
...  

Reflectance spectroscopy allows cost-effective and rapid mineral characterisation, addressing mineral exploration and mining challenges. Shortwave (SWIR), mid (MIR) and thermal (TIR) infrared reflectance spectra are collected in a wide range of environments and scales, with instrumentation ranging from spaceborne, airborne, field and drill core sensors to IR microscopy. However, interpretation of reflectance spectra is, due to the abundance of potential vibrational modes in mineral assemblages, non-trivial and requires a thorough understanding of the potential factors contributing to the reflectance spectra. In order to close the gap between understanding mineral-diagnostic absorption features and efficient interpretation of reflectance spectra, an up-to-date overview of major vibrational modes of rock-forming minerals in the SWIR, MIR and TIR is provided. A series of scripts are proposed that allow the extraction of the relative intensity or wavelength position of single absorption and other mineral-diagnostic features. Binary discrimination diagrams can assist in rapidly evaluating mineral assemblages, and relative abundance and chemical composition of key vector minerals, in hydrothermal ore deposits. The aim of this contribution is to make geologically relevant information more easily extractable from reflectance spectra, enabling the mineral resources and geoscience communities to realise the full potential of hyperspectral sensing technologies.


2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Désirée Seger Jansson ◽  
Faruk Otman ◽  
Elisabeth Bagge ◽  
Ylva Lindgren ◽  
Pernille Engelsen Etterlin ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Small poultry flock ownership has become a popular hobby in Europe and North America in recent years but there is a general lack of information regarding bird health and welfare. This retrospective analysis of routine post-mortem cases of non-commercial anseriform poultry aimed at providing information on causes of mortality mostly in relation to mortality events. For this purpose, birds that were submitted for routine post-mortem diagnostics to the National Veterinary Institute (SVA) in Sweden in 2011–2020 were retrospectively reviewed to determine main causes of mortality. Results Records from 79 necropsy submissions involving 120 birds (domestic ducks n = 41, Muscovy ducks n = 45, hybrid ducks n = 2 and domestic geese n = 32) were retrieved and analysed. Most submissions (72.2%) represented flock disease events and unexpected mortality was the most common cause of submission (70.9% of submissions). Twenty-two submissions (27.8%) were referred by veterinarians. There was a wide range of diagnoses of infectious and noninfectious aetiologies. Infectious causes of mortality included parasitic (19.2%), bacterial (13.3%), fungal (10.0%) and viral infections (3.3%) (at bird level of all 120 birds). Some of these infections such as duck virus enteritis (DVE), highly pathogenic influenza (HPAI H5N8) in Muscovy ducks and leucocytozoonosis (Leucocytozoon sp.) in all three species were most likely acquired from contact with wild free-living waterfowl. Generalised yeast infection (Muscovy duck disease) was diagnosed in Muscovy ducks and in a Muscovy duck/domestic duck hybrid. Other diseases were related to generalised noninfectious causes (27.5% of all birds) including diseases such as kidney disease, amyloidosis, cardiac dilatation, reproductive diseases and idiopathic inflammatory conditions. Nutritional or management-related diseases were diagnosed in 14.2% of all birds including rickets and gastrointestinal impaction/obstruction. Congenital/developmental, neoplastic, toxic and traumatic causes of mortality were rare. Conclusions The information obtained in this study can be used to identify and evaluate risks and help owners and veterinarians to prevent disease and provide adequate veterinary care for non-commercial anseriform poultry.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire Witham ◽  
Sara Wells

AbstractBiobanks containing tissue and other biological samples from many model organisms provide easy and faster access to ex vivo resources for a wide-range of research programmes. For all laboratory animals, collecting and preserving tissue at post-mortem is an effective way of maximising the benefits of individual animals and potentially reducing the numbers required for experimentation in the future. For primate tissues, biobanks represent the scarcest of these resources but quite possibly those most valuable for preclinical and translation studies.


Antiquity ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (315) ◽  
pp. 73-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Bendezu-Sarmiento ◽  
H.-P. Francfort ◽  
A. Ismagulova ◽  
Z. Samashev

The authors find numerous cut-marks on human bones from an Early Iron Age cemetery in Kazakhstan and review a wide range of possible explanations. They discount cannibalism and find that the cuts and fractures fit best with a range of ritual mutilations known to ethno-archaeologists of the Altai region


1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 1131-1133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan F. M. Moorwood

All the ISO instruments are contributing to the study of activity in galaxies of essentially all types. Although AGN's as such are pointlike, the beautiful CAM image of CenA shown by Catherine Cesarsky has given us the clearest view so far of its visually obscured nucleus and surrounding spiral disc embedded in an elliptical galaxy. The CAM CVF is also providing spectral images of the PAH features and important diagnostic ionic lines (e.g [NeII] and [NeIII]) in the circumnuclar regions of AGN and merging starburst systems (Vigroux et al., 1996). PHT is providing detailed spectral energy distributions over the complete 2.5-240µm range and PHTS is proving invaluable for assembling a catalogue of low resolution (R ⋍ 90) galaxy spectra covering the 6-12µm PAH features. SWS and LWS are generating higher resolution (R ⋍ 2000-200) spectra over the range 2.5-200µm such as that shown in Fig. 1. of the Circinus galaxy which exhibits both AGN and starburst activity and well illustrates the wide range of diagnostic features, many seen for the first time, accessible to ISO studies of galaxies. It shows the overall continuum with a peak around 100µm; PAH features and Si absorption which dominate the spectrum around 10µm; H recombination lines; H2 pure rotational emission lines; low ionization potential ionic lines excited by starburst activity and high excitation lines (up to ⋍ 300eV) excited by the visually obscured AGN.


Zootaxa ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 2114 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
YUZO OTA ◽  
EUICHI HIROSE

Gnathia maculosa sp. nov. is described from males reared in a laboratory from larvae that were collected as ectoparasites on elasmobranchs, caught off Okinawa Island in the Ryukyu Archipelago, southwestern Japan. The species is most similar to G. trimaculata but it is distinguished from G. trimaculata by deeper and narrower dorsal sulcus, a narrower body, and the wider pylopod. Gnathia trimaculata, previously recorded from Great Barrier Reef, Australia, was also collected from elasmobranchs caught off Okinawa Island. The record of G. trimaculata from Okinawa indicates a wide range of the distribution of the gnathiids inhabiting elasmobranchs.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 1262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sahar Khaleghi ◽  
Yousef Firouz ◽  
Maitane Berecibar ◽  
Joeri Van Mierlo ◽  
Peter Van Den Bossche

The success of electric vehicles (EVs) depends principally on their energy storage system. Lithium-ion batteries currently feature the ideal properties to fulfil the wide range of prerequisites specific to electric vehicles. Meanwhile, the precise estimation of batteries’ state of health (SoH) should be available to provide the optimal performance of EVs. This study attempts to propose a precise, real-time method to estimate lithium-ion state of health when it operates in a realistic driving condition in the presence of dynamic stress factors. To this end, a real-life driving profile was simulated based on highly dynamic worldwide harmonized light vehicle test cycle load profiles. Afterward, various features will be extracted from voltage data and they will be scored based on prognostic metrics to select diagnostic features which can conveniently identify battery degradation. Lastly, an ensemble learning model was developed to capture the correlation of diagnostic features and battery’s state of health (SoH). The result illustrates that the proposed method has the potential to estimate the SoH of battery cells aged under a distinct depth of discharge and current profile with a maximum error of 1%. This confirms the robustness of the developed approach. The proposed method has the capability of implementing in battery management systems due to many reasons; firstly, it is tested and validated based on the data which are equal to the real-life driving operation of an electric vehicle. Secondly, it has high accuracy and precision, and a low computational cost. Finally, it can estimate the SoH of battery cells with different aging patterns.


1986 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 308-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. L. Ranson ◽  
P. J. Berry

A case is reported of a 13-year-old boy who died suddenly during physical exercise. Post-mortem examination showed no macroscopic or histological abnormalities and it was only later that he was discovered to be a regular solvent abuser of typewriter correcting fluid containing the solvent 111 Trichloroethane. Typewriter correcting fluid is a relatively unusual substance for solvent abuse, and this case demonstrates the wide range of products which are inhaled by children. The implications of the abuse of 111 Trichloroethane are discussed, with particular reference to the possible mode of death in such cases.


1992 ◽  
Vol 335 (1274) ◽  
pp. 247-280 ◽  

The skull and mandible of the type specimen of the large pliosauroid plesiosaur Rhomaleosaurus zetlandicus from the Toarcian of England are elongate, and adapted for powerful predatory activity in water. The mandible contains all elements found in primitive reptilian mandibles. The broadly caniniform dentition suggests that Rhomaleosaurus fed on a wide range of active prey, and forcibly dismembered larger prey by shaking and twisting them. The cranial musculature is reconstructed for the first time in plesiosaurs. It was adapted for feeding in water. The adductor musculature included a large anterior pterygoideus attached to the suborbital fenestra, a large posterior pterygoideus, and a group of large dorsal muscles including the adductor mandibulae externus. The anterior pterygoideus exerted maximum torque when the jaws were wide open, snapping them shut quickly, and the dorsal muscle mass exerted maximum torque when the jaws were closed on prey to subdue and dismember it. The role of the posterior pterygoideus is uncertain or intermediate. The musculature combines elements of the "kinetic inertial’ system ascribed to aquatic tetrapods by Olson (1961), with his ‘static, pressure’ system ascribed to terrestrial tetrapods. Olson suggested that the large pterygoideus musculature typical of the ‘kinetic inertial’ system functioned to confer kinetic energy on the mandible. However, its function may instead have been to compensate for the inertia and drag of the mandible. The depressor musculature comprised the depressor mandibulae and the longitudinal pharyngeal muscles, and opened the jaw quickly against drag. The cervical musculature cannot be reconstructed in detail. There was a strong nuchal ligament. The forces within the head are analysed by using box and girder beams as analogues. Gross form, shape of constituent bones, and sutural morphology confirm adaptations to resist great bending moments arising from the action of the muscles when biting on prey. When the jaws were closed, the pterygoid flange supported the mandible against the inward component of the adductor muscle force. Rhomaleosaurus was a visual predator. The eyes were large. The stapes is present. Underwater olfaction was likely. There is no evidence for an eardrum, but it is not known whether this is the plesiomorphic reptilian state or secondarily derived from a tympanate ancestor. The ears were not acoustically isolated from the braincase, so underwater directional hearing was poor, and sonar was not possible. The structure of the head of Rhomaleosaurus is a functional compromise between the needs to maximize structural strength and to maximize swimming and feeding efficiency. Especially important were the ability to sustain large muscle and reaction forces to provide an adequate bite force at the end of a long snout, and the wide gape allowing the swallowing of large pieces of prey. Even larger items were dismembered into smaller pieces by shake and twist feeding. The major unresolved problems are the effects of scaling factors, and the torsional loadings induced when biting asymmetrically, or twisting large prey to pieces.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document