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1.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 25(7): 1196-1204, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37823877

ABSTRACT

Anthropogenic fires are an increasing threat to tropical savannas and their plant populations. In the Brazilian Cerrado, human-made fires at the end of the dry season are replacing natural fires at the beginning of the dry season. Critically, these late burns occur under more intense climate variables. Here, we aimed to understand the potential role of fire seasonality on individuals of Anacardium humile, a widespread Cerrado species of cultural and economic importance. We conducted two prescribed burnings, one at the beginning of the dry season (early burning) and one at the end of the dry season (late burning) when climate variables were remarkably different. We assessed the reproductive responses of A. humile individuals over 4 years and compared individuals from the fire treatments with those from an unburned area (control). The reproductive phenology of A. humile varied over time and was influenced by climate variables. The seasons of different burning had similar impacts on the reproductive phenology of A. humile, and this impact lasted for at least 4 years. While A. humile populations do not depend on fire for reproduction, they produced more flowers and fruits for up to 2 years with the fire treatments. We provide empirical evidence of the role of climate variables on the phenology of A. humile and demonstrate the importance of considering the role of time after fire events. The similar responses of A. humile to fire seasonality show that Cerrado fire management can be more complex than previously thought.


Subject(s)
Anacardium , Ecosystem , Humans , Grassland , Plants , Reproduction
3.
Anal Verbal Behav ; 11: 31-42, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22477078

ABSTRACT

This study attempted to analyze defective stimulus control relations underlying persistent substitution between voiced and unvoiced consonants in the speech and writing of two children. A series of 20 tests was administered repeatedly. Some tests consisted of matching-to-sample tasks, with dictated words, printed words, or pictures as samples. Comparison stimuli were arranged in pairs of printed words or pictures, such that the only difference in their corresponding spoken words was the voicing of one consonant phoneme. In other tests, a stimulus (dictated word, printed word, or picture) was presented, and the subject was required to emit an oral response (repeat the dictated word, read the printed word, or name the picture) or a written response (write to dictation, copy the word, or write a picture name). Other tests required the subjects to make a same/different distinction in pairs of dictated words that did or did not differ in the voicing of a single phoneme. Results showed distinct deficit profiles for each subject, consisting of patterns of defective stimulus control relations. The subjects were able, however, to distinguish between voiced and unvoiced sounds and to produce these sounds.

4.
J Biol Chem ; 251(12): 3629-36, 1976 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-932000

ABSTRACT

The activation of ATP equilibrium Pi exchange, ITP equilibrium Pi exchange, and the degree of phosphorylation of the membrane of sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles by ATP, ITP, and Pi were compared under different experimental conditions. In media containing 0.1 mM CaCl2, 6 mM Pi, and 4 mM ATP, during the period of Ca2+ accumulation the rate of ATP equilibrium Pi exchange was very low and the level of membrane phosphorylation by ATP was about 10-fold higher than the level of membrane phosphorylation by Pi. When net Ca2+ accumulation ceased and the Ca2+ concentration of the assay media had fallen to less than 5 muM, the degree of membrane phosphorylation by ATP decreased 4-fold and both the level of membrane phosphorylation by Pi and the rate of ATP equilibrium Pi exchange increase 4- to 6-fold. Contrasting with these data, when ATP was replaced by ITP, the rate of ITP equilibrium Pi exchange and the level of membrane phosphorylation by Pi were already high during the period of Ca2+ accumulation and varied slightly when the Ca2+ concentration of the incubation medium decreased to less than 5 muM. During the period of Ca2+ accumulation, the degree of membrane phosphorylation by Pi varied inversely with the NTP or NDP concentration of the medium, ATP and ADP being more effective than ITP and IDP in inhibiting the membrnae phosphorylation by Pi. Leaky vesicles incubated in media containing a high Ca2+ concentration were still able to catalyze both ATP equilibrium Pi and ITP equilibrium Pi exchange. Although the membrane of leaky vesicle was amply phosphorylated by Pi in media containing 0.1 nM CaCl2 and ITP, a significant rate of ITP equilibrium Pi exchange could only be measured in Ca2+ concentrations higher than 0.5 mM. The Ca2+ concentration required for half-maximal activation of the rate of either ITP equilibrium Pi or ATP equilibrium Pi exchange in leaky vesicles was found to be in the range of 1 to 2 mM. In leaky vesicles, the apparent Km of Pi for the ITP equilibrium Pi exchange was at least 1 order of magnitude lower than for the ATP equilibrium Pi exchange.


Subject(s)
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Animals , Biological Transport, Active , Calcium/metabolism , Calcium/pharmacology , Energy Transfer , Inosine Nucleotides/metabolism , Kinetics , Membranes/drug effects , Membranes/metabolism , Phosphates/metabolism , Rabbits , Sarcoplasmic Reticulum/drug effects
5.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 22(1): 215-8, 1974 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16811780

ABSTRACT

Five pigeons were exposed to an unsignalled avoidance procedure where key pecks were maintained through shock postponement. Functions obtained showed an inverse relationship between rate of responding and length of the response-shock interval, while changes in the shock-shock interval had no systematic effect on response rates. The rate of shocks delivered generally decreased with increases in length of both response-shock and shock-shock intervals. Results show that key pecking in pigeons, maintained through an unsignalled avoidance procedure, was affected by changes in response-shock and shock-shock intervals in the same manner as other responses in pigeons and in rats.

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