This study focuses on the effects of different thinning regimes on clonal Eucalyptus plantations growth. Four different trials, planted in 1999 and located in Bahia and Espírito Santo States, were used. Aside from thinning, initial planting density, and post thinning fertilization application were also evaluated. Before canopy closure, and therefore before excessive competition between trees took place, it was found that stands planted under low densities (667 trees per hectare) presented a lower mortality proportion when compared to stand planted under higher densities (1111 trees per hectare). However, diameter growth prior to thinning operations was not statistically different between these two densities, presenting an overall mean of 4.9 cm/year. After canopy closure and the application of the thinning treatments, it was found that thinning regimes beginning early in the life of the stand and leaving a low number of residual trees presented the highest diameter and height growth. Unthinned treatments and thinning regimes late in the life of the stand (after 5.5 years), leaving a large number of residual trees presented the highest values of basal area production. The choice of the best thinning regime for Eucalyptus clonal material will vary according to the plantation objective.
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Evol Appl
December 2024
INRAE, UR 629 Ecologie des Forêts Méditerranéennes (URFM), Domaine Saint Paul-Site Agroparc Avignon France.
In managed populations-whether for production or conservation-management practices can interfere with natural eco-evolutionary processes, providing opportunities to mitigate immediate impacts of disturbances or enhance selection on tolerance traits. Here, we used a modelling approach to explore the interplay and feedback loops among drought regimes, natural selection and tree thinning in naturally regenerated monospecific forests. We conducted a simulation experiment spanning three nonoverlapping generations with the individual-based demo-genetic model Luberon2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
December 2024
Hefei National Research Center for Physical Sciences at the Microscale, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230026, China.
Properties of layered superconductors can vary drastically when thinned down from bulk to monolayer owing to the reduced dimensionality and weakened interlayer coupling. In transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), the inherent symmetry breaking effect in atomically thin crystals prompts novel states of matter such as Ising superconductivity with an extraordinary in-plane upper critical field. Here, we demonstrate that two-dimensional (2D) superconductivity resembling those in atomic layers but with more fascinating behaviors can be realized in the bulk crystals of two new TMD-based superconductors BaClTaS and BaClTaSe with superconducting transition temperatures 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fluid Mech
November 2024
Department of Mathematics, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Microorganism motility often takes place within complex, viscoelastic fluid environments, e.g., sperm in cervicovaginal mucus and bacteria in biofilms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
December 2024
Department of Experimental Medicine, Section of Biotechnology, Medical Histology and Molecular Biology, University of Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli", via L. De Crecchio 7, 80138 Naples, Italy. Electronic address:
The effect of hyaluronan (HA) molecular weight (MW) and concentration (c) on key features of HA-formulations was systematically studied, in vitro, exploring the widest range/number of MW/c to date. Nine pharmaceutical grade HA samples (60-2500 kDa) were hydrodynamically characterized using Size Exclusion Chromatography-Triple Detector Array (SEC-TDA) also providing conformational data. HAs aqueous solutions (thirteen concentrations in the range 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
October 2024
Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK.
Extensional flows of complex fluids play an important role in many industrial applications, such as spraying and atomisation, as well as microfluidic-based drop deposition. The dripping-on-substrate (DoS) technique is a conceptually-simple, but dynamically-complex, probe of the extensional rheology of low-viscosity, non-Newtonian fluids. It incorporates the capillary-driven thinning of a liquid bridge, produced by a single drop as it is slowly dispensed from a syringe pump onto a solid partially-wetting substrate.
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