4,034 research outputs found
Helena Kolody, carbono & diamante: uma biografia ilustrada
Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e Expressão. Programa de Pós-Graduação em LiteraturaHelena Kolody, carbono & diamante - uma biografia ilustrada conta a vida da escritora Helena Kolody, a partir de sua inscrição na literatura, questionando sua identidade, o mundo que a cercava e o sentido de sua existência. Equivale a dizer: em sua lírica, reflexões e sentimentos se entretecem a partir de uma matéria pessoal e localizada. Da estação ferroviária à estação tubo; da Ucrânia ao centro de Curitiba; de Paisagem interior a Reika; do século XIX ao século XXI, a literatura de Helena Kolody gerencia sua presença na consolidação do binômio arte-vida. O retrato da autora acaba se constituindo também por meio de farto aparato iconográfico; pelos mais de quinhentos textos críticos elencados e por sua obra completa. Fragmentação deliberadamente assumida, a pessoa se revela em sua inteireza.Helena Kolody, carbon & diamond - an illustrated biography tells the life of Helena Kolody, from her very insertion in literature, as it questions her identity, the world surrounding her, and the meaning of her existence. That is equivalent to saying that in her poetry there is the intermingling of reflections and feelings that derive from personal and localized material. From the railroad station to the tube-shaped bus stops; from Ukraine to downtown Curitiba; from Paisagem interior to Reika; from the nineteenth century to the twenty-first century, Helena Kolody's literature guarantees her presence in the consolidation of the art/life binomial. The portrait of the author ends up by also being made up of an abundant iconographic apparatus, of the over five hundred critical texts listed, and of her complete work. The person, although deliberately accepting her own fragmentation, reveals herself in her entireness
SFB754 Nutrient amendment experiments
Bioassays with amendment of DIN, DIP, and various trace elements were conducted in short-term replicated bottle incubations to determine limiting elements for phytoplankton growth (Browning et al., 2017). Shipboard mesocosm experiments with a duration from 7 to 11 days were conducted on several cruises in the ETNA and ETSP and land-based on Cape Verde to determine the impact of N:P stoichiometry on the pelagic community (Franz et al., 2012b; Hauss et al., 2012; Meyer et al., 2016) and dissolved organic compounds (Loginova et al., 2015; Engel et al., 2015)
Transient observations : the textualizing of St Helena through five hundred years of colonial discourse
This thesis explores the textualizing of the South Atlantic island of St Helena (a
British Overseas Territory) through an analysis of the relationship between
colonizing practices and the changing representations of the island and its
inhabitants in a range of colonial 'texts', including historiography, travel writing,
government papers, creative writing, and the fine arts.
Part I situates this thesis within a critical engagement with post-colonial
theory and colonial discourse analysis primarily, as well as with the recent
'linguistic turn' in anthropology and history. In place of post-colonialism's rather
monolithic approach to colonial experiences, I argue for a localised approach to
colonisation, which takes greater account of colonial praxis and of the continuous
re-negotiation and re-constitution of particular colonial situations.
Part II focuses on a number of literary issues by reviewing St Helena's
historiography and literature, and by investigating the range of narrative tropes
employed (largely by travellers) in the textualizing of St Helena, in particular
with respect to recurrent imaginings of the island in terms of an earthly Eden.
Part III examines the nature of colonial 'possession' by tracing the island's
gradual appropriation by the Portuguese, Dutch and English in the sixteenth and
early seventeenth century and the settlement policies pursued by the English
East India Company in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century.
Part IV provides an account of the changing perceptions, by visitors and
colonial officials alike, of the character of the island's inhabitants (from the late
eighteenth to the early twentieth century) and assesses the influence that these
perceptions have had on the administration of the island and the political status of
its inhabitants (in the mid- to late twentieth century).
Part V, the conclusion, reviews the principal arguments of my thesis by
addressing the political implications of post-colonial theory and of my own
research, while also indicating avenues for further research.
A localised and detailed exploration of colonial discourse over a period of
nearly five hundred years, and a close analysis of a consequently wide range of
colonial 'texts', has confirmed that although colonising practices and
representations are far from monolithic, in the case of St Helena their continuities
are of as much significance as their discontinuities
De Novo Transcriptome Periphylla periphylla (Cnidaria, Coronatae), Stenvers & Hauss et al.
Assembled de novo transcriptome, part of NCBI Bioproject PRJNA971902Assembly method:After sequencing, raw reads were filtered by removing adaptor sequences, contamination and low-quality reads (i.e. read quality set to Phred score +33 with SOAPnuke). Cleaned reads were assembled into a de novo transcriptome using Trinity 2.8.5 with default parameters in paired-end mode. Transdecoder 5.50 was used to trim the transcriptome based on ORFs (at least 100 bp in length), followed by removal of transcripts matching prokaryotic or viral origins based on Trinotate 3.2.1 annotation using Blastx, Blastp, Pfam, UniProt-SwissProt, GO, eggNog and KEGG databases. BUSCO was used to check completeness with the metazoan OrthoDB v09 referent database.Other datasets related to this one include:Stenvers, V.I., Hauss, H.; Schmittmann, L., Bayer, T., Havermans, C., Hentschel, U., Sweetman, A.K., Hoving, H.T. (2023). Physiological and behavioural responses of the deep pelagic jellyfish Periphylla periphylla exposed to sediment plumes and increasing temperatures. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.957367Stenvers, V.I., Hauss, H.; Schmittmann, L., Bayer, T., Havermans, C., Hentschel, U., Sweetman, A.K., Hoving, H.T. (2023). Microbial community composition associated with Periphylla periphylla exposed to sediment plumes and increasing temperatures. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.957395Stenvers, V.I., Hauss, H.; Schmittmann, L., Bayer, T., Havermans, C., Hentschel, U., Sweetman, A.K., Hoving, H.T. (2023). Transcriptome expression in Periphylla periphylla exposed to sediment plumes and increasing temperatures. PANGAEA, https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.962217</p
Zooplankton data from UVP measurements during Maria S. Merian cruise MSM22 and METEOR cruises M97, M105 and M106
Aggregates/marine snow; sum of image categories "det_aggr_dark_spherical" (dark spherical object), "det_aggregate_dark" (dark grey aggregate), "det_aggregate_light"(light grey aggregate)
Copepoda; sum of image categories "copepod" and "copepod_like"
Gelatinous plankton; sum of image categories"zoo_gel_carn_ctenophore" (Ctenophora), "zoo_gel_carn_medusa" (Medusae), "zoo_gel_carn_siphonophore" (Siphonophora), "zoo_gel_filt_app" (Appendicularia), "zoo_gel_filt_salp_like" (Thaliacea)and "zoo_gel_other" (unidentified gelatinous plankton)
Rhizaria-> Collodaria: sum of all "pro_rhizaria_radiolaria_collodaria_solitary"-categories (_black, _grey, _fuzzy, _globule)
Rhizaria-> Phaeodaria: sum of all "pro_rhizaria_phaeodaria"-categories (_leg, _eye, _thorn
Growth and behaviour of Baltic spring spawning herring (Clupea harengus) larvae raised at two different temperatures and under different feeding regimes (prey size) using the copepod Acartia tonsa
Ten female (mean 179 g wet mass (WM) and 25.3 cm standard length (SL) and ten male (182 g WM, 24.5 cm SL) Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus L.) were obtained from Kiel Bight (54°22'N, 010°09'E) and strip-spawned. Their offspring were subjected to feeding and growth experiments using different prey size spectra in controlled laboratory settings at different temperatures. In 4- (13°C) or 7-day (7°C) experiments, the effect of prey size on larval foraging behaviour, specific growth rate (SGR) and biochemical condition (RNA:DNA, RD) was tested. On a daily basis, the swimming behaviour and foraging activity of these larvae was recorded
Growth and behaviour of Baltic spring spawning herring (Clupea harengus) larvae raised at two different temperatures and under different feeding regimes (prey size) using the copepod Acartia tonsa: behaviour
Ten female (mean 179 g wet mass (WM) and 25.3 cm standard length (SL) and ten male (182 g WM, 24.5 cm SL) Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus L.) were obtained from Kiel Bight (54°22'N, 010°09'E) and strip-spawned. Their offspring were subjected to feeding and growth experiments using different prey size spectra in controlled laboratory settings at different temperatures. In 4- (13°C) or 7-day (7°C) experiments, the effect of prey size on larval foraging behaviour, specific growth rate (SGR) and biochemical condition (RNA:DNA, RD) was tested. On a daily basis, the swimming behaviour and foraging activity of these larvae was recorded
Length-at-age and weight-at-age of larval herring (Clupea harengus) reared at three temperatures in the laboratory up to 52 days post hatch
Ten female (mean 179 g wet mass (WM) and 25.3 cm standard length (SL) and ten male (182 g WM, 24.5 cm SL) Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus L.) were obtained from Kiel Bight (54°22'N, 010°09'E) and strip-spawned. The eggs were strip-spawned onto polyethylene plates, fertilized and incubated within aerated 250-L tanks containing 16 (±0.2) psu, 10 (±0.12)°C water at a light regime of 14 h (light):10 h (dark). After hatch on April 17, 2007, larvae were reared in semi-static (30% water exchange day−1) 100-L tanks (Ø 60 cm) at 17 (±0.5) psu and either 13.2 (±0.4), 10 (±0.4) or 7.2 (±0.3)°C. Tanks were “greened” with R. baltica (50,000 cells mL−1) and larvae were fed ad libitum rations of newly-hatched A. tonsa nauplii which corresponded to 5 prey mL−1 until a larval age of 13 days post hatch (dph) and then 2 prey mL−1 of early and late naupliar and copepodite stages. During rearing, larval SL- and dry mass (DM)-at-age was monitored every 2 to 3 days
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