17,086 research outputs found

    Bayergorgia vermidoma Williams & Lopez-Gonzalez 2005

    No full text
    Bayergorgia vermidoma Williams & Lopez-Gonzalez, 2005 Material examined: BBB 2016: St. 12; St. 13; St. 18; St. 21; St. 23; St. 26; St. 36; St. 38; St. 40. PD BB 2017: St. 14; St. 21; St. 43 (MACN-In: 43486, 43487). Distribution: Drake Passage (61°26.08’S, 58°06.2’W, 1047–1227 m); Elephant Island, (61°18.14’S, 56°8.27’W, 281.1–288.6 m); Shag Rocks (53°23.59’S, 42°41.78’W, 223.6–307 m) Antarctic Peninsula, South Shetland Is.; South Georgia Is. (54°29’S, 39°22’W, 659–686 m); South Orkney Is. (60°22’S, 46°50’W, 298–403 m) (Williams & López-González 2005); off Cape Horn (57°00.33’S, 67°35.1’W, 450 m; 57°13.81’S, 67°02.32’W 1100 m); Burdwood bank 54°31´S, 62°11´W 330 m as Clavularia sp. (Schejter et al. 2016a).); Elephant Island (61°15´S, 56°24´W, 450 m) (Auscavitch & Waller 2017); Drake Passage, 57°04´S, 67°30´W, 850 m (Waller & Robinson 2011 as Bayergorgia sp.); off Tierra del Fuego, Burdwood bank (130–785 m) (present study). Remarks: The original diagnosis of the species does not include branched specimens (Williams & López-González 2005). Although the authors discuss some branched forms, it is unlikely these specimens correspond to a different new species. Besides the presence of branching, we could not find clear boundaries between those two morphotypes either in the specimens examined herein or in specimens from other areas (unpublished data). Thus, we suggest the emendation of the diagnosis of B. vermidoma to include both branched and unbranched forms. Some of the studied specimens presented epibionts, mainly other cnidarians (see Schejter et al. 2020).Published as part of Schejter, L., Genzano, G., Pérez, C. D., Acuña, F., Cordeiro, R. T. S., Silva, R. A., Garese, A. & Bremec, C. S., 2020, Checklist of Benthic Cnidaria in the SW Atlantic Ocean (54 ºS- 56 ºS), pp. 201-239 in Zootaxa 4878 (2) on page 221, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4878.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/442488

    Bayergorgia vermidoma Williams & Lopez-Gonzalez 2005

    No full text
    Bayergorgia vermidoma Williams & Lopez-Gonzalez, 2005 Material examined: BBB 2016: St. 12; St. 13; St. 18; St. 21; St. 23; St. 26; St. 36; St. 38; St. 40. PD BB 2017: St. 14; St. 21; St. 43 (MACN-In: 43486, 43487). Distribution: Drake Passage (61°26.08’S, 58°06.2’W, 1047–1227 m); Elephant Island, (61°18.14’S, 56°8.27’W, 281.1–288.6 m); Shag Rocks (53°23.59’S, 42°41.78’W, 223.6–307 m) Antarctic Peninsula, South Shetland Is.; South Georgia Is. (54°29’S, 39°22’W, 659–686 m); South Orkney Is. (60°22’S, 46°50’W, 298–403 m) (Williams & López-González 2005); off Cape Horn (57°00.33’S, 67°35.1’W, 450 m; 57°13.81’S, 67°02.32’W 1100 m); Burdwood bank 54°31´S, 62°11´W 330 m as Clavularia sp. (Schejter et al. 2016a).); Elephant Island (61°15´S, 56°24´W, 450 m) (Auscavitch & Waller 2017); Drake Passage, 57°04´S, 67°30´W, 850 m (Waller & Robinson 2011 as Bayergorgia sp.); off Tierra del Fuego, Burdwood bank (130–785 m) (present study). Remarks: The original diagnosis of the species does not include branched specimens (Williams & López-González 2005). Although the authors discuss some branched forms, it is unlikely these specimens correspond to a different new species. Besides the presence of branching, we could not find clear boundaries between those two morphotypes either in the specimens examined herein or in specimens from other areas (unpublished data). Thus, we suggest the emendation of the diagnosis of B. vermidoma to include both branched and unbranched forms. Some of the studied specimens presented epibionts, mainly other cnidarians (see Schejter et al. 2020).Published as part of Schejter, L., Genzano, G., Pérez, C. D., Acuña, F., Cordeiro, R. T. S., Silva, R. A., Garese, A. & Bremec, C. S., 2020, Checklist of Benthic Cnidaria in the SW Atlantic Ocean (54 ºS- 56 ºS), pp. 201-239 in Zootaxa 4878 (2) on page 221, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4878.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/442488

    Who is interested in developing the way of Saint James? The pilgrimage from faith to tourism

    No full text
    The Way of St. James in Spain is the main European pilgrimage route. Currently, it is a cultural, tourist, monumental, spiritual, and sports route. For this reason, the paper aims to discuss the concept of the “Polysemy of The Way”, by analysing how the new pilgrims’ motivations are creating an inclusive and complex space, which is making a shift from religious space to a multifaceted tourism reality. We study the characterisation and interaction of the new actors involved in its development, maintenance and promotion. As a result, its original “space of faith” is now a “live heritage space”, thanks to the rehabilitation of routes, monuments, and landscapes. The combination of these motivational and spatial transformations enhances the factors of post-secular pilgrimage, such as slow mobility, the liminality and the sense of community, which the same actors assume as priorities for territorial management

    Editorial: Security and privacy in Internet of Things

    No full text
    J. M. de Fuentes, L. Gonzalez-Manzano and P. Peris-Lopez have been partially supported by MINECO grants TIN2013-46469-R and TIN2016-79095-C2-2-R, and CAM grant S2013/ICE-3095

    La herencia intransmisible. Dinámicas de sucesión en la novela española (2006-2017)

    No full text
    This dissertation studies the succession dynamics as manifested in novels by canonical ‘Cultura de la Transición’ authors, published during the years framing the recent crisis (2006-2017), in an attempt of understanding the logic of the generational block evidenced in Spanish society during that period. In a social environment of massive protests against the dysfunctionality of the Spanish democratic system, the cultural elites castle themselves in their defense of both the system and their very own hegemonic position, thus authoritarianly refusing to pass the baton to the younger generations. In order to explore this idea, I examine these elites’ conceptualization of the relation between their own time and that of their parents. My analysis suggests that the generation that led the Spanish Transition to democracy claims to have created a brand new temporality, resulting from their very own personal and generational formation process – a temporality forged in their own image and likeness. In these narratives, the new temporality redeems unpaid debts and unresolved conflicts left by the previous temporality, thus closing it down, that is, dissociating themselves from it. Furthermore, the younger generations are depicted in these works as infantile, unable to succeed them. Having redeemed the past and cancelled the future, the ‘Cultura de la Transición’ generation clings to their hegemony in present continuous tense. Finally, I contrast these narratives with those by other voices outside the dominant cultural paradigm. These latter question the lineal succession of independent, unrelated temporalities, suggesting on the contrary that the alleged new temporality is actually an updated patriarchal and authoritarian traditionalism.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2020-08-01The student, Mario Lopez Gonzalez, accepted the attached license on 2018-07-09 at 15:30.The student, Mario Lopez Gonzalez, submitted this Dissertation for approval on 2018-07-09 at 16:37.This Dissertation was approved for publication on 2018-07-10 at 09:05.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #12780 on 2018-09-27 at 11:36:28Made available in DSpace on 2018-09-27T16:47:27Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 LOPEZGONZALEZ-DISSERTATION-2018.pdf: 1115791 bytes, checksum: 727ba6216e6eb2a287ac8b51ac16cf65 (MD5) LICENSE.txt: 4217 bytes, checksum: 3457734b748308baeda31d1d398ab443 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018-07-10Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 107901 Lift date: 2020-09-27T16:47:41Z Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemLimited Restriction set for Item 107901 on 2020-07-06T17:05:31Z with date 2020-09-27 by [email protected] Restriction Lifted for Item 107901 on 2020-09-27T09:15:33Z

    Effects of d-amphetamine on short-and long-term memory in spontaneously hypertensive, Wistar–Kyoto and Sprague–Dawley rats

    No full text
    Diverse studies indicate that the attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is associated with alterations in encoding processes, including working or short-term memory. Some ADHD dysfunctional domains are reflected in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR). Here SHR-saline group showed significantly poor STM and LTM relative to SD and WKY saline rats. SD and WKY rats treated with d-amphetamine displayed better STM and LTM, compared to SD-vehicle, WKY-vehicle or SHR-damphetamine groups
    corecore