2,177 research outputs found
Arbuscular and ectomycorrhizal tree seedling growth is inhibited by competition
The experiments were conducted in southern Quebec, in the northern temperate deciduous forest bioclimatic domain. Tree seedlings (AM and ECM species) were planted on site in tubes set in the ground and i) left intact, ii) allowing hyphal access or iii) allowing roots and hyphal access from neighboring herbaceous vegetation. Seedling performance, root morphological traits and mycorrhizal colonization were compared in relation to presence of neighboring roots and/or fungal hyphae. More information on the experimental design are found in : Parasquive, V., J. Brisson, E. Laliberté, and P.-L. Chagnon. 2024. Arbuscular and ectomycorrhizal tree seedling growth is inhibited by competition from neighboring roots and associated fungal hyphae. Plant and Soil
Motet a Deux voix et En Symphonie // Pseaume 12e. Usquequo Domine Etc. // 1769 // Par M. Brisson, a Moissac en Quercy (manuscrit autographe)
Titre uniforme : Brisson (17..-17.. ; compositeur). Compositeur. [Usquequo Domine. Voix (2), instruments (Psaume 12). Do majeur]Voix solistes : Sol 2, Fa 4. - Instruments : Sol 2 (2), Fa 4. - Mention d'instrumentation sous la musique : "violons, flûtes, bc". - Au v° de la p. de t., table des agréments et commentaires du compositeur. - Au v° de la dernier f., sig. du compositeur : "Brisson // a Moissac // En quercy". - Jointe à la partition, table des incipit musicaux de tous les nPrésentation musicale : [Partition]Incipit : Usquequo Domine oblivisceris me in finemAppartient à l’ensemble documentaire : RISM1Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : RISMMssPsaumes (musique
Rapport sur l’ensemble de l’ouvrage de Brisson, L. et alii, Plotin, Traités 30-37
Voici le rapport sur les 148 fiches insérées de l’ouvrage de L. Brisson, R. Dufour, J. Laurent et J.-F. Pradeau, Plotin, Traités 30-37, présentés, traduits et annotés, sous la direction de L. Brisson et J.-F. Pradeau, Paris, GF Flammarion, 2006. *Certaines fiches (03) ne font pas référence à un traité spécifique mais à des références bibliographiques concernant le débat antignostique. Numéros de fiches par Ennéade : Ennéade II : 128 Ennéade III : 2 Ennéade V : 12 Ennéade VI : 3 Numéros de fic..
Quand il reviendra chez nous
Gift of Dr. Mary Jane Esplen.G [key]Moderato [tempo]Piano vocal [instrumentation]Chansonette march [form/genre]Returning soldier, wife, picket fence ;Hector Pellerin (photograph), Gordon V. Thomspon (photograph) [illustration]Paroles de R. Brisson, auteur de "Mon Soldat" [note]Partir un jour pour la guerre [first line]Quand il re viendra chez nous [first line of refrain]Publisher's advertisement on back cover [note
Nectarinia philippensis Brisson
Nectarinia philippensis “Brisson” Meyen, 1834a: 82. Now: Cinnyris jugularis jugularis (Linnaeus, 1766). Gadow (1884: 63, 85), Stresemann (1952: 513). Lectotype (herein designated; see below for explanation): Specimen figured by Brisson (1760a, pl. 30, fig. 2). This specimen was collected by Pierre Poivre in 1751–1754 at Manila, Luzon, Philippines, and was deposited in the collection of Abbé Aubry in France when Brisson examined it (Stresemann 1952: 513). Its later fate is unknown. Note that this specimen is also the holotype of Certhia philippina Linnaeus, 1766: 187. Paralectotypes (lost): Specimens figured by Brisson (1760a, pl. 31, fig. 2–3; also Daubenton 1768, pl. 246, fig. 1–2). These specimens, which were collected by Pierre Poivre (1719–1786), were at first deposited in the collection of René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur (1683–1757), then in the collection of King Louis XV of France (1710–1774), but now are lost (Stresemann 1952). Note that these specimens are also syntypes of Certhia sperata Linnaeus, 1766: 186. Paralectotypes (lost): Specimens figured by Sonnerat (1776, pl. 30, fig. A, B, D). They were probably collected by Pierre Sonnerat (1748–1814) on the island of Luzon, Philippines, but they were not preserved. Paralectotype (lost): ZMB 8075, ♂, (Lichtenstein 1832, Nr. 4–6 sub “ Nectarinia exspectata ”), collected by Meyen in “ October ” [= 1–9 October 1831; see below] in “ Manila ” [= Laguna de Bay, Luzon, Philippines; see below]. Paralectotype (lost): ZMB 8076 (Lichtenstein 1832, Nr. 7 sub “ Nectarinia exspectata ”), juv., collected by Meyen in “ October ” [= 1–9 October 1831; see below] in “ Manila ” [= Laguna de Bay, Luzon, Philippines; see below]. Paralectotype (lost): ZMB 8081 (Lichtenstein 1832, Nr. 8–12 sub “ Nectarinia gularis ”), collected by Meyen in “ October ” [= 1–9 October 1831; see below] in “ Manila ” [= Laguna de Bay, Luzon, Philippines; see below]. Paralectotype (lost): ZMB 8082 (Lichtenstein 1832, Nr. 8–12 sub “ Nectarinia gularis ”), collected by Meyen in “ October ” [= 1–9 October 1831; see below] in “ Manila ” [= Laguna de Bay, Luzon, Philippines; see below]. Paralectotype (lost): ZMB 8083 (Lichtenstein 1832, Nr. 8–12 sub “ Nectarinia gularis ”), collected by Meyen in “ October ” [= 1–9 October 1831; see below] in “ Manila ” [= Laguna de Bay, Luzon, Philippines; see below]. Paralectotypes (lost): ZMB uncatalogued (Lichtenstein 1832, Nr. 4–6 sub “ Nectarinia exspectata ”); two specimens, both collected by Meyen in “ October ” [= 1–9 October 1831; see below] in “ Manila ” [= Laguna de Bay, Luzon, Philippines; see below]. These specimens were presumably destined by M.H.C. Lichtenstein for exchange, but their fate remains unknown. Paralectotypes (lost): ZMB uncatalogued (Lichtenstein 1832, Nr. 8–12 sub “ Nectarinia gularis ”); two specimens, both collected by Meyen in “ October ” [= 1–9 October 1831; see below] in “ Manila ” [= Laguna de Bay, Luzon, Philippines; see below]. These specimens were presumably destined by M.H.C. Lichtenstein for exchange, but their fate remains unknown. Type locality. Due to lectotypification, the type locality is ascertained as Manila, island of Luzon, Philippines. Remarks. Meyen (1834a: 82) introduced Brisson’s (1760a: 655) name for this bird, believing that Linnaeus’s (1766: 186, 188) Certhia sperata and Certhia zeylonica were its females and males, respectively, and that Brisson’s (1760a) philippensis had precedence. Brisson’s species-group names are not available for nomenclatural purposes (see Melville & Smith 1987), so Meyen (1834a) is the author of Nectarinia philippensis. Meyen (1834a) did not specify the type series of this species, but Lichtenstein (1832) listed nine relevant specimens, which thus belong to the type series. Moreover, Meyen (1834a: 82–83) explicitly included in his Nectarinia philippensis specimens figured by Brisson (1760a, pl. 30, fig. 2, and pl. 31, fig. 2–3), Sonnerat (1776, pl. 30, fig. A, B, D), and Daubenton (1768, pl. 246, fig. 1–2; 1773, pl. 576, fig. 1–4), which also belong in the type series (see above for their list). Meyen (1834a) did not specify where and when exactly he collected his specimens. M.H.C. Lichtenstein (1832) said that all Meyen specimens were collected in “October” at “ Manila ”. However, Meyen (1834a) used “ Manila ” in the sense of both the city and Luzon Island. His itinerary shows (see above) that all specimens originated from southern Luzon, having been collected at the city of Manila and/or at Laguna de Bay. If M.H.C. Lichtenstein (1832) is correct in saying that the specimens were collected in October, then they must have been collected at Laguna de Bay, more particularly on the Jalajala Peninsula and/or on Talim Island, during 1– 9 October. In absence to any evidence to the contrary we accept this locality and date of collection. As correctly observed by Gadow (1884: 63, 85), Meyen’s (1834a) description of “males” of philippensis agrees with that of male Nectarinia sperata, while his description of “females” of philippensis agrees with that of male Nectarinia jugularis. Meyen’s (1834a) Nectarinia philippensis is thus based on a mixed type series and its nomenclatural fate needs to be determined via lectotypification. We found no surviving syntype, so we designate here the specimen figured by Brisson (1760a, pl. 30, fig. 2) as the lectotype of this species. Herewith, Nectarinia philippensis Meyen, 1834, becomes a junior objective synonym of Certhia philippina Linnaeus, 1766, of which this specimen is the holotype (see above). All other former syntypes of N. philippensis Meyen become herewith paralectotypes of this form.Published as part of Mlíkovský, Jiří & Frahnert, Sylke, 2017, Type specimens and type localities of birds (Aves) collected during F. J. F. Meyen's circumnavigation in 1830 – 1832, pp. 1-22 in Zootaxa 4250 (1) on pages 12-13, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4250.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/43977
Dictionnaire raisonné de physique par M. Brisson... ; tome premier
Antep.Port. con grab. xil.Texto a dos col.An. ms. en v. de port.: "Son tres tomos, q[u]e regaló Dn. Antonio Carrión al P. Fr. Franc[is]co de San Laureano Carm[eli]ta Descalzo.
Dictionnaire raisonné de physique par M. Brisson... ; tome second
Antep.Port. con grab. xil.Texto a dos col.An. ms. en v. de port.: "Al uso del P. Fr. Franc[is]co de San Laureano Carmelita Descalzo."Enc. PielSign.: [ ]2, A-Z4, Aa-Zz4, Aaa-Zzz4, Aaaa-Zzzz4, Aaaaa-Ddddd4, Eeeee
Modeling the phase behavior of the membrane binding protein annexin V
The bulk thermodynamic properties of proteins originate from a varied and complex combination of interactions. We propose a simple model for the formation of ordered two-dimensional aggregates based on the interactions between pairs of annexin V molecules. Simulations of this model are shown to reproduce the experimental observations of a honeycomb (p6) and a triangular (p3) crystalline phase. The simulations indicate that the transition between these two phases is first order. While this model is extremely simple in that it relies only on hard body and short-range directional interactions, it nevertheless captures the essential physics of the interactions between the protein molecules and reproduces the phase behavior observed in electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy experiments
HASAR: mining sequential association rules for atherosclerosis risk factor analysis
@inproceedings{AI-HEBERT-2004, author = {Brisson, L. and Pasquier, N. and Hébert, C. and Collard, M.}, title = {HASAR: mining sequential association rules for atherosclerosis risk factor analysis}, booktitle = {PKDD'04 Discovery Challenge on risk factors of patients with atherosclerosis co-located with the 8th European Conference on Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases PKDD'04}, pages = {14-25}, year = {2004}, address = {Pisa, Italy}, month = {September} }International audienc
'Archytas: Author and Authenticator of Pythagoreanism'
This paper critically examines the use of the name 'Pseudo-Archytas' to refer to two aspects of the reception of Archytas of Tarentum in antiquity: the 'author-inflection' and the 'authority-inflection'. In order to make progress on our understanding of authority and authorship within the Pythagorean tradition, it attempts to reconstruct Porphyry's views on the importance of Archytas as guarantor of Pythagorean authenticity in the former's lost work On the History of the Philosophers by considering a fragment preserved in Arabic by Ibn Abī Uṣaybi‘a. The article finally argues that a range of problems attend our use of the term 'pseudo-Archytas', which is not fit for purpose when considering the evidence regarding authorship and authority in the Pythagorean tradition. It recommends a more critical approach to the notion of authenticity within the Pythagorean tradition and suggests a new term, 'Archytism', as a more useful point of reference
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