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  • 1
    Description / Table of Contents: Intro -- Preface of the 3rd Annual International Conference on Natural and Social Science Education (ICNSSE) -- Organization -- Contents -- Peer-Review Statements -- Education -- Decoding City Branding Through Social Media: Overseas Student Perceptions of an Instagram Account -- Teacher's Efforts in Improving Students Arabic Writing Skills in The Post Pandemic -- Augmenting Knowledge: Measuring the Cognitive Impact of Pop-Up Book Integration -- Improving Maharah Al Qiro'ah: Evaluating the PQ4R Method -- Exploring the Correlation Between Reading Habit and Students' Reading Achievement -- Interactive or Uninteractive: How is the Implementation of English Song Improve Listening Skill Students at Junior High School? -- Bilingual Education Challenges and Strategies in an Indonesian Natural School -- Content Analysis of Novel "Di Kaki Bukit Cibalak" an Alternative Source of Social Studies Learning -- Live Worksheets Impact: Unveiling Junior High Students' Perception and Reading Achievement Nexus -- The Relationship Between Peer Social Support and Self-Regulated Learning -- Body Image Impact: Unveiling the Crucial Link to Student Self-Confidence -- Resilience vs. Stress: Unraveling Academic Challenges in Working Students -- Relationship Between School Well-Being and Academic Flow in Vocational School Students -- Communication Patterns of Counseling Guidance Teachers and Female Students in Preventing Online Gender-Based Violence -- Educational Supervision in Improving the Performance Teacher of State Elementary School -- Representation of Indonesian Speech Activities in Classroom Learning: A Study of Communication Ethnography -- Number Bag Media and Math Outcomes in Elementary Students -- The Role of Parents Early Childhood Sexual Education in Indonesia: Reconstructing and Rethinking.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (683 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9782384762422
    Series Statement: Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research Series v.846
    Language: English
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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  • 2
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    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/9012 | 403 | 2012-08-03 17:37:42 | 9012 | United States National Marine Fisheries Service
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: Size-related differences in power production and swim speed duration may contribute to the observed deficit of nursing calves in relation to lactating females killed in sets by tuna purse-seiners in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean (ETP). Power production and swim-speed duration were estimated for northeastern spotted dolphins (Stenella attenuata), the species (neonate through adult) most often captured by the fishery. Power required by neonates to swim unassisted was 3.6 times that required of an adult to swim the same speed. Estimated unassisted burst speed for neonates is only about 3 m/s compared to about 6 m/s for adults. Estimated long-term sustainable speed is about 1 m/s for neonates compared to about 2.5 m/s for adults. Weight-specific power requirements decrease as dolphin calves increase in size, but power estimates for 2-year-old spotted dolphin calves are still about 40% higher than power estimates for adults, to maintain the same speed. These estimated differences between calves and adults are conservative because the calculations do not include accommodation for reduced aerobic capacity in dolphin calves compared to adults. Discrepancies in power production are probably ameliorated under normal circumstances by calves drafting next to their mothers, and by employing burst-coast or leap-burst-coast swimming, but the relatively high speeds associated with evasion behaviors during and after tuna sets likely diminish use of these energy-saving strategies by calves.
    Keywords: Biology ; Ecology ; Fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: article , TRUE
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 125-135
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2017-05-24
    Description: Preparing students to explore, understand, and resolve societal challenges such as global climate change is an important task for evolutionary and ecological biologists that will require novel and innovative p...
    Print ISSN: 1936-6426
    Electronic ISSN: 1936-6434
    Topics: Biology
    Published by SpringerOpen
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2017-09-14
    Description: Identification of Genetically Important Individuals of the Rediscovered Floreana Galápagos Giant Tortoise ( Chelonoidis elephantopus ) Provide Founders for Species Restoration Program Scientific Reports, Published online: 13 September 2017; doi:10.1038/s41598-017-11516-2
    Electronic ISSN: 2045-2322
    Topics: Natural Sciences in General
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2013-11-26
    Description: Background: Several well-established tumour prognostic factors are used to guide the clinical management of patients with breast cancer. Lymphovascular invasion and angiogenesis have also been reported to have some promise as prognostic factors. The aim of the present study was to examine the prognostic value of tumour lymphovascular invasion and microvessel density compared with that of established prognostic factors in invasive ductal breast cancer.Methodology: In addition to hormone receptor status and Ki-67 proliferative activity, lymphovascular invasion and microvessel density and their relationship with survival were examined in patients with invasive ductal breast cancer. Full sections and tissue microarrays (n = 384 patients) were utilised to assess these factors and were scored by appropriate methods. Results: On univariate analysis tumour size (P 〈 0.05), lymph node involvement (P 〈 0.01), lymphovascular invasion (P 〈 0.05), microvessel density (P 〈 0.05) and local- regional treatment (P 〈 0.01) were associated with poorer survival in ER negative tumours. On multivariate analysis in ER negative tumours lymph node involvement (P 〈 0.01) and local- regional treatment (P 〈 0.05) were independently associated with poorer cancer-specific survival. On univariate analysis tumour grade (P 〈 0.05), lymph node involvement (P 〈 0.001), HER-2 (P 〈 0.05), Ki-67 (P 〈 0.01) and lymphovascular invasion (P 〈 0.001) were associated with poorer survival in ER positive tumours. On multivariate analysis lymph node involvement (P 〈 0.001), Ki-67 (P 〈 0.001) and lymphovascular invasion (P 〈 0.05) were independently associated with poorer cancer-specific survival in ER positive tumours. Conclusion: Lymphovascular invasion but not microvessel density was independently associated with poorer survival in patients with ER positive but not ER negative invasive ductal breast cancer.
    Electronic ISSN: 1472-6890
    Topics: Medicine
    Published by BioMed Central
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2014-04-12
    Description: Acidity is an important chemical variable that impacts atmospheric and snow pack chemistry. Here we describe composite time series and the spatial pattern of acidity concentration (Acy = H +  − HCO 3 − ) during the last 2000 years across the Dronning Maud Land region of the East Antarctic Plateau using measurements in seven ice cores. Coregistered measurements of the major ion species show that sulfuric acid (H 2 SO 4 ), nitric acid (HNO 3 ), and hydrochloric acid (HCl) determine greater than 98% of the acidity value. The latter, also described as excess chloride (ExCl − ) is shown mostly to be derived from postdepositional diffusion of chloride with little net gain or loss from the snowpack. A strong inverse linear relationship between nitrate concentration and inverse accumulation rate provides evidence of spatially homogenous fresh snow concentrations and reemission rates of nitrate from the snowpack across the study area. A decline in acidity during the Little Ice Age (LIA, 1500–1900 C.E.) is observed and is linked to declines in HNO 3 and ExCl − during that time. The nitrate decline is found to correlate well with published methane isotope data from Antarctica (δ 13 CH 4 ) , indicating that it is caused by a decline in biomass burning. The decrease in ExCl − concentration during the LIA is well correlated to published sea surface temperature reconstructions in the Atlantic Ocean, which suggests increased sea salt aerosol production associated with greater sea ice extent.
    Print ISSN: 0148-0227
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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