Annual seasonal variations in tourism demand have been a central theme in literature. However, annual seasonality is not the only time-based inequality in tourism flows that has important ...implications on policy-making decisions at destinations. Within the context of tourism, this study aims to make an in-depth analysis of intra-monthly and intra-weekly tourism demand using the entropy and relative redundancy measures as alternative seasonality indicators to the Gini coefficient in order to provide new tools to manage tourism and propose new action policies at these frequencies. In comparison with the Gini coefficient, the entropy measure is simpler to compute and it is easily decomposable. Using the case study of air arrivals and departures to and from the Balearic Islands, results show the appropriateness of entropy and relative redundancy as seasonal indicators but also as a new information tools for tourism seasonality analysis.
•Seasonality is present in annual, monthly and weekly frequencies.•Entropy measure can be easily decomposed.•A case study at the Balearic Islands airports is conducted.•Entropy-based seasonal measures capture seasonality in the same way as the Gini.•Monthly and weekly seasonality differs across geographical markets.
•GnRH was evaluated as a replacement for eCG in ewes during the breeding season.•Ovulation moment and luteal function were not affected when eCG was replaced by GnRH.•GnRH before TAI negatively ...affected pregnancy rate compared to eCG treatment.•eCG cannot be replaced by GnRH for TAI in ewes during the breeding season.
Hormonal protocols based on progestogens and equine chorionic gonadotrophin (eCG) are efficient for estrus and ovulation synchronization in ewes. Although eCG is indispensable during seasonal anestrus, it may not be necessary during the breeding season. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that GnRH is effective in replacing eCG during the breeding season allowing satisfactory ovulation rate, luteal function and conception rates after timed artificial insemination (TAI). Ewes (n = 134) with a minimum body condition score of 2.5 (0–5 scale) were treated with intravaginal devices (IVD) containing 60 mg of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) for seven days and received 0.26 mg of sodium cloprostenol at the time of IVD removal. In Exp. 1, at IVD removal, ewes (n = 29) were allocated to three groups: eCG (200 IU at IVD removal; n = 10); eCG+GnRH (200 IU eCG at IVD removal and 4 µg of buserelin 36 h later; n = 10); or GnRH (buserelin 36 h after IVD removal; n = 9). Blood samples were collected 2, 6 and 12 days after TAI moment (54 h after IVD removal), for progesterone (P4) analysis. In Exp 2, the ewes were allocated to eCG (n = 10) or GnRH (n = 10) groups, as above described, and ovulation moment was evaluated 54, 66 and 78 h after IVD removal. In Exp 3, TAI was performed in ewes from eCG (n = 45) and GnRH (n = 40) groups using 100 × 106 motile spermatozoa from a pool of semen collected from four rams. In Exp. 1, based on P4 levels, we confirmed that all the ewes ovulated (29/29) and there was no significant effect of group (P = 0.89) or group x day (P = 0.18) on P4 concentration, being observed a significant effect of day (P = 0.0001). In Exp. 2, the maximum DF diameter (P = 0.26) and ovulation moment (P = 0.69) did not differ between groups. In Exp. 3, pregnancy rate was significantly lower (P = 0.02) in GnRH (22.5 %; 9/40) compared to eCG (46.7 %; 21/45). The results indicate that, although ovulation and luteal function were not altered after eCG, eCG+GnRH or GnRH treatment, GnRH alone before TAI cannot be used to replace eCG treatment during the breeding season.
The list of standard abbreviations for JDS is available at adsa.org/jds-abbreviations-24. Nonstandard abbreviations are available in the Notes.
Ruminant milk composition can be affected by many ...factors, primarily interspecies differences, but also environmental factors (e.g., season, feeding system, and feed composition). Pasture-based feeding systems are known to be influenced by seasonal effects on grass composition. Spring pasture is rich in protein and low in fiber compared with late-season pasture, potentially inducing variability in the composition of some milk metabolites across the season. This study aimed to investigate interspecies and seasonal differences in the milk metabolome across the 3 major commercial ruminant milk species from factories in New Zealand: bovine, caprine, and ovine milk. Samples of bovine (n = 41) and caprine (n = 44) raw milk were collected monthly for a period of 9 mo (August 2016–April 2017), and ovine milk samples (n = 20) were collected for a period of 5 mo (August 2016–January 2017). Milk samples were subjected to biphasic extraction, and untargeted metabolite profiling was performed using 2 separate liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry analytical methods (polar metabolites and lipids). Major differences in the milk metabolome were observed between the 3 ruminant species, with 414 of 587 (71%) polar metabolite features and 210 of 233 (87%) lipid features being significantly different between species. Significant seasonal trends were observed in the polar metabolite fraction for bovine, caprine, and ovine milk (17, 24, and 32 metabolites, respectively), suggesting that the polar metabolite relative intensities of ovine and caprine milk were more susceptible to changes within seasons than bovine milk. We found no significant seasonal difference for the triglycerides (TG) species measured in bovine milk, whereas 3 and 52 TG species changed in caprine and ovine milk, respectively, across the seasons. In addition, 4 phosphatidylcholines and 2 phosphatidylethanolamines varied in caprine milk within the season, and 8 diglycerides varied in ovine milk. The interspecies and seasonal metabolite differences reported here provide a knowledge base of components potentially linked to milk physiochemical properties, and potential health benefits of New Zealand pasture-fed dairy ingredients.
Unlocking the benefits of credit through saving Mukherjee, Sanghamitra Warrier; Bergquist, Lauren Falcao; Burke, Marshall ...
Journal of development economics,
October 2024, 2024-10-00, Letnik:
171
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Access to microcredit has been shown to generate only modest average benefits for recipient households. We study whether other financial market frictions – in particular, lack of access to a safe ...place to save – might limit credit’s benefits. Working with Kenyan farmers, we cross-randomize access to a simple savings product with a harvest-time loan. Among loan offer recipients, the additional offer of a savings lockbox increased farm investment by 11% and household consumption by 7%. Results suggest that financial market frictions can interact in important ways and that multifaceted financial access programs might unlock dynamic household gains.
•We present experimental evidence on the complementarities between credit and savings.•We cross-randomize a savings product and a harvest-time loan among Kenyan farmers.•Among loan recipients, a lockbox increased investment by 11% and consumption by 7%.•Results suggest that multifaceted financial access programs unlock dynamic gains.
Here we apply a sclerochronological approach to reconstruct the life-history of two stenohaline bivalves of the family Pectinidae, Gigantopecten latissimus and Pecten jacobaeus from the Pliocene of ...Italy. The specimens come from the locality of Torrita di Siena (Siena-Radicofani Basin, Tuscany), dated to the late Zanclean-Piacenzian with nannoplankton biostratigraphy and Sr-isotope stratigraphy. After measuring the width of micro-growth increments and verifying that the shells were not diagenetically altered, we sampled them at high resolution for carbon and oxygen stable isotopes. δ13C and δ18O shell values allowed to distinguish between specimens that lived above or below the thermocline. Those influenced by surface waters indicate temperatures (for δ18Oseawater = 1.5‰) with winter minima of 16–18 °C and summer values up to 28–29 °C, close to present temperature conditions in the tropical west-African climate belt. In line with this, we found that the two species had similar seasonal growth patterns, with faster growth during colder months and summer slowdown, a typical adaptation of bivalves of tropical affinity suffering from summer temperature extremes. Despite this similar adaptation, G. latissimus, with large and heavy shells (length up to 30 cm) became extinct around 3.0 Ma, while the smaller P. jacobaeus survived Plio-Pleistocene cooling. Different growth rates between the two species and, therefore, different metabolic costs, might explain such differential response, together with differences in reproduction strategies. Habitat loss and fragmentation, due to the decrease of shelf margins and organogenic substrates caused by cooling and sea level fall, are abiotic factors that could have also contributed to the extinction of G. latissimus. P. jacobaeus adaptation to live across a larger bathymetric range, which indicates the ability to thrive in a wider range of temperatures, most likely played a role in its survival. Further studies, including more specimens across multiple localities, will help verifying these hypotheses.
•Life-history of two Pectinidae species from the warm Pliocene are compared•One is extinct (G. latissimus), one still lives in the Mediterranean (P. jacobaeus)•Both show summer growth slowdown, like bivalves of subtropical affinity•Narrow thermal niche and habitat loss most likely explain G. latissimus extinction•Eurythermal life-habit probably facilitated P. jacobaeus survival
The Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine is a well-established inducer of innate immune memory (also termed trained immunity), causing increased cytokine production upon heterologous secondary ...stimulation. Innate immune responses are known to be influenced by season, but whether seasons impact induction of trained immunity is not known. To explore the influence of season on innate immune memory induced by the BCG vaccine, we vaccinated healthy volunteers with BCG either during winter or spring. Three months later, we measured the ex vivo cytokine responses against heterologous stimuli, analyzed gene expressions and epigenetic signatures of the immune cells, and compared these with the baseline before vaccination. BCG vaccination during winter induced a stronger increase in the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) upon stimulation with different bacterial and fungal stimuli, compared to BCG vaccination in spring. In contrast, winter BCG vaccination resulted in lower IFNγ release in PBMCs compared to spring BCG vaccination. Furthermore, NK cells of the winter-vaccinated people had a greater pro-inflammatory cytokine and IFNγ production capacity upon heterologous stimulation. BCG had only minor effects on the transcriptome of monocytes 3 months later. In contrast, we identified season-dependent epigenetic changes in monocytes and NK cells induced by vaccination, partly explaining the higher immune cell reactivity in the winter BCG vaccination group. These results suggest that BCG vaccination during winter is more prone to induce a robust trained immunity response by activating and reprogramming the immune cells, especially NK cells. (Dutch clinical trial registry no. NL58219.091.16)
Coral skeleton δ13C is a routinely measured indicator in modern insolation change research, but the knowledge of environmental and climatic signals recorded in its seasonality during geological time ...is sparse. In this study, we present eight Porites coral δ13C records from the mid‐late Holocene to the present from the northern South China Sea (NSCS). Compared with the main control factors for modern δ13C changes, coral δ13C seasonality in the NSCS since the mid‐Holocene shows a long‐term decreasing trend, which is consistent with the change trend as orbital‐induced (precession) insolation seasonal amplitude. By excluding other influencing factors, we speculate that the stronger coral δ13C seasonality (18.8%) over the mid‐Holocene than modern period is attributable to the metabolic effect, which predicts the stronger coral δ13C seasonality under stronger insolation seasonality. Our study has implications for coral δ13C seasonality as a potential indicator to record past insolation information under different climatic backgrounds.
Plain Language Summary
Numerous studies have documented the seasonal features of fast‐growing modern coral skeleton δ13C in response to insolation variation. The environmental and climatic signals recorded by coral δ13C seasonality in the geological period remain unclear owing to the relatively short length of observation records. Here we present monthly resolved δ13C records in seven fossil Porites corals (5.6–3.6 ka BP, before 1950 CE) and one modern Porites coral (1987–2001 CE) from the northern South China Sea (NSCS). Compared with the widely accepted prevailing control factors for modern coral δ13C, our results indicated that the stronger coral δ13C seasonality (18.8%) over the mid‐Holocene compared to the modern period is consistent with the orbital‐induced (precession) insolation changes, which indicate a declining seasonality from the mid‐Holocene to present. By excluding other influencing factors, we infer that a tendency toward higher δ13C seasonality during the mid‐Holocene was primarily driven by the metabolic fractionation caused by the enhanced insolation seasonality. This study highlighted coral δ13C seasonality as a potential indicator for recording past insolation information.
Key Points
The seasonal variation of modern coral skeleton δ13C in the northern South China Sea (NSCS) is primarily controlled by solar insolation
Coral δ13C seasonality in the NSCS since the mid‐Holocene shows a long‐term decreasing trend
The decrease of orbital‐induced (precession) insolation seasonal amplitude led to the declining trend of δ13C seasonality
Enteric methane (CH4) emissions of 3 genetic groups (GG) of dairy cows were recorded across the grazing season (early March to late October). The 3 GG were (1) high economic breeding index (EBI) ...Holstein-Friesian (HF) representative of the top 1% of dairy cows in Ireland at the time of the study (elite), (2) national average (NA) EBI, which were representative of the average HF dairy cow in Ireland, and (3) purebred Jersey (JE) cows. Enteric CH4 was recorded using GreenFeed technology. Seasonal variation in CH4 was observed, with the lowest daily CH4 emissions and CH4 expressed per unit of dry matter intake occurring in spring (253 g/d and 15.56 g/kg, respectively), intermediate in summer (303 g/d and 18.26 g/kg, respectively), and greatest in autumn (324 g/d and 19.80 g/kg, respectively). Seasonal variation was also observed in the proportion of gross energy intake converted to CH4 (Ym); in the spring the Ym was lowest at 0.046, increasing to 0.053 and 0.058 in the summer and autumn, respectively. There was no difference in daily CH4 between the elite and NA, whereas JE had lower CH4 emissions compared with the elite. When expressed per unit of milk solids (fat + protein yield; MS), the elite and JE produced 6.8% and 9.7% less CH4 per kilogram of MS, respectively, compared with NA. There was no difference between the GG for CH4 per unit of DMI or the Ym. This research emphasizes the variation in CH4 emissions across the grazing season and among cows of differing genetic merit for CH4 emission intensities but not for CH4 per unit of DMI or the Ym.
Tourism is a key sector in the sustainable development of rural environments. Its ability to create stable employment and an acceptable level of profits is conditioned by the stability of tourist ...activity throughout the year. This paper compares the level of seasonality of a group of rural destinations to that of coastal and urban destinations. By doing so, we intend to determine whether seasonality-related problems exist in the rural environment or not. The second aim is related to the first one: the proposal of a new, more comprehensive and objective methodology that can measure the intensity of seasonality based on a DP2 synthetic indicator. The DP2 indicator groups information about different representative variables of seasonality. The study takes the main tourist spots in Spain as a reference. The analysis concludes that the annual level of stability of rural tourism is not far from the stability of urban tourism, which is the most stable, as seasonality is much higher in coastal destinations. The methodology that provides the framework to build the DP2 indicator has allowed us to identify which variables explain the differences in the level of seasonality of each destination to a large extent. The results showed that the variables that do so are related to the internalization of the destination and changes in the availability of bed places.