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Grandin G., A. Marchaudon, A. Aikio, P.-L. Blelly, A. Kozlovsky, F. Pitout, T. Ulich, M. Lester, E. Miller, and T. Yeoman. (2015). Effects of the 20 March 2015 total solar eclipse on the ionosphere-thermosphere system.
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Marchaudon, A., F. Pitout, K.-h. Trattner, M. O. Chandler. (2015). Cluster, Polar and SuperDARN simultaneous observations of cusp signatures in the northern and southern hemispheres.
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. (2018). (Vol. 278).
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Lavrillier, A., Gabyshev S. (2017). An Arctic Indigenous Knowledge System of Landscape, Climate, and Humans interactions. Evenki Reindeer Herders and Hunters.
Abstract: Co-written by an anthropologist and a reindeer herder (BRISK project co-researcher) on the basis of their field materials, this book offers documentation and analysis of complex traditional environmental knowledge. After discussing the methodology of the Evenki community-based transdisciplinary observatory for monitoring climate and environmental changes with herders (2012-2016), the book reveals some of the results of this co-production. It presents the emic typologies and concepts the Evenki use for understanding norms and anomalies, observing and predicting changes, and adaptating. Conceived together with the herders, the book's structure combines analytical texts (traditional in anthropology) and other forms of presentation, such as abstract diagrams with explanations in Evenki, Russian, and English, diagrams on pictures, and encyclopaedic entries with pictures and trilingual explanations from the herders.
Programme: 1127
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Aghajari N., Feller G., Gerday C. & Haser R. (1998). Structures of the psychrophilic Alteromonas halop Ch. lanctis alpha-amylase give insights into cold adaptation at molecular level. Structure, 6, 1503–1516.
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Rosnet E. (2002).17–38.
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Wawrzyniak M. & Rosnet E. (2002).241–258.
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. (2015). Reassessment of the cardio-respiratory stress response, using the king penguin as a model
. Stress, 18(1), 115–120.
Abstract: AbstractResearch in to short-term cardio-respiratory changes in animals in reaction to a psychological stressor typically describes increases in rate of oxygen consumption and heart rate. Consequently, the broad consensus is that they represent a fundamental stressor response generalizable across adult species. However, movement levels can also change in the presence of a stressor, yet studies have not accounted for this possible confound on heart rate. Thus the direct effects of psychological stressors on the cardio-respiratory system are not resolved. We used an innovative experimental design employing accelerometers attached to king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) to measure and thus account for movement levels in a sedentary yet free-to-move animal model during a repeated measures stress experiment. As with previous studies on other species, incubating king penguins (N?=?6) exhibited significant increases in both and heart rate when exposed to the stressor. However, movement levels, while still low, also increased in response to the stressor. Once this was accounted for by comparing periods of time during the control and stress conditions when movement levels were similar as recorded by the accelerometers, only significantly increased; there was no change in heart rate. These findings offer evidence that changing movement levels have an important effect on the measured stress response and that the cardio-respiratory response per se to a psychological stressor (i.e. the response as a result of physiological changes directly attributable to the stressor) is an increase in without an increase in heart rate.
Programme: 394
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Micol T., Lebouvier M., Jouventin P. & Duncan P. (1999). Reconciling the irreconcilable: an exotic ungulate and a world endangered bird species..
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Duncan A. Young, Laura E. Lindzey, Donald D. Blankenship, Jamin S. Greenbaum1 and Emmanuel Le Meur. (2013). Ice surface elevation change on the George V Coast of East Antarctica: a new hybrid highresolution record.
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