Changes of terpene content in milk from cows grazing natural diversified upland pasture were examined in this observational trial. A homogeneous plot divided into 2 subplots was used from May 31 to July 1, 2003 (first growth) and again from October 1 to October 7, 2003 (vegetative regrowth). Each subplot was grazed by 6 dairy cows in 2 ways: strip grazing (SG), with new allocations of pasture strips at 2-d intervals, and paddock grazing (PG). The PG subplot was divided into 3 paddocks and the cows were moved to a new paddock on June 13 and June 24, 2003. Milk from the 6 cows was collected twice a week, pooled, and used for terpene analyses by dynamic headspace gas chromatography-mass spectrometry system. Twenty mono- and 23 sesquiterpenes desorbing from the milk fat were separated. The most abundant monoterpenes were beta-pinene, alpha-pinene, gamma-terpinene, limonene, alpha-tujene, terpinolene, and alpha-phellandrene. The most abundant sesquiterpenes were beta-caryophyllene, alpha-copaene, beta-cedrene, transmuurola-4-(14)-5-diene, beta-bisabolene, and delta-cadinene. Both mono- and sesquiterpenes in SG milk increased across time with an 8-fold increase in total terpenes in milk from the beginning to the end of June. In parallel, dicotyledons, including the main terpene-rich plants, increased from 17 to 31% of total biomass of the vegetation and the development of Dactylis glomerata progressed from boot to ripening stage. The terpenes in PG milk were equivalent to those in SG milk for the first paddock at the beginning of June and remained constant or doubled for the sum of mono- and sesquiterpenes, respectively. The lower variability of the PG milk terpene content could be related to the opportunity that PG cows had to choose ingested herbage, whereas the SG cows had limited choice within the smaller allocated pasture strips. Milk from cows grazing regrowth pastures in October contained low levels of terpenes, and values were similar for PG and SG milks. Change in the sum of monoterpenes is representative of changes for most monoterpenes (except for limonene) and, conversely, the change in the sum of sesquiterpenes mainly reflected changes in beta-caryophyllene and alpha-copaene. In addition to effects of botanical composition of pasture, it appears that terpene content in milk may vary according to factors linked to grazing management that need more intensive study. Nevertheless, current results raise questions about the precision of terpenes as feed tracers.
International audienceMarine resources are under increasing pressure from a wide variety of threats such as overfishing, offshore energy development, and climate change. As marine ecosystems degrade, so do the well-being and livelihoods of humans that depend directly on the ecosystem goods and services they provide. Marine protected areas have been proposed to protect biodiversity, restore damaged ecosystems, sustain fisheries, and rebuild overexploited stocks. The effectiveness of marine protected areas depends in part on their effectiveness as connected networks, linked over large areas by ecological processes such as larval dispersal. Here, we applied a biophysical model driven by ocean currents derived from satellite altimetry to evaluate connectivity between Western Indian Ocean reefs. We applied graph-theoretic analysis, including clustering and a betweenness centrality metric. Our results show high interconnectivity within several regions (Mozambique Channel, Mascarene archipelago) and lower connectivity across the WIO region. We compared the results with the current MPA network, and proposed sites/reefs that should be considered priority sites for MPA implementation: Pebane, Cosmoledo, Majunga, Masoarivo, Platte Island, Farquhar, Agalega and Geyser bank. Our results are timely, considering the oil and gas exploration that is ongoing in the region. We discuss implications for transboundary marine policies and regional cooperation in the Western Indian Ocean, and advocate the creation of a regional-scale organization to structure interactions among the different actors
Although stocking rate is a key management variable influencing the structure and composition of pastures, only few studies have simultaneously analysed the seasonal patterns of pasture use by cattle, and the adjustments the animals make to maintain intake of a high-quality diet over the grazing season. Therefore, over a 3-year study, we recorded diet selection, plot use and impact of heifers on sward structure and quality under three different stocking rates (0.6, 1.0 and 1.4 livestock units (LU) per ha) in a species-rich mountain pasture of central France. Measurements were made on three occasions between early June and the end of September each year. Overall, heifers selected for bites dominated by legumes or forbs, and against reproductive grass, whatever the stocking rate or season. Selection for tall mixed (P , 0.05), short mixed (P , 0.05) and short pure grass bites (P , 0.01) was more pronounced in plots grazed at the lowest stocking rate. Although heifers' selection for short patches decreased at the end of the season (P , 0.001), they continued to graze previously grazed areas, thus exhibiting a typical 'patch grazing' pattern, with the animals that grazed at the lowest stocking rate tending to better maintain their selection for short patches in September (treatment 3 period: P 5 0.078). Neither diet quality nor individual animal performance were affected by the different stocking rate treatments despite high variability in the quantity and quality of herbage offered and differences in diet selection. However, at the 1.4 LU per ha stocking rate, the quantity of forage available per animal at the end of the season, 0.79 t dry matter (DM) per ha of green leaves with the median of sward height at 4.6 cm, approached levels limiting cattle's ability to compensate for the effects of increasing stocking rate. In plots grazed at 0.6 LU per ha, the total herbage biomass remained higher than 3 t DM per ha with more than 30% of plot area still covered by reproductive grass patches at the end of the grazing season, which in the medium term should affect the botanical composition of these pastures. Sward heterogeneity was high in plots grazed at 1.0 LU per ha, with sufficient herbage availability (1.1 t DM per ha of green leaves) to maintain animal performance, and more than 15% of plot area was kept at a reproductive stage at the end of the grazing season. Hence, it could represent the optimal balance to satisfy both livestock production and conservation management objectives.
-Twenty-four multiparous cows were divided into 4 groups immediately after calving according to a 2 × 2 factorial design: 2 milking frequencies (1 daily [morning only] milking for the first three weeks of lactation, then 2 daily milkings vs. 2 daily milkings throughout) under two diet energy concentrations (normal or low). The trial lasted 30 weeks, on average, and ended in the pasture on 28 May 2000. During the winter period, the cows were housed together in a free-stall barn, and were given complete rations ad libitum. The cows that were not milked were significantly more vocal than the controls, close to the omitted milking, and in a large number of them, milk leaked from the udder. Once-daily milking gradually reduced the amount of milk secreted in relation to that produced by cows milked twice a day, with differences of 8.5 kg·d -1 (P < 0.01) at week 3. As early as the first week of resumption of twice-daily milking, that difference ceased to be statistically significant but amounted to 1.3 kg·d -1 (P > 0.10) throughout the rest of the trial. Once-daily milking did not affect the contents of milk fat, true protein, serum albumin and lactose contents or somatic cell count, plasmin activity and plasminogen-derived activity. That treatment also increased the G1 immunoglobulin concentration (P = 0.02; measured at week 3) and reduced milk lipoprotein lipase activity. Once-daily milking improved the nutritional status at the beginning of lactation (reduced live weight and body condition losses, and increased the computed energy balance) and had no effect on the ration intake. The normal-energy diet produced expected results, in relation to the low-energy diet: a significant increase in intake (1.2 kg DM·d -1 ), milk yield (3.1 kg·d -1 ), milk protein content (2.0 g·kg -1 ), and nutritional indices, in particular. The decrease in milk yield induced by once-daily milking during the (0)4 73 98 13 80; e-mail: remond@gentiane.enitac.fr first three weeks of lactation was 5.5 kg·d -1 in the low-energy group and 8.5 kg·d -1 for the normal energy group (non-significant interaction; P > 0.10). once-daily milking / level of feeding / milk production / enzyme activities / nutritional status Résumé -Effets de la traite une fois par jour combinée au niveau d'alimentation pendant les trois premières semaines de la lactation sur la production et les activités enzymatiques du lait, et l'état nutritionnel, chez des vaches Holstein. Vingt-quatre vaches multipares ont été réparties dès le vêlage en 4 lots, selon un schéma factoriel 2 × 2 : 2 fréquences de traite (1 traite par jour pendant les 3 premières semaines de lactation, puis 2 traites par jour vs. 2 traites par jour en permanence) × 2 concentrations énergétiques de la ration (normale ou basse). L'essai a duré en moyenne 30 semaines et s'est terminé au pâturage, le 28 mai 2000. Pendant la période hivernale, les vaches étaient logées ensemble dans une stabulation libre à logettes et recevaient à volonté une ration complète. La traite omise était celle du soir. Les vac...
The TropiSAR campaign has been conducted in August 2009 in French Guiana with the ONERA airborne radar system SETHI. The main objective of this campaign was to collect data to support the Phase A of the 7th Earth Explorer candidate mission, BIOMASS. Several specific questions needed to be addressed to consolidate the mission concept following the Phase 0 studies, and the data collection strategy was constructed accordingly. More specifically, a tropical forest data set was required in order to provide test data for the evaluation of the foreseen inversion algorithms and data products. The paper provides a description of the resulting data set which is now available through the European Space Agency website under the airborne campaign link. First results from the TropiSAR database analysis are presented with two in-depth analyses about both the temporal radiometric variation and temporal coherence at P-band. The temporal variations of the backscatter values are less than 0.5 dB throughout the campaign, and the coherence values are observed to stay high even after 22 days. These results are essential for the BIOMASS mission. The observed temporal stability of the backscatter is a good indicator of the expected robustness of the biomass estimation in tropical forests, from cross-polarized backscatter values as regarding environmental changes such as soil moisture. The high temporal coherence observed after a 22-day period is a prerequisite for SAR Polarimetric Interferometry and Tomographic applications in a single satellite configuration. The conclusion then summarizes the paper and identifies the next steps in the analysis.
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