Psychostimulants, as well as cannabinoids, have been shown to
significantly affect a great variety of behaviors in both humans
and laboratory animals. Our previous studies have repeatedly
demonstrated that the application of the vehicle for
psychostimulants, i.e. saline, to control groups, generated
different behavioral test results compared to absolute naïve
controls (i.e. without any injection). Therefore, our present study
has set three goals: (1) to evaluate the effect of three different
psychostimulant drugs, (2) to evaluate the effect of three doses
of delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), and (3) to evaluate the
effect of saline and ethanol injections vs sham injections and no
injection on spontaneous behavior of adult male rats. The
LABORAS test (Metris B.V., Netherlands) was used to examine
spontaneous locomotor activity and exploratory behavior in an
unknown environment over 1 h. In Experiment 1,
psychostimulant drugs were tested: single subcutaneous (s.c.)
injections of amphetamine (5 mg/kg), cocaine (5 mg/kg), and
3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) (5 mg/kg) were
applied prior to testing. Control animals received the same
volume (1 ml/kg) of s.c. saline. In Experiment 2, the effect of
three doses of THC (1, 2, and 5 mg/kg, s.c.) were examined.
An s.c. injection of vehicle (ethanol) was used as a control. In
Experiment 3, injections of saline and ethanol were compared to
the group receiving a sham s.c. injection and to a group of
absolute “naïve” controls. Our results demonstrated that (1) all
psychostimulants increased locomotion time, distance traveled,
and speed while decreasing immobility time of adult male rats
relative to saline controls. The most prominent effect was
associated with MDMA; (2) The effect of THC was dosedependent and was most apparent within the first 10 min of the
LABORAS test. (3) With regard to the effect of injection: absolute
controls (without injection) compared to animals injected with
ethanol, saline, or sham-injected displayed reduced immobility
time, traveled longer distances, and had increased speed. In
conclusion, our data showed drug dependent behavioral changes
in adult male rats after application of psychostimulants and
cannabinoids. Our findings also suggest that not only drugs but
the actual single injection per se also affects the behavior of
laboratory animals in an unknown environment. This effect
seems to be associated with the acute stress associated
with the injection.
In this note, we prove that the countable compactness of {0, 1} R together with the Countable Axiom of Choice yields the existence of a nonmeasurable subset of . This is done by providing a family of nonmeasurable subsets of whose intersection with every non-negligible Lebesgue measurable set is still not Lebesgue measurable. We develop this note in three sections: the first presents the main result, the second recalls known results concerning non-Lebesgue measurability and its relations with the Axiom of Choice, the third is devoted to the proofs.
By a sign pattern (matrix) we mean an array whose entries are from the set $\lbrace +,-,0\rbrace $. The sign patterns $A$ for which every real matrix with sign pattern $A$ has the property that its inverse has sign pattern $A^T$ are characterized. Sign patterns $A$ for which some real matrix with sign pattern $A$ has that property are investigated. Some fundamental results as well as constructions concerning such sign pattern matrices are provided. The relation between these sign patterns and the sign patterns of orthogonal matrices is examined.
Large veteran trees are key structures sustaining biodiversity in wooded landscapes. Many organisms associated with
such trees are, however, also able to inhabit suitable trees with smaller diameters or other surrogate habitats. Understanding the
mechanisms behind the importance of veteran trees and the conditions enabling veteran tree specialists to exploit smaller trees
might help conservation efforts targeted at the diverse and highly endangered biota associated with veteran trees. To investigate
this, we studied local patterns in the exploitation of trees by a veteran tree specialist, the great capricorn beetle (Cerambyx cerdo),
at three sites with different soil characteristics, namely fl oodplain, dry-sandy and dry-rocky sites, where this beetle exploits oaks
of large (~1.5 m), medium (~0.75 m) and small (~0.25 m) diameters, respectively. We recorded the presence and number of exit
holes made by C. cerdo on each tree and related these to the characteristics of the trees: their diameters, openness of the canopy
around them and their state of health. The probability of occurrence and the number of exit holes increased with tree diameter,
canopy openness, and decreasing tree health, but these relationships differed considerably among the study sites. In dry conditions, trees of small diameters were more likely to be exploited by the beetle than in the fl oodplain. The number of exit holes, on
the other hand, was a function of tree diameter, with large trees sustaining more beetles and thus acting as larger habitat patches.
The species of oak affected the probability of exit hole presence as the sessile oak (Quercus petraea) and pedunculate oak (Q.
robur) were preferred over Turkey oak (Q. cerris). The slope orientation also affected the presence of exit holes as trees on slopes
with either an eastern or northern orientation were not exploited by the beetle. This study revealed a high level of between-site
variability in the tree characteristics relevant to predicting the occurrence of C. cerdo, mainly with respect to diameter. Therefore,
while the general patterns of habitat use and the fundamental niche of this beetle are well known, survival and protection of local
populations is dependent on site-specifi c characteristics. The realized niche of this beetle must therefore be carefully considered
when planning conservation management for a particular site. The results also signify that at some sites, small trees can, at least
temporarily, substitute for scarce large trees if the state of their health is managed using proper conservation measures.
Leucorrhinia caudalis is a dragonfly species threatened throughout Europe. Despite evidence of the recent extension of its distribution range, it is unknown whether L. caudalis regularly or hardly ever migrates among ponds. The contemporary migration patterns of the species were investigated using Bayesian assignment tests and the migration rates related to landscape structural and thematic variables (distance between ponds, forest area, area of water body, area of hedgerow). Migration rates of L. caudalis are independent of any landscape element. Thus, landscape structure is not a barrier or corridor for migration in this species. The tendency of L. caudalis to disperse is largely independent of the nature of the landscape, at least at the scale of the present study. and Janine Bolliger, Daniela Keller, Rolf Holderegger.
Let X be a completely regular Hausdorff space and, as usual, let C(X) denote the ring of real-valued continuous functions on X. The lattice of z-ideals of C(X) has been shown by Martínez and Zenk (2005) to be a frame. We show that the spectrum of this lattice is (homeomorphic to) βX precisely when X is a P-space. This we actually show to be true not only in spaces, but in locales as well. Recall that an ideal of a commutative ring is called a d-ideal if whenever two elements have the same annihilator and one of the elements belongs to the ideal, then so does the other. We characterize when the spectrum of the lattice of d-ideals of C(X) is the Stone-Čech compactification of the largest dense sublocale of the locale determined by X. It is precisely when the closure of every open set of X is the closure of some cozero-set of X.
The study stems from the author’s long-time interest in the history of the Czechoslovak foreign resistance during the Great War, particularly in Russia. As to its sources, it draws from a collection of published recollections of Czechoslovak legionnaires and their autobiographic novels and other texts of prose. The author attempts to reconstruct the picture of the return of Czechoslovak legions from Russia to their home country; due to the nature of his sources, however, his intention is not to convey an authentic experience of the return in the fi rst days and weeks, but rather to examine the construct created by the legionnaires’ memories and novels. In this respect, he makes use of, in particular, Anglo-Saxon historical literature dealing with similar topics. The key issues include how individuals or whole social groups were coping with the reality of the newborn republic, which was rather different from the visions of the home country they had been dreaming about while away. An important factor affecting their refl ections was also the required political nonaffi liation of organizations of legionnaires, as well as the criticism of the situation not just among the veterans, but in the entire society. The extent of the idealization of Russia, which was a fairly frequent phenomenon among them, was directly proportional to the disillusionment after their return, and was a mirror image of their previous idealization of home while they had been in Russia. In the author’s opinion, the topic of the return of Czechoslovak legions home and their life in their home country is far from exhausted; this is why the present study should be just a springboard to further broadly conceived research. and Přeložil Jiří Mareš