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Soil radon was measured from late October 2000 to January 2001 at three test sites on the campus of Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan. Factors affecting radon concentrations were investigated with relation to meteorological data, as well as soil 226Ra content, mineral composition, water content, and pH, Eh and conductivity. Soil radon varied with time and with sampling site appreciably, in a manner unaltered by the surface geology. However, the ratio of radon isotopes (220Rn/222Rn) in the soil was constant within each sampling site, regardless of varying concentration of these nuclides during the monitoring period. Snow covering on the soil surfaces may affect the 222Rn concentration. 相似文献
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Several factors controlling the soil radon level in the present site were found to be changing air-filled porosity caused
by fluctuations in moisture content, differences between the atmospheric and soil temperatures as well as volumetric 226Ra content of the soil. The radon activity increased significantly in early October, especially at point 1, possibly as a
result of a magnitude 8.0 earthquake which occurred on September 26, 2003, with epicenter located offshore near Tokachi, Hokkaido. 相似文献
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Jun Tabata Yutaka Narai Nobuo Sawamura Syuntaro Hiradate Hajime Sugie 《Die Naturwissenschaften》2012,99(7):567-574
Mealybugs, which include several agricultural pests, are small sap feeders covered with a powdery wax. They exhibit clear sexual dimorphism; males are winged but fragile and short lived, whereas females are windless and less mobile. Thus, sex pheromones emitted by females facilitate copulation and reproduction by serving as a key navigation tool for males. Although the structures of the hitherto known mealybug pheromones vary among species, they have a common structural motif; they are carboxylic esters of monoterpene alcohols with irregular non-head-to-tail linkages. However, in the present study, we isolated from the Matsumoto mealybug, Crisicoccus matsumotoi (Siraiwa), a pheromone with a completely different structure. Using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we identified the pheromone as 3-methyl-3-butenyl 5-methylhexanoate. Its attractiveness to males was confirmed in a series of field trapping experiments involving comparison between the isolated natural product and a synthetic sample. This is the first report of a hemiterpene mealybug pheromone. In addition, the acid moiety (5-methylhexanoate) appears to be rare in insect pheromones. 相似文献
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