25 results on '"Monjardino, P"'
Search Results
2. Stacked Denoising Autoencoders and Transfer Learning for Immunogold Particles Detection and Recognition
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Sousa, Ricardo Gamelas, Santos, Jorge M., Silva, Luís M., Alexandre, Luís A., Esteves, Tiago, Rocha, Sara, Monjardino, Paulo, de Sá, Joaquim Marques, Figueiredo, Francisco, and Quelhas, Pedro
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
In this paper we present a system for the detection of immunogold particles and a Transfer Learning (TL) framework for the recognition of these immunogold particles. Immunogold particles are part of a high-magnification method for the selective localization of biological molecules at the subcellular level only visible through Electron Microscopy. The number of immunogold particles in the cell walls allows the assessment of the differences in their compositions providing a tool to analise the quality of different plants. For its quantization one requires a laborious manual labeling (or annotation) of images containing hundreds of particles. The system that is proposed in this paper can leverage significantly the burden of this manual task. For particle detection we use a LoG filter coupled with a SDA. In order to improve the recognition, we also study the applicability of TL settings for immunogold recognition. TL reuses the learning model of a source problem on other datasets (target problems) containing particles of different sizes. The proposed system was developed to solve a particular problem on maize cells, namely to determine the composition of cell wall ingrowths in endosperm transfer cells. This novel dataset as well as the code for reproducing our experiments is made publicly available. We determined that the LoG detector alone attained more than 84\% of accuracy with the F-measure. Developing immunogold recognition with TL also provided superior performance when compared with the baseline models augmenting the accuracy rates by 10\%.
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- 2017
3. Whole farm planning raises profit despite burgeoning climate crisis
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Muleke, Albert, Harrison, Matthew Tom, Eisner, Rowan, de Voil, Peter, Yanotti, Maria, Liu, Ke, Yin, Xiaogang, Wang, Weilu, Monjardino, Marta, Zhao, Jin, Zhang, Feng, Fahad, Shah, and Zhang, Yunbo
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- 2022
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4. Macao air quality forecast using statistical methods
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Lei, Man Tat, Monjardino, Joana, Mendes, Luisa, Gonçalves, David, and Ferreira, Francisco
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- 2019
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5. Household food insecurity and socio-demographic determinants in young adults: findings from a Portuguese population-based sample
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Maia, Isabel, Monjardino, Teresa, Lucas, Raquel, Ramos, Elisabete, and Santos, Ana Cristina
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- 2019
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6. First Report of Cucumber Mosaic Virus Infecting Azorina vidalii in Azores Islands
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Luna, S., primary, Lopes, M. S., additional, Dias, E., additional, Pereira, D., additional, Monjardino, P., additional, da Câmara Machado, A., additional, and Mendonça, D., additional
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- 2023
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7. The population impact of rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases in relation to other non-communicable disorders: comparing two estimation approaches
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Simões, Daniela, Araújo, Fábio Azevedo, Monjardino, Teresa, Severo, Milton, Cruz, Ivo, Carmona, Loreto, and Lucas, Raquel
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- 2018
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8. Yield potential determines Australian wheat growers’ capacity to close yield gaps while mitigating economic risk
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Monjardino, Marta, Hochman, Zvi, and Horan, Heidi
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- 2019
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9. Smartphone Apps for Food Purchase Choices: Scoping Review of Designs, Opportunities, and Challenges.
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Benthem de Grave, Remco, Bull, Christopher N, Monjardino de Souza Monteiro, Diogo, Margariti, Eleni, McMurchy, Gareth, Hutchinson, Joseph William, and Smeddinck, Jan David
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CONSUMER behavior ,GROCERY shopping ,MOBILE apps ,IMAGE recognition (Computer vision) ,NUDGE theory - Abstract
Background: Smartphone apps can aid consumers in making healthier and more sustainable food purchases. However, there is still a limited understanding of the different app design approaches and their impact on food purchase choices. An overview of existing food purchase choice apps and an understanding of common challenges can help speed up effective future developments. Objective: We examined the academic literature on food purchase choice apps and provided an overview of the design characteristics, opportunities, and challenges for effective implementation. Thus, we contribute to an understanding of how technologies can effectively improve food purchase choice behavior and provide recommendations for future design efforts. Methods: Following the PRISMA-ScR (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews) guidelines, we considered peer-reviewed literature on food purchase choice apps within IEEE Xplore, PubMed, Scopus, and ScienceDirect. We inductively coded and summarized design characteristics. Opportunities and challenges were addressed from both quantitative and qualitative perspectives. From the quantitative perspective, we coded and summarized outcomes of comparative evaluation trials. From the qualitative perspective, we performed a qualitative content analysis of commonly discussed opportunities and challenges. Results: We retrieved 55 articles, identified 46 unique apps, and grouped them into 5 distinct app types. Each app type supports a specific purchase choice stage and shares a common functional design. Most apps support the product selection stage (selection apps; 27/46, 59%), commonly by scanning the barcode and displaying a nutritional rating. In total, 73% (8/11) of the evaluation trials reported significant findings and indicated the potential of food purchase choice apps to support behavior change. However, relatively few evaluations covered the selection app type, and these studies showed mixed results. We found a common opportunity in apps contributing to learning (knowledge gain), whereas infrequent engagement presents a common challenge. The latter was associated with perceived burden of use, trust, and performance as well as with learning. In addition, there were technical challenges in establishing comprehensive product information databases or achieving performance accuracy with advanced identification methods such as image recognition. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that designs of food purchase choice apps do not encourage repeated use or long-term adoption, compromising the effectiveness of behavior change through nudging. However, we found that smartphone apps can enhance learning, which plays an important role in behavior change. Compared with nudging as a mechanism for behavior change, this mechanism is less dependent on continued use. We argue that designs that optimize for learning within each interaction have a better chance of achieving behavior change. This review concludes with design recommendations, suggesting that food purchase choice app designers anticipate the possibility of early abandonment as part of their design process and design apps that optimize the learning experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. In vitro propagation of Picconia azorica (Tutin) Knobl. (Oleaceae) an Azorean endangered endemic plant species
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Mendonça, Duarte, Luna, Sara, Bettencourt, Sílvia, Lopes, Maria Susana, Monteiro, Lisandra, Drumonde Neves, João, Monjardino, Paulo, and da Câmara Machado, Artur
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- 2015
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11. Associations between a posteriori defined dietary patterns and bone mineral density in adolescents
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Monjardino, Teresa, Lucas, Raquel, Ramos, Elisabete, Lopes, Carla, Gaio, Rita, and Barros, Henrique
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- 2015
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12. Guia Prático da Fauna de Artrópodes Predadores dos Ecossistemas Agrícolas dos Açores
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Borges, P A V, Lamelas-Lopez, L, Ferrante, M, Gil, A, Lopes, D H, Monjardino, P, Nunes, R, Onofre-Soares, A, and Lövei, Gabor L
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- 2022
13. Gains and losses in ecosystem services and disservices after converting native forest to agricultural land on an oceanic island.
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Ferrante, Marco, Lövei, Gábor L., Nunes, Rui, Monjardino, Paulo, Lamelas-López, Lucas, Möller, Daniella, Soares, António Onofre, and Borges, Paulo A.V.
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FARMS ,FORESTS & forestry ,ECOSYSTEM services ,MUSTARD seeds ,STRAWBERRIES ,WHEAT seeds ,CORN - Abstract
Habitat conversion to agricultural land is one of the main threats to terrestrial biodiversity and can affect ecosystem processes and cause changes in ecosystem services (ESs) and disservices (EDs). Yet, studies often rely only on the abundance and diversity of the service providers; the effects on ecological processes of habitat conversion are rarely directly monitored. In this study, we used the sentinel approach to evaluate how habitat conversion from native forest to agricultural land affected ESs and EDs on an oceanic island. We quantified herbivory on lettuce plants, invertebrate and vertebrate predation rates on artificial caterpillars, pollination on strawberry plants, seed predation on wheat and mustard seeds, and leaf decomposition rates in native forests, maize fields and pastures on Terceira Island, Azores (Portugal). Herbivory, invertebrate predation rates, and pollination service were not significantly different between habitats. Vertebrate predation rates in native forests (mean 6.1% d
−1 ) were significantly higher than that in pastures (0.3% d−1 ), or high-elevation maize fields (0.5% d−1 ), and marginally higher than in low-elevation maize fields (2.2% d−1 ). Overall seed predation after 48 h was significantly higher on wheat (mean 16.8%) than mustard seeds (5.6%). High-elevation maize fields also had higher seed predation (27.8%) than low-elevation ones (0.6%) or pastures (3.6%), but did not differ from the native forest (12.9%). Decomposition after 90 days was highest in pastures (78.4% and 45.9%, for tea and rooibos, respectively); although no significant differences between habitats were detected, except for low-elevation maize fields (64.4% and 33.6%). Conversion from native forest to cultivated land did not cause a clear decrease in the intensity of the studied ESs/EDs except for vertebrate predation. Using direct monitoring tools to simultaneously and consistently quantify multiple ecological processes is not only possible but needed, as ecological processes can respond differently to landscape changes. [Display omitted] • Ecological processes were assessed after converting Azorean forests to agriculture. • All quantified ecosystem services/disservices showed idiosyncratic changes. • Predation rates significantly decreased when forest was converted to cropland. • Herbivory and pollination did not indicate significant changes. • Decomposition and seed predation increased in high elevation maize fields and pastures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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14. I resigned from CNN over its pro-Israel bias.
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Monjardino, Ana Maria
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Network objected to the word "Palestine" in an internal document. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
15. Investigating Perched Aquifers in Volcanic Terrains using TDEM Geophysical Exploration Technique
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Trota, A., primary, Martinez-Moreno, F.J., additional, Monjardino, P., additional, Santos, F.A. Monteiro, additional, Bernardo, I., additional, Raposo, P., additional, Ekstrom, M., additional, Goncalves, S., additional, and Cabral, Joao, additional
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- 2019
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16. Food Insecurity in Portugal Among Middle- and Older-Aged Adults at a Time of Economic Crisis Recovery: Prevalence and Determinants.
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Maia, Isabel, Monjardino, Teresa, Frias, Brenda, Canhão, Helena, Cunha Branco, Jaime, Lucas, Raquel, and Santos, Ana Cristina
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Background: To characterize the scenario of food insecurity in Portugal at a time of economic crisis recovery is of the utmost relevance.Objective: This study aimed to estimate the prevalence and to identify the determinants of food insecurity during economic crisis recovery in a population-based urban sample of middle- and older-aged Portuguese adults.Methods: A cross-sectional study including 604 participants of the EPIPorto cohort was conducted. Data on sociodemographic characteristics and on food security status were collected. Food security status was assessed using the US Household Food Security Survey Module: Six-Item Short Form. Logistic regression models, crude and adjusted for sex, age, education, and household income perception, were performed.Results: The prevalence of food insecurity was 16.6%. Women (odds ratio [OR] = 1.96; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.09-3.54), those less educated (OR = 5.46; 95% CI: 2.84-10.46), and those who had the perception of an insufficient household income (OR = 10.39; 95% CI: 5.00-21.56) were more likely to belong to a food insecure household. Unmarried individuals (OR = 1.79; 95% CI: 1.05-3.06) and lower white-collar workers (OR = 2.22; 95% CI: 1.03-4.77) were also more prone to live within a food insecure household, regardless of sex, age, education, and household income perception.Conclusions: The obtained information is valuable for the development of intervention strategies to reduce food insecurity in middle- and older-aged adults, suggesting that women, unmarried, less educated individuals, less skilled workers, and lower income families should be targeted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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17. Improving Air Quality in Lisbon: modelling emission abatement scenarios
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Monjardino, J., Barros, N., Ferreira, F., Tente, H., Fontes, T., Pereira, P., and Manso, C.
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Lisbon is one of the European cities where NO2and PM10legal limit values are still exceeded, leading to an Air Quality Plan applicable up to 2020. The developed work combined a detailed emission inventory, monitoring data, and modelling in order to assess if the proposed emission abatement scenarios, focused on the road transport sector, were able to tackle exceedances. A maximum decrease of 14% for PM10concentrations was achieved, and of 21% for NO2, providing compliance. PM10smallest reduction is related with higher weight of regional background sources, while for NO2local traffic has more influence on concentrations.
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- 2018
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18. Do bone mineral content and density determine fracture in children? A possible threshold for physical activity
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Martins, Ana, Monjardino, Teresa, Nogueira, Luísa, Canhão, Helena, and Lucas, Raquel
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BackgroundRelations between bone parameters, physical exertion, and childhood fractures are complex. We aimed to estimate the associations between fracture history and bone mineral content (BMC) and areal bone mineral density (aBMD) at 7 years of age, by levels of physical activity, as a proxy for trauma frequency.MethodsWe used data collected from 2,261 children of the Generation XXI birth cohort, assembled in 2005/6 in Porto, Portugal. At the age of 7 years (2012/4), fracture history, time spent per week in active play, and sports practice were reported by parents. Subtotal and lumbar spine (LS) BMC and aBMD were measured using whole-body dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry.ResultsBoys and girls in the highest categories of time spent in sports practice or active play generally had higher BMC and aBMD. Among girls, BMC and aBMD were protective of fracture only in the highest quarter of active play (>660 min/week)—odds ratios (OR; 95% confidence interval (95% CI)) for subtotal BMC=0.27 (0.11–0.67), subtotal aBMD=0.18 (0.06–0.49), and LS aBMD=0.41 (0.22–0.75). For boys in the highest quarter of sports practice (>240 min/week), subtotal and LS BMC were protective of fracture—OR=0.39 (0.16–0.98) and 0.51 (0.27–0.96), respectively.ConclusionIn prepubertal children, BMC and aBMD predicted fracture history only in the highest levels of physical activity.
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- 2017
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19. Patterns and Consequences of Multimorbidity in the General Population: There is No Chronic Disease Management Without Rheumatic Disease Management
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Simões, Daniela, Araújo, Fábio A., Severo, Milton, Monjardino, Teresa, Cruz, Ivo, Carmona, Loreto, and Lucas, Raquel
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To identify empirical model‐based patterns of multimorbidity from chronic noncommunicable diseases in the general population, with a focus on the contribution of rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMDs), and to quantify their association with adverse health outcomes. Cross‐sectional data from the Portuguese Fourth National Health Survey were analyzed (n = 23,754). Latent class analysis was used to identify patterns of coexistence of 11 chronic noncommunicable diseases (RMDs, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, stroke, depression, myocardial infarction, cancer, osteoporosis, asthma, and renal failure). Based on the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology, filter 2.0, health outcomes included life impact, pathophysiologic manifestations, and resource use. We assessed the association between patterns and adverse health outcomes, through sex‐, age‐, and body mass index–adjusted prevalence ratios with 95% confidence intervals, obtained using Poisson regression. Four patterns of chronic noncommunicable diseases co‐occurrence were identified and labeled as low disease probability, cardiometabolic conditions, respiratory conditions, and RMDs and depression. RMDs were highly prevalent in patients with chronic diseases (from 38.6% in cardiometabolic conditions to 66.7% in RMDs and depression). While negative self‐rated health, short‐term disability, and chronic pain were more strongly associated with cardiometabolic conditions and respiratory conditions, all multimorbidity patterns were similarly associated with long‐term disability, frequent health care utilization, and out‐of‐pocket health care expenses. Our study emphasizes RMDs as a major presence in multimorbidity in the general population. All multimorbidity patterns were associated with a wide set of adverse health outcomes. Management strategies for the patient with chronic cardiometabolic, respiratory, or depressive conditions should also target RMDs.
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- 2017
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20. Interactions between water and nitrogen in Australian cropping systems: physiological, agronomic, economic, breeding and modelling perspectives
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Sadras, V. O., Hayman, P. T., Rodriguez, D., Monjardino, M., Bielich, M., Unkovich, M., Mudge, B., and Wang, E.
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This paper reviews the interactions between water and nitrogen from physiological, agronomic, economic, breeding and modelling perspectives. Our primary focus is wheat; we consider forage crops, sorghum and legumes where relevant aspects of water–nitrogen interactions have been advanced. From a physiological perspective, we ask: How does nitrogen deficit influence the water economy of the crop? How does water deficit influence the nitrogen economy of the crop? How do combined water and nitrogen deficit affect crop growth and yield? We emphasise synergies, and the nitrogen-driven trade-off between the efficiency in the use of water and nitrogen. The concept of nitrogen–water co-limitation is discussed briefly. From agronomic and economic perspectives, the need to match supply of nitrogen and water is recognised, but this remains a challenge in dryland systems with uncertain rainfall. Under-fertilisation commonly causes gaps between actual and water-limited potential yield. We discuss risk aversion and the role of seasonal rainfall forecasts to manage risk. From a breeding perspective, we ask how selection for yield has changed crop traits relating to water and nitrogen. Changes in nitrogen traits are more common and profound than changes in water-related traits. Comparison of shifts in the wheat phenotype in Australia, UK, Argentina and Italy suggests that improving yield per unit nitrogen uptake is straightforward; it requires selection for yield and allowing grain protein concentration to drift unchecked. A more interesting proposition is to increase nitrogen uptake to match yield gains and conserve protein in grain. Increased stomatal conductance is a conspicuous response to selection for yield which partially conflicts with the perception that reduced conductance at high vapour pressure deficit is required to increase water- use efficiency; but high stomatal conductance at high vapour pressure deficit may be adaptive for thermal stress. From a modelling perspective, water and nitrogen are linked in multiple ways. In crops where water limits growth, reduced biomass reduces nitrogen demand. Reciprocally, nitrogen limitation during crop expansion reduces leaf area index and increases the soil evaporation:transpiration ratio. Water–nitrogen interactions are also captured in the water-driven uptake of nitrogen by mass flow and diffusion and in the water-driven processes of nitrogen in soil (e.g. mineralisation). The paper concludes with suggestions for future research on water-nitrogen interactions.
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- 2016
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21. Fibroma da bainha do tendão patelar: Um novo paradigma
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Boavida, João, Grandão, Rui Sousa, Monjardino, Maria Pia, Quintas, Catarina, and Oliveira, João Pedro
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- 2022
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22. Weight Trajectories from Birth and Bone Mineralization at 7 Years of Age.
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Monjardino, Teresa, Rodrigues, Teresa, Inskip, Hazel, Harvey, Nicholas, Cooper, Cyrus, Santos, Ana Cristina, and Lucas, Raquel
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Objective: To assess whether different trajectories of weight gain since birth influence bone mineral content (BMC) and areal bone mineral density (aBMD) at 7 years of age.Study Design: We studied a subsample of 1889 children from the Generation XXI birth cohort who underwent whole-body dual-energy radiograph absorptiometry. Weight trajectories identified through normal mixture modeling for model-based clustering and labeled "normal weight gain," "weight gain during infancy," "weight gain during childhood," and "persistent weight gain" were used. Differences in subtotal BMC, aBMD, and size-corrected BMC (scBMC) at age 7 years according to weight trajectories were estimated through analysis of covariance.Results: Compared with the "normal weight gain" trajectory, children in the remaining trajectories had significantly greater BMC, aBMD, and scBMC at age 7 years, with the strongest associations for "persistent weight gain" (girls [BMC: 674.0 vs 559.8 g, aBMD: 0.677 vs 0.588 g/cm2, scBMC: 640.7 vs 577.4 g], boys [BMC: 689.4 vs 580.8 g, aBMD: 0.682 vs 0.611 g/cm2, scBMC: 633.0 vs 595.6 g]). After adjustment for current weight, and alternatively for fat and lean mass, children with a "weight gain during childhood" trajectory had greater BMC and aBMD than those with a "normal weight gain" trajectory, although significant differences were restricted to girls (BMC: 601.4 vs 589.2 g, aBMD: 0.618 vs 0.609 g/cm2).Conclusion: Overall, children following a trajectory of persistent weight gain since birth had clearly increased bone mass at 7 years, but weight gain seemed slightly more beneficial when it occurred later rather than on a normal trajectory during the first 7 years of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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23. Terra Nostra Garden 2023 dataset of Camellia species, hybrids and their cultivars (Azores, Portugal).
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Costa C, Costa F, Trota A, Borges PAV, Monjardino P, and Pereira MJ
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Background: Camellias cultivars collections, comprising an exquisite array of meticulously bred and curated camellia varieties, emerged as indispensable elements within the resplendent 19
th century gardens that adorned landscapes across the globe. The heart of Terra Nostra Garden, nestled within the captivating surroundings of the Furnas volcano on S. Miguel Island (Azores, Portugal), started in the year 1782 as an enchanting fishpond garden, strategically positioned in front of the summer house belonging to the esteemed Thomas Hickling, the American vice-consul. Soon this garden was enlarged and embellished with species from several continents. This tradition continued during all the 19th century with the Viscount Duarte Borges da Câmara Medeiros (1848-1872) and his son the Marquis António Borges Medeiros Dias da Câmara e Sousa (1872-1913). In 1933, the 12 hectares property was acquired by the Terra Nostra Society, led by Vasco Bensaude and increased to 12.5 hectares. In 1935, the current Terra Nostra Garden Hotel was inaugurated and, two years later, the Terra Nostra Society reopened the botanical garden attached to the hotel, now called Terra Nostra Garden. Beginning in 1982, the Head Gardener embarked on a transformative journey, dedicating his expertise to the meticulous renovation and expansion of numerous botanical collections nestled within the garden's enchanting landscapes. Amongst the remarkable transformations, the revered camellias collection received special attention, as it underwent a comprehensive rejuvenation process under his skilful guidance. The recent publication of a global digital dataset of Camellia names provides the opportunity to publish the dataset of Camellia species, hybrids and its cultivars currently cultivated at Terra Nostra Garden with their validated names., New Information: In June 2023, a total of 669 Camellia phenotypes were identified across the 12.5 hectares of Terra Nostra Garden. These phenotypes include 38 species, 178 hybrids and 637 cultivars. Camelliajaponica represents 81.7% of the 459 species cultivars, while C. x williamsii accounts for 32% of 178 hybrid cultivars. The most prevalent genotypes in Camellia hybrids with known parentage are those of C.japonica , C.saluenensis and C.reticulata present respectively in 64.1%, 45.5% and 37.9% of the hybrids. Regarding cultivar registration, 46.9% were registered in the US, followed by 13% from Japan and 10.8% from Portugal. Although the most ancient cultivar registered growing at the garden is Camelliareticulata Lindl. 'Damanao' from 1621, the majority (69.4%) of cultivars in the garden were registered in the 20th century, followed by the 19th century cultivars (20.7%). One cultivar, Camellia 'Patrícia Bensaude Fernandes', was produced and registered specifically by this garden., (Carina Costa, Fernando Costa, António Trota, Paulo A. V. Borges, Paulo Monjardino, Maria J. Pereira.)- Published
- 2023
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24. Flowering Coriander ( Coriandrum sativum ) Strips Do Not Enhance Ecosystem Services in Azorean Orchards.
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Ferrante M, Lövei GL, Lavigne L, Vicente MC, Tarantino E, Lopes DH, Monjardino P, and Borges PAV
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The effect of flower strips on ecosystem services (ESs) and disservices (EDs) is routinely assessed following changes in service provider densities without measuring the associated levels of ES/EDs. By using the sentinel approach (i.e., exposing a plant, seeds, and prey models in a standardized way), we tested how coriander ( Coriandrum sativum ) strips planted in mixed orchards on Terceira Island (Azores, Portugal) affected herbivory on lettuce plants, seed predation on wheat and weed seeds, and predation on artificial caterpillars. Vertebrates had more influence than invertebrates on ESs/EDs. Herbivory (ED) after 2 weeks was similar in the coriander and the control plots (mean ± SD; 2.3% ± 3.3% vs. 2.2% ± 2.9%, n = 32 for both). Seed predation was higher in the control than in the coriander plots for both grain (ED; 30.8% ± 38.9% vs. 15.3% ± 10.8%, n = 18 for both) and weed seeds (ES; 2.5% ± 4.1% vs. 0.4% ± 0.5%, n = 18 for both). Vertebrate predation (ES) rates after 48 h were significantly higher in the control (estimate 9%, 95% CI: 4-20%) than in the coriander plots (3%, 1-8%), while no difference was observed for invertebrate predation. Coriander strips did not support increased ES/reduced ED levels in this setting. The tools used can be effective to quantitatively compare multiple ESs/EDs under different farming management strategies.
- Published
- 2023
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25. Monitoring Arthropods in Azorean Agroecosystems: the project AGRO-ECOSERVICES.
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Borges PAV, Nunes R, Lamelas-López L, Pereira E, Costa R, Monjardino P, Lopes DH, Soares AO, Gil A, Rigal F, Ferrante M, and Lövei GL
- Abstract
Background: The data we present are part of the AGRO-ECOSERVICES project (Assessing ecosystem services and disservices provided by arthropod species in Azorean agroecosystems). The project aims to evaluate the relative importance of native and non-native organisms as ecosystem services (ES) and disservices (ED) providers, by combining novel, direct and quantitative tools for monitoring agro-biodiversity. Ecosystem services include evaluation of natural pest control by predation, seed predation on weed plants, pollination, decomposition and ecosystem disservices, herbivory and seed predation on crop plants. Active Aerial Searching (AAS) (only in maize-fields) and pitfall traps were used to sample the arthropod biodiversity (predatory spiders, true-bugs and beetles and main insect pests) on four agricultural habitats of Terceira Island, namely citrus orchards, low and high elevation maize fields and vineyards., New Information: We provided an inventory of all arthropods recorded in four Azorean agroecosystems (citrus orchards, low and high elevation maize fields and vineyards) from Terceira Island. A total of 50412 specimens were collected, belonging to four classes, 20 orders, 81 families and 200 identified species of arthropods. A total of 127 species are considered introduced (n = 22646) and 69 native non-endemic (n = 24117). Four endemic species were recorded with very few specimens (n = 14) and 3635 specimens belong to unidentified taxa recorded only at genus or family level. Five species are new records for Terceira Island, with Lagriahirta (Linnaeus, 1758) (Coleoptera, Tenebrionidae) being also a new record for the Azores. This publication contributes to a better knowledge of the arthropods communities present in agro-ecosystems of Terceira Island and will serve as a baseline for future monitoring schemes targeting the long-term change in arthropod diversity and abundance., (Paulo A. V. Borges, Rui Nunes, Lucas Lamelas-López, Enésima Pereira, Ricardo Costa, Paulo Monjardino, David H. Lopes, António Onofre Soares, Artur Gil, François Rigal, Marco Ferrante, Gabor L. Lövei.)
- Published
- 2021
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