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1

Sasaki, Koki, Tsuyoshi Okue, Yasuhiro Shu, Koji Miyake, Yoshiaki Uchida, and Norikazu Nishiyama. "Thin ZIF-8 nanosheets synthesized in hydrophilic TRAPs." Dalton Transactions 50, no. 30 (2021): 10394–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1dt01507a.

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2

Tekawade, Aniket, Tianbo Xie, and Matthew A. Oehlschlaeger. "Comparative Study of the Ignition of 1-Decene, trans-5-Decene, and n-Decane: Constant-Volume Spray and Shock-Tube Experiments." Energy & Fuels 31, no. 6 (May 12, 2017): 6493–500. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.7b00430.

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3

Brinkmann, Volker. "Neutrophil Extracellular Traps in the Second Decade." Journal of Innate Immunity 10, no. 5-6 (2018): 414–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000489829.

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Nearly 15 years after the first description of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), our knowledge concerning this structure has expanded considerably. Initially, NETs were considered solely an elaborate function of the innate immune system to combat invading microorganisms. Successively it became clear that NETs have farther-reaching capabilities. They are involved in a series of pathophysiological mechanisms ranging from inflammation to thrombosis where they fulfill essential functions when produced at the right site and the right time but can have a serious impact when generation or clearance of NETs is inadequately controlled. This review provides a concise overview on the far-reaching functions of NETs in health and disease.
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4

Khajuria, Chanchal K., Guntupalli V. R. Prasad, and Brijesh K. Manhas. "Palaeontological constraints on the age of Deccan Traps, peninsular India." Newsletters on Stratigraphy 31, no. 1 (September 15, 1994): 21–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/nos/31/1994/21.

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5

Chaudhuri, Mayurakshi, and Viola Thimm. "Introduction." Transfers 8, no. 3 (December 1, 2018): 28–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2018.080303.

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The past decade has witnessed an exponential growth in literature on the diverse forms, practices, and politics of mobility. Research on migration has been at the forefront of this field. Themes in this respect include heterogeneous practices that have developed out of traditions of resistance to a global historical trajectory of imperialism and colonialism. In response to such historical transformations of recent decades, the nature of postcolonial inquiry has evolved. Such changing postcolonial trajectories and power negotiations are more pronounced in specific parts of the world than in others. To that end, “Postcolonial Intersections: Asia on the Move” is a special section that engages, examines, and analyzes everyday power negotiations, focusing particularly on Asia. Such everyday negotiations explicitly point to pressure points and movements across multiple geosocial scales where gender, religion, age, social class, and caste, to name a few, are constantly negotiated and redefined via changing subjectivities.
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6

Nelson, Gareth. "A Decade of Challenge the Future of Biogeography." Earth Sciences History 4, no. 2 (January 1, 1985): 187–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.4.2.c347xp1671w4m0n0.

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According to Croizat's global synthesis, the main biogeographic patterns include trans-Atlantic, trans-Pacific, trans-Indoceanic, Boreal, and Austral. Geological and geophysical theories vary, but agree that sea-floor spreading in the Pacific is different in its effect from that in other ocean basins. The difference allows for radial expansion of the basin and not merely east-west displacement of continental areas. Biogeographic data suggest that bipolar (boreal + austral) distributions are to be reckoned among the results of sea-floor spreading in the Pacific. Data from one group of inshore fishes (family Engraulidae) exemplify this notion and add, as terminal parts of the differentiation of the Pacific Basin, trans-Panama marine vicariance and a collateral occurrence in freshwater of tropical South America. These findings corroborate Croizat's synthesis. They suggest that the critical evaluation of that synthesis will be the main task of biogeography over the next decade. They indicate that within the area of systematics, evaluation will require a cladistic approach and the elimination of paraphyletic groups from classification.
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7

Benhima, Kenza, and Baptiste Massenot. "Safety Traps." American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 5, no. 4 (October 1, 2013): 68–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/mac.5.4.68.

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Fear of risk provides a rationale for protracted economic downturns. We develop a real business cycle model where investors with decreasing relative risk aversion choose between a risky and a safe technology that exhibit decreasing returns. Because of a feedback effect from the interest rate to risk aversion, two equilibria can emerge: a standard equilibrium and a “safe” one in which investors invest in safer assets. We refer to the dynamics of this second equilibrium as a safety trap because it is self-reinforcing as investors accumulate more wealth and show it to be consistent with Japan's lost decade. (JEL D14, E13, E21, E22, E23, E32)
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8

Nishikawa, K., H. Tsukada, S. Abe, S. Misaki, and N. Yasuoka. "(R,R)-(−)-trans-2,3-Bis(hydroxydiphenylmethyl)-1,4-dioxaspiro[4.5]decane." Acta Crystallographica Section C Crystal Structure Communications 54, no. 1 (January 15, 1998): 111–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s010827019700992x.

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9

Triburgo, Lorenzo, and Sarah Van Dyck. "Representational Refusal and the Embodiment of Gender Abolition." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 28, no. 2 (April 1, 2022): 249–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-9608161.

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Abstract The crisis of mass incarceration has made its way into US mainstream politics in the last five years owing in large part to the transgender activists of color who have been at the forefront of prison abolitionist movements for the last five decades. While mainstream media displays a seemingly insatiable visual appetite for trans and queer bodies, transgender women and trans-queer people—particularly those of color—continue to experience violence and criminalization at increasingly high rates. If we are to understand the prison industrial complex as an infrastructure of oppression upheld in part by the dominant narrative that people of color, poor people, and queer people are “dangerous” (to the white-capitalist-heteropatriarchy), it is critical to examine the visual language of criminalizing queerness and to further consider the work of artists grappling with efforts to shift the narrative while remaining wary of the traps of visibility.
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10

Krech, F., K. Issleib, A. Zschunke, and H. Meyer. "Cis- und trans-1-Phosphabicyclo[4.4.0]decan." Zeitschrift f�r anorganische und allgemeine Chemie 553, no. 10 (October 1987): 136–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/zaac.19875531016.

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11

Aimar, Mario L., and Rita H. de Rossi. "Kinetics of the Isomerization of 1-Decene to cis- and trans-2-Decene." Journal of Organic Chemistry 60, no. 13 (June 1995): 4255–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jo00118a048.

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12

Nossin, Jan J. "A decade of trans-European remote sensing cooperation." International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation 3, no. 4 (January 2001): 372. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0303-2434(01)85045-5.

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13

Kumanovic, S., M. Lautens, and A. J. Lough. "A Highly Substituted trans-Fused Bicyclo[5.3.0]decene." Acta Crystallographica Section C Crystal Structure Communications 51, no. 11 (November 15, 1995): 2370–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s0108270195006573.

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14

Wallington, E. D. "A Decade of Trans-European Remote Sensing Cooperation." Photogrammetric Record 19, no. 105 (March 2004): 77–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0031-868x.2003.00261.x.

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15

Dukes, Michael D. "Two Decades of Smart Irrigation Controllers in U.S. Landscape Irrigation." Transactions of the ASABE 63, no. 5 (2020): 1593–601. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/trans.13930.

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HighlightsSavings numbers in new studies across multiple soil types and climates are similar to those summarized in 2011 and are summarized here as 51% in research plot studies and 30% in single-family homes.Studies of the human factors have begun showing how important the users are to success of the technology.Education in implementation remains important to achieve potential water conservation.Abstract. Smart irrigation controllers, such as evapotranspiration (ET) and soil moisture sensor (SMS) controllers, have become commonly available from virtually all irrigation controller manufacturers. This review summarizes the literature since the Fifth Decennial National Irrigation Symposium (NIS) concerning these controllers in research studies and pilot implementations. Studies have expanded to multiple climates throughout the U.S. on a variety of soils and plant types. When these devices are implemented properly on sites that have potential irrigation savings (i.e., excess irrigation), they are able to reduce irrigation while maintaining plant quality. The level of reduction depends on many factors, including the amount of excess irrigation, climate, plant type, and human interaction with the technology. When studies report positive savings, the levels documented here range from 40% to 61% (51% avg.) in plot studies and from 28% to 32% (30% avg.) in residential studies. Of 17 identified studies in the past decade, five reported negative savings, and in most cases those results were due to ET controllers installed on sites with little excess irrigation or controller programming that was not optimized for savings. New trends in the industry include Wi-Fi signal-based ET controllers with smartphone app capability, an upcoming standard for SMS controllers, as well as smart controllers becoming mandatory in areas of the U.S. As identified in the Fifth Decennial NIS, it remains important to implement controllers on sites with the potential for irrigation reduction as well as proper implementation with the best current information. Finally, there is a need to understand human interaction with these devices because improper programming can make the difference between a water-saving device and ineffective technology with a dissatisfied customer. Keywords: ET controller, Landscape irrigation, Smart controller, SMS, Soil moisture sensor, Soil water sensor.
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16

Antosik, Maria, Aleksandra Stafiej, and Roman Stryjek. "Mutual solubility of binary trans-decalin +, and n-decane + polar component mixtures." Fluid Phase Equilibria 58, no. 3 (January 1990): 325–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0378-3812(90)85140-6.

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17

Estapa, Margaret, James Valdes, Kaitlyn Tradd, Jackson Sugar, Melissa Omand, and Ken Buesseler. "The Neutrally Buoyant Sediment Trap: Two Decades of Progress." Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology 37, no. 6 (June 2020): 957–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/jtech-d-19-0118.1.

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AbstractThe biological carbon flux from the ocean’s surface into its interior has traditionally been sampled by sediment traps, which physically intercept sinking particulate matter. However, the manner in which a sediment trap interacts with the flow field around it can introduce hydrodynamic biases, motivating the development of neutral, self-ballasting trap designs. Here, the performance of one of these designs, the neutrally buoyant sediment trap (NBST), is described and evaluated. The NBST has been successfully used in a number of scientific studies since a prototype was last described in the literature two decades ago, with extensive modifications in subsequent years. Originated at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the NBST is built around a profiling float and carries cylindrical collection tubes, a feature that distinguishes it from other neutral traps described in the literature. This paper documents changes to the device that have been implemented over the last two decades, including wider trap tubes; Iridium Communications, Inc., satellite communications; and the addition of polyacrylamide gel collectors and optical sedimentation sensors. Information is also provided with the intent of aiding the development of similar devices by other researchers, including the present adaptation of the concept to utilize commercially available profiling float hardware. The performance of NBSTs built around commercial profiling floats is comparable to NBSTs built around customized floats, albeit with some additional operational considerations. Data from recent field studies comparing NBSTs and traditional, surface-tethered sediment traps are used to illustrate the performance of the instrument design. Potential improvements to the design that remain to be incorporated through future work are also outlined.
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18

Neumann, Ariane, Graham Brogden, and Maren von Köckritz-Blickwede. "Extracellular Traps: An Ancient Weapon of Multiple Kingdoms." Biology 9, no. 2 (February 18, 2020): 34. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology9020034.

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The discovery, in 2004, of extracellular traps released by neutrophils has extended our understanding of the mode of action of various innate immune cells. This fascinating discovery demonstrated the extracellular trapping and killing of various pathogens by neutrophils. During the last decade, evidence has accumulated showing that extracellular traps play a crucial role in the defence mechanisms of various cell types present in vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants. The aim of this review is to summarise the relevant literature on the evolutionary history of extracellular traps used as a weapon in various kingdoms of life.
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19

Welker, Michael. "Springing Cultural Traps." Theology Today 58, no. 2 (July 2001): 165–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/004057360105800204.

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This article reviews the dialogue of recent decades between scientists and theologians in general and in two multiyear consultations held at the Center of Theological Inquiry in Princeton in particular. It reflects upon the fact that the shift from a “methodological phase” through a “physics phase” to a content-centered “theology phase” has been extremely fruitful for the discourse. The article considers the various gaps between theological, scientific, and common-sense thought in modernity. It shows how scientists and theologians tried to overcome these gaps. Finally, the article identifies six “cultural traps” that limited the fruitfulness and the academic impact of the science-and-theology discourse in the past.
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20

Jahn, Michaela K., David Dewald, Montserrat Vallejo-López, Emilio J. Cocinero, Alberto Lesarri, and Jens-Uwe Grabow. "Rotational Spectra of Bicyclic Decanes: The Trans Conformation of (−)-Lupinine." Journal of Physical Chemistry A 117, no. 50 (September 27, 2013): 13673–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp407671m.

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21

KUMANOVIC, S., M. LAUTENS, and A. J. LOUGH. "ChemInform Abstract: A Highly Substituted trans-Fused Bicyclo(5.3.0)decene." ChemInform 27, no. 13 (August 12, 2010): no. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chin.199613027.

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22

Seiler, Cotten. "Discipline and Publish?" Transfers 10, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 58–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2020.100107.

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Ten years ago a new journal that would anchor and foster what would become known as the “new mobility studies” appeared: Transfers. The intervening years have seen it grow into an important multidisciplinary, if not yet quite interdisciplinary, journal for researchers around the world. Reflecting on Transfers’ founding and first decade, this essay comments on the salutary development within the journal’s pages of “worlding” the European and North American analyses that had characterized early mobility studies, and cautions against underestimating the continuing power of the state in constructing and administering environments of mobility.
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23

Hamazaki, H., H. Hosomi, and S. Ohba. "A triclinic polymorph of (R,R)-(–)-trans-1,4-dioxaspiro[4,5]decane-2,3-diylbis(diphenylmethanol)." Acta Crystallographica Section C Crystal Structure Communications 55, no. 11 (November 15, 1999): IUC9900132. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s0108270199098443.

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24

Deters, Henning. "European environmental policy at 50: Five decades of escaping decision traps?" Environmental Policy and Governance 29, no. 5 (May 17, 2019): 315–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eet.1855.

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25

Kaydos, Janet A., and Thomas A. Spencer. "Serendipitous synthesis of cis- and trans-4-decene-1,10-dioic acids." Journal of Organic Chemistry 58, no. 12 (June 1993): 3463–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jo00064a042.

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26

Ponsavady, Stéphanie. "Editorial." Transfers 10, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): vi—viii. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2020.100102.

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This current issue marks the tenth anniversary of our journal. The jubilee also coincides and clashes with a critical time for all of us as the world grapples with the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences. Ten years ago, when Gijs Mom’s team launched Transfers, the journal responded to an urgent need to think through and beyond mobilities scholarship. Today, as our mobilities have been upended and disrupted, it is with a renewed sense of urgency that we must assess the field and the impact of Transfers over the past decade. Indeed, many things have changed since the journal’s founding.
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Arnold, Donald R., Laurie J. Lamont, and Allyson L. Perrott. "1,n-Radical ions. Photosensitized (electron transfer) carbon–carbon bond cleavage. Formation of 1,6-radical cations." Canadian Journal of Chemistry 69, no. 2 (February 1, 1991): 225–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/v91-036.

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The reactivity of the radical cations of methyl 2,2-diphenylcyclohexyl ether (7), 6,6-diphenyl-1,4-dioxaspiro[4.5]decane (8), methyl cis- and trans-2-phenylcyclohexyl ether (9cis and trans), and 6-phenyl-1,4-dioxaspiro[4.5]decane (10), generated by photosensitized (electron transfer) irradiation, has been studied. Solutions of the ethers and acetals in acetonitrile–methanol (3:1), with 1,4-dicyanobenzene (2) serving as the electron acceptor, were irradiated with a medium-pressure mercury vapour lamp through Pyrex. The diphenyl derivatives 7 and 8 were reactive; 7 gave 6,6-diphenylhexanal dimethyl acetal (11) and 8 gave 2-methoxy-2-(5,5-diphenylpentyl)-1,3-dioxolane (12). These are the products expected from the intermediate 1,6-radical cation, formed upon carbon–carbon bond cleavage of the cyclic radical cation. The monophenyl derivatives 9cis and trans and 10 were stable under these irradiation conditions. The mechanism for the carbon–carbon bond cleavage and for the cis–trans isomerization is discussed. An explanation, based upon conformation, is offered for the lack of reactivity of 9 and 10. Molecular mechanics (MM2) calculations were used to determine the preferred conformation of 9cis and trans, and 10. Key words: photosensitization, electron transfer, radical cation, carbon–carbon bond cleavage, conformation.
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28

Lamm, Freddie R., Michael D. Dukes, Kenneth C. Stone, and Brent Q. Mecham. "Beyond 2020, Vision of the Future: Selected Papers from the Sixth Decennial National Irrigation Symposium." Transactions of the ASABE 64, no. 5 (2021): 1449–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/trans.14574.

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HighlightsASABE/IA 6th National Irrigation Symposium includes 80 papers, with 36 introduced here in this Special Collection.Papers include current irrigation research about ET, management, turf systems, technology, humid region, water supply.Irrigation in the U.S. is growing more rapidly in humid regions, and pressurized irrigation continues to grow in usage.There has been much progress in irrigation science in the last decade, and the vision of the future looks bright.Abstract. This article introduces the ASABE Special Collection associated with the 6th Decennial National Irrigation Symposium: Beyond 2020, Vision of the Future. This U.S. symposium, jointly sponsored by ASABE and the Irrigation Association in December 2021, was postponed from 2020 due to the pandemic and consists of approximately 80 presentations, of which 36 were accepted as journal articles for this Special Collection. Irrigated land area appears to be growing slightly in the U.S. but is shifting geographically somewhat toward humid regions. Pressurized irrigation continues to grow, and gravity-fed irrigation continues to decline. Competition for stressed water resources among diverse water users remains great, and smaller numbers of irrigation scientists are available to meet the informational needs. Improved ability to acquire, assess, and use water and crop information helps to meet these challenges. This article discusses irrigation research progress in evapotranspiration (ET), irrigation management, turf systems, sensors and technologies, irrigation strategies in the humid region, and water supply. Challenges and opportunities continue to exist for irrigation in the U.S., but progress in the last decade has been steady, and a good vision for the future of irrigation beyond 2020 is anticipated. Keywords: Evapotranspiration, Irrigation, Irrigation management, Irrigation scheduling, Irrigation systems, Turf and landscape irrigation.
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Audley, Jackson P., Richard M. Bostock, and Steven J. Seybold. "Assessment of Semiochemical Repellents for Protecting Walnut Trees From Walnut Twig Beetle (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) Attack in a Commercial Orchard Setting in California." Journal of Economic Entomology 114, no. 3 (April 3, 2021): 1180–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jee/toab054.

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Abstract The walnut twig beetle, Pityophthorus juglandis Blackman, the vector of thousand cankers disease (TCD), poses a significant threat to North American walnut (Juglandaceae Juglans) trees. Despite discovery of TCD-related tree mortality over a decade ago, management options are lacking. This study represents the culmination of several years of investigating the chemical ecology of P. juglandis in hopes of developing a semiochemical repellent to disrupt the beetle’s host colonization and aggregation behaviors. Numbers of P. juglandis landing on semiochemical-treated Juglans regia L. trees in a commercial walnut orchard were compared based on captures on sticky traps. Two repellent combinations were tested: R-(+)-limonene and trans-conophthorin (LimeCon), and R-(+)-limonene, trans-conophthorin, and R-(+)-verbenone (LCV). Both repellents reduced P. juglandis aggregation (captures) equally; thus, we proceeded with the LimeCon combination to reduce potential treatment cost. Subsequent trials included a 2× dose (Dual) of LimeCon. Both LimeCon and Dual significantly reduced the number of P. juglandis caught compared with the baited control, however, only for the lower of two trap positions. Beetle landings were modeled by trap distance from repellent placement on each tree. Beetle responses to the pheromone lure were surprisingly localized and did not bring the whole tree under attack. LimeCon, LCV, and Dual treatments averaged fewer than a single beetle caught for all trap distances; however, performance of the repellents beyond 150 cm is not clear due to the localized landing response of P. juglandis to pheromone lures. Further testing is required to fully analyze the zone of inhibition of the LimeCon repellent.
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Lin, Weiqiang. "Aeromobilities in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic." Transfers 10, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 102–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2020.100111.

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This Perspective piece marks the ten-year anniversary of Transfers’ life as a journal and its contributions to aeromobilities research. Reflecting on my own past decade learning and writing about aeromobilities, the article takes stock of some significant threads in the field, before charting out three key future directions for aeromobilities research prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic and health crisis. Without prejudice to existing scholarly threads, the article discusses the burgeoning salience of new (aero)mobility injustices, automation, and aerial (in)civilities, amid an aviation industry struggling to reboot itself. The next ten years present enduring possibilities for aeromobilities inquiries, and the article hopes to inspire future thinking on the subject as societies connect again through aviation.
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31

Biswas, G., A. C. Gomes, A. K. Pal, A. Bera, K. L. Ghatak, U. C. Haider, and A. Banerjee. "Crystal structure of trans-9,10-dichlorotricyclo [3.3.2.01,5]decan-2-one, C10H12Cl2O." Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures 212, no. 1 (December 1, 1997): 265–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1524/ncrs.1997.212.1.265.

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32

Cayari, Christopher, Felix A. Graham, Emma Joy Jampole, and Jared O’Leary. "Trans Voices Speak: Suggestions from Trans Educators about Working with Trans Students." Music Educators Journal 108, no. 1 (September 2021): 50–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00274321211038481.

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The social climate in the past decade has seen a rise in visibility of trans students in music classrooms and ensembles, leading to a need for scholarship on how to serve this growing population. Literature is being published to address this topic; however, the lack of scholarship by trans educators might lead many music educators to conclusions and practices that can be, at the very least, discouraging to some trans students and may disrupt their learning experiences. This article was written by four educators who identify as part of the trans community (a genderfluid and gender-nonconforming individual, a trans man, a trans woman, and a gender-nonbinary person) to fill this gap in the literature by illuminating some of the pitfalls inherent in the lack of discussion on (and by) trans people in music education. In addition, this article provides five actionable suggestions for working with trans students: (1) Learn about the trans community, (2) inspect your language and biases, (3) represent the diversity of trans people in your teaching, (4) promote healthy music-making and identity development, and (5) model allyship.
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33

Straube, Wibke. "Introduction." Screen Bodies 5, no. 1 (June 1, 2020): 56–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/screen.2020.050105.

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This past decade has witnessed not only an increase in trans and non-binary visibility in screen cultures, but also a growing social awareness concerning the increase in violence against trans and non-binary people. While trans and non-binary people have become more recognized and visible in Western society, at the same time they have also been scrutinized with growing intensity.
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34

Yao, Yao, Yibin Ying, and Jianfeng Ping. "Development of a Graphene Paper-Based Flexible Solid-Contact Lead Ion-Selective Electrode and its Application in Water." Transactions of the ASABE 62, no. 2 (2019): 245–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/trans.12906.

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Abstract. A graphene paper-based flexible solid-contact ion-selective electrode (SC-ISE) was developed to detect lead ion sensitively. Graphene paper obtained via a simple vacuum filtration method was used as the electrode substrate for direct coating of an ion-selective membrane. The Nernstian slope of the prepared paper-based potentiometric sensor toward lead ion detection was demonstrated as 29.4 mV per decade. A detection limit as low as 2.5 × 10-7 mol L-1 was achieved. Reversed chronopotentiometry and water layer test revealed that the graphene paper-based SC-ISE possessed excellent potential stability because of the hydrophobicity of graphene paper. Furthermore, reliable data were obtained from the detection of lead ion levels in real water samples using the graphene paper-based potentiometric sensor, which shows great potential in practical application. Keywords: Graphene paper, Heavy metal, Ion-selective electrode, Potentiometry, Water sample.
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35

Swanson, Heather Anne. "The entrapment of trap design: Materiality, political economy and the shifting worlds of fixed gear fishing equipment." Journal of Material Culture 24, no. 4 (March 24, 2019): 401–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359183519828769.

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Anthropologists have often focused on what one can read about the worlds of hunters and prey from the forms of traps. This article demonstrates, however, that a trap’s design is not always tightly coupled to the worlds within which it is deployed. Using the case of Columbia River salmon traps, it shows how the social, economic and ecological roles of traps can dramatically change – even as their physical shape remains the same. In the late 19th century, these traps were lucrative for their owners, but unpopular with the region’s gillnet fishermen. The fishermen feared that traps entrapped the community in a problematic form of political economy – that they created the wrong kind of subjects and social order, concentrating wealth in the hands of a small, lazy owner class. The fishermen argued that such problems inhered in the materiality of the traps and that their physical design produced inequality that jeapordized the community. The gillnetters ultimately won over the government with their arguments, and fish traps were banned. But the banning of traps has subsequently proved entrapping. Today, some of the river’s salmon are listed as endangered species. Gillnets, which often kill fish before they are hauled in, do not allow fishermen to sort out endangered and unendangered fish; they are thus being phased out. Traps that keep fish alive in their holds would allow for sorting out and releasing endangered fish, and they are now heralded as an environmentally sustainable technology by conservationists. But after decades of arguments that traps embody and create unjust economic forms, it is logistically and socially difficult to bring back traps. Based on this example, this article proposes an approach to traps that gives special attention to how the material force of traps shifts as they are linked to different ecological contexts and practices of political economy.
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36

Proulx, Gilbert. "Veterinarians and Wildlife Biologists Should Join Forces to End Inhumane Mammal Trapping Technology." World's Veterinary Journal 11, no. 3 (September 25, 2021): 317–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.54203/scil.2021.wvj43.

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Current mammal trapping standards uphold the use of inhumane trapping technology. For example, killing neck snares for the capture of canids, and rotating-jaw traps, and steel-jawed leghold traps for procyonids and mustelids, are being used by trappers despite decades of research showing that they are inhumane, and cause serious injuries and distress in captured animals. Many wildlife biologists unsuccessfully raised concerns about inhumane mammal trappings. This short communication stresses the need for veterinarians and wildlife biologists to work together to improve the fate of mammals captured in killing or restraining traps, and modify mammal trapping standards on the basis of animal welfare science.
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Nguyen, Chuc Dinh, Tu Van Nguyen, Hung Quang Nguyen, Cuong Van Bui, Thanh Quoc Truong, and Xuan Van Tran. "Applying seismic stratigraphy analysis for assessing upper Oligocene stratigraphic traps in Southeastern Cuu Long Basin." Science and Technology Development Journal 20, K4 (July 31, 2017): 48–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.32508/stdj.v20ik4.1112.

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As oil and gas production has been going on over a few decades, conventional plays such as pre-Tertiary fractured basement highs and Cenozoic structural traps become more and more exhausted, and the remaining targets of the same type do not have sufficient reserves for development and production. Exploration activities in Cuu Long basin, therefore, are shifting towards more complicating types of plays which are stratigraphic traps and combination traps. Several researches were conducted in southeastern marginal slope and indicated the possibility of stratigraphic pinch-out traps with insufficient petroleum system and low hydrocarbon potential. In spite of many researches, there are still difficulties in defining the distribution and in evaluating hydrocarbon potential of these traps, so seismic stratigraphy analysis in accompanied with interpretation of seismic attribute and well logs is very necessary to support this problem. Seismic stratigraphic analysis on seismic sections, in agreement with seismic attributes’ and log analysis’ findings, show that the stratigraphic/combination traps in Oligocene C and D were formed during lowstand system tract as sigmoid-oblique clinoforms downlapping onto underlying strata in distributary mouths/delta settings. The integration of seismic attribute analysis and well log interpretation has further defined the fan-shaped distribution of these traps. Thus, using various methods, the stratigraphic traps can be better revealed. Further studies, however, need to be carried out to fully evaluate hydrocarbon potential of these stratigraphic/ combination traps, and minimize risks in exploration drilling.
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Shydlovskyy, Ihor, and Hanna Kuzyo. "Anthropogenic or ecological trap: what is causing the population decline of the Lapwing Vanellus vanellus in Western Ukraine?" Ring 38, no. 1 (December 1, 2016): 43–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ring-2016-0003.

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Abstract Ecological and anthropogenic traps exist and exert a negative effect on Lapwing populations. We believe that an anthropogenic trap is a partial or delayed manifestation of an ecological trap. In recent decades Lapwing communities have shown higher affiliation with urban landscapes, which negatively influences breeding success and the overall density of the species. It appears that the Lapwing has fallen into an anthropogenic trap, which in Ukraine is represented by agricultural landscapes. The decline in the Lapwing population is mainly caused by high intensity of agriculture, overgrazing, desolation of agricultural lands, changes in the water regime of rivers and lakes, global forestation, increasing disturbance by recreational activity and tourism, and an increase in the distribution and number of predatory mammals. Controlled burns of dead vegetation performed in late spring, household waste disposal, and construction work all contribute to the loss of breeding grounds. As a result the majority of local Lapwing populations declined during last decade, and some populations have gone completely extinct.
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Tinant, B., J. P. Declercq, M. van Meerssche, Ph Picard, J. Moulines, and M. Lecoustre. "Trans 8-Tert-Butyl-2-Oxaspiro [4. 5] Decan-3-One C13H22O2." Bulletin des Sociétés Chimiques Belges 96, no. 7 (September 1, 2010): 521–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bscb.19870960706.

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40

Morales Calatayud, Francisco. "HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY. ACHIEVMENTS AND QUESTIONS AFTER FOUR DECADES OF DEVELOPMENT." PSIENCIA Revista Latinoamericana de Ciencia Psicológica 4, no. 2 (November 1, 2012): 98–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.5872/psiencia/4.2.71.

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41

Gott, Michael. "Cowboys, Icebergs, and "Outlaws"." Transfers 3, no. 2 (June 1, 2013): 47–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2013.030204.

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This article builds on recent scholarship on the European road movie, focusing on Francophone Belgian road films that engage with issues of citizenship and personal, national, and transnational identities. The relationship of these films to the process of identity reformulation within new European parameters is examined, using four films from the past decade as case studies: Eldorado (Bouli Lanners, 2008), L'iceberg (Dominique Abel, Fiona Gordon and Bruno Romy, 2005), Quand la mer monte/When the Sea Rises (Jeanne Moreau and Gilles Porte, 2004), and Les folles aventures de Simon Konianski/Simon Konianski (Micha Wald, 2008). Despite the limited scale of its territory, this article contends that Belgium's complex make-up and status as a post-colonial “melting pot“ provides the ideal laboratory for cinematic identity quests. While anchored in a distinctively Belgian context, these films demonstrate that national boundaries are no longer an adequate container for identities in contemporary Europe. Particular focus is paid to the ways by which each film employs and distorts the traditional road movie template to stage voyages into citizenship.
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Mom, Gijs, and Nanny Kim. "Editorial." Transfers 3, no. 3 (December 1, 2013): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2013.030301.

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How topsy-turvy can the world of mobility become? Th e London cab has recently been revived by a Chinese automotive group,1 General Motors had to be rescued by the American taxpayer, and BMW is converting its cars to electricity. In Delhi, after a rape and murder of a woman in a bus, rickshaw pullers introduced “safe for women” rickshaws.2 In Brazil riots against corruption and poverty started in a bus, out of outrage at increased ticket prices.3 In Rio de Janeiro there are three bus accidents per day, in part caused by drivers racing against each other.4 How can we understand the plethora of confusing messages from a world of mobility that seems to spin out of control, more so with every new decade? New Mobility Studies tries to make sense of this turbulence and as editors of Transfers we seek fresh approaches that are not afraid of transgressing boundaries. Th is issue, in which we present scholarship beyond the immediate reach of Western mainstream mobility studies, is an example of such boundary crossing.
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Kobayashi, Susumu, and Atsuo Nakazaki. "Claisen Rearrangement Using Bicyclic 2-[(Z)-Alkenyl]dihydropyran: Stereoselective Synthesis of trans-Substituted Spiro[4.5]decane." Synlett 2009, no. 10 (June 2, 2009): 1605–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0029-1217339.

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44

Hunklinger, Michael, and Niklas Ferch. "Trans* voting: demand and supply side of trans* politics in Germany." European Journal of Politics and Gender 3, no. 3 (September 1, 2020): 389–408. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/251510820x15780296516691.

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Trans* people and trans* issues have been part of the scientific literature for over a decade, though framed most of the time under umbrella terms such as ‘LGBT’ or ‘LGBTIQ*’ and often without further consideration regarding trans*-specific issues. In this article, we take an emancipatory approach and focus on trans* people as political subjects. For the first time, we thus present data on the political preferences, attitudes and voting behaviour of trans* people in Germany, and put them in relation to the parties’ manifestos for the 2017 German general election (the 2017 Bundestagswahl). We discuss our findings in the theoretical context of trans* citizenship and trans* visibility. This approach positions trans* people as citizens in the centre of analysis and adds to our understanding of the citizenship of minority groups in our modern societies.
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Jacobs, G. A., H. E. Hurlburt, J. C. Kindle, E. J. Metzger, J. L. Mitchell, W. J. Teague, and A. J. Wallcraft. "Decade-scale trans-Pacific propagation and warming effects of an El Niño anomaly." Nature 370, no. 6488 (August 1994): 360–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/370360a0.

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46

KAYDOS, J. A., and T. A. SPENCER. "ChemInform Abstract: Serendipitous Synthesis of cis- and trans-4-Decene-1,10-dioic Acids." ChemInform 24, no. 39 (August 20, 2010): no. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chin.199339116.

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47

Rhook, Nadia. "“Turban-clad” British Subjects." Transfers 5, no. 3 (December 1, 2015): 104–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/trans.2015.050308.

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The late nineteenth century saw a wave of Indian migrants arrive in Victoria, many of whom took up the occupation of hawking. These often-described “turban-clad hawkers” regularly became visible to settlers as they moved through public space en route to the properties of their rural customers. This article explores how the turban became a symbol of the masculine threat Indians posed to the settler order of late nineteenth-century Victoria, Australia. This symbolism was tied up with the two-fold terrestrial and oceanic mobility of 'turban-clad' men; mobilities that took on particular meanings in a settler-colonial context where sedentarism was privileged over movement, and in a decade when legislators in Victoria and across the Australian colonies were working out ways to exclude Indian British subjects from the imagined Australian nation. I argue that European settlers' anxieties about the movements of Indian British subjects over sea and over land became metonymically conflated in ways that expressed and informed the late nineteenth-century project to create a settled and purely white nation. These findings have repercussions for understandings of the contemporaneous emergence of nationalisms in other British settler colonies.
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48

Lohmann, Larry. "Gas, waqf and Barclays Capital: a decade of resistance in southern Thailand." Race & Class 50, no. 2 (October 2008): 89–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0306396808096395.

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The struggle of villagers in the Chana district of southern Thailand to resist the construction of the Trans Thai-Malaysia gas pipeline and its various spin-off industries illustrates some of the ways in which questions of ethnic, religious and class conflict are tightly bound up with industrial development, the global financial sector and human rights abuses. While the Thai elite and international investors portray the project as `socially responsible', the protesting villagers have increasingly turned to Islamic principles of waqf — land designated as given over to God and therefore available for common use — to articulate their opposition.
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49

Marchioro, Matteo, Andrea Battisti, and Massimo Faccoli. "Light Traps in Shipping Containers: A New Tool for the Early Detection of Insect Alien Species." Journal of Economic Entomology 113, no. 4 (May 15, 2020): 1718–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jee/toaa098.

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Abstract Insects are one of the most successful groups of invasive species, and the number of new introductions has been increasing in the last decades. Insect invasions are affected mainly by the increase in international trade, as most of them travel across the world inside shipping containers. The effectiveness of sticky light traps was tested for the interception of alien pests inside the containers. The tested hypotheses were that light traps have a valuable broad-spectrum attraction and their trapping performance differs between empty or loaded containers. The optimal trap density in a container was also investigated. Trapping tests were conducted on four model species: Cadra cautella Walker (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), Drosophila melanogaster Meigen (Diptera: Drosophilidae), Sitophilus zeamais, Motschulsky and Ips typographus L. (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). Insects were released within a standard shipping container, in either empty or loaded conditions, where sticky light traps were deployed for 15 h. Traps were tested with light on (activated) or off (control). Activated traps captured more Lepidoptera and Diptera than control ones, with no differences between empty and loaded container. Instead, Coleoptera were rarely caught, probably because of their ability to escape from traps. Results show that higher trap density in the container (from 1 to 8) increases the probability of insect capture. In conclusion, positive results on C. cautella and D. melanogaster suggest a possible application of sticky light traps against some small Lepidoptera and Diptera species flying in containers and infesting seeds, grains, and fruits, while traps need improvement for application against beetles.
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Otabil, Kenneth B., Samuel F. Gyasi, Esi Awuah, Daniels Obeng-Ofori, Mario A. Rodríguez-Pérez, Charles R. Katholi, and Thomas R. Unnasch. "The Search for an Efficient Black Fly Trap for Xenomonitoring of Onchocerciasis." Journal of Parasitology Research 2018 (July 3, 2018): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/5902367.

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Onchocerciasis is a neglected tropical disease that has plagued mankind for decades with pathologies that involve the eyes and the skin. The WHO and the global health community have earmarked the disease for global elimination by 2045. However, as control programmes shift focus from reduction of the burden of the disease to elimination, new tools and strategies may be needed to meet targets. Monitoring Onchocerca volvulus larvae in the black fly vectors is an important tool needed to monitor disease dynamics and certify elimination. For decades, human landing collections have been the sole means of acquiring vectors for monitoring of the disease. This procedure has been plagued with ethical concerns and sometimes the inability to harvest enough black flies needed to carry out effective monitoring. Since the 1960s, the WHO recognized the need to replace human landing collections but relatively few field studies have designed and tested alternative traps. This review article systematically discusses some of the key traps tested, their successes, and their challenges. It is the aim of the review to direct research and development focus to the most successful and promising vector traps which could potentially replace the human landing collections.
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