Temperate deciduous forests are located in eastern North America, western Europe, parts of Asia, and southern South America. These forests experience seasonal changes with cold winters and warm summers. Common tree species include oaks, hickories, maples, and beeches which lose their leaves in autumn to conserve water. The forest has three layers - a top canopy layer, middle shrub layer, and bottom forest floor layer of grasses and ferns. These forests provide habitat but are threatened by human development and agriculture.
This document discusses different types of plants and their characteristics. It describes trees as tall plants with trunks, branches, leaves and roots. Evergreens keep their leaves all year while deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn and winter. Bushes are short with many stems and leaves but no trunk. Grass is green and bendy. Some plants like trees and bushes are cultivated while others like grass grow wild. Flowers grow fruit to protect seeds inside while non-flowering plants like ferns and moss use spores to reproduce. The document provides a vocabulary list of plant-related terms.
This document discusses mass extinction events that have occurred throughout history. It provides details on 5 major extinction events, including their timing in millions of years ago and potential causes such as asteroid impacts, volcanic activity, and climate change. Causes of species extinction are also explored, including climate change, changes in sea levels/currents, asteroids/cosmic radiation, acid rain, disease, invasive species, habitat loss, pollution, and human population growth.
This document provides information about rainforests, including their definition, types, locations, layers, endemic fauna and flora. It defines a rainforest as an environment with high rainfall and many tall trees. The two main types are tropical and temperate rainforests. Examples of endemic fauna mentioned include the Philippine eagle, monkey-eating eagle, and Philippine cobra. Key layers of a rainforest are the emergent, canopy, understory and forest floor layers. More than two-thirds of the world's plant species are found in rainforests, and examples of endemic Philippine flora are also provided. The document notes that rainforests are threatened by logging, mining and clearing for farming.
Tropical rainforests exist near the equator between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, including countries like Brazil, Indonesia, and the Congo. They have high rainfall, temperature, and humidity. The forest is divided into strata including the forest floor, understory, canopy, and emergent layer, each with different environmental conditions and species of plants and animals. Some example animal species mentioned are the kinkajou, poison dart frog, and sloth.
Temperate deciduous forests are located in eastern North America, western Europe, parts of Asia, and southern South America. These forests experience seasonal changes with cold winters and warm summers. Common tree species include oaks, hickories, maples, and beeches which lose their leaves in autumn to conserve water. The forest has three layers - a top canopy layer, middle shrub layer, and bottom forest floor layer of grasses and ferns. These forests provide habitat but are threatened by human development and agriculture.
This document discusses different types of plants and their characteristics. It describes trees as tall plants with trunks, branches, leaves and roots. Evergreens keep their leaves all year while deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn and winter. Bushes are short with many stems and leaves but no trunk. Grass is green and bendy. Some plants like trees and bushes are cultivated while others like grass grow wild. Flowers grow fruit to protect seeds inside while non-flowering plants like ferns and moss use spores to reproduce. The document provides a vocabulary list of plant-related terms.
This document discusses mass extinction events that have occurred throughout history. It provides details on 5 major extinction events, including their timing in millions of years ago and potential causes such as asteroid impacts, volcanic activity, and climate change. Causes of species extinction are also explored, including climate change, changes in sea levels/currents, asteroids/cosmic radiation, acid rain, disease, invasive species, habitat loss, pollution, and human population growth.
This document provides information about rainforests, including their definition, types, locations, layers, endemic fauna and flora. It defines a rainforest as an environment with high rainfall and many tall trees. The two main types are tropical and temperate rainforests. Examples of endemic fauna mentioned include the Philippine eagle, monkey-eating eagle, and Philippine cobra. Key layers of a rainforest are the emergent, canopy, understory and forest floor layers. More than two-thirds of the world's plant species are found in rainforests, and examples of endemic Philippine flora are also provided. The document notes that rainforests are threatened by logging, mining and clearing for farming.
Tropical rainforests exist near the equator between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, including countries like Brazil, Indonesia, and the Congo. They have high rainfall, temperature, and humidity. The forest is divided into strata including the forest floor, understory, canopy, and emergent layer, each with different environmental conditions and species of plants and animals. Some example animal species mentioned are the kinkajou, poison dart frog, and sloth.
The Amazon rainforest spans several countries in South America and contains the greatest biodiversity on Earth. It experiences a hot, humid climate year-round between 22-34°C due to its proximity to the equator. The Amazon River, born in the Andes Mountains, is the largest river in the world by volume and flows through the forest before emptying into the Atlantic Ocean. Over 20 million people from diverse indigenous tribes and cultures call the Amazon rainforest home. However, illegal logging has led to the deforestation of over 700,000 square kilometers of forest in Brazil alone in the past few decades.
Trees play an important role in the ecosystem by producing oxygen, improving air quality, managing water resources, preventing soil erosion, and providing habitat for wildlife. They produce oxygen through photosynthesis, extract moisture from the soil and return it to the air through their leaves. Trees also provide food, wood, and shade for humans. Given their benefits, it is important to plant more trees and prevent deforestation, as tree loss is a major cause of climate change.
The document discusses the variety of plant life found in tropical rainforests. It notes that rainforests contain over half the world's plant species due to abundant rainfall and sunshine. The major plants are tall trees that create a canopy up to 100 feet high and hold many epiphytic plants like orchids, bromeliads and ferns. Vines called lianas are also important, and pitcher plants trap insects. While rainforests once covered 14% of the planet, deforestation has reduced this to 6%. Rainforest plants provide valuable foods, medicines, and produce one-fifth of the world's oxygen supply.
It is my very pleasure to publish a slide on the World forest day. I have seen if there are any slides based on the world forest day. But, I have found only something on it. So hope that you will be benefited.
Detailed study of 7 biodiversity Parks of Delhi. Namely Yamnuna, Aravali, Tughlaqabad, Kamla Nehru, Tilapath, South Biodiversity Parks.
Contributed by Yash Sakhuja, Chandni Kalyani, Anandita Doda, Harshit Kapoor and Srivatsa.
Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi.
This document discusses habitats and the different animals that live in each of the five main habitats. It defines a habitat as a place where animals can find food, water, and shelter. It then lists some examples of animals that live in each of the five main habitats: the ocean habitat (crabs, urchins, whales, seals), the forest habitat (squirrels, monkeys, owls), the desert habitat (snakes, scorpions, camels), the grasslands habitat (lions, giraffes, zebras, koalas, ostriches), and the Antarctica habitat (penguins, polar bears).
Deforestation is the removal of forests to make room for human development. It has increased due to population growth, urbanization, and industrialization. Deforestation leads to soil erosion, flooding, loss of wildlife, increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and other environmental issues. Pakistan has one of the highest deforestation rates in Asia due to unsustainable logging and lack of enforcement of forestry laws. Reforestation efforts and use of alternative energy are needed to address deforestation.
This document describes the major biomes of the world, including the Arctic tundra, coniferous forest, deciduous forest, desert, grassland, marine, savanna, and tropical rainforest biomes. For each biome, it provides examples of characteristic plant and animal species and describes environmental conditions. Additional resources on biomes are also listed.
Wildlife management techniques and methods of wildlife conservationAnish Gawande
Wildlife Conservation is the practice of protecting wild plant and animal species and their habitat. Wildlife plays an important role in balancing the environment and provides stability to different natural processes of nature. The goal of wildlife conservation is to ensure that nature will be around for future generations to enjoy and also to recognize the importance of wildlife and wilderness for humans and other species alike. Many nations have government agencies and NGO's dedicated to wildlife conservation, which help to implement policies designed to protect wildlife. Numerous independent non-profit organizations also promote various wildlife conservation causes.
Wildlife conservation has become an increasingly important practice due to the negative effects of human activity on wildlife. An endangered species is defined as a population of a living species that is in the danger of becoming extinct because the species has a very low or falling population, or because they are threatened by the varying environmental or prepositional parameters.
The document discusses the composition of air and the water cycle. It begins by explaining that air contains water vapor and important gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide. It then goes into detail about the water cycle, describing how water evaporates into the air and condenses back into water droplets, forming clouds and precipitation in a continuous cycle. It also explains that air can contain dust particles and germs, so we should wash our hands before eating.
This document summarizes the life cycle of a butterfly through four stages:
1) Egg - The first stage where butterflies lay eggs on leaves.
2) Larva (caterpillar) - The second stage where the caterpillar hatches and eats leaves, molting several times as it grows.
3) Pupa (chrysalis) - The third stage where the caterpillar undergoes metamorphosis inside the chrysalis.
4) Adult - The fourth and final stage where the butterfly emerges with wings and mates, continuing the cycle.
Plants need water, soil, space, sunlight, and air to survive and grow healthily. Water and minerals from the soil are absorbed by the roots and transported throughout the plant. Sunlight provides energy for photosynthesis to convert water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and food. Plants also require adequate space to spread their roots and access nutrients from the soil. Air supplies the oxygen necessary for plant respiration. Without these basic requirements, plants are unable to grow.
The document describes a song about visiting the zoo. It mentions seeing monkeys scratching and hanging by their tails, giraffes stretching their long necks, elephants swinging their trunks, seals splashing in the water, and rhinoceroses huffing and puffing. The song encourages the reader to come along to the zoo to see these animals and stay all day long.
The taiga biome has long, cold winters and short, cool summers with low precipitation. It is dominated by coniferous trees like spruce, fir, and pine that are adapted to the climate with needle-like leaves and thick bark. Common animal species include bears, wolves, lynx, and birds that have insulating fur or feathers. The taiga stores a large amount of carbon and covers a significant portion of the northern hemisphere.
Tropical rainforests are defined by high precipitation, temperature, and humidity. They support a high level of biodiversity despite covering a small area of the planet. Plants and animals in rainforests have adapted to the dense canopy structure through traits like buttresses, prop roots, epiphytic growth, and camouflage. However, human activities like deforestation, overexploitation, mining, agriculture, and introducing invasive species are degrading many rainforests and reducing biodiversity.
Asexual reproduction is a process in which new organism is produced from a single parent without the involvement of gametes or cells. Many unicellular and multi cellular organisms reproduce asexually.
Tropical rainforests exist within 28 degrees north and south of the equator. They receive high rainfall, have warm temperatures, and high humidity. Though they cover less than 6% of the Earth's land, they are home to 50% of animals and plants and produce 40% of the oxygen. The four main types are lowland equatorial evergreen, moist deciduous and semi-evergreen seasonal, montane, and flooded forests. Rainforests have distinct layers - the forest floor, understory, canopy, and emergent layer - which each have unique environmental conditions and species adaptations.
This document discusses global warming and its causes and effects. It begins by defining global warming as the process by which the Earth heats up due to increased greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, water vapor, and methane trapping heat in the atmosphere. Some causes of increased greenhouse gases listed are the industrial revolution, deforestation, urbanization, and overutilization of natural resources. The document then lists some effects of global warming, such as rising temperatures, sea levels, and frequency of extreme weather events like hurricanes and droughts. It concludes by suggesting some solutions to address global warming like increasing forestation, renewable energy, and reducing pollution.
This document provides information about human impact on the environment. It discusses several topics:
1) Atmosphere and climate change - it describes the greenhouse effect and key greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. It explains how their emissions are increasing due to human activities like burning fossil fuels.
2) Water availability and quality - it notes how climate change and other factors are affecting the water cycle and leading to issues like changing rainfall patterns.
3) Food security - factors like climate change, loss of biodiversity, and water issues threaten global food production.
4) Loss of biodiversity - the document discusses the biodiversity crisis due to habitat loss, pollution, invasive species, and other human impacts.
There are three major rainforests in the world: the Amazon, Congo, and Indonesia rainforests. The Amazon is the largest rainforest containing about 390 billion trees. Rainforests are full of beautiful and exotic animals and provide 50% of the world's food and 3/4 of clean water. Indigenous people of the Amazon live in houses made of leaves and straw, with fathers farming/hunting and mothers gardening/cooking, while children learn about plants and animals through play. Threats to the rainforest include deforestation for wood and paper, but conservation efforts like providing technology to report illegal logging are helping to protect these vital ecosystems.
Physical features, also known as landforms, include topographical elements shown on relief maps as well as bodies of water. Examples of physical features are peninsulas, seas, mountain ranges, volcanoes, rivers, and plateaus. Physical features are natural geographical elements and do not include man-made structures or geographic regions like deserts or forests. The document provides tasks related to identifying physical features on different continents using an atlas.
The document discusses tempo, which refers to the speed or pace of a song. Tempo can be slow, moderate, or fast, and composers indicate tempo using Italian words like andante, moderato, and allegro. A song's tempo is usually based on its message and the feeling it aims to convey - for example, a sad song is often slow while a happy song is usually fast. The document provides three examples of songs with different tempos: "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes" is slow, "Pamulinawen" is moderate, and "Magtanim ay Di Biro" shows the ups and downs of pace that planting entails.
The Amazon rainforest spans several countries in South America and contains the greatest biodiversity on Earth. It experiences a hot, humid climate year-round between 22-34°C due to its proximity to the equator. The Amazon River, born in the Andes Mountains, is the largest river in the world by volume and flows through the forest before emptying into the Atlantic Ocean. Over 20 million people from diverse indigenous tribes and cultures call the Amazon rainforest home. However, illegal logging has led to the deforestation of over 700,000 square kilometers of forest in Brazil alone in the past few decades.
Trees play an important role in the ecosystem by producing oxygen, improving air quality, managing water resources, preventing soil erosion, and providing habitat for wildlife. They produce oxygen through photosynthesis, extract moisture from the soil and return it to the air through their leaves. Trees also provide food, wood, and shade for humans. Given their benefits, it is important to plant more trees and prevent deforestation, as tree loss is a major cause of climate change.
The document discusses the variety of plant life found in tropical rainforests. It notes that rainforests contain over half the world's plant species due to abundant rainfall and sunshine. The major plants are tall trees that create a canopy up to 100 feet high and hold many epiphytic plants like orchids, bromeliads and ferns. Vines called lianas are also important, and pitcher plants trap insects. While rainforests once covered 14% of the planet, deforestation has reduced this to 6%. Rainforest plants provide valuable foods, medicines, and produce one-fifth of the world's oxygen supply.
It is my very pleasure to publish a slide on the World forest day. I have seen if there are any slides based on the world forest day. But, I have found only something on it. So hope that you will be benefited.
Detailed study of 7 biodiversity Parks of Delhi. Namely Yamnuna, Aravali, Tughlaqabad, Kamla Nehru, Tilapath, South Biodiversity Parks.
Contributed by Yash Sakhuja, Chandni Kalyani, Anandita Doda, Harshit Kapoor and Srivatsa.
Kirori Mal College, University of Delhi.
This document discusses habitats and the different animals that live in each of the five main habitats. It defines a habitat as a place where animals can find food, water, and shelter. It then lists some examples of animals that live in each of the five main habitats: the ocean habitat (crabs, urchins, whales, seals), the forest habitat (squirrels, monkeys, owls), the desert habitat (snakes, scorpions, camels), the grasslands habitat (lions, giraffes, zebras, koalas, ostriches), and the Antarctica habitat (penguins, polar bears).
Deforestation is the removal of forests to make room for human development. It has increased due to population growth, urbanization, and industrialization. Deforestation leads to soil erosion, flooding, loss of wildlife, increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and other environmental issues. Pakistan has one of the highest deforestation rates in Asia due to unsustainable logging and lack of enforcement of forestry laws. Reforestation efforts and use of alternative energy are needed to address deforestation.
This document describes the major biomes of the world, including the Arctic tundra, coniferous forest, deciduous forest, desert, grassland, marine, savanna, and tropical rainforest biomes. For each biome, it provides examples of characteristic plant and animal species and describes environmental conditions. Additional resources on biomes are also listed.
Wildlife management techniques and methods of wildlife conservationAnish Gawande
Wildlife Conservation is the practice of protecting wild plant and animal species and their habitat. Wildlife plays an important role in balancing the environment and provides stability to different natural processes of nature. The goal of wildlife conservation is to ensure that nature will be around for future generations to enjoy and also to recognize the importance of wildlife and wilderness for humans and other species alike. Many nations have government agencies and NGO's dedicated to wildlife conservation, which help to implement policies designed to protect wildlife. Numerous independent non-profit organizations also promote various wildlife conservation causes.
Wildlife conservation has become an increasingly important practice due to the negative effects of human activity on wildlife. An endangered species is defined as a population of a living species that is in the danger of becoming extinct because the species has a very low or falling population, or because they are threatened by the varying environmental or prepositional parameters.
The document discusses the composition of air and the water cycle. It begins by explaining that air contains water vapor and important gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide. It then goes into detail about the water cycle, describing how water evaporates into the air and condenses back into water droplets, forming clouds and precipitation in a continuous cycle. It also explains that air can contain dust particles and germs, so we should wash our hands before eating.
This document summarizes the life cycle of a butterfly through four stages:
1) Egg - The first stage where butterflies lay eggs on leaves.
2) Larva (caterpillar) - The second stage where the caterpillar hatches and eats leaves, molting several times as it grows.
3) Pupa (chrysalis) - The third stage where the caterpillar undergoes metamorphosis inside the chrysalis.
4) Adult - The fourth and final stage where the butterfly emerges with wings and mates, continuing the cycle.
Plants need water, soil, space, sunlight, and air to survive and grow healthily. Water and minerals from the soil are absorbed by the roots and transported throughout the plant. Sunlight provides energy for photosynthesis to convert water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and food. Plants also require adequate space to spread their roots and access nutrients from the soil. Air supplies the oxygen necessary for plant respiration. Without these basic requirements, plants are unable to grow.
The document describes a song about visiting the zoo. It mentions seeing monkeys scratching and hanging by their tails, giraffes stretching their long necks, elephants swinging their trunks, seals splashing in the water, and rhinoceroses huffing and puffing. The song encourages the reader to come along to the zoo to see these animals and stay all day long.
The taiga biome has long, cold winters and short, cool summers with low precipitation. It is dominated by coniferous trees like spruce, fir, and pine that are adapted to the climate with needle-like leaves and thick bark. Common animal species include bears, wolves, lynx, and birds that have insulating fur or feathers. The taiga stores a large amount of carbon and covers a significant portion of the northern hemisphere.
Tropical rainforests are defined by high precipitation, temperature, and humidity. They support a high level of biodiversity despite covering a small area of the planet. Plants and animals in rainforests have adapted to the dense canopy structure through traits like buttresses, prop roots, epiphytic growth, and camouflage. However, human activities like deforestation, overexploitation, mining, agriculture, and introducing invasive species are degrading many rainforests and reducing biodiversity.
Asexual reproduction is a process in which new organism is produced from a single parent without the involvement of gametes or cells. Many unicellular and multi cellular organisms reproduce asexually.
Tropical rainforests exist within 28 degrees north and south of the equator. They receive high rainfall, have warm temperatures, and high humidity. Though they cover less than 6% of the Earth's land, they are home to 50% of animals and plants and produce 40% of the oxygen. The four main types are lowland equatorial evergreen, moist deciduous and semi-evergreen seasonal, montane, and flooded forests. Rainforests have distinct layers - the forest floor, understory, canopy, and emergent layer - which each have unique environmental conditions and species adaptations.
This document discusses global warming and its causes and effects. It begins by defining global warming as the process by which the Earth heats up due to increased greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, water vapor, and methane trapping heat in the atmosphere. Some causes of increased greenhouse gases listed are the industrial revolution, deforestation, urbanization, and overutilization of natural resources. The document then lists some effects of global warming, such as rising temperatures, sea levels, and frequency of extreme weather events like hurricanes and droughts. It concludes by suggesting some solutions to address global warming like increasing forestation, renewable energy, and reducing pollution.
This document provides information about human impact on the environment. It discusses several topics:
1) Atmosphere and climate change - it describes the greenhouse effect and key greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. It explains how their emissions are increasing due to human activities like burning fossil fuels.
2) Water availability and quality - it notes how climate change and other factors are affecting the water cycle and leading to issues like changing rainfall patterns.
3) Food security - factors like climate change, loss of biodiversity, and water issues threaten global food production.
4) Loss of biodiversity - the document discusses the biodiversity crisis due to habitat loss, pollution, invasive species, and other human impacts.
There are three major rainforests in the world: the Amazon, Congo, and Indonesia rainforests. The Amazon is the largest rainforest containing about 390 billion trees. Rainforests are full of beautiful and exotic animals and provide 50% of the world's food and 3/4 of clean water. Indigenous people of the Amazon live in houses made of leaves and straw, with fathers farming/hunting and mothers gardening/cooking, while children learn about plants and animals through play. Threats to the rainforest include deforestation for wood and paper, but conservation efforts like providing technology to report illegal logging are helping to protect these vital ecosystems.
Physical features, also known as landforms, include topographical elements shown on relief maps as well as bodies of water. Examples of physical features are peninsulas, seas, mountain ranges, volcanoes, rivers, and plateaus. Physical features are natural geographical elements and do not include man-made structures or geographic regions like deserts or forests. The document provides tasks related to identifying physical features on different continents using an atlas.
The document discusses tempo, which refers to the speed or pace of a song. Tempo can be slow, moderate, or fast, and composers indicate tempo using Italian words like andante, moderato, and allegro. A song's tempo is usually based on its message and the feeling it aims to convey - for example, a sad song is often slow while a happy song is usually fast. The document provides three examples of songs with different tempos: "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes" is slow, "Pamulinawen" is moderate, and "Magtanim ay Di Biro" shows the ups and downs of pace that planting entails.
The document discusses various landforms and features of the Earth's surface and interior. It defines a landform as a physical feature on the Earth's surface and describes features of the ocean floor such as ocean basins, continental shelves, slopes, canyons, and rises. It also discusses how elevation and topographical maps are used to map Earth's landforms. Finally, it outlines Earth's major layers including the atmosphere, hydrosphere, crust, mantle, outer core, and inner core.
Physical characteristics of the United States power pointkonrak01
The document discusses the physical characteristics of the United States, which are natural features made of land or water. It identifies major physical characteristics as landforms like mountains and hills, or bodies of water like oceans, lakes, and rivers. The document also provides examples of different physical characteristics found in the US and categorizes them as land features or water features.
This document contains 4 multiple choice questions testing different subjects such as science, culture, and mathematics. The questions ask whether eyes are used for seeing, if Pagsanjan Falls is located in the Philippines, and what the product of 8x9 is. It also shows pictures and asks to cross out the one that does not belong to the group.
I have replaced most of my performance management talks (monthly performance, feedback, goal discussion) with walk-n-talks during my past three years. During the walks we talk about everything from business decisions down to personal feedback and I have been able to provide coaching when applicable.
This has been an efficient way for me to listen in to all parts of my team, work with the individuals' potential and helped me take the right decision.
I have only good experience from this - try it out!
This film trailer storyboard is for a psychological thriller that follows a girl who has a disturbing dream. In her dream, she is walking alone at night when a masked man starts following her. As she walks faster to get away, he gains on her. The storyboard cuts between shots of the increasing danger in her dream and her sleeping face. It ends with an extreme close up of a knife handle turning in her room, suggesting the dream may not have been a dream after all, as she wakes up screaming.
Sản xuất thiết bị điện công nghiệp vattuthietbidien.vn ống luồn dây điện thé...nguyencvl
1. The document provides information on colored and steel conduit products from Cat Van Loi including specifications, sizes, and standards.
2. Product information is given for electrical metallic tubing (EMT), intermediate metal conduit (IMC), and various screwed conduit types from standards like BS31, BS4568, and JISC8305.
3. Details are also provided on conduit bending machines that can bend the listed conduit sizes.
Strong Nuclear Force and Quantum Vacuum as Gravity (FUNDAMENTAL TENSOR)SergioPrezFelipe
Publication at Publication at journal of advanced in physics. Gravity explained by a new theory, ‘Superconducting String Theory (SST)’, completely opposite from current field emission based and inspired on originals string theories. Strengths are decomposed to make strings behave as one-dimensional structure with universe acting as a superconductor where resistance is near 0 and the matter moves inside. Strong nuclear force, with an attraction of 10.000 Newtons is which makes space to curve, generating acceleration, more matter more acceleration. Electromagnetic moves in 8 decimals, gravity is moved to more than 30 decimals to work as a superconductor.
This document provides information about Telemno Life Agency's (TLA) Family Endowment Fund product and how it can help secure families' financial futures. The key points are:
1) TLA works with Insurance Company of East Africa to offer Family Endowment Funds, which combine savings and life insurance protection. Funds range from 5-200 million UGX depending on savings ability.
2) The 3-jar money management system encourages allocating income to spending, saving, and investing jars. An endowment fund guarantees funds for dependents if the primary earner passes away prematurely.
3) Setting up an endowment fund through TLA provides direct and indirect commissions through their network marketing
Probabilistic range query over uncertain moving objects in constrained two di...LeMeniz Infotech
Probabilistic range query over uncertain moving objects in constrained two dimensional space
Do Your Projects With Technology Experts
To Get this projects Call : 9566355386 / 99625 88976
Visit : www.lemenizinfotech.com / www.ieeemaster.com
Mail : projects@lemenizinfotech.com
Hiding in the mobile crowd location privacy through collaborationLeMeniz Infotech
Hiding in the mobile crowd location privacy through collaboration
Location-aware smartphones support various location-based services (LBSs): users query the LBS server and learn on the fly about their surroundings. However, such queries give away private information, enabling the LBS to track users. A user-collaborative privacy-preserving approach is proposed for LBSs. This solution does not require changing the LBS server architecture and does not assume third party servers; yet, it significantly improves users’ location privacy. The gain stems from the collaboration of mobile devices: they keep their context information in a buffer and pass it to others seeking such information.
The document appears to be lyrics for a song that describe an intense dance battle or "slam" between two groups. The lyrics mention shoving, elbowing, headbutts, bruises, bloody noses, and intense dancing. They encourage the reader to get rowdy, bloody, and sweaty during the dense and intense dancing. The lyrics repeat refrains telling the reader to "dance and dense, denso".
Providing privacy aware incentives in mobile sensing systemsLeMeniz Infotech
Providing privacy aware incentives in mobile sensing systems
Do Your Projects With Technology Experts
To Get this projects Call : 9566355386 / 99625 88976
Web : http://www.lemenizinfotech.com
Web : http://www.ieeemaster.com
Mail : projects@lemenizinfotech.com
Blog : http://ieeeprojectspondicherry.weebly.com
Blog : http://www.ieeeprojectsinpondicherry.blogspot.in/
Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eesBNUnKvws
Order : Trombidiformes (Acarina) Class : Arachnida
Mites normally feed on the undersurface of the leaves but the symptoms are more easily seen on the uppersurface.
Tetranychids produce blotching (Spots) on the leaf-surface.
Tarsonemids and Eriophyids produce distortion (twist), puckering (Folds) or stunting (Short) of leaves.
Eriophyids produce distinct galls or blisters (fluid-filled sac in the outer layer)
Microbial interaction
Microorganisms interacts with each other and can be physically associated with another organisms in a variety of ways.
One organism can be located on the surface of another organism as an ectobiont or located within another organism as endobiont.
Microbial interaction may be positive such as mutualism, proto-cooperation, commensalism or may be negative such as parasitism, predation or competition
Types of microbial interaction
Positive interaction: mutualism, proto-cooperation, commensalism
Negative interaction: Ammensalism (antagonism), parasitism, predation, competition
I. Mutualism:
It is defined as the relationship in which each organism in interaction gets benefits from association. It is an obligatory relationship in which mutualist and host are metabolically dependent on each other.
Mutualistic relationship is very specific where one member of association cannot be replaced by another species.
Mutualism require close physical contact between interacting organisms.
Relationship of mutualism allows organisms to exist in habitat that could not occupied by either species alone.
Mutualistic relationship between organisms allows them to act as a single organism.
Examples of mutualism:
i. Lichens:
Lichens are excellent example of mutualism.
They are the association of specific fungi and certain genus of algae. In lichen, fungal partner is called mycobiont and algal partner is called
II. Syntrophism:
It is an association in which the growth of one organism either depends on or improved by the substrate provided by another organism.
In syntrophism both organism in association gets benefits.
Compound A
Utilized by population 1
Compound B
Utilized by population 2
Compound C
utilized by both Population 1+2
Products
In this theoretical example of syntrophism, population 1 is able to utilize and metabolize compound A, forming compound B but cannot metabolize beyond compound B without co-operation of population 2. Population 2is unable to utilize compound A but it can metabolize compound B forming compound C. Then both population 1 and 2 are able to carry out metabolic reaction which leads to formation of end product that neither population could produce alone.
Examples of syntrophism:
i. Methanogenic ecosystem in sludge digester
Methane produced by methanogenic bacteria depends upon interspecies hydrogen transfer by other fermentative bacteria.
Anaerobic fermentative bacteria generate CO2 and H2 utilizing carbohydrates which is then utilized by methanogenic bacteria (Methanobacter) to produce methane.
ii. Lactobacillus arobinosus and Enterococcus faecalis:
In the minimal media, Lactobacillus arobinosus and Enterococcus faecalis are able to grow together but not alone.
The synergistic relationship between E. faecalis and L. arobinosus occurs in which E. faecalis require folic acid
Anti-Universe And Emergent Gravity and the Dark UniverseSérgio Sacani
Recent theoretical progress indicates that spacetime and gravity emerge together from the entanglement structure of an underlying microscopic theory. These ideas are best understood in Anti-de Sitter space, where they rely on the area law for entanglement entropy. The extension to de Sitter space requires taking into account the entropy and temperature associated with the cosmological horizon. Using insights from string theory, black hole physics and quantum information theory we argue that the positive dark energy leads to a thermal volume law contribution to the entropy that overtakes the area law precisely at the cosmological horizon. Due to the competition between area and volume law entanglement the microscopic de Sitter states do not thermalise at sub-Hubble scales: they exhibit memory effects in the form of an entropy displacement caused by matter. The emergent laws of gravity contain an additional ‘dark’ gravitational force describing the ‘elastic’ response due to the entropy displacement. We derive an estimate of the strength of this extra force in terms of the baryonic mass, Newton’s constant and the Hubble acceleration scale a0 = cH0, and provide evidence for the fact that this additional ‘dark gravity force’ explains the observed phenomena in galaxies and clusters currently attributed to dark matter.
Presentation of our paper, "Towards Quantitative Evaluation of Explainable AI Methods for Deepfake Detection", by K. Tsigos, E. Apostolidis, S. Baxevanakis, S. Papadopoulos, V. Mezaris. Presented at the ACM Int. Workshop on Multimedia AI against Disinformation (MAD’24) of the ACM Int. Conf. on Multimedia Retrieval (ICMR’24), Thailand, June 2024. https://doi.org/10.1145/3643491.3660292 https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.18649
Software available at https://github.com/IDT-ITI/XAI-Deepfakes