Hormone analyses and exocrine gland measurements were made to probe for physiological correlates of division of labor among similarly aged adult worker honey bees (Apis mellifera L.). Middle-age bees (ca. 2 weeks old) performing different tasks showed significant differences in both juvenile hormone (JH) biosynthesis rates and hemolymph titers; guards and undertakers had high JH, and wax producers and food storers, low JH. Guards and undertakers had similar hormone levels to foragers, even though they were 10 days younger than foragers. No differences in JH were detected among young bees (1-week-old queen attendants and nurses) or older bees (3-4 week-old pollen foragers, non-pollen foragers, and soldiers). Hypopharyngeal gland size was inversely correlated with worker age and rate of JH biosynthesis, but soldiers had significantly larger hypopharyngeal glands than did foragers, despite their similar age and JH level. Results from soldiers indicate that exocrine gland development is not always linked with age-related behavior and endocrine development; they also support the recent claim that soldiers constitute a group of older bees that are distinct from foragers. Hormonal analyses indicate that the current model of JH's role in honey bee division of labor needs to be expanded because high levels of JH are associated with several other tasks besides foraging. JH may be involved in the regulation of division of labor among similarly aged workers in addition to its role in age-related division of labor.
In the very high cycle regime (N f > 10 7 cycles) cracks can nucleate on inclusions, "supergrains" and pores, which leads to fish-eye propagation around the defect. The initiation from an inclusion or other defect is almost equal to the total crack growth lifetime, perhaps much more than 99% of this lifetime in many cases. Integration of the Paris law allows one to predict the number of cycles to crack initiation. A cyclic plastic zone around the crack exists, and recording the surface temperature of the sample during the test may allow one to follow crack propagation and determine the number of cycles to crack initiation. A thermo-mechanical model has been developed. In this study several fish-eyes from various materials have been observed by scanning electron microscopy, and the fractographic results analyzed as they related to the mechanical and thermo-mechanical models.
Herein,
we report a facile method for cholesterol detection by
coupling the peroxidase-like activity of polypyrrole nanoparticles
(PPy NPs) and cholesterol oxidase (ChOx). ChOx can catalyze the oxidation
of cholesterol to produce H2O2. Subsequently,
PPy NPs, as a nanozyme, induce the reaction between H2O2 and 3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB). Under
optimal conditions, the increase is proportional to cholesterol with
concentrations from 10 to 800 μM in absorbance of TMB at 652
nm. The linear range for cholesterol is 10–100 μM, with
a detection limit of 3.5 μM. This reported method is successfully
employed for detection of cholesterol in human serum. The recovery
percentage is ranged within 96–106.9%. Furthermore, we designed
a facile and simple portable assay kit using the proposed system,
realizing the on-site semiquantitative and visual detection of cholesterol
in human serum. The cholesterol content detected from the portable
assay kit were closely matching those obtained results from solution-based
assays, thereby holding great potential in clinical diagnosis and
health management.
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