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Animal-mediated seed dispersal is very important for plant population regeneration and the stability of forest ecosystems. Seed size and cache density are important factors for seed dispersal, but we still know little about seed size selection at different cache densities. Here, we conducted field experiments in a plantation in the Liupan Mountains in Ningxia province to investigate the effects of tag-marked seeds of different sizes and cache densities on predation and the scatter-hoarding behavior of rodents. The results showed lower proportions of intact in situ (IIS) and eaten in situ (EIS) large seeds than small seeds at all levels of cache density, with the exception of IIS seeds at a 6.25 seed·m cache density. A higher proportion of small seeds were eaten after removal (EAR), but a higher proportion of large seeds were scatter-hoarded (SH) by rodents at most cache densities. Furthermore, rodents preferentially removed large seeds farther away for eating or scatter-hoarding. The IIS and EIS proportions of both large and small seeds declined, but the proportion of the two types of seeds that were EAR fluctuated, increasing with increasing cache density. Rodents preferred to increase the proportion of scatter-hoarding of large seeds with increasing cache density, whereas the proportion of scatter-hoarding of small seeds was maximized at a cache density of 6.25 seed·m. Both the eaten distance after removal (EDAR) and scatter-hoarded distance (SHD) increased with increasing cache density. These results suggest that large seeds are more likely to be scatter-hoarded and removed to longer distances than small ones. Rodents tended to reduce the seed proportion of EIS seeds and increased the proportion of seeds EAR and SH, and accordingly increased EDAR and SHD with increasing cache density. This study provides some scientific basis for animal-mediated seed dispersal.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life14030286 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
July 2025
Quantropi (Canada), 1545 Carling Ave., Suite 620, Ottawa, ON, K1Z 8P9, Canada.
High-quality randomness is fundamental to the security of modern cryptographic systems. We present QPP-RNG, a true random number generator (TRNG) that harvests entropy from diverse system-level jitters-including CPU pipeline timing divergences, DRAM refresh cycle perturbations, cache miss-driven memory access latencies, and other subtle hardware and operating system-induced fluctuations. QPP-RNG's core mechanism measures the elapsed time of randomized array sorting operations-where each Fisher-Yates shuffle is infinitesimally perturbed by these microscopic jitters-and amplifies these timing variations into cryptographically strong randomness through a quantum permutation pad (QPP) architecture, all achievable on commodity hardware.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
August 2025
School of Integrated Circuits, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China.
Phase-change memory (PCM) emerges as a leading contender for storage-class memory applications yet faces inherent trade-offs between SET speed and RESET power due to competing crystallization and melt-quench dynamics. Herein, we demonstrate a stacked dielectric heterostructure strategy integrating lattice-matched TiO and thermal-confining SiO interlayers to overcome these limitations. The crystalline TiO layer lowers nucleation barriers via epitaxial matching, while the ultralow thermal conductivity SiO layer confines Joule heating localization via thermal-field regulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
May 2025
Engineering Science and Mechanics, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.
Static Random-Access Memory (SRAM) cells are fundamental in computer architecture, serving crucial roles in cache memory, buffers, and registers due to their high-speed performance and low power consumption. However, scaling SRAM cells to advanced technology nodes poses significant challenges. Three-dimensional (3D) integration offers a promising solution for reinstating SRAM scaling by vertically stacking devices, thereby reducing the physical footprint.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
March 2025
Faculty of Computing and Information Technology (FCIT), University of Tabuk, Tabuk 47713, Saudi Arabia.
The Vehicular Edge-Cloud Computing (VECC) paradigm has gained traction as a promising solution to mitigate the computational constraints through offloading resource-intensive tasks to distributed edge and cloud networks. However, conventional computation offloading mechanisms frequently induce network congestion and service delays, stemming from uneven workload distribution across spatial Roadside Units (RSUs). Moreover, ensuring data security and optimizing energy usage within this framework remain significant challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe probability of encountering conspecifics shapes animal behaviour, particularly for territorial individuals which often increase vigilance and scent marking when approaching home range boundaries. However, whether the foraging behaviours of territorial predators also vary with the probability of encountering neighbouring territory owners is poorly understood. We monitored 23 Arctic foxes occupying neighbouring home ranges during 2 years of contrasting resource availability on Bylot Island, Nunavut, Canada.
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