2,248 research outputs found
Combining geospatial abundance and ecological niche models to identify high-priority areas for conservation: The neglected role of broadscale interspecific competition
oai:repository.mdx.ac.uk:zxyvxEcological niche models (ENMs) have become a practical and key mechanism for filling major gaps in spatial information for targeted conservation planning, particularly when only occurrence data are available. Nonetheless, accounting for abundance patterns in the internal structure of species’ ranges, and the role of biotic interactions in such models across broad scales, remains highly challenging. Our study gathered baseline information on abundance data of two Endangered Amazonian primates (Ateles chamek and Lagothrix lagotricha cana) to create geospatial abundance models using two spatial interpolation methods: inverse distance weight (IDW) and Ordinary Kriging (OK). The main goals were to: (i) test whether geospatial abundance models are correlated with habitat suitability derived from correlative ENMs; (ii) compare the strength of the abundance-suitability relationships between original and interpolated abundances; (iii) test whether interspecific competition between the two target taxa constrained abundance over broad spatial scales; and (iv) create ensemble models incorporating both habitat suitability and abundance to identify high-priority areas for conservation. We found a significant positive relationship between habitat suitability with observed and predicted abundances of woolly (L. l. cana) and spider (A. chamek) monkeys. Abundance-suitability correlations showed no significant differences when using original relative abundances compared to using IDW- and OK-abundances. We also found that the association between L. l. cana abundance and habitat suitability depended on the abundance of its putative competitor species, A. chamek. Our final models combining geospatial abundance information with ENMs were able to provide more realistic assessments of hotspots for conservation, especially when accounting for the important, but often neglected, role of interspecific competition in shaping species’ geographic ranges at broader scales. The framework developed here, including general trends in abundance patterns and suitability information, can be used as a surrogate to identify high-priority areas for conservation of poorly known species across their entire geographic ranges
Corporate social responsibility and marketing: A bibliometric and visualization analysis of the literature between the Years 1994 and 2020
Several studies explored the effect of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) on marketing.
However, bibliometric research that organizes this production is scarce. Thus, this study aims to
provide a bibliometric view of marketing-related CSR research, identifying this field’s state-of-the-art
literature. Two thousand and forty-two articles were collected through the Web of Science (WoS)
platform. Data were analyzed using VOSviewer software to map the data graphically. The results
show that: (a) the literature on CSR in the marketing area is growing; (b) five articles alone accounted
for 9940 citations, and there are several prolific authors; (c) the prominent journals identified in
this research published 42.16% of the total; (d) The “Journal of Business Ethics” is the leader in the
number of publications, followed by “Sustainability,” which has shown strong growth in recent
years, and; (e) The US is the leading country, according to the number of articles and citations. The
keyword trending network analysis revealed that CSR is becoming a strategic marketing approach
for companies. This study offers an insight into the state-of-the-art and trends identification in CSR
and marketing.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Pion-delta sigma-term
We use a configuration space chiral model in order to evaluate nucleon and
delta sigma-terms. Analytic expressions are consistent with chiral counting
rules and give rise to expected non-analytic terms in the chiral limit. We
obtain the results MeV and MeV, which are
very close to values extracted from experiment and produced by other groups.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Crossing Symmetry Violation of Unitarized Pion-Pion Amplitude in the Resonance Region
Pion-pion scattering amplitude obtained from one-loop Chiral Perturbation
Theory (ChPT) is crossing symmetric, however the corresponding partial wave
amplitudes do not respect exact unitarity relation. There are different
approaches to get unitarized partial wave amplitudes from ChPT. Here we
consider the inverse amplitude method (IAM) that is often used to fit pion-pion
phase shifts to experimental data, by adjusting free parameters. We measure the
amount of crossing symmetry violation (CSV) in this case and we show that
crossing symmetry is badly violated by the IAM unitarized ChPT amplitude in the
resonance region. Important CSV also occurs when all free parameters are set
equal to zero.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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