123 research outputs found
Changing fish distributions challenge the effective management of European fisheries.
Changes in fish distribution are being observed across the globe. In Europe's Common Fisheries Policy, the share of the catch of each fish stock is split among management areas using a fixed allocation key known as ‘Relative Stability’: in each management area, member states get the same proportion of the total catch each year. That proportion is largely based on catches made by those member states in the 1970s. Changes in distribution can, therefore, result in a mismatch between quota shares and regional abundances within management areas, with potential repercussions for the status of fish stocks and the fisheries that depend on them. Assessing distribution changes is crucial to ensure adequate management and sustainable exploitation of our fish resources. We analysed scientific survey data using a three‐tiered analytical approach to provide, for the first time, an overview of changes in distribution for 19 northeast Atlantic fish species encompassing 73 commercial stocks over 30 yr. All species have experienced changes in distribution, five of which did so across management areas. A cross‐species analysis suggested that shifts in areas of suitable thermal habitat, and density‐dependent use of these areas, are at least partly responsible for the observed changes. These findings challenge the current use of relative stability to allocate quotas.acceptedVersio
Exploitation of TerraSAR-X Data for Land use/Land Cover Analysis Using Object-Oriented Classification Approach in the African Sahel Area, Sudan.
Recently, object-oriented classification techniques based on image segmentation approaches are being studied using high-resolution satellite images to extract various thematic information. In this study different types of land use/land cover (LULC) types were analysed by employing object-oriented classification approach to dual TerraSAR-X images (HH and HV polarisation) at African Sahel. For that purpose, multi-resolution segmentation (MRS) of the Definiens software was used for creating the image objects. Using the feature space optimisation (FSO) tool the attributes of the TerraSAR-X image were optimised in order to obtain the best separability among classes for the LULC mapping. The backscattering coefficients (BSC) for some classes were observed to be different for HH and HV polarisations. The best separation distance of the tested spectral, shape and textural features showed different variations among the discriminated LULC classes. An overall accuracy of 84 % with a kappa value 0.82 was resulted from the classification scheme, while accuracy differences among the classes were kept minimal. Finally, the results highlighted the importance of a combine use of TerraSAR-X data and object-oriented classification approaches as a useful source of information and technique for LULC analysis in the African Sahel drylands
Deliverable 1.1 review document on the management of marine areas with particular regard on concepts, objectives, frameworks and tools to implement, monitor, and evaluate spatially managed areas
The main objectives if this document were to review the existing information on spatial management of marine areas, identifying the relevant policy objectives, to identify parameters linked to the success or failure of the various Spatially Managed marine Areas (SMAs) regimes, to report on methods and tools used in monitoring and evaluation of the state of SMAs, and to identify gaps and weaknesses in the existing frameworks in relation to the implementation, monitoring, evaluation and management of SMAs. The document is naturally divided in two sections: Section 1 reviews the concepts, objectives, drivers, policy and management framework, and extraneous factors related to the design, implementation and evaluation of SMAs; Section 2 reviews the tools and methods to monitor and evaluate seabed habitats and marine populations.peer-reviewe
Deliverable 3.6 zoning plan of case studies : evaluation of spatial management options for the case studies
Within MESMA, nine case studies (CS) represent discrete marine European spatial entities, at different spatial scales, where a spatial marine management framework is in place, under development or considered. These CS (described in more details below) are chosen in such a way (MESMA D. 3.1 ) that they encompass the complexity of accommodating the various user functions of the marine landscape in various regions of the European marine waters. While human activities at sea are competing for space, there is also growing awareness of the possible negative effects of these human activities on the marine ecosystem. As such, system specific management options are required, satisfying current and future sectoral needs, while safeguarding the marine ecosystem from further detoriation. This integrated management approach is embedded in the concept of ecosystem based management (EBM). The goal of marine EBM is to maintain marine ecosystems in a healthy, productive and resilient condition, making it possible that they sustain human use and provide the goods and services required by society (McLeod et al. 2005). Therefore EBM is an environmental mangagement approach that recognises the interactions within a marine ecosystem, including humans. Hence, EBM does not consider single issues, species or ecosystems good and services in isolation. Operationalisation of EBM can be done through place-based or spatial management approaches (Lackey 1998), such as marine spatial planning (MSP). MSP is a public process of analysing and allocating the spatial and temporal distribution of human activities aiming at achieving ecological, economic and social objectives. These objectives are usually formulated through political processes (Douvere et al. 2007, Douvere 2008). Within MESMA, a spatially managed area (SMA) is then defined as “a geographical area within which marine spatial planning initiatives exist in the real world”. Marine spatial planning initiatives refer to existing management measures actually in place within a defined area, or in any stage of a process of putting management in place, e.g. plans or recommendations for a particular area. Management can include management for marine protection (e.g. in MPAs), or management for sectoral objectives (e.g. building a wind farm to meet renewable energy objectives). Within MESMA, SMAs can have different spatial scales. A SMA can be a small, specific area that is managed/planned to be managed for one specific purpose, but it can also be a larger area within which lots of plans or ‘usage zones’ exist. This definition is different from the definition mentioned in the DoW (page 60). The original definition was adapted during a CS leader workshop (2-4 May 2012 in Gent, Belgium) and formally accepted by the MESMA ExB during the ExB meeting in Cork (29-30 May 2012).
MSP should result in a marine spatial management plan that will produce the desired future trough explicit decisions about the location and timing of human activities. Ehler & Douvere (2009) consider this spatial management as a beginning toward the the implementation of desired goals and objectives. They describe the spatial management plan as a comprehensive, strategic document that provides the framework and direction for marine spatial management decisions. The plan should identify when, where and how goals and objectives will be met.
Zoning (the development of zoning plans) is often an important management measure to implement spatial management plans. The purpose of a zoning plan (Ehler & Douvere 2009) is: To provide protection for biologically and ecologically important habitats, ecosystems, and ecological processes. To seperate conflicting human activities, or to combine compatible activities. To protect the natural values of the marine management area (in MESMA terminology: the SMA) while allowing reasonable human uses of the area. To allocate areas for reasonable human uses while minimising the effects of these human uses on each other, and nature. To preserve some areas of the SMA in their natural state undisturbed by humans except for scientific and educational purposes.peer-reviewe
Les cornets polaires (étude d'une région clef de l'interface vent solaire-magnétosphère à l'aide des données Cluster)
L'accès direct à l'ionosphère que les cornets polaires permettent au plasma du vent solaire font de ceux-ci une région-clef pour l'étude de l interface entre le vent solaire et la magnétosphère. Il a été choisi d'étudier la nature des ondes UBF et de leur interaction avec le plasma dans la partie la plus distante des cornets polaires avec les données Cluster. Une étude de cas détaillée montre que les injections de plasma du vent solaire s'accompagnent d'une forte activité électromagnétique. L'analyse des ondes, met en valeur la nature alfvénique dominante de ces fluctuations, ainsi que le mélange des modes dans une même bouffée, résultat obtenu par une analyse pluri-satellitaire, ici le filtrage-en-k. Les ondes d'Alfvén sont identifiées dans le domaine cinétique. Les interactions possibles avec le plasma sont recherchées. Ces résultats sont pour partie généralisés, montrant l'importance des ondes UBF dans la pénétration du plasma du vent solaire dans la magnétosphère terrestre.The direct access to ionosphere offered by the polar cusps to the solar wind plasma makes it a key region to study the solar wind / magnetosphere interface. It has been chosen to study the nature of the UBF waves and their interactions with the plasma in the most distant part of the polar cusp which the Cluster II data. The detailed study of an event shows that the injections of solar wind plasma are detected in simultaneity with strong electromagnetic UBF activity. The wave analyses highlight the alfvénic nature of the fluctuations and the mixing of various modes inside a single wave burst. That result is achievable only with a multi-satellite analysis, in this case the k- filtering technique. These results are generalized, showing the importance of the UBF waves in the solar wind plasma penetration into the magnetosphere.PARIS-BIUSJ-Thèses (751052125) / SudocPARIS-BIUSJ-Physique recherche (751052113) / SudocSudocFranceF
Landau and Non-Landau Linear Damping: Physics of the Dissipation
International audienceThe linear Landau effect is revisited by the means of numerical simulations and analytical calculations. The existence of non-Landau solutions to the Vlasov-Poisson system is emphasized and the consistency of these solutions with respect to the arguments based on energy is investigated. The present article briefly summarizes the content of two articles already published on the subject and introduces a discussion based on the exchanges that occurred at Marseille during the Vlasovia meeting
Landau and non-Landau linear damping: Physics of the dissipation
International audienceFor linear Langmuir waves, it is well known that the energy exchanges generally lead to a continuous dissipation, on average, from the electric form to the kinetic one. Many papers have estimated these exchanges and indeed shown that the classical Landau value gammaL, characterizing the electric field damping, can be derived from this estimation. The paper comes back to this demonstration and its implicit assumption of ``forgetting the initial conditions.'' The limits of the usual energy calculations have become much apparent recently when non-Landau solutions, decreasing with damping rates smaller than gammaL, have been evidenced [Belmont et al., Phys. Plasmas 15, 052310 (2008)]. Taking advantage of the explicit form provided in this paper for the perturbed distribution function, the dissipation process is revisited here in a more general way. It is shown that the energy calculations, when complete (i.e., when the role of the initial conditions is not excluded by the very hypotheses of the calculations), are indeed in full agreement with the existence of non-Landau solutions; Landau damping, by the way, appears as a particular mode of dissipation, in which the ballistic transport of the initial plasma perturbation leads to negligible effects. Two approaches are presented for this demonstration, Eulerian and Lagrangian, the first one starting from the Vlasov equation and the second from the dynamics of the individual particles. The specific role of the so-called resonant particles is investigated in both formalisms, which provides complementary pictures of the microphysics involved in the energy transfers between field and particles for Landau as well as for non-Landau solutions
Caractérisation des magnétomètres à induction
MasterCe document présente une séance de travaux pratiques de caractérisation d'un magnétomètre à induction haute performance destinée aux étudiants de M2 OSAE de l'Observatoire de Meudon. Ce TP se déroule sur une journée et nécessite du matériel spécifique (bobines Helmholtz, analyseur de spectre).Le TP a pour but de comparer deux modes de fonctionnement du magnétomètre inductif permettant de s'affranchir de la résonance: la contre-réaction de flux et l'amplification en courant. Le TP permet de réaliser des caractérisations en champ magnétique et donner un cadre concret à des caractérisations de bruit
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