108 research outputs found

    A conservação de tartarugas marinhas baseada na comunidade: contribuição para a gestão dos recursos costeiros das ilhas de Santo Antão, São Vicente e São Nicolau, Cabo Verde

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    Embora cada vez mais assumida como um imperativo institucional pelo mundo todo, em Cabo Verde, as experiencias de participação das comunidades locais na gestão da biodiversidade e recursos naturais são até hoje, muito fracas. No entanto, embora legalmente protegidas, ano após ano as populações de tartarugas marinhas vem-se cada vez mais reduzidas, com os respectivos habitats degradados. Num contexto em que importantes recursos da pesca artesanal se encontram em franca diminuição, ou já não são comercialmente viáveis,as comunidades piscatórias enfrentam cada dia condições adversas face a globalização do desenvolvimento económico. Consequentemente, a introdução de sistemas de gestão de recursos costeiros, mais inclusivos, eficazes e eficientes e que reforcem a participação das comunidades, constituem um imperativo. Dessa forma, a conservação das tartarugas marinhas na região de Barlavento, mais propriamente nas ilhas à Noroeste, foi concebida para promover o envolvimento de comunidades costeiras na preservação dessas espécies e de outros recursos marinhos ameaçados, tudo isto em prol do desenvolvimento rural sustentável e redução da pobreza. Os resultados indicam que a abordagem é eficaz, traduzindo-se em 1) Redução efectiva das capturas e consumo local de tartarugas marinhas; 2) Identificação local das espécies, sua distribuição e, identificação das ameaças que enfrentam. Assim, a população de fêmeas da Caretta caretta em São Nicolau, foi identificada como uma das mais abundantes do arquipélago. 3) Trabalhos relevantes no reforço da consciência ambiental da população no geral. As comunidades piscatórias têm livremente apoiado não só na redução da captura de tartarugas mas também tem estado envolvidas em acções de vigilância e fiscalização de praias, prevenindo mesmo a extracção de areia em zonas de postura. Internamente, têm promovido luta contra práticas irresponsáveis de pesca, tais como o uso de dinamite na pesca de pequenos pelágicos. 4) Adopção de instrumentos integradores promovendo a participação interinstitucional e multidisciplinar e, particularmente, a mobilização de recursos, criando espaços para o envolvimento directo das comunidades na concepção e planificação de acções e planos locais de conservação. 5) Investigação participativa, apropriadamente articulada com a comunicação social e fiscalização como responsabilidade compartilhada, enquanto escola eficaz de aprendizagem interactiva de formas alternativas de gestão e utilização sustentável de recursos naturais costeiros. Os desafios resumem na 1) necessidade de um contexto político e legal que oriente e regulamente a implementação de iniciativas de conservação de tartarugas marinhas baseadas na comunidade, em regimes de gestão concertada (co-gestão); 2) no engajamento e apropriação efectiva, assim como a devida articulação institucional e, 3) sustentabilidade económica das acções

    An extrasolar planetary system with three Neptune-mass planets

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    Over the past two years, the search for low-mass extrasolar planets has led to the detection of seven so-called 'hot Neptunes' or 'super-Earths' around Sun-like stars. These planets have masses 5-20 times larger than the Earth and are mainly found on close-in orbits with periods of 2-15 days. Here we report a system of three Neptune-mass planets with periods of 8.67, 31.6 and 197 days, orbiting the nearby star HD 69830. This star was already known to show an infrared excess possibly caused by an asteroid belt within 1 AU (the Sun-Earth distance). Simulations show that the system is in a dynamically stable configuration. Theoretical calculations favour a mainly rocky composition for both inner planets, while the outer planet probably has a significant gaseous envelope surrounding its rocky/icy core; the outer planet orbits within the habitable zone of this star.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, preprint of the paper published in Nature on May 18, 200

    The MAORY laser guide star wavefront sensor: design status

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    MAORY will be the multi-adaptive optics module feeding the high resolution camera and spectrograph MICADO at the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) first light. In order to ensure high and homogeneous image quality over the MICADO field of view and high sky coverage, the baseline is to operate wavefront sensing using six Sodium Laser Guide Stars. The Laser Guide Star Wavefront Sensor (LGS WFS) is the MAORY sub-system devoted to real-time measurement of the high order wavefront distortions. In this paper we describe the MAORY LGS WFS current design, including opto-mechanics, trade-offs and possible future improvements

    MORFEO enters final design phase

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    MORFEO (Multi-conjugate adaptive Optics Relay For ELT Observations, formerly MAORY), the MCAO system for the ELT, will provide diffraction-limited optical quality to the large field camera MICADO. MORFEO has officially passed the Preliminary Design Review and it is entering the final design phase. We present the current status of the project, with a focus on the adaptive optics system aspects and expected milestones during the next project phase

    Theia: Faint objects in motion or the new astrometry frontier

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    Theia: Faint objects in motion or the new astrometry frontier

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    EuReCa ONE—27 Nations, ONE Europe, ONE Registry A prospective one month analysis of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest outcomes in 27 countries in Europe

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    AbstractIntroductionThe aim of the EuReCa ONE study was to determine the incidence, process, and outcome for out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) throughout Europe.MethodsThis was an international, prospective, multi-centre one-month study. Patients who suffered an OHCA during October 2014 who were attended and/or treated by an Emergency Medical Service (EMS) were eligible for inclusion in the study. Data were extracted from national, regional or local registries.ResultsData on 10,682 confirmed OHCAs from 248 regions in 27 countries, covering an estimated population of 174 million. In 7146 (66%) cases, CPR was started by a bystander or by the EMS. The incidence of CPR attempts ranged from 19.0 to 104.0 per 100,000 population per year. 1735 had ROSC on arrival at hospital (25.2%), Overall, 662/6414 (10.3%) in all cases with CPR attempted survived for at least 30 days or to hospital discharge.ConclusionThe results of EuReCa ONE highlight that OHCA is still a major public health problem accounting for a substantial number of deaths in Europe.EuReCa ONE very clearly demonstrates marked differences in the processes for data collection and reported outcomes following OHCA all over Europe. Using these data and analyses, different countries, regions, systems, and concepts can benchmark themselves and may learn from each other to further improve survival following one of our major health care events

    ARIA digital anamorphosis : Digital transformation of health and care in airway diseases from research to practice

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    Digital anamorphosis is used to define a distorted image of health and care that may be viewed correctly using digital tools and strategies. MASK digital anamorphosis represents the process used by MASK to develop the digital transformation of health and care in rhinitis. It strengthens the ARIA change management strategy in the prevention and management of airway disease. The MASK strategy is based on validated digital tools. Using the MASK digital tool and the CARAT online enhanced clinical framework, solutions for practical steps of digital enhancement of care are proposed.Peer reviewe

    Photography-based taxonomy is inadequate, unnecessary, and potentially harmful for biological sciences

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    The question whether taxonomic descriptions naming new animal species without type specimen(s) deposited in collections should be accepted for publication by scientific journals and allowed by the Code has already been discussed in Zootaxa (Dubois & Nemésio 2007; Donegan 2008, 2009; Nemésio 2009a–b; Dubois 2009; Gentile & Snell 2009; Minelli 2009; Cianferoni & Bartolozzi 2016; Amorim et al. 2016). This question was again raised in a letter supported by 35 signatories published in the journal Nature (Pape et al. 2016) on 15 September 2016. On 25 September 2016, the following rebuttal (strictly limited to 300 words as per the editorial rules of Nature) was submitted to Nature, which on 18 October 2016 refused to publish it. As we think this problem is a very important one for zoological taxonomy, this text is published here exactly as submitted to Nature, followed by the list of the 493 taxonomists and collection-based researchers who signed it in the short time span from 20 September to 6 October 2016
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