1,088 research outputs found
Variability of species’ roles in marine communities: change of paradigms for conservation priorities.
The structure and organisation of aquatic communities, moulded in each environment by
combinations of abiotic factors, recruitment and productivity rates, rely upon a network of both
pairwise and transitive interactions among organisms. In many cases, a few strong interactors drive
basic ecological processes by playing a leading role in channelling the available resources. Among
these, keystone species may control the outputs of local biodiversity through large indirect effects,
disproportionately large relative to their abundance. Functional roles are not fixed labels, and species
interactions have variable outputs in both time and space: also, in spite of a growing literature on
species interactions, terminology is often poorly applied. This leads to the loss of the informative value
of concepts, like the keystone species, which might represent useful trade-offs between science and
environmental politics. Species’ roles are often used to set taxonomic conservation priorities, although
this might even be regarded as unethical, ecologically wrong, or in disregard of the evolutionary
meaning of species coexistence and interaction. A re-assessment of species’ roles is given here,
attempting to highlight their limits and applicability. Electronic supplementary material to this paper
can be obtained by using the Springer LINK server located at
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00227-001-0769-2
The market price of greenness. A factor pricing approach for Green Bonds
Fostered by an empirical literature providing disparate evidence on the green premium, we propose
a two-factor model to explain returns on green bonds not only as a function of market risk but also of
the bond greenness. The second factor can be interpreted as a greenness premium, which can be either
positive or negative depending on the product of the price given by the market to greenness and the
sensitivity of the specific green bond to the latter. Based on the model proposed and its Fama-Mac
Beth estimation on a sample of Euro-denominated bonds over the period 08.10-2014-31.12.2019, we
are able to conclude that the market does price greenness, but the price is very small: including
Government green bonds is 0.7 bps, and focusing on corporate green bonds only is – 1.3 bps. In all
cases the dynamics of the price for greenness has a positive drift as the market reaches a more mature
phase, landing to a positive average value (2 bps), which implies greenness being viewed as a small
penalty. However, differences emerge when we look at the issuer sector level and at single bonds,
thus our model is able to explain the disparate empirical evidence provided by the literature on the
greenium. On the whole, results hint to a market where the difference in pricing between conventional
and green bonds is, ceteris paribus, shrinking, which is consistent with greenness becoming a new
normal. These results are of interest for many economic agents, including market participants and
financial intermediaries, whereby the latter are also called by the regulator to manage their portfolio
in consideration of climate risk
Time is an affliction: Why ecology cannot be as predictive as physics and why it needs time series
Ecological systems depend on both constraints and historical contingencies, both of which shape their present
observable system state. In contrast to ahistorical systems, which are governed solely by constraints (i.e. laws),
historical systems and their dynamics can be understood only if properly described, in the course of time.
Describing these dynamics and understanding long-termvariability can be seen as themission of long time series
measuring not only simple abiotic features but also complex biological variables, such as species diversity and
abundances, allowing deep insights in the functioning of food webs and ecosystems in general. Long timeseries
are irreplaceable for understanding change, and crucially inherent system variability and thus envisaging
future scenarios. This notwithstanding current policies in funding and evaluating scientific research discourage
the maintenance of long term series, despite a clear need for long-term strategies to cope with climate change.
Time series are crucial for a pursuit of the much invoked Ecosystem Approach and to the passage from simple
monitoring programs of large-scale and long-termEarth observatories — thus promoting a better understanding
of the causes and effects of change in ecosystems. The few ongoing long time series in European waters must be
integrated and networked so as to facilitate the formation of nodes of a series of observatories which, together,
should allowthe long-termmanagement of the features and characteristics of European waters. Human capacity
building in this region of expertise and a stronger societal involvement are also urgently needed, since the expertise
in recognizing and describing species and therefore recording them reliably in the context of time series is rapidly
vanishing from the European Scientific community
Reputational Cues in Repeated Trust Games
The importance of reputation in human societies is highlighted both by theoretical models and empirical studies. In this paper, we have extended the scope of previous experimental studies based on trust games by creating treatments where players can rate their opponents' behavior and know their past ratings. Our results showed that being rated by other players and letting this rating be known are factors that increase cooperation levels even when rational reputational investment motives are ruled out. More generally, subjects tended to respond to reputational opportunities even when this was neither rational nor explainable by reciprocit
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