100 research outputs found
Report from the Expert Panel (EP) on the evaluation of the ARK VRZ commitment during the 2019/20 fishing season
This is an update on the operation of and compliance with the ARK commitment during its second year of operation. The evaluation was completed by an expanded EP compared to 2019 (Appendix 1) and based on communication through video conferences and e-mails. The EP had access to fishery data up to the end of July 2020 and based its evaluation on this information combined with CCAMLR reports and recent publications related to the Antarctic ecosystem
Structural, electrical, magnetic, and optical properties of bis-benzene-1,2-dithiolato-Au(IV) crystals
Infrared studies of the phase transition in the organic charge transfer salt N-propylquinolinium(TCNQ)2
Polarized infrared and optical reflectance spectroscopies were used to study the structural phase transition in the organic charge-transfer salt N-propylquinolinium ditetracyanoquinodimethane. Above the 220-K phase-transition temperature, the spectra are characteristic of other 1:2 semiconducting charge-transfer salts. Three significant changes occur below T(c). First, the midinfrared charge-transfer band can be resolved into two distinct excitations. Second, there is enhanced oscillator strength, indicative of a larger intratetramer transfer integral in the low-temperature phase. Finally, the vibrational lines split into doublets, providing evidence for an uneven charge distribution within the tetramer. The weakly metallic transport properties above T(c) are attributed to the uniform charge distribution within the tetramer and the high degree of overlap between the intratetramer and intertetramer charge-transfer bands. The transport properties in the low-temperature phase are dominated by charge localization, which may act to reduce the overlap between these low-energy charge-transfer features
Inclusion of ecological, economic, social, and institutional considerations when setting targets and limits for multispecies fisheries
Targets and limits for long-term management are used in fisheries advice to operationalize the way management reflects societal priorities on ecological, economic, social and institutional aspects. This study reflects on the available published literature as well as new research presented at the international ICES/Myfish symposium on targets and limits for long term fisheries management. We examine the inclusion of ecological, economic, social and institutional objectives in fisheries management, with the aim of progressing towards including all four objectives when setting management targets or limits, or both, for multispecies fisheries. The topics covered include ecological, economic, social and governance objectives in fisheries management, consistent approaches to management, uncertainty and variability, and fisheries governance. We end by identifying ten ways to more effectively include multiple objectives in setting targets and limits in ecosystem based fisheries management
The MSY concept in a multi-objective fisheries environment – Lessons from the North Sea
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