6,504 research outputs found

    Construction participative d’un modèle régional pour l’évaluation de la demande en eau agricole: un exemple dans le bassin de la Drôme

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    International audienceLa " gestion intégrée des ressources en eau " tente de rendre compte du fonctionnement d’" hydro-systèmes " qui rassemblent un ensemble de ressources et d’usages de l’eau en interaction au sein d’un territoire, qui lui-même recouvre diverses unités administratives ou politiques. Pour mettre en place cette gestion intégrée, certains pays ont opté pour une décentralisation : la gestion de l’eau est alors confiée à des organisations de bassin au sein desquels siègent des porte-parole des différents intérêts en jeu. Ces organisations soulignent le peu de support pour favoriser la concertation. Les outils disponibles mettent l’accent sur les processus biophysiques, mais proposent une représentation très simplifiée des usages notamment agricoles. Ces usages sont non seulement liés aux disponibilités en eau et à ses conditions d’accès, mais aussi au contexte technologique, économique, et institutionnel dans lequel les agriculteurs évoluent. Pour favoriser la concertation, nous proposons de construire avec les acteurs locaux une représentation du système dans lequel ils agissent, touchant à la fois aux aspects techniques, et économiques. L’objectif est de représenter les interactions entre ressource et usages (notamment agricoles), et d’évaluer les conséquences de scénarios imaginés à l’échelle du territoire. Ce modèle régional comprend donc (i) une caractérisation hydrologique simplifiée qui permet d’évaluer en entrée les disponibilités initiales de la ressource et de mesurer les impacts des prélèvements, (ii) un modèle bio-physique PILOT qui permet d’évaluer les consommations d’eau, et les rendements selon les pratiques agricoles et les conditions agroclimatiques, et (iii) un modèle technico-économique qui rend compte des choix techniques des agriculteurs et de leurs conséquences en termes économiques. Le modèle technicoéconomique des activités agricoles à l’échelle régionale s’appuie sur une typologie des exploitations et des ateliers de productions agricoles. Dans ce modèle, (i) les activités agricoles à l’échelle régionale sont la somme pondérée des activités des exploitations types (les pondérations correspondent aux effectifs d’exploitations), et (ii) les activités d’une exploitation type sont la somme pondérée d’ateliers de production types (les pondérations correspondent aux dimensions des ateliers). Cette structure permet d’agréger à l’échelle régionale les impacts des activités et de désagréger à l’échelle des exploitations et de leurs activités les conséquences de mesures globales. La construction participative du modèle régional s’appuie sur la mise en place dès le démarrage de l’étude d’un " groupe de pilotage ", composé des représentants des acteurs locaux. Ce groupe de pilotage participe à la modélisation en fournissant les données nécessaires et en validant chaque étape de la construction. Le modèle, construit et validé par Colloque - 13th IWRA World water congress, 1-4 september 2008, Montpellier tous les acteurs, peut alors contribuer à aider les décideurs locaux ou régionaux à élaborer des scénarios raisonnés pour définir des stratégies de gestion intégrée et durable de l’eau. Nous avons mis en oeuvre cette démarche dans le bassin de la Drôme dans le cadre du programme APPEAU financé par l’Agence Nationale de la Recherche (programme " Agriculture et Développement Durable "), et en nous appuyant sur les travaux du programme MIPAIS financé par l’Union Européenne (programme Interreg III Medoc). / The "integrated management of water resources" tries to convey the functioning of the "hydro-systems" which brings together a group of resources and uses of water. This group of resources and uses interacts within a territory, which itself includes various administrative or political units. In order to develop this integrated management, some countries have chosen decentralization: water management is then given to basin institutions within which representatives of the various key interests sit. These institutions emphasize the poor support they get to encourage the dialogue. Available tools emphasize biophysical process but provide a very simplified representation of uses, and particularly of farm uses. These uses are not only linked to water availabilities and to its conditions of access, but also to the technological, economic, and institutional background in which the farmers operate. With the local stakeholders, we suggest to build a model of the system in which they act. At the same time, this model includes the technical, economic, and environmental sides. Therefore, this regional model includes (i) a hydrological model, which enables to assess as input the initial resource availabilities and to measure the impacts of withdrawals, (ii) a biophysical model which enables to assess crop water needs, yields and environmental impacts according to agricultural practices and agro-climatic conditions, and (iii) a technical and economic model which conveys the technical choices of farmers and theirs economic consequences. The construction of the hydrological and biophysical models can be limited to the parameterization of pre-existing models. The technical and economic model of farm activities at the regional scale relies on a typology of farms and of farm production units; its structure has been designed to enable an aggregation and a desegregation of the results between various scales, which provides a detailed analysis of the studied scenarios. The participative construction of the regional model relies on the creation, from the start of the study, of a “steering group” compound of the representatives of local stakeholders. This steering group takes part in the modelling by supplying the necessary data and by validating each stage of the model construction. The model, build and validated by all the stakeholders, can then contribute to help the local or regional decision-makers to develop reasoned scenarios in order to define strategies of integrated and sustainable water management. We have implemented this approach in the Drôme basin within the framework of the APPEAU project funded by the "Agriculture et Développement Durable" program of the French National Research Agency, and by relying on the works of the MIPAIS project funded by the Programme Interreg III Medoc of the European Union. This paper presents the first results obtained

    Heavy Flavor Probes of Quark Matter

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    A brief survey of the role of heavy flavors as a probe of the state of matter produced by high energy heavy ion collisions is presented. Specific examples include energy loss, initial state gluon saturation, thermalization and flow. The formation of quarkonium bound states from interactions in which multiple heavy quark-antiquark pairs are initially produced is examined in general. Results from statistical hadronization and kinetic models are summarized. New predictions from the kinetic model for J/Psi at RHIC are presented.Comment: Based on invited plenary talk at Strange Quark Matter 2004, Cape Town, South Africa, September 15-20, 2004, references completed, published in J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 31 (2005) S641-S64

    Variations in water use by a mature mangrove of Avicennia germinans, French Guiana

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    In the tropical intertidal zones, little is known on water uptake by mangroves. Transpiration rates are generally measured at leaf level, but few studies exist on water use at tree or stand levels. The objective of this study was to measure sap flow in trees of different sizes to appreciate the range of variation in water use that may exist in a site dominated by 80% mature Avicennia germinans. The results showed that from the dry to the wet season the mean water use increased from 3.2 to 5.3 dm3 d−1 in small trees (DBH ∼ 13 cm), from 11.5 to 30.8 dm3 d−1 in medium trees (∼24 cm) and from 40.8 to 64.1 dm3 d−1 in large ones (∼45 cm). Sapwood remained active up to a depth of 8 cm with radial variations within the stem. Weak correlations were obtained with VPD and net radiation. This study confirmed that transpiration was larger under low levels of salinity. Water use at stand level (∼1900 living stems ha−1) was estimated to be in the range of 5.8 to 11.8 m3 ha−1 d−1 according to the season

    Emerg. Infect. Dis

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    The multidrug-resistant (MDR) Salmonella enterica serotype Newport strain that produces CMY-2 β-lactamase(Newport MDR-AmpC) was the source of sporadic cases and outbreaks in humans in France during 2000–2005. Because this strain was not detected in food animals, it was most likely introduced into France through imported food products

    Influence of ion-to-electron temperature ratio on tearing instability and resulting subion-scale turbulence in a low-βe\beta_e collisionless plasma

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    A two-field gyrofluid model including ion finite Larmor radius (FLR) corrections, magnetic fluctuations along the ambient field and electron inertia is used to study two-dimensional reconnection in a low βe\beta_e collisionless plasma, in a plane perpendicular to the ambient field. Both moderate and large values of the ion-to-electron temperature ratio τ\tau are considered. The linear growth rate of the tearing instability is computed for various values of τ\tau, confirming the convergence to reduced electron magnetodynamics (REMHD) predictions in the large τ\tau limit. Comparisons with analytical estimates in several limit cases are also presented. The nonlinear dynamics leads to a fully-developed turbulent regime that appears to be sensitive to the value of the parameter τ\tau. For τ=100\tau = 100, strong large-scale velocity shears trigger Kelvin-Helmholtz instability, leading to the propagation of the turbulence through the separatrices, together with the formation of eddies of size of the order of the electron skin depth. In the τ=1\tau = 1 regime, the vortices are significantly smaller and their accurate description requires that electron FLR effects be taken into account

    J/ψJ/\psi production in PHENIX

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    Heavy quarkonia production is expected to be sensitive to the formation of a quark gluon plasma (QGP). The PHENIX experiment has measured J/ψJ/\psi production at sNN=\sqrt{s_{NN}}=~200 GeV in Au+Au and Cu+Cu collisions, as well as in reference p+p and d+Au runs. J/ψJ/\psi's were measured both at mid (y<0.35|y|<0.35) and forward (1.2<y<2.21.2<|y|<2.2) rapidity. In this letter, we present the A+A preliminary results and compare them to normal cold nuclear matter expectations derived from PHENIX d+Au and p+p measurements as well as to theoretical models including various effects (color screening, recombination, sequential melting...).Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures. To appear in the proceedings of Hot Quarks 2006: Workshop for Young Scientists on the Physics of Ultrarelativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, Villasimius, Italy, 15-20 May 200

    Antimicrobial susceptibility of S. aureus strains isolated from a ham plant in France

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    As MRSA (methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus) were recently isolated from pigs in the Netherlands (1), we were incited to evaluate the resistance gene circulation inside S. aureus strains isolated from swine food products. A study, build in 2002, established the biodiversity of S. aureus isolates originated from a single raw ham industrial unit located in western France. Biotypes and pulsotypes from 106 isolates from raw material ham, end product and plant environment were determined. Isolates split up into 7 biotypes and about forty pulsotypes, which delineated a total of 23 sub-groups with 80% of homology and indicated the presence of numerous S. aureus strains in the plant

    Marked long-term decline in ambient CO mixing ratio in SE England, 1997–2014:Evidence of policy success in improving air quality

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    Atmospheric CO at Egham in SE England has shown a marked and progressive decline since 1997, following adoption of strict controls on emissions. The Egham site is uniquely positioned to allow both assessment and comparison of ‘clean Atlantic background’ air and CO-enriched air downwind from the London conurbation. The decline is strongest (approximately 50ppb per year) in the 1997–2003 period but continues post 2003. A ‘local CO increment’ can be identified as the residual after subtraction of contemporary background Atlantic CO mixing ratios from measured values at Egham. This increment, which is primarily from regional sources (during anticyclonic or northerly winds) or from the European continent (with easterly air mass origins), has significant seasonality, but overall has declined steadily since 1997. On many days of the year CO measured at Egham is now not far above Atlantic background levels measured at Mace Head (Ireland). The results are consistent with MOPITT satellite observations and ‘bottom-up’ inventory results. Comparison with urban and regional background CO mixing ratios in Hong Kong demonstrates the importance of regional, as opposed to local reduction of CO emission. The Egham record implies that controls on emissions subsequent to legislation have been extremely successful in the UK
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