4,805 research outputs found

    Holy communion in the Church of Scotland in the nineteenth century

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    Summary available: p. iv-vii

    Medium-Term Impacts of Grassland and Forestry Integration on the Environmental Performance of a New Zealand Pastoral System

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    At the IGC in 2008, we presented a paper outlining a project that aimed to improve the economic and environmental performance of a New Zealand hill country pastoral catchment farm system. This project was undertaken by engaging a wide group of sector stakeholders in visioning, modelling, planning and implementing significant land use change within a 296-hectare pastoral farm. In recognition of developing sectoral views of agricultural sustainability, the major changes involved pine afforestation, livestock production intensification, protection of waterways and indigenous bush restoration. The report in 2008 outlined the positive impacts on key farm systems and water quality performance indicators after 4 years. Additional data on these and other parameters have been collected in the subsequent 20+ years. Some indicators have not followed expectations – in afforested sub-catchments, nitrate-N concentrations in drainage waters have steadily increased and no significant decreases in annual suspended sediment loads have been detected. Other indicators have changed as expected – with the exclusion of livestock access to riparian areas, indigenous bush understory has regenerated and stream ammonium-N concentration spikes have decreased; and stream water temperatures have decreased with headwater afforestation. Improvements in animal productivity have reduced emissions intensity from 25 to 15 kg CO2-e per kg product. Afforestation and associated carbon sequestration have more than offset livestock and soil emissions to move the system from a net CO2 source to a projected net CO2 sink for the next 100+ years

    Upcycling by Crowdsourcing: Leveraging Pro-Environmental Behavior as Corporate Strategy

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    This report provides a critique of Company X's strategy of reliance on vol- unteer organizations and makes recommendations to support and improve its collection operations. We used focus-group interviews and a national email survey of volunteer leaders to determine the motivating factors for joining and participating in the program. Our results show that 68% of collection sites are located in schools and that schools are the most pro- ductive sites. Most non-school collection sites are primarily female. There are two leading motivational factors for sites: nancial rewards and con- cern for the environment, and site o cials would like to be able to share best practices with each other. Anecdotally, collection site o cials are frustrated by Company X's customer service and by the long waitlists for the more popular waste items. We recommend that Company X focus in the short-term on increasing its volunteer productivity through improved customer service, by providing volunteer groups a platform with which to communicate with one another, and by sharing speci c volunteer de- mographics with CPG brand partners. In the medium-term, Company X should focus on enhancing its environmental message and diversifying volunteer demographics, and in the long-term, should consider how best to modify its business model in moving forward to nd alternative ways of financing Squads.Master of ScienceNatural Resources and EnvironmentUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90949/4/TC_FINAL_7-May-2012.pd

    Current logistical capacity is sufficient to deliver the implementation and management of a representative Antarctic protected area system

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    Antarctica’s terrestrial ecosystems are vulnerable to impacts resulting from climate change and local human activities. The Antarctic Treaty System (ATS) provides for the designation of protected areas through the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty. Unsystematic use of agreed management tools, including Antarctic Specially Protected Areas (ASPAs), has resulted in a protected area system lacking representation across the full range of Antarctic terrestrial ecosystems and Antarctic Conservation Biogeographic Regions (ACBRs). Systematic Conservation Planning (SCP) methods provide established mechanisms to fulfil ATS protected area designation goals. However, how would a continent-wide ASPA system be delivered should appropriate sites be identified using SCP or other methods? Although the rate of area protection has slowed recently, we show that newer Consultative Parties to the Antarctic Treaty are increasingly active as ASPA proponents and may have scope for further engagement with protected area management activities. Furthermore, all 16 ACBRs were found to be within the operational footprint of at least two Parties, indicating that this current logistical footprint could support the implementation and management of a continent-wide ASPA system. Effective management of a representative Antarctic protected areas system could be delivered through greater participation by those Parties with currently more limited protected area management esponsibilities and greater use of remote-sensing technologies for protected area monitoring, where appropriate. Crucially, political will to implement an ASPA system identified through SCP approaches may be greater once a pragmatic means of delivery and effective management has been identified

    Imaging the Thermal and Kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Signals in a Sample of Ten Massive Galaxy Clusters: Constraints on Internal Velocity Structures and Bulk Velocities

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    We have imaged the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect signals at 140 and 270 GHz towards ten galaxy clusters with Bolocam and AzTEC/ASTE. We also used Planck data to constrain the signal at large angular scales, Herschel-SPIRE images to subtract the brightest galaxies that comprise the cosmic infrared background (CIB), Chandra imaging to map the electron temperature TeT_e of the intra-cluster medium (ICM), and HST imaging to derive models of each galaxy cluster's mass density. The galaxy clusters gravitationally lens the background CIB, which produced an on-average reduction in brightness towards the galaxy clusters' centers after the brightest galaxies were subtracted. We corrected for this deficit, which was between 5-25% of the 270 GHz SZ effect signal within R2500R_{2500}. Using the SZ effect measurements, along with the X-ray constraint on TeT_e, we measured each galaxy cluster's average line of sight (LOS) velocity vzv_z within R2500R_{2500}, with a median per-cluster uncertainty of +-700 km/s. We found an ensemble-mean of 430+-210 km/s, and an intrinsic cluster-to-cluster scatter σint\sigma_{int} of 470+-340 km/s. We also obtained maps of vzv_z over each galaxy cluster's face with an angular resolution of 70". All four galaxy clusters previously identified as having a merger oriented along the LOS showed an excess variance in these maps at a significance of 2-4σ\sigma, indicating an internal vzv_z rms of ≳\gtrsim1000 km/s. None of the six galaxy clusters previously identified as relaxed or plane of sky mergers showed any such excess variance.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap

    Mercury (Hg) concentrations and stable isotope signatures in golden eagle eggs 2009-2013: a Predatory Bird Monitoring Scheme (PBMS) report

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    The Predatory Bird Monitoring Scheme (PBMS; http://pbms.ceh.ac.uk/) is the umbrella project that encompasses the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology’s National Capability activities for contaminant monitoring and surveillance work on avian predators. The PBMS aims to detect and quantify current and emerging chemical threats to the environment and in particular to vertebrate wildlife. Mercury (Hg) is a neurotoxin and there has been global concern over its impact on humans and wildlife. It has been predicted that global Hg emissions may rise in the future because of increased coal-fired power generation, but, in 2013, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) agreed The Minamata Convention on Mercury, a global treaty to protect human health and the environment from the adverse effects of mercury. An overarching aim of the convention is to control the anthropogenic releases of Hg to the environment. Therefore, long-term trends in environmental Hg concentrations are uncertain. One cost-effective means of assessing such trends is to monitor exposure in sentinel wildlife species. Golden eagles Aquila chrysaetos breed and forage in the Scottish uplands and could prove a sentinel for changing Hg deposition in upland terrestrial areas and associated wildlife exposure. We measured Hg residues in failed golden eagle eggs with the aim of providing baseline data on current levels of exposure. Specifically, we measured Hg concentrations in failed eggs laid between 2009 and 2013 in inland (> 3km from the coast) and coastal (<3 km from the coast) nests. We distinguished nests in this way because coastal nesting birds can feed on seabirds that can accumulate high levels of Hg themselves. Marine dietary Hg inputs could potentially obscure any changes in Hg accumulation associated with altered upland terrestrial Hg deposition, and so we hypothesized that only eggs from inland nests may be useful sentinels. In conjunction with Hg measurements, we examined stable isotope (SI) signatures (carbon (δ13C), nitrogen (δ15N) and sulphur (δ34S)) to determine if they differed between eggs from inland and coastal nests in a manner consistent with feeding primarily on terrestrial and marine prey, respectively. We also examined Hg concentrations and SI signatures of failed white-tailed sea eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) eggs from nests on the west coast of Scotland. We used these measurements as a comparator against which to assess the extent to which SI and Hg measurements in eggs from coastal golden eagle nests might be indicative of feeding on marine prey and scavenge. We found that SI signatures (particularly δ34S isotopic ratios) and Hg concentrations were similar in golden eagle eggs from coastal nests and white tailed sea eagle eggs. SIs and Hg concentrations in eggs from inland nests were much more variable, and a third had SI signatures that were the same as those of eggs from coastal nests, suggesting that they too were laid by females feeding on a coastal diet. A cluster of seven eggs from inland nests had distinctive δ34S and δ15N values (below 11.0 ‰ and 5.7 ‰ respectively) and it was inferred that these were most likely laid by females feeding terrestrially. Hg concentrations were non-detectable in these seven eggs whereas the median concentration in golden eagle eggs associated with coastal feeding was 0.412 µg/g dry weight, similar to that (0.569 µg/g dry weight) in white tailed sea eagle eggs. Hg concentrations in all eggs were below those thought to be associated with embryotoxic effects. The lack of detectable Hg concentrations in GE eggs associated with upland terrestrial feeding is problematic if these eggs are to be used as sentinels of change in upland Hg concentrations. Re-analysis of a set of eggs using a more sensitive analytical technique may resolve this issue and should be explored, otherwise other sentinels may need to be investigated
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