228 research outputs found
Less rain, more water in ponds: a remote sensing study of the dynamics of surface waters from 1950 to present in pastoral Sahel (Gourma region, Mali)
Changes in the flooded area of ponds in the Gourma region from 1950 to present are studied by remote sensing, in the general context of the current multi-decennial Sahel drought. The seasonal and interannual variations of the areas covered by surface water are assessed using multi-date and multi-sensor satellite images (SPOT, FORMOSAT, LANDSAT-MSS, –TM, and -ETM, CORONA, and MODIS) and aerial photographs (IGN). Water body classification is adapted to each type of spectral resolution, with or without a middle-infrared band, and each spatial resolution, using linear unmixing for mixed pixels of MODIS data. The high-frequency MODIS data document the seasonal cycle of flooded areas, with an abrupt rise early in wet season and a progressive decrease in the dry season. They also provide a base to study the inter-annual variability of the flooded areas, with sharp contrasts between dry years such as 2004 (low and early maximal area) and wetter years such as 2001 and 2002 (respectively high and late maximal area).The highest flooded area reached annually greatly depends on the volume, intensity and timing of rain events. However, the overall reduction by 20% of annual rains during the last 40 years is concomitant with an apparently paradoxical large increase in the area of surface water, starting from the 1970's and accelerating in the mid 1980's. Spectacular for the two study cases of Agoufou and Ebang Mallam, for which time series covering the 1954 to present period exist, this increase is also diagnosed at the regional scale from LANDSAT data spanning 1972–2007. It reaches 108% between September 1975 and 2002 for 91 ponds identified in central Gourma. Ponds with turbid waters and no aquatic vegetation are mostly responsible for this increase, more pronounced in the centre and north of the study zone. Possible causes of the differential changes in flooded areas are discussed in relation with the specifics in topography, soil texture and vegetation cover over the watersheds that feed each of the ponds. Changes in rain pattern and in ponds sedimentation are ruled out, and the impact of changes in land use, limited in the area, is found secondary, as opposed to what has often been advocated for in southern Sahel. Instead, major responsibility is attributed to increased runoff triggered by the lasting impact of the 1970–1980's droughts on the vegetation and on the runoff system over the shallow soils prevailing over a third of the landscape
Resting lateralized activity predicts the cortical response and appraisal of emotions : an fNIRS study
This study explored the effect of lateralized left-right resting brain activity on prefrontal cortical responsiveness to emotional cues and on the explicit appraisal (stimulus evaluation) of emotions based on their valence. Indeed subjective responses to different emotional stimuli should be predicted by brain resting activity and should be lateralized and valence-related (positive vs negative valence). A hemodynamic measure was considered (functional near-infrared spectroscopy). Indeed hemodynamic resting activity and brain response to emotional cues were registered when subjects (N = 19) viewed emotional positive vs negative stimuli (IAPS). Lateralized index response during resting state, LI (lateralized index) during emotional processing and self-assessment manikin rating were considered. Regression analysis showed the significant predictive effect of resting activity (more left or right lateralized) on both brain response and appraisal of emotional cues based on stimuli valence. Moreover, significant effects were found as a function of valence (more right response to negative stimuli; more left response to positive stimuli) during emotion processing. Therefore, resting state may be considered a predictive marker of the successive cortical responsiveness to emotions. The significance of resting condition for emotional behavior was discussed
A leaf area index data set acquired in Sahelian rangelands of Gourma in Mali over the 2005–2017 period
The leaf area index of Sahelian rangelands and related variables
such as the vegetation cover fraction, the fraction of absorbed
photosynthetically active radiation and the clumping index were measured
between 2005 and 2017 in the Gourma region of northern Mali. These
variables, known as climate essential variables, were derived from the
acquisition and the processing of hemispherical photographs taken along 1 km
linear sampling transects for five contrasted canopies and one millet field.
The same sampling protocol was applied in a seasonally inundated Acacia open
forest, along a 0.5 km transect, by taking photographs of the understorey and
the tree canopy. These observations collected over more than a decade, in a
remote and not very accessible region, provide a relevant and unique data
set that can be used for a better understanding of the Sahelian vegetation
response to the current rainfall changes. The collected data can also be
used for satellite product evaluation and land surface model development and
validation. This paper aims to present the field work that was carried out
during 13 successive rainy seasons, the measured vegetation variables, and
the associated open database. Finally, a few examples of data use are
shown. DOI of the referenced data set: https://doi.org/10.17178/AMMA-CATCH.CE.Veg_Gh.</p
Observed long-term land cover vs climate impacts on the West African hydrological cycle: lessons for the future ? [P-3330-65]
West Africa has experienced a long lasting, severe drought as from 1970, which seems to be attenuating since 2000. It has induced major changes in living conditions and resources over the region. In the same period, marked changes of land use and land cover have been observed: land clearing for agriculture, driven by high demographic growth rates, and ecosystem evolutions driven by the rainfall deficit. Depending on the region, the combined effects of these climate and environmental changes have induced contrasted impacts on the hydrological cycle. In the Sahel, runoff and river discharges have increased despite the rainfall reduction (“less rain, more water”, the so-called "Sahelian paradox "). Soil crusting and erosion have increased the runoff capacity of the watersheds so that it outperformed the rainfall deficit. Conversely, in the more humid Guinean and Sudanian regions to the South, the opposite (and expected) “less rain, less water” behavior is observed, but the signature of land cover changes can hardly be detected in the hydrological records. These observations over the past 50 years suggest that the hydrological response to climate change can not be analyzed irrespective of other concurrent changes, and primarily ecosystem dynamics and land cover changes. There is no consensus on future rainfall trend over West Africa in IPCC projections, although a higher occurrence of extreme events (rainstorms, dry spells) is expected. An increase in the need for arable land and water resources is expected as well, driven by economic development and demographic growth. Based on past long-term observations on the AMMA-CATCH observatory, we explore in this work various future combinations of climate vs environmental drivers, and we infer the expected resulting trends on water resources, along the west African eco-climatic gradient. (Texte intégral
Control of Transdermal Permeation of Hydrocortisone Acetate from Hydrophilic and Lipophilic Formulations
The purpose of this research was the preparation of four formulations containing hydrocortisone acetate (HCA) for topical application, including two aqueous systems (hydrophilic microemulsion and aqueous gel) and two systems with dominant hydrophobicity (hydrophobic microemulsion and ointment). The formulations were tested for the release and permeation of HCA across an animal membrane. The release of HCA was found comparable for the four systems. The two microemulsions promote permeation across an ex-vivo membrane, examined by means of a Franz cell. Hydrophobic microemulsion guarantees the highest solubility (2,370Â ÎĽg/ml) and flux (133Â ÎĽg/cm2.h) of the drug, since it contains almost 40% Transcutol, a permeation enhancer. Gel and ointment provide lower solubility and flux, being the values, related to the ointment, the lowest ones (562Â ÎĽg/ml and 0.4Â ÎĽg/cm2.h). Experimental results allow the conclusion that gel and ointment can be suitable when it is desirable to minimize absorption of topically applied HCA as to keep the drug restricted to the diseased area and prevent side effects of the systemic presence of HCA
Il contributo degli esuli italiani alla riflessione sui caratteri dei totalitarismi: alcuni casi di studio
Il saggio esami la riflessione sviluppata da alcuni grandi esuli italiani sui caratteri dei totalitarism
Correction to: Water Resources in Africa under Global Change: Monitoring Surface Waters from Space
International audienc
Casi e materiali di diritto commerciale
Il volume raccoglie i casi trattati nelle esercitazioni di Diritto
Commerciale I e II nel corso dell’A.A. 2012/2013. Esso vuole costituire,
prima di tutto, per gli studenti che frequentano i corsi di Diritto
commerciale uno strumento di approfondimento e conoscenza nel concreto
dell’applicazione giurisprudenziale delle principali tematiche affrontate
a lezione e una guida per la partecipazione alle esercitazioni;
ma ancor piĂą serve agli studenti che, per scelta o per necessitĂ , non
frequentano i corsi, in quanto li mette di fronte ad una diversa prospettiva
di analisi delle norme e li aiuta a comprendere ragioni
e metodi dello studio del Diritto Commerciale, piĂą di quanto potrebbe
fare la semplice lettura non guidata dei testi didattici e delle norme. Ciascun caso viene presentato secondo uno schema standard:
1) il provvedimento e gli eventuali atti, sfrondati delle parti non
strettamente necessarie agli scopi didattici;
2) i titoletti (che servono a classificare la pronuncia secondo partizioni
prefissate, consentendo al lettore di individuare immediatamente
l’argomento cui attiene e il principio di diritto affermato);
3) i richiami normativi, che individuano le norme la cui lettura e
comprensione è indispensabile allo studio del caso;
4) la massima, che enuncia analiticamente il principio di diritto
contenuto nel provvedimento;
5) il commento, che guida il lettore attraverso il ragionamento
condotto dal giudice, indicandogli il percorso logico/giuridico e le regole
di diritto positivo utilizzate per la soluzione del caso;
6) le indicazioni bibliografiche, volutamente non troppo ampie,
giacché si limitano a rimandare ad alcune fonti ulteriori che rappresentano
punti di partenza basilari per avviare uno studio analitico di ciascuna
tematica.
Talvolta al centro dell’approfondimento non è una pronuncia giurisprudenziale,
ma un documento, parimenti idoneo ad illuminare
aspetti problematici o particolarmente interessanti nella prospettiva
dello studio del Diritto commerciale. In questo caso, al documento seguono
immediatamente il commento/guida alla lettura e le indicazioni
bibliografiche. I temi ruotano intorno ai nuclei fondamentali del diritto commerciale.
L’impresa, innanzitutto, nelle sue articolate qualificazioni di impresa
commerciale, agricola e artigiana, nonché negli aspetti concorrenziali.
Il diritto societario, nella “summa divisio” fra società personali
e società di capitali, senza trascurare i problemi che l’approvvigionamento
dei mezzi finanziari sul mercato solleva a carico dei risparmiatori.
E le procedure concorsuali, declinate soprattutto nel fallimento,
che – nonostante la travagliata e sempre incompiuta riforma –
resta al centro del sistema concorsuale
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Global snow mass measurements and the effect of stratigraphic detail on inversion of microwave brightness temperatures
Snow provides large seasonal storage of freshwater, and information about the distribution of snow mass as Snow Water Equivalent (SWE) is important for hydrological planning and detecting climate change impacts. Large regional disagreements remain between estimates from reanalyses, remote sensing and modelling. Assimilating passive microwave information improves SWE estimates in many regions but the assimilation must account for how microwave scattering depends on snow stratigraphy. Physical snow models can estimate snow stratigraphy, but users must consider the computational expense of model complexity versus acceptable errors. Using data from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Cold Land Processes Experiment (NASA CLPX) and the Helsinki University of Technology (HUT) microwave emission model of layered snowpacks, it is shown that simulations of the brightness temperature difference between 19 GHz and 37 GHz vertically polarised microwaves are consistent with Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer-Earth Observing System (AMSR-E) and Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I) retrievals once known stratigraphic information is used. Simulated brightness temperature differences for an individual snow profile depend on the provided stratigraphic detail. Relative to a profile defined at the 10 cm resolution of density and temperature measurements, the error introduced by simplification to a single layer of average properties increases approximately linearly with snow mass. If this brightness temperature error is converted into SWE using a traditional retrieval method then it is equivalent to ±13 mm SWE (7% of total) at a depth of 100 cm. This error is reduced to ±5.6 mm SWE (3 % of total) for a two-layer model
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