2,172 research outputs found
Circular economy and corporate social responsibility in the agricultural system: Cases study of the Italian agri-food industry
The persistent exploitation of natural resources and the consequent use of consumption are driving global food demand with the result that agricultural activity is becoming less and less environmentally friendly. The circular economy (CE) can become a valid alternative, inserting the economic-agricultural system into the harmonic process of material circulation. The corporate social responsibility (CSR) model is particularly interesting not only because of the ethical dimension of the company but also as a factor of strategic business improvement that combines the concepts of CSR and CE as possible solutions for developing sustainable business processes. The objective of the work is to highlight a detailed framework of how the small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) of the Italian agri-food industry can provide an ade-quate level of communication, circular strategies and social responsibility practices. The research methodology is based on a qualitative multiple study conducted on a sample of nine companies in the Italian territory. The study highlights the attention of companies on the issues of the CE for the achievement of the set sustainable objectives and the attention to CSR and CE practices. The work has several implications. It provides a further understanding of CSR and CE policies as enabling factors for the development of sustainable organizational performance in agriculture. Moreover, it better investigates the relationship between CSR and the CE. Finally, it analyses the SMEs state of the art in the CE field and strengthens the concept of CE by analysing corporate practices consistent with sustainability reports
The role of cerebellar circuitry alterations in the pathophysiology of autism spectrum disorders
The cerebellum has been repeatedly implicated in gene expression, rodent model and post-mortem studies of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). How cellular and molecular anomalies of the cerebellum relate to clinical manifestations of ASD remains unclear. Separate circuits of the cerebellum control different sensorimotor behaviors, such as maintaining balance, walking, making eye movements, reaching, and grasping. Each of these behaviors has been found to be impaired in ASD, suggesting that multiple distinct circuits of the cerebellum may be involved in the pathogenesis of patients' sensorimotor impairments. We will review evidence that the development of these circuits is disrupted in individuals with ASD and that their study may help elucidate the pathophysiology of sensorimotor deficits and core symptoms of the disorder. Preclinical studies of monogenetic conditions associated with ASD also have identified selective defects of the cerebellum and documented behavioral rescues when the cerebellum is targeted. Based on these findings, we propose that cerebellar circuits may prove to be promising targets for therapeutic development aimed at rescuing sensorimotor and other clinical symptoms of different forms of ASD
Tuning the Re/Os Clock: Stellar-Neutron Cross Sections
The neutron-capture cross sections of 186,187Os have been recently measured at the CERN neutron time-of-flight facility n_TOF for an improved evaluation of the Re/Os cosmo-chronometer. This experimental information was complemented by nuclear model calculations for obtaining the proper astrophysical reaction rates at s-process temperatures. The calculated results and their implications for the determination of the time-duration of nucleosynthesis during galactic chemical evolution is discusse
Correlation functions of disorder operators in massive ghost theories
The two-dimensional ghost systems with negative integral central charge
received much attention in the last years for their role in a number of
applications and in connection with logarithmic conformal field theory. We
consider the free massive bosonic and fermionic ghost systems and concentrate
on the non-trivial sectors containing the disorder operators. A unified
analysis of the correlation functions of such operators can be performed for
ghosts and ordinary complex bosons and fermions. It turns out that these
correlators depend only on the statistics although the scaling dimensions of
the disorder operators change when going from the ordinary to the ghost case.
As known from the study of the ordinary case, the bosonic and fermionic
correlation functions are the inverse of each other and are exactly expressible
through the solution of a non-linear differential equation.Comment: 8 pages, late
Re(\gamm,n) cross section close to and above the neutron threshold
The neutron capture cross section of the unstable nucleus Re is
studied by investigating the inverse photodisintegration reaction
Re(,n). The special interest of the {\it s}-process branching
point Re is related to the question of possible {\it s}-process
contributions to the abundance of the {\it r}-process chronometer nucleus
^{187}^{186}\gamma^{186}$Os; the two predicted neutron-capture cross sections
differ by a factor of 2.4; this calls for future theoretical study.Comment: Phys. Rev. C, in pres
Transcriptional alteration of gene biomarkers in hemocytes of wild ostrea edulis with molecular evidence of infections with bonamia spp. And/or marteilia refringens parasites
The European flat Ostrea edulis is highly susceptible to intracellular parasitic infections, particularly bonamiosis and marteiliosis. The defensive response of oyster to both bonamiosis and marteiliosis is typically mediated by hemocytes, which play a pivotal role in immune system homeostasis. In the present study, we first used a DNA-based tool in order to rapidly and specifically detect the presence of parasites in oysters from natural banks in the middle Adriatic Sea. In a second step, we used qRT-PCR to analyze the mRNA levels of a set of genes (i.e., superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione S-transferase (GST), metallothionein (MT), heat shock protein (HSP) 70 and 90, inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP), fas ligand (FAS), galectin (GAL) and extracellular superoxide dismutase (Ec-SOD)) expressed by hemocytes of flat oysters infected by the parasites, present singularly or in combination, compared to hemocytes from non-infected specimens. The results indicate that the presence of parasite DNA may be associated to a general upregulation of host genes related to apoptosis, detoxification and oxidative stress protection, with the exception of Ec-SOD, whose trend to a downregulation might reflect a mechanism for parasite escape before internalization
growth performance and stress response of common sole subjected to varying stocking densities and rearing temperatures
AbstractEarlier short-term studies have shown productivity of intensively farmed common sole (S. solea) to be closely dependent on rearing density. Irrespective of fish size, elevating crowding conditions led to declining growth rates while the effect of density on mortality remains controversial. To what extent water temperature could affect productivity of growing sole subjected to varying crowding conditions, warrants investigation as very few studies have tried to quantify the effects of this fundamental rearing parameter on growth and survival in this fish species. This is particularly crucial for developing suitable farming protocols in Italy, where common sole may experience a broad range of water temperatures throughout the rearing cycle. The aim of this study was to evaluate productivity and blood cortisol level as a measure of stress response, in growing sole subjected to different stocking densities and temperature conditions. Six hundred juveniles (ind. weight 21.8±1.5g) were randomly allotted..
Chemical Enrichment at High Redshifts: Understanding the Nature of Damped Ly Systems in Hierarchical Models
We use cosmological hydrodynamical simulations including star formation and
metal enrichment to study the evolution of the chemical properties of
galaxy-like objects at high redshift in the range in a
hierarchical clustering scenario. As the galactic objects are assembled we find
that their gaseous components exhibit neutral Hydrogen column densities with
abundances and scatter comparable to those observed in damped Lyman-
systems (DLAs).The unweighted mean of abundance ratios and least square linear
regressions through the simulated DLAs yield intrinsic metallicity evolution
for the [Zn/H] and [Fe/H], consistent with results obtained from similar
analysis of available observations. Our model statistically reproduces the mild
evolution detected in the metallicity of the neutral hydrogen content of the
Universe, given by mass-weighted means,if observational constraints are
considered (as suggested by Boiss\'ee et al. 1998). For the -elements
in the simulated DLAs, we find neither enhancement nor dependence on
metallicity. Our results support the hypotheses that DLAs trace a variety of
galactic objects with different formation histories and that both SNI and SNII
are contributing to the chemical enrichment of the gas component at least since
. This study indicates that DLAs could be understood as the
building blocks that merged to form today normal galaxies within a hierarchical
clustering scenario.Comment: 2 Postscript figures.Acepted Ap
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