367 research outputs found
Economic implications of different cork oak forest management systems
The agro-silvopastoral system 'montado' is mostly dominated by Mediterranean evergreen oaks such as, cork oak (Quercus suber L.) and holm oak (Quercus rotundifolia). The 'montado' production system management aims the maintenance of a balanced sustainable land use to cope with the Mediterranean climate variability. One important issue in cork oak forests is the control shrub growth in order to prevent forest fire hazard, which is of high risk in Mediterranean climate. In this article, two shrub control systems are compared and the results show that although soil disking is more profitable than shrub cutting, the results are reversed, if one considers the carbon sequestration. This means that besides the great economic sustainability of cork oak dependence on the price of cork, the profitability of different shrub control methods depend also on the way society valuates other goods and services provided by cork oak forest
Co2 exchange and biomass development of the herbaceous vegetation in the portuguese montado ecosystem during spring
Montado are spatially heterogeneous ecosystems that are economically important for the production of
cork and herbaceous biomass that provide fodder for animals. Understanding of how trees and the
herbaceous layer interact to determine pasture yield and the overall CO2 exchange of the herbaceous
layer is crucial. Portable chamberswere used to study CO2 exchange by the herbaceous layer component
of the montado ecosystem in southern Portugal. Biomass, Net herbaceous layer CO2 exchange (NEE) and
respiration (Reco) were measured in the open and understory locations between March and May, during
the active growing period. Parameter fits on the NEE data were performed using empirical hyperbolic
light response model, while ecosystem respiration (Reco) data were fitted with a two-parameter
exponential model. Annual green biomass productions were 405.8 9.0 and 250.6 6.3 g m 2 in the
open and the understory, respectively. The respective maximum NEE during the day were 24.0 2.9 and
9.6 2.2 mmol m 2 s 1 while maximum Reco were 20.6 2.2 and 10.0 1.6 mmol m 2 s 1, occurring in
April. Photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) explained more that 70% of variations in daytime NEE while
soil temperature at 10 cm depth (Tsoil) explained >50% of the variations in Reco under non-limiting soil
moisture conditions. Both the herbaceous layer communities shared similar plant functional types and no
significant difference in nutrient nitrogen (N) occurred between them. The two herbaceous layer components
shared similar physiological characteristics and differences that arose in their CO2 uptake capacities and
green biomass production were the result of microclimatic differences created by tree shadin
A low-lying scalar meson nonet in a unitarized meson model
A unitarized nonrelativistic meson model which is successful for the
description of the heavy and light vector and pseudoscalar mesons yields, in
its extension to the scalar mesons but for the same model parameters, a
complete nonet below 1 GeV. In the unitarization scheme, real and virtual
meson-meson decay channels are coupled to the quark-antiquark confinement
channels. The flavor-dependent harmonic-oscillator confining potential itself
has bound states epsilon(1.3 GeV), S(1.5 GeV), delta(1.3 GeV), kappa(1.4 GeV),
similar to the results of other bound-state qqbar models. However, the full
coupled-channel equations show poles at epsilon(0.5 GeV), S(0.99 GeV),
delta(0.97 GeV), kappa(0.73 GeV). Not only can these pole positions be
calculated in our model, but also cross sections and phase shifts in the
meson-scattering channels, which are in reasonable agreement with the available
data for pion-pion, eta-pion and Kaon-pion in S-wave scattering.Comment: A slightly revised version of Zeitschrift fuer Physik C30, 615 (1986
BB Intermeson Potentials in the Quark Model
In this paper we derive quark model results for scattering amplitudes and
equivalent low energy potentials for heavy meson pairs, in which each meson
contains a heavy quark. This "BB" system is an attractive theoretical
laboratory for the study of the nuclear force between color singlets; the
hadronic system is relatively simple, and there are lattice gauge theory (LGT)
results for V_BB(r) which may be compared to phenomenological models. We find
that the quark model potential (after lattice smearing) has qualitative
similarities to the LGT potential in the two B*B* channels in which direct
comparison is possible, although there is evidence of a difference in length
scales. The quark model prediction of equal magnitude but opposite sign for I=0
and I=1 potentials also appears similar to LGT results at intermediate r. There
may however be a discrepancy between the LGT and quark model I=1 BB potentials.
A numerical study of the two-meson Schrodinger equations in the (bqbar)(bqbar)
and (cqbar)(cqbar) sectors with the quark model potentials finds a single
"molecule", in the I=0 BB* sector. Binding in other channels might occur if the
quark model forces are augmented by pion exchange.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, revtex and epsfig. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Field theory description of vacuum replicas
In this paper we develop a systematic quantum field theory based approach to
the vacuum replica recently found to exist in effective low energy models in
hadronic physics. A local operator creating the replica state is constructed
explicitly. We show that a new effective quark-quark force arises in result of
replica existence. Phenomenological implications of such a force are also
briefly discussed.Comment: RevTeX4, 23 pages, 4 Postscript figures, uses epsfig.sty, to appear
in Phys.Rev.
Assessing the impact of rice cultivation and off-season period on dynamics of soil enzyme activities and bacterial communities in two agro-ecological regions of Mozambique
Soil ecosystem perturbation due to agronomic practices can negatively impact soil productivity
by altering the diversity and function of soil health determinants. Currently, the influence
of rice cultivation and off-season periods on the dynamics of soil health determinants is unclear.
Therefore, soil enzyme activities (EAs) and bacterial community compositions in rice-cultivated fields
at postharvest (PH) and after a 5-month off-season period (5mR), and fallow-fields (5-years-fallow,
5YF; 10-years-fallow, 10YF and/or one-year-fallow, 1YF) were assessed in two agroecological regions
of Mozambique. EAs were mostly higher in fallow fields than in PH, with significant (p < 0.05)
differences detected for -glucosidase and acid phosphatase activities. Only -glucosidase activity
was significantly (p < 0.05) different between PH and 5mR, suggesting that -glucosidase is responsive
in the short-term. Bacterial diversity was highest in rice-cultivated soil and correlated with
NO3
, NH4
+ and electrical conductivity. Differentially abundant genera, such as Agromyces, Bacillus,
Desulfuromonas, Gaiella, Lysobacter, Micromonospora, Norcadiodes, Rubrobacter, Solirubrobacter and
Sphingomonas were mostly associated with fallow and 5mR fields, suggesting either negative effects
of rice cultivation or the fallow period aided their recovery. Overall, rice cultivation and chemical
parameters influenced certain EAs and shaped bacterial communities. Furthermore, the 5-month
off-season period facilitates nutrient recovery and proliferation of plant-growth-promoting bacteriainfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Thermal conductivity via magnetic excitations in spin-chain materials
We discuss the recent progress and the current status of experimental
investigations of spin-mediated energy transport in spin-chain and spin-ladder
materials with antiferromagnetic coupling. We briefly outline the central
results of theoretical studies on the subject but focus mainly on recent
experimental results that were obtained on materials which may be regarded as
adequate physical realizations of the idealized theoretical model systems. Some
open questions and unsettled issues are also addressed.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Electrode Polarization Effects in Broadband Dielectric Spectroscopy
In the present work, we provide broadband dielectric spectra showing strong
electrode polarization effects for various materials, belonging to very
different material classes. This includes both ionic and electronic conductors
as, e.g., salt solutions, ionic liquids, human blood, and
colossal-dielectric-constant materials. These data are intended to provide a
broad data base enabling a critical test of the validity of phenomenological
and microscopic models for electrode polarization. In the present work, the
results are analyzed using a simple phenomenological equivalent-circuit
description, involving a distributed parallel RC circuit element for the
modeling of the weakly conducting regions close to the electrodes. Excellent
fits of the experimental data are achieved in this way, demonstrating the
universal applicability of this approach. In the investigated ionically
conducting materials, we find the universal appearance of a second dispersion
region due to electrode polarization, which is only revealed if measuring down
to sufficiently low frequencies. This indicates the presence of a second
charge-transport process in ionic conductors with blocking electrodes.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, experimental data are provided in electronic form
(see "Data Conservancy"
Progress in analytical approaches integrating Livestock and Biodiversity to identify HNV Montados
The World Congress Silvo-Pastoral Systems 2016 aims to gather researchers from different disciplines, practitioners and policy makers at different governance levels that deal with the management and sustainability of silvo-pastoral systems. In this way the congress will create a fertile context to progress through interdisciplinarity research approaches that can help translate scientific knowledge into new adaptive management solutions, and thus bridge from science to practice. The aim is also to gather and compare knowledge from silvo-pastoral systems around the world, which share drought as a limiting factor, so that they can be discussed and evaluated
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