2,548 research outputs found

    INDIGENOUS SUSTAINABLE FINANCE AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS: CONTRIBUTIONS FROM REDD+ IN BRAZIL

    Get PDF
    Indigenous sustainable finance has emerged as a promising research field to understand how indigenous communities can address sustainable governance and economic development issues based on their relationship with the land and cultural aspects. Furthermore, the SDGs have offered a development guide for economies worldwide whilst it pushes forward the applied efforts in pursuing a sustainable future based on its 17 principles. Indigenous territories, in this case, can be understood as an essential asset that can contribute to maintaining biodiversity and remunerating communities for preserving forests, with REDD+ projects constituting a vital initiative to encourage compensation processes for economic activities. This study describes a case of Indigenous Sustainable Finance in Brazil using REDD++ and provides linkages to the Sustainable Development Goals Agenda. Results reveal that new parameters that can contribute to REDD+ processes developed by indigenous communities in Brazil should be set, facilitating the organizational strategy, credit access and territory governance status. Implications for sustainable finance are centred on developing successful constellations of stakeholder action towards social good through green, transitional and heritage bonds

    The 9-MilCA method as a rapid, partly automated protocol for simultaneously recording milk coagulation, curd firming, syneresis, cheese yield, and curd nutrients recovery or whey loss

    Get PDF
    Abstract The aim of this study was to propose and test a new laboratory cheesemaking procedure [9-mL milk cheesemaking assessment (9-MilCA)], which records 15 traits related to milk coagulation, curd firming, syneresis, cheese yield, and curd nutrients recovery or whey loss. This procedure involves instruments found in many laboratories (i.e., heaters and lacto-dynamographs), with an easy modification of the sample rack for the insertion of 10-mL glass tubes. Four trials were carried out to test the 9-MilCA procedure. The first trial compared 8 coagulation and curd firming traits obtained using regular or modified sample racks to process milk samples from 60 cows belonging to 5 breeds and 3 farms (480 tests). The obtained patterns exhibited significant but irrelevant between-procedure differences, with better repeatability seen for 9-MilCA. The second trial tested the reproducibility and repeatability of the 7 cheesemaking traits obtained using the 9-MilCA procedure on individual samples from 60 cows tested in duplicate in 2 instruments (232 tests). The method yielded very repeatable outcomes for all 7 tested cheese yield and nutrient recovery traits (repeatability >98%), with the exception of the fresh cheese yield (84%), which was affected by the lower repeatability (67%) of the water retained in the curd. In the third trial (96 tests), we found that using centrifugation in place of curd cooking and draining (as adopted in several published studies) reduced the efficiency of whey separation, overestimated all traits, and worsened the repeatability. The fourth trial compared 9-MilCA with a more complex model cheese-manufacturing process that mimics industry practices, using 1,500-mL milk samples (72 cows, 216 tests). The average results obtained from 9-MilCA were similar to those obtained from the model cheeses, with between-method correlations ranging from 78 to 99%, except for the water retained in the curd (r=54%). Our results indicate that new 9-MilCA method is a powerful research tool that allows the rapid, inexpensive, and partly automated analysis processing 40 samples per day with 2 replicates each, using 1 lacto-dynamograph, 2 heaters, and 3 modified sample racks, and yields a complete picture of the cheesemaking process (e.g., milk gelation, curd firming, syneresis, and whey expulsion) as well as the cheese yield and the efficiency of energy or nutrients retention in the cheese or loss in the whey

    Trial sequential meta-analysis of laparoscopic versus open pancreaticoduodenectomy: is it the time to stop the randomization?

    Get PDF
    Background: The advantages of LPD compared with OPD remain debatable. The study aimed to compare the laparoscopic (LPD) versus open (OPD) for pancreaticoduodenectomy. Methods: A meta-analysis of randomized studies (RCTs) comparing LPD and OPD was made. The results were reported as relative risk (RRs) or mean differences (MDs). The trial sequential analysis was used to test the type I and type II errors defining the required information size (RIS). The primary outcome was mortality, major morbidity, and postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF). R1 resection, post-pancreatectomy hemorrhage, delayed gastric emptying, biliary fistula, reoperation, readmission, operative time (OT), lymph nodes harvested, and length of stay (LOS) were also studied. Results: Four RCTs, counting 818 patients, were found. The RRs for mortality, major morbidity, and POPF were 1.16, 1.04, and 0.86, without significant differences. The RISs were 35,672, 16,548, and 8206. To confirm this equivalence, at least 34,854, 15,730, and 7338 should be randomized. OT was significantly longer in LPD than OPD, with an MD of 63.22. The LOS was significantly shorter in LPD than in OPD, with − 1.76 days. The RISs were 1297 and 1273, excluding a false-positive result. No significant differences were observed for the remaining endpoints, and RISs suggested that more than 3000 patients should be randomized to confirm the equivalence. Conclusion: The equivalence of LPD and OPD for mortality, major morbidity, and POPF is affected by type II error. The RISs to demonstrate a superiority of one of the two techniques seem unrealistic to obtain

    Integrated geophysical and aerial sensing methods for archaeology: A case history in the Punic site of Villamar (Sardinia, Italy)

    Get PDF
    In this paper, the authors present a recent integrated survey carried out on an archaeological urban site, generally free of buildings, except some temporary structures related to excavated areas where multi-chamber tombs were found. The two methods used to investigate this site were thermal infrared and ground penetrating radar (GPR). The thermography was carried out with the sensor mounted under a helium balloon simultaneously with a photographic camera. In order to have a synthetic view of the surface thermal behavior, a simplified version of the existing night thermal gradient algorithm was applied. By this approach, we have a wide extension of thermal maps due to the balloon oscillation, because we are able to compute the maps despite collecting few acquisition samples. By the integration of GPR and the thermal imaging, we can evaluate the depth of the thermal influence of possible archaeological targets, such as buried Punic tombs or walls belonging to the succeeding medieval buildings, which have been subsequently destroyed. The thermal anomalies present correspondences to the radar time slices obtained from 30 to 50 cm. Furthermore, by superimposing historical aerial pictures on the GPR and thermal imaging data, we can identify these anomalies as the foundations of the destroyed building

    Cambio en la sensibilidad al fungicida Tebuconazol en las poblaciones de Zymoseptoria Tritici (Quaedvlieg & Crous) patógeno de la septoriosis de la hoja del trigo

    Get PDF
    La septoriosis de la hoja del trigo, producida por Zymoseptoria tritici (Quaedvlieg & Crous), necrosa el área fotosintética disminuyendo el rendimiento final. En Argentina la aplicación de fungicidas es una práctica común de control y los triazoles y las estrobilurinas son los más frecuentes. Los triazoles son activos inhibidores del ergosterol que abunda como parte constitutiva de la membrana de la célula fúngica. No obstante, el uso genera grados de tolerancia en el patógeno obligando a la utilización de mezclas de principios activos. El objetivo fue: evaluar la pérdida de sensibilidad al efecto del fungicida tebuconazol en las poblaciones de aislados de Zymoseptoria tritici de la región triguera argentina. Se cuantificaron: a) la tasa de crecimiento de las colonias fúngicas de 46 aislados creciendo en APG sólido con fungicida incorporado, en relación a los mismos creciendo en medio de cultivo sin el fungicida y b) el porcentaje de eficiencia del fungicida para cada uno de los aislados. El análisis de Kruskal Wallis categorizó a los aislados en dos tipos de respuesta: 1-tolerantes, que superan el efecto inhibidor del fungicida; 2- que no superan el crecimiento en presencia del fungicida. La experiencia internacional explica la tolerancia al fungicida por alteraciones genéticas producidas en el gen CYP51, responsable en el patógeno de la sensibilidad al químico. El siguiente avance será diagnosticar la presencia de los genotipos alterados para recomendar el uso adecuado de los principios activos.Trabajo presentado por el Centro de Investigaciones de Fitopatología (CIDEFI

    Emerging Insights on the Interaction Between Anticancer and Immunosuppressant Drugs and Intestinal Microbiota in Pediatric Patients

    Get PDF
    Diseases affecting the immune system, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), are pathological conditions affecting the pediatric population and are often associated with alterations in the intestinal microbiota, such as a decrease in bacterial diversity. Growing evidence suggests that gut microbiota can interfere with chemotherapeutic and immunosuppressant drugs, used in the treatment of these diseases, reducing or facilitating drug efficacy. In particular, the effect of intestinal microflora through translocation, immunomodulation, metabolism, enzymatic degradation, and reduction of bacterial diversity seems to be one of the reasons of interindividual variability in the therapeutic response. Although the extent of the role of intestinal microflora in chemotherapy and immunosuppression remains still unresolved, current evidence on bacterial compositional shifts will be taken in consideration together with clinical response to drugs for a better and personalized therapy. This review is focused on the effect of the intestinal microbiota on the efficacy of pharmacological therapy of agents used to treat IBD, JIA, and ALL

    Herd and animal factors affect the variability of total and differential somatic cell count in bovine milk

    Get PDF
    This study investigated factors affecting the variability of somatic cell traits in bovine milk. Animal had greater influence on somatic cell score (SCS) and differential somatic cell count (DSCC) compared to herd factors. Herds producing high average of daily milk energy were characterized by lower SCS and DSCC compared to the low average daily milk energy herds. The SCS and DSCC were higher in Holstein-Friesian than in Simmental, and during summer with respect to the other seasons. Older cows at the end of lactation showed the highest content of somatic cell traits. These results are helpful for the management of somatic cell traits at herd and animal levels
    corecore