191 research outputs found

    The Effect of Early Retirement Incentives on the Training Participation of Older Workers.

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    Human capital theory predicts that older workers are less likely to participate in on-the-job training than younger workers, due to lower net returns on such investments. Early retirement institutions are likely to affect these returns. Using the European Community Household Panel we show that older workers participate less in training, and that early retirement institutions do indeed matter. Generous early retirement schemes discourage older workers from taking part in training, whereas flexible early retirement schemes encourage this. Finally, the results suggest that in most European countries training can keep older workers longer in the labour market.

    Early retirement patterns in Europe:A comparative panel study

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    Taxonomy and biogeography of macroalgal communities in the upwelling region off the coast of Dhofar, Oman

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    This study investigates the floristic composition and the ecological and biogeographical characteristics of macroalgal communities in three bays along the coastline of the southern province of Dhofar in the Sultanate of Oman. Dhofar is located in the north-western Arabian upwelling province. From June through September the south-west monsoon winds cause Ekman transport of surface waters away from the Arabian coastline. This brings cold nutrient-rich waters from deeper layers into the eufotic zone.At each study site nine 0.25 m2 quadrants were sampled, three in the intertidal zone, three at a depth of 5m and three at a depth of 10m. In the intertidal zone Ulva fasciata and Melanothamnus somalensis are the dominant species. At two of the study sites Nizamuddinia zanardinii and Sargassum oligocystum are the dominant species in the subtidal zone, at the third site Jania sp. and Codium duthieae are the most abundant.Multivariate analysis was carried out on the data collected in the present study and data from previous studies on the macroalgal assemblages of the Socotra Archipelago and Masirah Island (Schils & Coppejans, 2003). DCA at species level showed a strong gradient in floristic composition from upwelling sheltered sites (Gulf of Oman, west coast of Masirah, north coast of Socotra and seagrass beds of both Masirah Island and the Socotra Archipelago) to upwelling exposed sites (east coast of Masirah Island, south coast of Socotra and Dhofar). The bays of Dhofar clearly have high affinities with the other upwelling exposed sites, but nonetheless cluster analysis showed that they are very well separated from all the other study areas. This uniqueness is also illustrated by the large number of indicator species pointed out by the indicator species analysis, among which are many endemics and species with a disjunct distribution.Affinities with remote areas were assessed based on the data collected in this study and species inventories of 11 countries in the Indian Ocean. For all Arabian Sea locations the similarity with the tropical coasts of east Africa and Indonesia is much lower than the similarity with South Africa and Australia, where besides subtropical conditions also temperate conditions occur. The rbcL gene of a number of specimens of Codium and Portieria was sequenced in order to assess whether these specimens are related to morphologically similar Japanese specimens. This analysis has shown that the Japanese and Omani specimens of the supposedly disjunctly distributed species are not related

    Voortijdig schoolverlaten in Zuid-Limburg: analyse van risicofactoren

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    FdR – Publicaties zonder aanstelling Universiteit Leide

    The Change in Macroalgal Assemblages through the Saldanha Bay/Langebaan Lagoon Ecosystem (South Africa)

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    Saldanha Bay and Langebaan Lagoon form together one of the few sheltered habitats within the Benguela Marine Province; a wide gradient in environmental factors is found here. The West Coast National Park was established to protect this unique ecosystem, but at the same time an industrially expanding harbour marks this area. In an effort to understand the biological composition of the Saldanha/Langebaan ecosystem, the intertidal macroalgal assemblages were studied in relation to the relatively well-known South African West Coast flora. Three distinct floral entities were identified using various analytical techniques (similarity coefficients, CCA and TWINSPAN): (i) the species poor, though distinct, salt marshes; (ii) the Lagoon sites; and (iii) the Bay and West Coast sites. The transition between the latter two is located at the mouth of the Lagoon. The species richness of the Bay/West Coast entity is larger than in the Lagoon. The change in algal composition can be explained in terms of the environmental variables of which wave exposure is the most significant. Other important environmental parameters are water surface temperature and salinity, which were found to be negatively correlated with wave exposure. Biogeographical affinities of the different algal entities of the Bay/Lagoon system were also determined in relation to the entire South African shoreline. The Bay/West Coast entity supports a typical West Coast flora, with some noticeable effects of uplift of subtidal species into the infralittoral fringe and morphological variation in less exposed areas. The algal flora of the Lagoon is also dominated by West Coast species, but is typified by species characteristic of sheltered habitats, and with a number of species which otherwise only occur on the geographically distant South Coast (east of Cape Agulhas). The algae from the salt marshes occur widely in tropical mangroves and warm temperate salt marshes

    Multilocus phylogeny reveals <i>Gibsmithia hawaiiensis</i> (Dumontiaceae, Rhodophyta) to be a species complex from the Indo-Pacific, with the proposal of <i>G. eilatensis</i> sp. nov.

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    Gibsmithia hawaiiensis is a peculiar red alga characterized by furry gelatinous lobes arising from a cartilaginous stalk. The species has been recorded from tropical reef systems throughout the Indo-Pacific. A multilocus phylogeny (UPA, rbcL, COI-5P) of 36 specimens collected throughout the species distribution range, showed high genetic diversity at species level. Two major groups were identified, each consisting of multiple lineages. Genetic variability was low in the Hawaiian Islands and the northern Red Sea and high in the Western Indian Ocean and the Coral Triangle, where lineages overlap in distribution. Genetic distances suggest that G. hawaiiensis represents a complex of five cryptic species, with no difference observed in the external morphology corresponding to separate lineages. Anatomical and reproductive differences were observed at the microscopic level for the lineage from the Red Sea, which is here described as G. eilatensis sp. nov. The geographic range of the species complex is here expanded to include Madagascar, the Red Sea and the Indo-Malay region, and the generitype seems endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. Algal diversity on coral reef systems is discussed from a conservation perspective using G. hawaiiensis as an example
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