368 research outputs found
Automatic interpretation of MSS-LANDSAT data applied to coal refuse site studies in southern Santa Catarina State, Brazil
The coal mining district in southeastern Santa Catarina State is considered one of the most polluted areas of Brazil. The author has identified significant preliminary results on the application of MSS-LANDSAT digital data to monitor the coal refuse areas and its environmental consequences in this region
The presence of women journalists in the screwball comedy: the main characters of His Girl Friday (1940) and Woman of the Year (1942)
Las películas sobre periodismo han tenido un notable desarrollo en el cine clásico (1927-1972). Este ámbito profesional se ha tratado en los diversos géneros narrativos, pero las mujeres periodistas no ocupaban roles principales. Durante la screwball comedy –años treinta y cuarenta-, los personajes femeninos adquirieron más protagonismo, y aparecieron ejerciendo profesiones liberales con éxito. Aquí destacaron Luna nueva (Howard Hawks, 1940) y La mujer del año (George Stevens, 1942), donde las protagonistas, Hildy Johnson y Tess Harding, se dedicaban a la crónica de sucesos y a la de política internacional. Con el objetivo de reflexionar sobre la presencia de las mujeres periodistas principales en la comedia, se analizan ambos seres de ficción como persona y como rol, según las teorías de Franceso Casetti y Federico Di Chio. Este trabajo pretende destacar la construcción de estos personajes en uno de los principales géneros de la Edad de Oro del Hollywood clásico.Films about journalism have been widely developed in classical cinema (1927-1972). This professional discipline has been treated in the different narrative genres, but women journalists hardly occupied main roles. During the 1930s and 1940s, the female characters in the screwball comedy films acquired more relevance, insomuch as they played successful liberal professions. For example, we can highlight His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks, 1940) and Woman of the Year (George Stevens, 1942). Hildy Johnson and Tess Harding, the protagonists of these films, were specifically responsible for writing chronicles of events and international politics. With the aim of reflecting on the presence of the main women journalists in the comedy, we analyze them as a person and as a role, according to the theories of Francesco Casetti y Federico Di Chio. Thus, this paper tries to highlight the construction of these characters in one of the prominent genres of classic Hollywood’s Golden Age
Drought constrains acorn production and tree growth in the Mediterranean holm oak and triggers weak legacy effects
Droughts are becoming more frequent in the Mediterranean basin due to warmer conditions. Droughts negatively impact forests growth for several years, often generating negative legacies or carryover effects. However, these legacies differ among tree species, sites and drought characteristics and have been mainly studied considering tree growth or canopy greenness, but ignoring reproductive phenomena. Here, we compare the legacy effects of drought on acorn and male inflorescence production and radial growth by using a 19-year series of 150 Quercus ilex individuals in three stands located in north-eastern Spain. We evaluate the relationships between monthly climate variables, tree-ring width, acorn production and male inflorescence production. For the two driest years considered (2005 and 2012), when very few acorns were produced, we did not find negative legacy effects on acorn production in the three years following droughts. The production of male inflorescences did not show any significant legacy after drought, although its annual variation was related to the climatic conditions of the year before acorn ripening. Acorn production was higher than expected for some of these years, apparently following the pattern of tree growth recovery with a certain lag. This compensatory response of acorn production differed between the two analysed droughts, in accordance with different conditions of drought timing and post-drought climate conditions. Even though few negative legacy effects of growth and acorn production were found, we confirmed the negative effect of drought stress on tree growth and acorn production, linked to dry winter conditions. Our findings confirm that drought features (timing, duration, intensity) and post-drought climate conditions influence tree growth and reproduction legacies
A semiautomatic methodology to detect fire scars in shrubs and evergreen forests with Landsat MSS time series.
This paper presents a semi-automatic methodology for fire scars mapping from a long time series of remote sensing data. Approximately, a hundred MSS images from different Landsat satellites were employed over an area of 32 100 km2 in the north-east of the Iberian Peninsula. The analysed period was from 1975 to 1993. Results are a map series of fire history and frequencies. Omission errors are 23% for burned areas greater than 200 ha while commission errors are 8% for areas greater than 50 ha. Subsequent work based on the resultant fire scars will also help in describing fire regime and in monitoring post-fire regeneration dynamics.Peer Reviewe
A gradient-forming MipZ protein mediating the control of cell division in the magnetotactic bacterium Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense
Cell division needs to be tightly regulated and closely coordinated with other cellular processes to ensure the generation of fully viable offspring. Here, we investigate division site placement by the cell division regulator MipZ in the alphaproteobacterium Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense, a species that forms linear chains of magnetosomes to navigate within the geomagnetic field. We show that M. gryphiswaldense contains two MipZ homologs, termed MipZ1 and MipZ2. MipZ2 localizes to the division site, but its absence does not cause any obvious phenotype. MipZ1, by contrast, forms a dynamic bipolar gradient, and its deletion or overproduction cause cell filamentation, suggesting an important role in cell division. The monomeric form of MipZ1 interacts with the chromosome partitioning protein ParB, whereas its ATP-dependent dimeric form shows non-specific DNA-binding activity. Notably, both the dimeric and, to a lesser extent, the monomeric form inhibit FtsZ polymerization in vitro. MipZ1 thus represents a canonical gradient-forming MipZ homolog that critically contributes to the spatiotemporal control of FtsZ ring formation. Collectively, our findings add to the view that the regulatory role of MipZ proteins in cell division is conserved among many alphaproteobacteria. However, their number and biochemical properties may have adapted to the specific needs of the host organism
Growth, earlywood anatomy and wood nutrients respond to precipitation and flow in semi-arid riparian tamarisk forests
Riparian forests from semi-arid regions with saline soils are dominated by facultative phreatophytes such as tamarisks (Tamarix spp.). Tamarisks tolerate drought and salt stress by using shallow and deep soil water sources depending on precipitation and flow variability in ephemeral or permanent streams. Therefore, their radial growth and wood anatomy would differently respond to precipitation and drought severity depending on stream ephemerality. To assess these responses, tree-ring-width, earlywood anatomy and sapwood nutrient concentrations were measured in five riparian tamarisk stands located in semi-arid north-eastern Spain. These sites experienced different aridity degrees and were located near ephemeral (e.g., Lanaja-dry site) or permanent streams in intensively irrigated agricultural areas (e.g., Valcuerna). Tree rings were widest in Peñaflor (2.94 mm) and narrowest in the driest Lanaja-dry site (1.11 mm), where tree-to-tree growth coherence was higher than in the other sites. Wet conditions during the water year enhanced growth, particularly in the most responsive Lanaja-dry site and in Lopín, whereas elevated flow increased the earlywood hydraulic diameter in Valcuerna. In the Lanaja-dry site, Ca, Cu, K and Mn wood concentrations were higher than in Valcuerna, but C and N concentrations were lower. Elevated Ca wood concentrations correspond to higher drought stress in the Lanaja-dry site, whereas higher N concentrations reflect eutrophication due to extensive use of agricultural fertilizers in Valcuerna. In sites near permanent streams such as Valcuerna, depth to groundwater may be a more robust proxy of growth than in drier sites located near more ephemeral streams such as Lanaja-dry site where tamarisk growth is constrained by 12-month long spring droughts
Using wood rings to determine age and climate constraints of grapevine (Vitis vinifera) radial growth
Grapevine (Vitis vinifera) is the most widely cultivated and economically relevant crop in the world, but its productivity is menaced by aridification in some wine-growing regions such as the Mediterranean Basin. The impacts of climate on vines depend on regional conditions, cultivar, and vine age, among other factors. Hence, a better understanding of vine radial-growth responses to climate in different regions is sorely needed. First, we related climate data and drought severity with a long-term series of vine leaf unfolding from NE Spain to test if climate warming is advancing the onset of the growing season. Second, we used growth rings to estimate age and quantify climate-growth relationships of vines using dendrochronology. Three sites from different designations of origin and vine varieties were studied: Logroño in northern Spain (La Rioja, Tempranillo), San Martín del Río in northeast Spain (Calatayud, Garnacha) and Anzi in southern Italy (Aglianico, Aleatico). Vine leaf unfolding occurred earlier as winter-spring conditions were warmer and drier. Vine ages ranged between 16 (Logroño, Anzi) and 56 years (S. Martín del Río), and growth rates declined in the two youngest grapevines. Ring widths varied between 1.19 (S. Martín del Río) and 1.80 mm (Logroño), with Anzi showing intermediate values (1.37 mm). February precipitation enhanced vine growth in San Martín del Río (r = 0.64) and Anzi (r = 0.49), whereas the correlation with soil moisture peaked in March in San Martín del Río (r=0.83). Vine growth rates positively responded to September minimum temperatures in San Martín del Río (r=0.51) and Logroño (r=0.50). Garnacha cultivar in San Martín del Río showed the highest responsiveness to water availability. Therefore, similar old grapevines from continental, seasonally dry areas could be the most negatively affected by future warmer and drier climate conditions
Growth Responses to Climate and Drought in Relict Cork Oak Populations as a Benchmark of the Species Tolerance
We still lack information on the long-term growth responses to climate of relict tree populations, which often persist in topoclimatic refugia. To fill that research gap, we studied three relict cork oak (Quercus suber) populations located in northern Spain using dendrochronology. The sites were subjected to humid (Zarautz), continental (Bozoó) and xeric (Sestrica) climate conditions. Cool–wet conditions during the current spring enhanced growth in Bozoó and Sestrica, whereas wet conditions in the previous October enhanced growth in Zarautz. In this site, growth also increased in response to dry conditions in the prior winter linked to high North Atlantic Oscillation indices. Correlations between the precipitation summed from the previous September to the current May peaked at the driest site (Sestrica). The strongest growth responses to drought severity were also found at this site, where growth negatively responded to 9-month early-summer droughts, followed by the continental Bozoó site, where growth was constrained by 1-month July droughts. Growth declined in response to 6-month January droughts in the wettest site (Zarautz), where cork oak was vulnerable to previous late-summer to autumn drought stress. Despite warmer and drier spring conditions that would negatively impact cork oak at the Bozoó and Sestrica sites, trees from these populations could tolerate further aridity
Climate, host ontogeny and pathogen structural specificity determine forest disease distribution at a regional scale
Predicting forest health at a regional level is challenging as forests are simultaneously attacked by multiple pathogens. Usually, the impacts of each pathogen are studied separately, however, interactions between them can affect disease dynamics. Pathogens can interact directly by competing for the same niche, but also facilitate or suppress each other via indirect effects through the host. We studied 66 native Mediterranean Pinus nigra stands located in the Pyrenees which were affected by two pathogens with different structural specificity: Dothistroma pini causing Dothistroma needle blight and Diplodia sapinea causing Diplodia shoot blight. We explored the ecology of both pathogens and whether the diseases they caused had an impact on trees and recruits. No signs of competition were found on adult trees. Diplodia shoot blight was restricted to the warmest and driest areas, while no climatic restrictions were identified for Dothistroma needle blight. Both diseases caused additive effects on crown defoliation and defoliated trees showed stagnated growth. In the regeneration layer, signs of disease suppression were found. In the warmest and driest areas, seedling mortality was mainly associated with Diplodia shoot blight, even though both pathogens were detected. Clear signs of D. pini spillover from canopy trees to recruits were found. However, seedling mortality caused by Dothistroma needle blight was only restricted to the coldest and wettest sites where D. sapinea could not survive. Large crowns in adult trees probably allow both pathogens to co-exist and cause additive impacts. The smaller size of recruits and a higher susceptibility to environmental stress compared to adult trees probably facilitates the effects of Diplodia shoot blight which masked those caused by Dothistroma needle blight. By considering climatic constraints, host ontogeny and structural specificity, we could dissect the disease impacts of two different pathogens and successfully explain forest health at a regional scale
Similar climate–growth relationships but divergent drought resilience strategies in coexisting Mediterranean shrubs
Anticipating future impacts of climate warming and aridification on drylands requires understanding how coexisting woody plant species respond to climate variability. However, we lack knowledge of the growth resilience capacity of Mediterranean shrubs. Do coexisting trees and shrubs differ in their response to climate? Do coexisting shrub species have comparable post-drought growth resilience?
This study was conducted in two Mediterranean shrublands with sparse trees in semi-arid north-eastern Spain. We selected sites situated in formerly agricultural or grassland areas in two regions subjected to semi-arid Mediterranean climate conditions. We sampled six shrubs' species (Juniperus phoenicea, Juniperus oxycedrus, Pistacia lentiscus, Pistacia terebinthus, Rhamnus lycioides and Rhamnus alaternus) and one tree species (Pinus halepensis) to measure their radial growth and to reconstruct their past growth patterns using dendrochronology. We quantified climate–growth relationships of trees and shrubs, as well as the growth resilience capacity after drought events of the six shrubs.
Growth patterns differed between species but a prevalent trade-off between growth and longevity was found. Growth responses to climate were comparable between species but differed between sites. Most species responded positively to precipitation and negatively to temperature. The most negative correlations of growth with drought severity were found at the driest Valcuerna site. Shrubs differed in their resilience capacity. Across sites, species were more resistant and resilient in Alcubierre, the wettest site. The shrubs P. terebinthus and R. lycioides were more resistant and resilient than the rest of species, which required longer growth recovery times and accumulated stronger growth reductions, particularly J. phoenicea.
Synthesis. These results highlight the importance of drought as a driver of growth in Mediterranean scrublands. Growth resilience strategies differed between species with junipers being less resilient to drought than other coexisting shrubs. Further research should investigate how this difference in post-drought resilience is related to functional traits, particularly those related with plant water-use strategies
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