304 research outputs found

    The value of traditional rural landscape and nature protected areas in tourism demand: A study on agritourists' preferences

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    This study focuses on how traditional rural landscape and proximity to a Natura 2000 Site of Community Importance (SCI) might influence consumers\u2019 choice of an agritourism farm for a weekend stay. Data were collected in Umbria region\u2019s (Italy) agritourism farms in 2014 by interviewing 160 tourists. Results from a discrete choice experiment reveal that the most important feature affecting the interviewees\u2019 propensity to pay a premium price to stay in an agritourism farm is the well-preserved traditional landscape (willingness to pay 32.32\u20ac/night for two people), followed by the availability of a swimming pool (willingness to pay 20.95\u20ac/night for two people), the proximity to a historical village (willingness to pay 18.37\u20ac/night for two people) and, the location in a Natura 2000 SCI (willingness to pay 13.57\u20ac/night for two people). Furthermore, the results underline how the preservation of the traditional landscape and protection of the surrounding environment play a strategic role in developing agritourism and provide economic benefits to local communities

    A general relativistic model for the light propagation in the gravitational field of the Solar System: the dynamical case

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    Modern astrometry is based on angular measurements at the micro-arcsecond level. At this accuracy a fully general relativistic treatment of the data reduction is required. This paper concludes a series of articles dedicated to the problem of relativistic light propagation, presenting the final microarcsecond version of a relativistic astrometric model which enable us to trace back the light path to its emitting source throughout the non-stationary gravity field of the moving bodies in the Solar System. The previous model is used as test-bed for numerical comparisons to the present one. Here we also test different versions of the computer code implementing the model at different levels of complexity to start exploring the best trade-off between numerical efficiency and the micro-arcsecond accuracy needed to be reached.Comment: 40 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication on The Astrophysical Journal. Manuscript prepared with AASLaTeX macros v.5.

    Consumers demand for social farming products: An analysis with discrete choice experiments

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    This paper analyses the demand for social farming (SF) products. In particular, we investigate the preferences of consumers who buy their products from large retailers, rather than from solidarity purchasing groups or other niche markets using a sample of 225 consumers. In this regard, a discrete choice experiment (DCE) was carried out to estimate the willingness to pay (WTP) a premium price for the purchase of a common product (i.e., eggs) from farms that employ disabled people. The attributes considered in our DCE design are the employment of disabled people and two additional attributes which may have ethical implications for the choices. The results indicate that consumers are interested in buying SF products, with about 74% of the sample willing to buy the eggs produced by social farms and the average WTP being equal to \u20ac1.36 for a pack of six eggs. Moreover, the average WTP for the use of labour of disabled people attribute amounted to \u20ac0.69 for a pack of six eggs

    The RAMOD astrometric observable and the relativistic astrometric catalogs

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    AbstractWe describe a way to compare current relativistic astrometric models accurate to the micro-arcsecond level. The observed stellar direction can be written as a function of several parts, linking the astrometric observables to the relativistic effects associated to the stellar kinematical properties and distances as seen inside the gravitational field of our Solar System, i.e. the so called relativistic astrometric parameters, providing a tool for comparing the RAMOD framework to the pM/pN approaches

    Late Holocene records of fire and human presence in New Zealand

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    New Zealand, and the South Island in particular, can be considered an excellent test site for the study of the\ud early impact of humans on the environment for two main reasons: the Polynesian settlement occurred only\ud about 700-800 y BP and resulted in abrupt and huge landscape modifications. Burning forest for land clearance\ud impacted dramatically on an ecosystem that was not adapted to fire, changing the composition of the vegetation\ud as documented by sedimentary charcoal and pollen records. Although charcoal data give incontrovertible\ud evidence of some unprecedented fire events right after the arrival of the Maori, its significance as a tracer for local\ud and anthropogenic fire events has been questioned, stressing the need for new markers to confirm and complete the information about human presence and its effective impact.\ud In the present work, faecal sterols and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) were individuated as suitable\ud molecular markers and analyzed by GC-MS in a sediment core from Lake Kirkpatrick, located in the Lake\ud Wakatipu catchment at 570 m a.s.l. in the South Island of New Zealand. Coprostanol accounts for about 60%\ud of total sterol content in human faeces, being much less relevant in animal dejections. Together with its\ud degradation product epi-coprostanol, it is well conserved in sedimentary archives and can be highly useful in\ud paleoenvironmental reconstructions of human settlements. PAHs are produced in relevant amounts by combustion in conditions of oxygen depletion, and diagnostic ratios (DR) between specific molecules can be used for inferring fuel and sources.\ud The charcoal record for Lake Kirkpatrick shows major fire episodes around AD 1350, confirmed by corresponding high levels of PAHs ascribable to biomass burning (as further evidenced by DR) at c. AD 1350. Moreover, the same trend is observed also in the fluxes of coprostanol and epi-coprostanol, whose sum results in two peaks at c. AD 1346 and 1351. This finding confirms not only the massive presence of humans in the area and the large use of fire at the time, but also complements and refines the reconstructions enabled by charcoal analysis

    Can the Pioneer anomaly be of gravitational origin? A phenomenological answer

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    In order to satisfy the equivalence principle, any non-conventional mechanism proposed to gravitationally explain the Pioneer anomaly, in the form in which it is presently known from the so-far analyzed Pioneer 10/11 data, cannot leave out of consideration its impact on the motion of the planets of the Solar System as well, especially those orbiting in the regions in which the anomalous behavior of the Pioneer probes manifested itself. In this paper we, first, discuss the residuals of the right ascension \alpha and declination \delta of Uranus, Neptune and Pluto obtained by processing various data sets with different, well established dynamical theories (JPL DE, IAA EPM, VSOP). Second, we use the latest determinations of the perihelion secular advances of some planets in order to put on the test two gravitational mechanisms recently proposed to accommodate the Pioneer anomaly based on two models of modified gravity. Finally, we adopt the ranging data to Voyager 2 when it encountered Uranus and Neptune to perform a further, independent test of the hypothesis that a Pioneer-like acceleration can also affect the motion of the outer planets of the Solar System. The obtained answers are negative.Comment: Latex2e, 26 pages, 6 tables, 2 figure, 47 references. It is the merging of gr-qc/0608127, gr-qc/0608068, gr-qc/0608101 and gr-qc/0611081. Final version to appear in Foundations of Physic

    Occurrence of Mycotoxins in Extruded Commercial Cat Food

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    The occurrence of the most important mycotoxins (deoxynivalenol, fumonisin B1 and B2, aflatoxins B1, B2, G1, and G2, ochratoxin A, zearalenone, T-2, and HT-2 toxins) was determined in 64 extruded cat foods purchased in Italy through ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. Deoxynivalenol and fumonisins were the most common contaminants (quantified in 80 and 95% of the samples, respectively). Conversely, aflatoxins B2, G1, and G2 were not identified in any sample. Some cat foods exceeded the regulatory limit for aflatoxin B1 (n = 3) or the guidance values for zearalenone (n = 3), fumonisins (n = 2), ochratoxin A (n = 1), and T-2 (n = 1) recently established for pets in the European Union. A widespread co-occurrence of mycotoxins was observed (28, 42, and 8% of the samples contained quantifiable amounts of two, three, and four mycotoxins, respectively). This study describes criticisms regarding the mycotoxin issue in pet food and suggests an improvement of the monitoring of the pet food chain
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