38 research outputs found

    Seasonal benefits of farmland pond management for birds

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    Capsule: There is seasonal variation in the benefits that birds can take from restored farmland ponds. Aims: To evaluate season-specific benefits of farmland pond restoration for local bird communities. Methods: Bird communities were recorded at unmanaged overgrown and managed open-canopy farmland ponds over the breeding, post-breeding and winter seasons. Results were compared and related to seasonal variation in environmental conditions of within-pond and marginal habitats to identify predictors of local bird communities. Results: Bird communities at managed open-canopy ponds showed a higher abundance and species richness over all seasons and displayed pronounced seasonal shifts in composition. Warblers and other specialised bird species were frequently observed at open-canopy sites over the breeding and post-breeding seasons but were generally absent from overgrown ponds. While pond management and landscape connectivity had a consistent positive influence on bird communities over all seasons, the importance of other predictors such as bramble area varied seasonally. Conclusions: Our study highlights a key role of pond management for farmland bird conservation. In addition, the identified seasonal predictors of bird assemblages provide valuable lessons for the design of agri-environment prescriptions for farmland ponds, highlighting the importance of bramble-dominated patches and pond marginal habitat over the breeding season and of a strong connectivity between pond margins and surrounding semi-natural habitats throughout the year

    Model for management of enterprise IT: Considerations of the impact of cloud computing

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    © Ota Novotny, Praha, Czech Republic. The quality of enterprise IT (Information Technology) management has a direct impact on the effectiveness of the IT and indirectly influences the performance of the entire enterprise. This provides motivation for the development of methodologies for the management of enterprise IT. A number of methodologies (e.g. ITIL, COBIT, ISO 20000, etc.) have been developed over the last two decades but their use, in particular in small and medium sized enterprises, is still very limited. According to recent surveys this low rate of adoption can be attributed to the complexity of such methodologies and the demands they place on human and financial resources. Furthermore these methodologies lack the ability to reflect specific conditions that prevail in individual organizations. The MBI (Management of Business Informatics) model developed at the Department of IT at the University of Economics, Prague attempts to overcome these limitations and assist IT executives with customizing the model to take into account various factors that influence enterprise IT management. In this paper we discuss the impact of an important recent trend towards cloud computing on enterprise IT management and we describe how the tasks defined in the MBI model can be modified to incorporate considerations of cloud computing

    Enzymatic activities of Ura2 and Ura1 proteins (aspartate carbamoyltransferase and dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase) are present in both isolated membranes and cytoplasm of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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    Computational analysis predicted three potential hydrophobic transmembrane α-helices within the Ura2 multidomain protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the C-terminal subdomain of which catalyses the second step of uridine-monophosphate biosynthesis by its L-aspartate carbamoyltransferase activity (EC 2.1.3.2). The fourth step of pyrimidine biosynthesis is catalysed by dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase (Ura1 protein; EC 1.3.99.11), which was similarly characterized as a peripheral membrane protein. Ex situ, the activities of the investigated enzymes were associated both with isolated yeast membranes, fractionated by differential centrifugation to remove intact nuclei, and with soluble cytoplasmic proteins. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Funded by: Grant Agency of the Czech Republic. Grant Number: 304/99/1380 and Czech Institutional Research Concept. Grant Number: AVOZ 5020903.Peer Reviewe

    Analiza čustvene inteligence

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    Biodiversity is undergoing unprecedented global decline. Efforts to slow this rate have focused foremost on rarer species, which are at most risk of extinction. Less interest has been paid to more common species, despite their greater importance in terms of ecosystem function and service provision. How rates of decline are partitioned between common and less abundant species remains unclear. Using a 30‐year data set of 144 bird species, we examined Europe‐wide trends in avian abundance and biomass. Overall, avian abundance and biomass are both declining with most of this decline being attributed to more common species, while less abundant species showed an overall increase in both abundance and biomass. If overall avian declines are mainly due to reductions in a small number of common species, conservation efforts targeted at rarer species must be better matched with efforts to increase overall bird numbers, if ecological impacts of birds are to be maintained

    Land-sharing vs. land-sparing urban development modulate predator-prey interactions in Europe

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    Urban areas are expanding globally as a consequence of human population increases, with overall negative effects on biodiversity. To prevent the further loss of biodiversity, it is urgent to understand the mechanisms behind this loss to develop evidence-based sustainable solutions to preserve biodiversity in urban landscapes. The two extreme urban development types along a continuum, land-sparing (large, continuous green areas and high-density housing) and land-sharing (small, fragmented green areas and low-density housing) have been the recent focus of debates regarding the pattern of urban development. However, in this context, there is no information on the mechanisms behind the observed biodiversity changes. One of the main mechanisms proposed to explain urban biodiversity loss is the alteration of predator–prey interactions. Using ground-nesting birds as a model system and data from nine European cities, we experimentally tested the effects of these two extreme urban development types on artificial ground nest survival and whether nest survival correlates with the local abundance of ground-nesting birds and their nest predators. Nest survival (n = 554) was lower in land-sharing than in land-sparing urban areas. Nest survival decreased with increasing numbers of local predators (cats and corvids) and with nest visibility. Correspondingly, relative abundance of ground-nesting birds was greater in land-sparing than in land-sharing urban areas, though overall bird species richness was unaffected by the pattern of urban development. We provide the first evidence that predator–prey interactions differ between the two extreme urban development types. Changing interactions may explain the higher proportion of ground-nesting birds in land-sparing areas, and suggest a limitation of the land-sharing model. Nest predator control and the provision of more green-covered urban habitats may also improve conservation of sensitive birds in cities. Our findings provide information on how to further expand our cities without severe loss of urban-sensitive species and give support for land-sparing over land-sharing urban development.This paper is a contribution by M. Diaz to the thematic net-work REMEDINAL3-CM (S2013/MAE-2719). F. Morelli and Y. Benedetti were financially supported by the Czech Science Foundation GACR (project number 18-16738S). P. Tryjanowski was supported by the BIOVEINS “Connectivity of green and blue infrastructure: living veins for biodiverse and healthy cities” (2016/22/Z/NZ8/00004)
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