612 research outputs found
History, origins and importance of temporary ponds
In Europe, temporary ponds are a naturally common and widespread habitat occurring, often in abundance, in all biogeographical regions from the boreal snow-melt pools of northern Scandinavia to the seasonally inundated coastal dune pools of southern Spain. Ecological studies in Europe and elsewhere also emphasise that temporary ponds are a biologically important habitat type, renowned both for their specialised assemblages and the considerable numbers of rare and endemic species they support. They are, however, a habitat currently under considerable threat. Most temporary ponds are inherently shallow and the majority are destroyed even by limited soil drainage for agriculture or urban development. The paper gives an overview of definitions of temporary ponds and examines their formation and abundance. The authors also summarise a visit to the Bialowieza Forest in Poland to investigate the occurrence of temporary ponds
Dangers and opportunities in managing temporary ponds
Although there is a growing awareness of the value of temporary ponds in Europe, there is still remarkably little information available to help guide their conservation and management.
General principles which can be used to guide the management
of temporary ponds as a whole have yet to be established. The aim of this article, therefore, is to give a broader overview of the main principles of temporary pond conservation, particularly by building on a number of general principles for managing ponds previously described by Biggs et al. (1994) and Williams et al. The authors emphasise the importance of surveys in order to get data on which to base management strategies. The main principles of temporary pond management are described, and examples of three case studies of ponds in England are given
Ants and Plants with Extrafloral Nectaries in Fire Successional Habitates on Andros (Bahamas)
Honey baits were used to assess the activity and abundance of nectar-drinking ants in fire successional habitats of rocklands on Andros Island, Bahamas. Vegetation was sampled in pineyard and coppice habitats (the same communities as Florida’s pine rocklands and hammocks), revealing a larger proportion of taxa with extrafloral nectaries in coppice samples, but roughly equivalent cover of plants with extrafloral nectaries in pineyard and coppice vegetation. Ant activity was greater in pineyard than in coppice habitats, with time to discovery of baits the shortest in open and recently burned pineyards, and most of the baits experiencing recruitment of ants. Overgrown pineyards and coppices both had longer time-todiscovery and much less recruitment to baits; coppice edges, more variable, were not significantly different from either of the 2 other habitat groups. Our preliminary study revealed some new records of plant genera and species with extrafloral nectaries, but all ants we observed at nectaries and on baits are also known from pine rocklands and hardwood hammocks of south Florida
Anticipatory governance and moral imagination : methodological insights from a scenario-based public deliberation study
The fields of Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) and participatory foresight seek to establish, and toinclude publics within, anticipatory governance mechanisms. While scenario-based methods can bring to thepublics’ attention the ethical challenges associated to existing technologies, there has been little empirical re-search examining how, in practice, prospective public deliberative processes should be organized to informanticipatory governance. The goal of this article is to generate methodological insights into the way suchmethods can stimulate the public's moral imagination regarding what may (or may not) happen in the future andwhat should (or should not) happen in the future. Our qualitative analyses draw on a public deliberation studythat included videos and online scenarios to support participants’ (n= 57) deliberations about fictional inter-ventions for genetically at-risk individuals. Our findings clarify how participants: (1) challenged key elements ofour scenarios; (2) extended several of their technical and moral prospects; (3) engaged personally with others,including our scenarios’ characters; and (4) mobilized the past creatively to reason about the future. Ourmethodology enabled participants to creatively and empathetically envision complex sociotechnical futures. Yet,important methodological limits should be acknowledged by those who design, implement and use public en-gagement methods to inform anticipatory governance
Lagrange multipliers and transport densities
In this paper we consider a stationary variational inequality with nonconstant gradient constraint and we prove the existence of solution of a Lagrange multiplier, assuming that the bounded open not necessarily convex set O has a smooth boundary. If the gradient constraint g is sufficiently smooth and satisfies ?g 2 =0 and the source term belongs to L 8 (O), we are able to prove that the Lagrange multiplier belongs to L q (O), for 1 0 of our problem has a subsequence that converges weakly to (? 0 ,u 0 ), which solves the transport equation.FCTO -Fuel Cell Technologies Office(UID/MAT/00013/2013)info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Recommended from our members
The p110 delta structure: mechanisms for selectivity and potency of new PI(3)K inhibitors.
Deregulation of the phosphoinositide-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K) pathway has been implicated in numerous pathologies including cancer, diabetes, thrombosis, rheumatoid arthritis and asthma. Recently, small-molecule and ATP-competitive PI(3)K inhibitors with a wide range of selectivities have entered clinical development. In order to understand the mechanisms underlying the isoform selectivity of these inhibitors, we developed a new expression strategy that enabled us to determine to our knowledge the first crystal structure of the catalytic subunit of the class IA PI(3)K p110 delta. Structures of this enzyme in complex with a broad panel of isoform- and pan-selective class I PI(3)K inhibitors reveal that selectivity toward p110 delta can be achieved by exploiting its conformational flexibility and the sequence diversity of active site residues that do not contact ATP. We have used these observations to rationalize and synthesize highly selective inhibitors for p110 delta with greatly improved potencies
Effect of grape maturity on the carbohydrate composition of red sparkling wines
PĂłster presentado en el 10th International Symposium of Enology (OENO 2015), celebrado en Burdeos del 19 de junio al 1 de julio de 2015.The authors thank the INIA for financing this study through the projects RTA2012-00092-C02-01 (with FEDER funds). Leticia MartĂnez thanks the ConsejerĂa de EducaciĂłn del
Gobierno de La Rioja for the FPI-CAR grant.Peer Reviewe
Nonequilibrium thermodynamics of circulation regimes in optically-thin, dry atmospheres
An extensive analysis of an optically-thin, dry atmosphere at different
values of the thermal Rossby number Ro and of the Taylor number Ff is per-
formed with a general circulation model by varying the rotation rate {\Omega}
and the surface drag {\tau} in a wide parametric range. By using nonequilibrium
thermodynamics diagnostics such as material entropy production, efficiency,
meridional heat transport and kinetic energy dissipation we characterize in a
new way the different circulation regimes. Baroclinic circulations feature high
mechanical dissipation, meridional heat transport, material entropy pro-
duction and are fairly efficient in converting heat into mechanical work. The
thermal dissipation associated with the sensible heat flux is found to depend
mainly on the surface properties, almost independent from the rotation rate and
very low for quasi-barotropic circulations and regimes approaching equa- torial
super-rotation. Slowly rotating, axisymmetric circulations have the highest
meridional heat transport. At high rotation rates and intermediate- high drag,
atmospheric circulations are zonostrohic with very low mechanical dissipation,
meridional heat transport and efficiency. When {\tau} is interpreted as a
tunable parameter associated with the turbulent boundary layer trans- fer of
momentum and sensible heat, our results confirm the possibility of using the
Maximum Entropy Production Principle as a tuning guideline in the range of
values of {\Omega}. This study suggests the effectiveness of using fun-
damental nonequilibrium thermodynamics for investigating the properties of
planetary atmospheres and extends our knowledge of the thermodynamics of the
atmospheric circulation regimes
Examining the ethical and social issues of health technology design through the public appraisal of prospective scenarios : a study protocol describing a multimedia-based deliberative method
Background: The design of health technologies relies on assumptions that affect how they will be implemented,
such as intended use, complexity, impact on user autonomy, and appropriateness. Those who design and
implement technologies make several ethical and social assumptions on behalf of users and society more broadly,
but there are very few tools to examine prospectively whether such assumptions are warranted and how the public
define and appraise the desirability of health innovations. This study protocol describes a three-year study that relies
on a multimedia-based prospective method to support public deliberations that will enable a critical examination
of the social and ethical issues of health technology design.
Methods: The first two steps of our mixed-method study were completed: relying on a literature review and the
support of our multidisciplinary expert committee, we developed scenarios depicting social and technical changes
that could unfold in three thematic areas within a 25-year timeframe; and for each thematic area, we created video
clips to illustrate prospective technologies and short stories to describe their associated dilemmas. Using this
multimedia material, we will: conduct four face-to-face deliberative workshops with members of the public (n = 40)
who will later join additional participants (n = 25) through an asynchronous online forum; and analyze and integrate
three data sources: observation, group deliberations, and a self-administered participant survey.
Discussion: This study protocol will be of interest to those who design and assess public involvement initiatives
and to those who examine the implementation of health innovations. Our premise is that using user-friendly tools
in a deliberative context that foster participants’ creativity and reflexivity in pondering potential technoscientific
futures will enable our team to analyze a range of normative claims, including some that may prove problematic
and others that may shed light over potentially more valuable design options. This research will help fill an
important knowledge gap; intervening earlier in technological development could help reduce undesirable effects
and inform the design and implementation of more appropriate innovations
- …