906 research outputs found

    Desastres 2.0. Aplicación de tecnologías Web2.0 en situaciones de emergencia

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    This article presents a social approach for disaster management, based on a public portal, so-called Disasters 2.0, which provides facilities for integrating and sharing usergenerated information about disasters. The architecture of Disasters 2.0 is designed following REST principles and integrates external mashups, such as Google Maps. This architecture has been integrated with different clients, including a mobile client, a multiagent system for assisting in the decentralised management of disasters, and an expert system for automatic asignation of resources to disasters. As a result, the platform allows seamless collaboration of humans and intelligent agents, and provides a novel web2.0 approach for multiagent and disaster management research and artificial intelligence teaching

    Assessing the effects of global change on the performance of Iberian firs using carbon

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    17 páginas, 8 figuras, 1 tabla.[EN]: Assessing the effects of global change on the performance of Iberian firs using carbon isotopes analyses in tree rings. Drought is the main tree-growth limiting factor in the Mediterranean basin. It has been suggested that, in water-limited ecosystems, the global atmospheric CO2 rise might to compensate an increasing drought-induced stomatal closure, without a significant drop in the production rates. In this paper we show data of secondary growth and intrinsic water use efficiency (WUEi) for Abies alba and A. pinsapo trees. We compared populations with and without external decline symptoms. Since the early eighties of the 20th century, the rate of WUEi increase has declined in the sites with decline symptoms, being currently below the rate of CO2 increase. Our data show a good relationship between the time the rate of WUEi increase falls below the CO2 increase, the regional mean temperature increase, the occurrence of several extreme droughts, and generalised radial growth decline.[ES]: Evaluando los efectos del cambio global sobre el funcionamiento de los abetos ibéricos mediante análisis de isótopos de carbono en los anillos de crecimiento. La sequía es el principal factor limitante del crecimiento en las especies forestales de la cuenca mediterránea. Se ha propuesto que en ecosistemas limitados por el agua, el incremento global de CO2 atmosférico puede compensar el mayor cierre estomático inducido por la sequía sin reducirse notablemente las tasas de producción. En este trabajo se muestran las tasas de crecimiento secundario y la eficiencia intrínseca de uso de agua (WUEi) de poblaciones de Abies alba y A. pinsapo. Se han comparado poblaciones con y sin síntomas externos de decaimiento. Desde comienzos de los años ochenta del pasado siglo la tasa de incremento de la WUEi en los sitios que presentan síntomas de decaimiento ha descendido hasta colocarse por debajo de la tasa de incremento de CO2. Nuestros datos muestran una buena correlación entre el momento en que el incremento de WUEi cae por debajo del incremento del CO2, el incremento regional de la temperatura media, la ocurrencia de varias sequías extremas, y la reducción de crecimiento radial.Peer reviewe

    Links between climate, drought and minimum wood density in conifers

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    As the global climate warms, increased aridity is expected to become a major determinant of forest productivity and tree growth. In gymnosperms, wood density quantified at seasonal to annual scales can be related to changes in tracheid lumen size due to alterations in soil water availability. In this way, minimum wood density (MND) has been shown to respond negatively to early growing-season precipitation in several conifers because dry conditions reduce tracheid lumen size and consequently increase MND. We investigated if this relationship between spring precipitation and MND applies to four conifer species (Abies alba, Pinus sylvestris, Pinus nigra, Juniperus thurifera) in NE Spain from mesic (A. alba, P. sylvestris) to xeric (P. nigra, J. thurifera) conditions. We further assessed how climate, precipitation, and drought-affected tree-ring width (TRW) and MND at several time scales to test if water shortage in spring increases MND and decreases TRW over time and seasonally. Lastly, we quantified the post-drought MND recovery. We found the strongest negative correlations between MND and spring precipitation in P. nigra followed by J. thurifera. In these two species, the associations between MND and 9-month long droughts peaked in early spring (P. nigra, r=−0.73; J. thurifera, r=−0.50). Juniperus thurifera presented a better post-drought recovery (decrease in MND), followed by P. nigra and P. sylvestris. We conclude that MND is a reliable and accurate proxy of drought severity during spring in conifers subjected to seasonal water shortage. MND can be used as an early-warning indicator of short- and long-term changes in the responses of trees to water shortage.Spanish Ministry of Economy “Fundiver” project (CGL2015-69186-C2-1-R). FEDER Funds, Andalusia Regional Government, Consejería de Economía, Conocimento, Empresas y Universidad 2014–2020 (PinCaR project UHU-1266324)

    Estructura de un ecotono bosque Subalpino-pastos alpinos (Las Cutas, Ordesa, Pirineos Centrales)

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    Describimos la estructura de un ecotono bosque subalpino-pastos alpinos en los Pirineos Centrales, que incluye los límites altitudinales del bosque y del árbol y está dominado por Pinus uncinata Ram. Para cada individuo de P. uncinata situado dentro de una parcela rectangular paralela a la pendiente anotamos su localización y medimos diversas variables estructurales o deforma (número y tipo de pies por individuo). Estos individuos fueron clasificados según su tamaño (adultos, jóvenes, vastagos y plántulas) y forma («krummholz» ¿individuos arbustivos policórmicos¿, krummholz con pies verticales). La estructura del ecotono se describió mediante los cambios de tamaño y forma de los individuos de P. uncinata a lo largo del ecotono y en relación con el clima de la zona, que se caracteriza por espesores de nieve máximos en primavera (abril) y fuertes vientos del N-NW-W. La mayoría de los individuos vivos eran krummholz, situándose por encima del límite del bosque y mostrando proximidad espacial con las plántulas. Los individuos grandes, verticales y unicórmicos predominaban en el bosque. Los cambios estructurales o deforma de los individuos eran bruscos a lo largo del ecotono. Los daños de las copas debidos al viento eran evidentes en individuos arbustivos y predominaban en las direcciones de viento más fuertes durante todo el año. La interacción nieve-viento permite explicar en parte la localización de este límite del bosque que puede considerarse un fenómeno local. La situación espacial de las distintas clases de individuos, la interacción espacial entre plántulas y krummholz más los cambios deforma de crecimiento (de arbustiva a arbórea o viceversa) pueden modificar la respuesta de estas poblaciones de P uncinata a cambios climáticos

    Timing of Drought Triggers Distinct Growth Responses in Holm Oak: Implications to Predict Warming-Induced Forest Defoliation and Growth Decline

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    Droughts negatively impact forests by reducing growth and increasing defoliation leading to forest dieback as the climate becomes warmer and drier. However, the timing and severity of droughts determine how differently or intensively water shortage affects primary (shoot and leaf formation) and secondary growth (stem radial growth based on tree-ring widths). We compare the impact of two severe droughts (2005, 2012), showing different climatic characteristics on the growth responses of three Mediterranean holm oak stands in northeastern Spain. We also quantify climate trends and drought severity. Then, we use remote sensing data to infer how those droughts impacted forest productivity. Both droughts were characterized by warm and dry spring conditions leading to reduced budburst, low shoot production, asynchrony in primary growth and decreased productivity and scarce radial growth, particularly in 2005. However, defoliation peaked in 2012 when radial growth showed minimum values and early spring and late summer temperatures reached maximum values. We discuss how uncoupled and resilient are the responses of primary and secondary growth to drought. Finally, these findings are used to gain insight into the drought-related drivers of defoliation in Spanish holm oak forests.We acknowledge support by the CSIC Open Access Publication Initiative through its Unit of Information Resources for Research (URICI).Peer reviewe

    Symmetric L-graphs

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    In this paper we characterize symmetric L-graphs, which are either Kronecker products of two cycles or Gaussian graphs. Vertex symmetric networks have the property that the communication load is uniformly distributed on all the vertices so that there is no point of congestion. A stronger notion of symmetry, edge symmetry, requires that every edge in the graph looks the same. Such property ensures that the communication load is uniformly distributed over all the communication links, so that there is no congestion at any link.Peer Reviewe

    Layer-resolved imaging of domain wall interactions in magnetic tunnel junction-like trilayers

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    We have performed a layer-resolved, microscopic study of interactions between domain walls in two magnetic layers separated by a non-magnetic one, using high-resolution x-ray photoemission electron microscopy. Domain walls in the hard magnetic Co layer of a Co/Al2O3/FeNi trilayer with in-plane uniaxial anisotropy strongly modify the local magnetization direction in the soft magnetic FeNi layer. The stray fields associated to the domain walls lead to an antiparallel coupling between the local Co and FeNi moments. For domain walls parallel to the easy magnetization axis this interaction is limited to the domain wall region itself. For strongly charged (head-on or tail-to-tail) walls, the antiparallel coupling dominates the interaction over radial distances up to several micrometers from the centre of the domain wall.Comment: Published version, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 19, 476204 (2007

    Prior height, growth, and wood anatomy differently predispose to drought-induced dieback in two Mediterranean oak speciesk

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    International audienceAbstractKey messageCoexisting Mediterranean oaks are differently predisposed to heat- and drought-induced dieback as a function of height, prior growth, wood anatomy, and growth responsiveness to temperatures. To forecast post-dieback damage, the variability of species and individual traits must be considered.ContextForests are susceptible to drought-induced dieback. However, considerable variability in how drought translates into tree damage exists in coexisting species.AimsThis study aimed to assess if tree size, radial growth, and wood anatomy predisposed trees to drought damage, measured as defoliation and changes in non-structural carbohydrate (NSC) concentrations.MethodsWe measured radial growth, wood anatomy, and post-drought NSC concentrations in highly defoliated and less defoliated holm oak (Quercus ilex) and Portuguese oak (Quercus faginea) trees co-occurring in a coppice stand.ResultsHighly defoliated trees showed a lower height than less defoliated individuals. In holm oak, a reduced previous growth and the formation of vessels with smaller lumen areas predisposed to drought damage, which suggests hydraulic deterioration. In Portuguese oak, most defoliated trees grew less in response to elevated growing season temperatures. Sapwood starch and NSC concentrations decrease in defoliated holm oaks.ConclusionA height-dependent predisposition modulates the responses to drought-induced dieback in Mediterranean oak coppices. Coexisting oak species presented different predisposing factors to drought-induced dieback related to growth (holm oak) and its sensitivity to temperature (Portuguese oak). To forecast post-dieback damage, we should consider the variability of traits between and within species

    Drops in needle production are early-warning signals of drought-triggered dieback in scots pine

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    Producción CientíficaUnderstanding the mechanisms of drought-induced forest dieback and tree mortality is a priority for predicting forest responses to climate change. However, long-term information on drought impacts on crown dynamics and how it relates to tree water and carbon economy is still lacking. Comparing declining and non-declining Scots pines at the same site, we quantified primary and secondary growth and intrinsic water-use efficiency (WUEi). Further, we reconstructed the needle production and the annual total number of needles using the Needle Trace Method. Here, we reconstructed the apical needles through the assessment of 2460 longitudinal sections. We fitted partial least squares regression models to assess climate influence on primary and secondary growth and needle dynamics, and then linear mixed models using climate covariates and discerning between health status in the 1975–2016 period. Finally, we analyzed drought legacy effects applying a Bayesian hierarchical framework. We detected the highest differences between health tree classes in the annual total number of needles during the warm-dry 1980s. Declining trees responded more negatively to climate than non-declining conspecifics and showed a higher variability of drought legacy effects. We found significant drought legacy effects in the annual total number of needles up to 3 years after a drought. The warm, dry 1980s, that preceded the dieback, showed the highest δ13C values since the 1970s. Declining trees showed higher WUEi than non-declining trees from the 2000s onwards. Our study sheds light on the major role of needle dynamics in dieback episodes and illustrates how past drops in needle production may be interpreted as early warnings of drought-induced dieback in Scots pine.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación y Agencia Estatal de Investigación - MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 (grant IJC2019- 040571-I), and the Instituto de Estudios Turolenses (IET) project PROWARM (PID2020-118444GA-100)Publicación en abierto financiada por el Consorcio de Bibliotecas Universitarias de Castilla y León (BUCLE), con cargo al Programa Operativo 2014ES16RFOP009 FEDER 2014-2020 DE CASTILLA Y LEÓN, Actuación:20007-CL - Apoyo Consorcio BUCL
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