315 research outputs found

    Flora of Kiritimati (Christmas) Atoll, Northern Line Islands, Republic of Kiribati

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    This paper is a compilation and analysis of all vascular plants that have been reported on Kiritimati (Christmas) Atoll in the Northern Line Islands of the Republic of Kiribati. It is based on field inventories conducted by the authors on six field visits to the atoll between 1996 and 2012 plus available published and unpublished records of vascular plant collections and observations made on the atoll. The total number of vascular plant species that have been recorded at some time on Kiritimati, including all indigenous and introduced species (whether in cultivation or not) is 168, plus three hybrids and three additional varieties, making a total of 174 taxa. Of these, three records are doubtful, leaving a reliably reported total of 171 taxa in 166 species. Only 10 of the reported taxa were not seen by one or other of us in the period 1996–2012, and of these at least six have probably died out on the island, leaving an extant flora of around 165 reliably recorded taxa (including the hybrids and varieties) in 160 species. There have been no ferns or gymnosperms recorded on the island. Probably only 15 (9%) or perhaps up to 19 of the reliably reported species are native, and most of the present-day flora is made up of deliberate or unintentional introductions made since the date of European discovery of the atoll. Of these, at least 54 and perhaps up to 59 species have naturalized

    Application of ERTS-1 satellite imagery for land use mapping and resource inventories in the central coastal region of California

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    ERTS-1 satellite imagery has proved a valuable data source for land use as well as natural and cultural resource studies on a regional basis. ERTS-1 data also provide an excellent base for mapping resource related features and phenomena. These investigations are focused on a number of potential applications which are already showing promise of having operational utility

    Low cost technology for monitoring sustainable development

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    The term \u27sustainable development\u27 first appeared in a significant way in the World Conservation Strategy (IUCN 1980), but the basic ideas had been discussed much earlier. \u27Ecologically sustainable development\u27 became particularly popular after the publication of Our Common Future, the Brundtland report (WCED 1987). Many agencies claim that their work is highly dependent on, or governed by, sustainable development or sustainability principles. One of the major problems with the concept of sustainability, however, is that, while many people claim to be utilising sustainability principles, there is often little evidence to confirm this. Supporting data are frequently absent, perhaps because people are uncertain about the information they should collect

    Jury Systems Around the World

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    Lay citizens participate as decision makers in the legal systems of many countries. This review describes the different approaches that countries employ to integrate lay decision makers, contrasting in particular the use of juries composed of all citizens with mixed decision-making bodies of lay and law-trained judges. The review discusses research on the benefits and drawbacks of lay legal decision making as well as international support for the use of ordinary citizens as legal decision makers, with an eye to explaining a recent increase in new jury systems around the world. The review calls for more comparative work on diverse approaches to lay participation, examining how different methods of including lay participation promote or detract from fact finding, legal consciousness, civic engagement, and citizen power

    Progressive left ventricular remodeling in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and severe left ventricular hypertrophy

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    AbstractObjectivesThe aim of this study was to determine the natural history of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and severe left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (i.e., maximal left ventricular wall thickness [MLVWT] ≥30 mm) and whether changes in cardiac morphology influence the course of the disease.BackgroundSevere LVH is common in young and rare among elderly patients with HCM. This has been explained by a high incidence of sudden death. We hypothesized that this age-related difference might be explained by left ventricular wall thinning.MethodsA total of 106 (age 33 ± 15 years; 71 males) consecutive patients with severe LVH underwent history taking, examination, electrocardiography, echocardiography, cardiopulmonary exercise testing, and Holter analysis. Survival data were collected at subsequent clinic visits or by communication with patients and their general practioners. In order to assess morphologic and functional changes, 71 (67.0%) patients (mean age 31 ± 15 years; 47 males) followed at our institution underwent serial (≥1 year) assessment.ResultsOf the 106 patients, the majority (78 [71.6%]) were <40 years of age. During follow-up (92 ± 50 months [range 1 to 169]), 18 (17.0%) patients died or underwent heart transplantation (13 sudden cardiac deaths, 2 heart failure deaths, 1 heart transplantation, 1 stroke, 1 postoperative death). Five-year survival from sudden death was 90.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] 84.0% to 96.3%), and that from heart failure death or transplantation was 97.7% (95% CI 94.5 to 100). In patients serially evaluated over 85 ± 51 months, there was an overall reduction in MLVWT of 0.6 mm/year (95% CI 0.31 to 0.81, p = 0.00004). Wall thinning ≥5 mm was observed in 41 patients (57.7%; age 35 ± 13 years; 28 males). On multivariate analysis, the follow-up duration only predicted wall thinning (0.6 mm/year, 95% CI 0.38 to 0.85, p < 0.00001).ConclusionsLeft ventricular remodeling is common in patients with severe LVH and contributes to the low prevalence of severe LVH seen in middle age and beyond

    The Conservation Status of Marine Biodiversity of the Pacific Islands of Oceania

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    The Pacific Islands of Oceania are small islands and atolls occurring over a vast expanse of ocean that are characterized by immense biodiversity and endemism. This project represents a major expansion of the coverage of the Pacific Islands’ marine biodiversity on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The threats to Pacific Island marine biodiversity are many. Results from IUCN Red List initiatives such as this can guide decision-making and conservation prioritization of Pacific Island governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the private sector. By shaping regional and national policies with these data in mind, priority sites for maintaining marine biodiversity can be identified and conserved

    Anthropology, Brokerage and Collaboration in the development of a Tongan Public Psychiatry: Local Lessons for Global Mental Health

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    The Global Mental Health (GMH) movement has revitalised questions of the translatability of psychiatric concepts and the challenges of community engagement in countries where knowledge of the biomedical basis for psychiatric diagnosis is limited or challenged by local cultural codes. In Tonga, the local psychiatrist Dr Puloka has successfully established a publicly accessible psychiatry that has raised admission rates for serious mental illness and addressed some of the stigma attached to diagnosis. On the basis of historical analysis and ethnographic fieldwork with healers, doctors and patients since 1998, this article offers an ethnographic contextualization of the development and reception of three key interventions during the 1990s inspired by traditional healing and reliant on the translation of psychiatric terms and diagnosis. Dr Puloka’s use of medical anthropological and transcultural psychiatry research informed a community engaged brokerage between the implications of psychiatric nosologies and local needs. As such it reveals deficiencies in current polarised positions on the GMH project and offers suggestions to address current challenges of the Global Mental Health movement
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