6 resultados para rocky outcrops
em Helda - Digital Repository of University of Helsinki
Resumo:
The objective of this study is to examine the social impacts of the integrated conservation and development project (ICDP) aimed at biodiversity conservation and local socio-economic development in the Ranomafana National Park (RNP), Madagascar. Furthermore, the study explores social sustainability and justice of the ICDP in Ranomafana. This ethnographically informed impact study uses of various field methods. The research material used consists of observation, interviews (key-person and focus group), school children's writings, official statistics and project documents. Fieldwork was conducted in three phases in 2001, 2002 and 2004 in twelve villages around the park, as well as in neighbouring areas of Ranomafana. However, four of those twelve villages were chosen for closer study. This study consists of five independent articles and a concluding chapter. Social impacts were studied through reproductive health indicators as well as a life security approach. Equity and distribution of benefits and drawbacks of ICDP were analysed and the actors related to the conservation in Ranomafana were identified. The children and adolescents' environmental views were also examined. The reproductive health indicators studied showed a poor state of reproductive health in the park area. Moreover, the existing social capital in the villages seemed to be fragmented due to economic difficulties that were partly caused by the conservation regulations. The ICDP in Ranomafana did not pay attention to the heterogeneity of the affected communities even though the local beneficiaries of the ICDP varied according to their ethnicity, living place, wealth, social position and gender. In addition, various conservation actors (local people in various groups, local authorities, tourist business owners, conservation NGOs and scientists) contest their interests over the forest, conservation and its related activities. This study corroborates the same type of evidence and conclusions discussed in other similar cases elsewhere: so called social conservation programmes still cannot meet the needs of the people living near the protected areas; on the contrary, they even have a reverse impact on the people's lives. A fundamental misunderstood assumption in the conservation process in Ranomafana was to consider the local people as a problem for biodiversity conservation. Major reasons for the failure of the ICDP in Ranomafana include a lack of local institutions that would have been able to communicate as equals with the conservation NGOs as well as to transfer the tradition of the authoritarian governance in conservation management together with the over-appreciation of scientific biodiversity, and lack of will to understand the local people's rights to use the forest for their livelihoods.
Resumo:
ABSTRACT The Baltic Sea is a vulnerable ecosystem currently undergoing a number of changes, both natural and human induced. The changes are likely to affect the species found on these shores, e.g. their distribution and interactions with other species. Blue mussels (Mytilus trossulus x Mytilus edulis) provide one of the main biogenic hard structures on the shallow shores of the Baltic Sea where they aggregate into dense beds and provide a number of resources for over 40 associated macrofaunal species, thus functioning as ecosystem engineers. The blue mussel, being a marine species, is highly likely to be affected by any changes in sea water salinity, circulation and/or water balance. These changes could trickle down also to affect the associated macrofaunal communities. The aims of this thesis were three-fold: first, I examined and described the macrofaunal communities found within blue mussel patches since the fauna associated with mussel patches had never been described in the study area prior to this thesis. Second, I explored how changes in mussel density, size as well as patch size and shape would affect the mussel communities. Finally, I tested how general landscape theories derived from terrestrial studies function in blue mussel systems. Theories included the structural heterogeneity hypothesis, species-area relationships, edge effects and patch isolation effects. The work shows that blue mussels in the northern Baltic Sea have an indisputable function as diversity hotspots and that the faunal assemblages found in mussel patches are extremely rich and unique. Further on, it shows that changes in mussel biomass, size, patch size and amount of edge have the potential to alter the faunal assemblages and diversity within patches. Finally, it shows that although some landscape theories, such as the structural heterogeneity hypothesis, seem to apply also in blue mussel communities, others cannot be directly applied due to the different prevailing conditions in the study system. This is a pioneering work looking at diversity shaping processes on the rocky shores of the Gulf of Finland, making up over 40% of the total water basin. A focus on niche construction, positive facilitation effects and ecosystem engineering could provide new insights and methods for conservation biology, but before this can be done, we need to fully understand the circumstances under which a species becomes an ecosystem engineer and recognize the systems in which it functions.
Resumo:
Women at the boundary. Kyöpeli ( ghost, devil, elf, fairy, enchantress, witch ), Nainen ( woman ), Naara(s) ( female animal, derogatory term for a woman ), Neitsyt ( young, [virgin] woman ), Morsian ( bride ), Akka ( old woman, wife, grandmother ) and Ämmä ( [old] woman, wife, grandmother ) in Finnish place names This study examines a total of about 4,000 Finnish place names which include a specific that refers to a woman: Kyöpeli, Nainen, Naara(s), Neitsyt, Morsian, Akka or Ämmä. The study has two main objectives. First, to interpret the place names in the data, that is, to examine the words included in the data and establish their background and to differentiate names of different ages. In establishing the background of a name, the type of place (e.g. lake, hill or marsh) and its location, as well as the semantics of the feminine specific, are taken into account. The connotations of words referring to a woman are also studied. Words that refer to a woman are often affective and susceptible to changes in meaning, which is reflected in the history of place names. The second main objective is to recognise and highlight mythological place names. Mythology is pivotal for the interpretation of many place names with a feminine specific. The criteria for mythological names have not been explicitly discussed in Finnish onomastics until now, and I seek to determine such criteria in this study with the help of the data. Mythological place names often refer to large and significant natural localities, which are in many cases important boundaries for the community. Names for smaller localities may also be mythological if they refer to a place with a key location or a special topography (e.g. steep or rocky places). I also discuss the stories involved with specific places in the data, such as stories about supernatural beings. Each of the name groups discussed in the study has its own profile. For example, Naara(s) names are so old that naara is no longer understood to refer to a woman. These names have thus often been misinterpreted in onomastics. Names beginning with Morsian, on the other hand, appear to be of fairly recent origin and may be attributed to an international cautionary tale. Names beginning with Nais, Neitsyt, Akka and Ämmä highlight the duality of the data. They include both old names for important natural localities or boundaries and more recent names for modest dwellings, small cultivated areas and useless marshy ponds. This distribution of place names may reflect a cultural shift that changed the status of women in the community.
Resumo:
Tutkielmassa on analysoitu lukijoiden lukukokemuksia ja sitä, millainen kieli koetaan sopivaksi, hauskaksi, vieraaksi ja läheiseksi nuorille ja nuorille aikuisille suunnatussa käännössarjakuvassa. Tutkimusaineistona on ruotsalaisen Martin Kellermanin Rocky-sarjakuva, joka kertoo nuorten aikuisten elämästä Tukholmassa. Sarjakuva on suunnattu nuorille ja nuorille aikuisille ja se on tyyliltään humoristinen. Tutkimusmenetelminä on käytetty tekstianalyysiä, käännösanalyysiä ja tutkimuskyselyä. Tutkielman teoriaosuudessa on käsitelty globaaleja ja paikallisia käännösstrategioita ja keskitytty erityisesti kolmeen globaaliin käännösstrategiaan: normalisoimiseen, vieraannuttamiseen ja kotouttamiseen. Lähtötekstin analyysissä kuvaillaan sarjakuvan yleistä kielimuotoa ja tyyliä. Analyysissä on perehdytty erityisesti puhekielisyyteen ja kulttuurisidonnaisiin elementteihin. Lähtötekstin analyysi keskittyy pääosin neljään sarjakuvastrippiin, jotka on valittu käännettäväksi aineistoksi. Käännösanalyysissa kuvataan käännösaineistosta tehtyä kolmea suomenkielistä käännöstä. Yksi käännöksistä on tehty normalisoivan käännösstrategian mukaan: se sijoittuu neutraaliin ympäristöön ja sen kieli on neutraalia yleiskieltä. Toinen käännöksistä on tehty vieraannuttavan käännösstrategian mukaan: se sijoittuu Tukholmaan ja kieli on yleispuhekieltä. Kolmas käännös on tehty kotouttavan käännösstrategian mukaan: se sijoittuu Helsinkiin ja kieli on helsinkiläistä puhekieltä. Tutkimuskysely toteutettiin käännöksen laatututkimuksena neljässä suomalaisessa lukiossa. Tutkimukseen osallistui yhteensä 102 lukiolaista Helsingistä, Iisalmesta, Tampereelta ja Turusta, joista 59 oli tyttöjä ja 43 poikia. Laatutututkimuksessa keskityttiin erityisesti lukiolaisten kokemuksiin hyvästä, hauskasta vieraasta ja omaa puhetyyliä lähellä olevasta käännöksestä. Tutkimuksessa käy ilmi, että maantieteelliset erot vaikuttavat odotettua vähemmän nuorten vastauksiin, mutta sukupuolella on jossain määrin merkitystä käännöksiä arvioitaessa. Kotouttavaa (helsinkiläistä) käännöstä pidettiin ehdottomasti hauskimpana joka paikkakunnalla (74 % kaikista vastanneista) ja sitä pidettiin myös parhaimpana käännöksenä (45,10 % kaikista vastanneista) Iisalmea lukuun ottamatta. Tutkimustulokset osoittavat, että normalisoiva käännös tuntuu nuorille vieraimmalta (43,63 % kaikista vastanneista), vaikka turkulaisista kotouttava käännös tuntui hieman vieraammalta ja iisalmelaisistakin yhtä oudolta kuin normalisoiva käännös. Vieraannuttava käännös oli lähimpänä nuorten omaa puhetyyliä (58,33 % kaikista vastanneista) joka paikkakunnalla. Tutkimustulos puhuu kotouttavan käännöksen puolesta tätä sarjakuvaa käännettäessä, jos kohderyhmän halutaan pysyvän samana. Tutkimustulosta ei kuitenkaan voida pitää yleispätevänä, niin että se koskisi kaikkea sarjakuvakääntämistä. Avainsanat: kääntäminen, reseptiotutkimus, laatututkimus, puhekieli, slangi, sarjakuvat, normalisointi, vieraannuttaminen, kotouttaminen
Resumo:
Spatial and temporal variation in the abundance of species can often be ascribed to spatial and temporal variation in the surrounding environment. Knowledge of how biotic and abiotic factors operate over different spatial and temporal scales in determining distribution, abundance, and structure of populations lies at the heart of ecology. The major part of the current ecological theory stems from studies carried out in central parts of the distributional range of species, whereas knowledge of how marginal populations function is inadequate. Understanding how marginal populations, living at the edge of their range, function is however in a key position to advance ecology and evolutionary biology as scientific disciplines. My thesis focuses on the factors affecting dynamics of marginal populations of blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) living close to their tolerance limits with regard to salinity. The thesis aims to highlight the dynamics at the edge of the range and contrast these with dynamics in more central parts of the range in order to understand the potential interplay between the central and the marginal part in the focal system. The objectives of the thesis are approached by studies on: (1) factors affecting regional patterns of the species, (2) long-term temporal dynamics of the focal species spaced along a regional salinity gradient, (3) selective predation by increasing populations of roach (Rutilus rutilus) when feeding on their main food item, the blue mussel, (4) the primary and secondary effects of local wave exposure gradients and (5) the role of small-scale habitat heterogeneity as determinants of large-scale pattern. The thesis shows that populations of blue mussels are largely determined by large scale changes in sea water salinity, affecting mainly recruitment success and longevity of local populations. In opposite to the traditional view, the thesis strongly indicate that vertebrate predators strongly affect abundance and size structure of blue mussel populations, and that the role of these predators increases towards the margin where populations are increasingly top-down controlled. The thesis also indicates that the positive role of biogenic habitat modifiers increases towards the marginal areas, where populations of blue mussels are largely recruitment limited. Finally, the thesis shows that local blue mussel populations are strongly dependent on high water turbulence, and therefore, dense populations are constrained to offshore habitats. Finally, the thesis suggests that ongoing sedimentation of rocky shores is detrimental for the species, affecting recruitment success and post-recruit survival, pushing stable mussel beds towards offshore areas. Ongoing large scale changes in the Baltic Sea, especially dilution processes with attendant effects, are predicted to substantially contract the distributional range of the mussel, but also affect more central populations. The thesis shows that in order to understand the functioning of marginal populations, research should (1) strive for multi-scale approaches in order to link ecosystem patterns with ecosystem processes, and (2) challenge the prevailing tenets that origin from research carried out in central areas that may not be valid at the edge.