9 resultados para Política cambial
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
El artículo establece, en primer lugar, las bases de una antropología pragmática - principalmente el interés por la pregunta "¿cómo hace la gente?" - que deben orientar la investigación etnográfica. Posteriormente, describe por medio de un extracto etnográfico, diferentes prácticas en la fiesta de San Juan/Inti Raymi en Otavalo (Andes ecuatorianos). Éste, es una construcción textual elaborada a partir de una perspectiva pragmática. Por último, se desarrollan cuatro puntos que apoyan la descripción pragmática y minuciosa: la acción en situación, la superación del intelectualismo, las relaciones situacionales de poder y la co-experiencia de los lectores.
Resumo:
Quantification is a major problem when using histology to study the influence of ecological factors on tree structure. This paper presents a method to prepare and to analyse transverse sections of cambial zone and of conductive phloem in bark samples. The following paper (II) presents the automated measurement procedure. Part I here describes and discusses the preparation method, and the influence of tree age on the observed structure. Highly contrasted images of samples extracted at breast height during dormancy were analysed with an automatic image analyser. Between three young (38 years) and three old (147 years) trees, age-related differences were identified by size and shape parameters, at both cell and tissue levels. In the cambial zone, older trees had larger and more rectangular fusiform initials. In the phloem, sieve tubes were also larger, but their shape did not change and the area for sap conduction was similar in both categories. Nevertheless, alterations were limited, and demanded statistical analysis to be identified and ascertained. The physiological implications of the structural changes are discussed.
Resumo:
The stems and roots of most dicot plants increase in diameter by radial growth, due to the activity of secondary meristems. Two types of meristems function in secondary plant body formation: the vascular cambium, which gives rise to secondary xylem and phloem, and the cork cambium, which produces a bark layer that replaces the epidermis and protects the plant stem from mechanical damage and pathogens. Cambial development, the initiation and activity of the vascular cambium, leads to an accumulation of wood, the secondary xylem tissue. The thick, cellulose-rich cell walls of wood provide a source of cellulose and have the potential to be used as a raw material for sustainable and renewable energy production. In this review, we will discuss what is known about the mechanisms regulating the cambium and secondary tissue development.