5 resultados para Structuration

em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça


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Predicting the response of species to environmental changes is a great and on-going challenge for ecologists, and this requires a more in-depth understanding of the importance of biotic interactions and the population structuration in the landscape. Using a reciprocal transplantation experiment, we tested the response of five species to an elevational gradient. This was combined to a neighbour removal treatment to test the importance of local adaptation and biotic interactions. The trait studied was performance measured as survival and biomass. Species response varied along the elevational gradient, but with no consistent pattern. Performance of species was influenced by environmental conditions occurring locally at each site, as well as by positive or negative effects of the surrounding vegetation. Indeed, we observed a shift from competition for biomass to facilitation for survival as a response to the increase in environmental stress occurring in the different sites. Unlike previous studies pointing out an increase of stress along the elevation gradient, our results supported a stress gradient related to water availability, which was not strictly parallel to the elevational gradient. For three of our species, we observed a greater biomass production for the population coming from the site where the species was dominant (central population) compared to population sampled at the limit of the distribution (marginal population). Nevertheless, we did not observe any pattern of local adaptation that could indicate adaptation of populations to a particular habitat. Altogether, our results highlighted the great ability of plant species to cope with environmental changes, with no local adaptation and great variability in response to local conditions. Our study confirms the importance of taking into account biotic interactions and population structure occurring at local scale in the prediction of communities’ responses to global environmental changes.

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Frauen werden im englischen Spätmittelalter auf den Innenraum von Haus und Kirche verwiesen. Wie sie diese Räume nutzten und kreativ (um-)gestalteten und auf welche Weise es ihnen gelang, reale Räume mental zu transgredieren und durch mentale Innenräume auszuwechseln, zeigt diese Arbeit. Dabei wird Raum - in Anlehnung an Giddens’ Theory of Structuration und den poststrukturalistischen Ansatz der Archäologie - als sowohl wirkmächtig als auch verschieden interpretierbar und transformierbar verstanden. Der Rückzug in den mentalen Innenraum führte im Extremfall dazu, daß neben der realen eine zweite Existenz aufgebaut wurde. Beide Existenzweisen konnten, wie insbesondere an den Biographien von Margaret Beaufort sowie Cicely und Margaret von York ablesbar ist, problemlos nebeneinander bestehen oder - wie am Beispiel von Margery Kempe gezeigt wird - so unvereinbar miteinander sein, daß gesellschaftliche Sanktionen die Folge waren.