916 resultados para Marine debris -- environmental aspects -- British Columbia -- Nootka Sound
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Organic petrology supported by electron microscopical and micro-analytical techniques was applied to organic matter in Proterozoic sediments to better understand hydrothermal processes responsible for ore-grade mineralisation. It was shown that organic maturation was not only closely linked to the geological history of the sediments, but also highlighted heat transfer by convection as differentiated from conduction solely through sediment burial and step-wise subsidence. Water-rock ratios effect organic maturation in hydrothermal systems, and erratic reflectance profiles are indicators of convective heat transfer. Identification and characterisation of organic materials in terms of source rock and migrated hydrocarbons was shown to be a powerful tool in reconstructing the thermal history of sediments, identifying hydrothermal episodes, fluid pathways and heat source in the northern Australian Proterozoic basins. Higher reflectance of organic matter towards the central parts of the Mount Isa Basin and some of the most northerly parts point to proximity to higher heat flow at times, in contrast to relatively low temperatures prevailing in the western parts of the basin, next to the Murphy Inlier. A close correlation shown between peak organic reflectance values and super-sequence boundaries farther highlighted the valuable information to be gained from organic petrology, by allowing the separation of processes responsible for metal dissolution and transportation from those inducing precipitation. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V All rights reserved.
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The link between body size and risk of extinction has been the focus of much recent attention. For Australian terrestrial mammals this link is of particular interest because it is widely believed that species in the intermediate size range of 35-5500 g (the critical weight range) have been the most prone to recent extinction. But the relationship between body size and extinction risk in Australian mammals has never been subject to a robust statistical analysis. Using a combination of randomization tests and phylogenetic comparative analyses, we found that Australian mammal extinctions and declines have been nonrandom with respect to body size, but we reject the hypothesis of a critical weight range at intermediate sizes. Small species appear to be the least prone to extinction, but extinctions have not been significantly clustered around intermediate sizes. Our results suggest that hypotheses linking intermediate body size with high risk of extinction in Australian mammals are misguided and that the focus of future research should shift to explaining why the smallest species are the most resistant to extinction.
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Fish occupy a range of hydrological habitats that exert different demands on locomotor performance. We examined replicate natural populations of the rainbow fishes Melanotaenia eachamensis and M. duboulayi to determine if colonization of low-velocity (lake) habitats by fish from high-velocity (stream) habitats resulted in adaptation of locomotor morphology and performance. Relative to stream conspecifics, lake fish had more posteriorly positioned first dorsal and pelvic fins, and shorter second dorsal fin bases. Habitat dimorphism observed between wild-caught fish was determined to be heritable as it was retained in M. eachamensis offspring raised in a common garden. Repeated evolution of the same heritable phenotype in independently derived populations indicated body shape divergence was a consequence of natural selection. Morphological divergence between hydrological habitats did not support a priori expectations of deeper bodies and caudal peduncles in lake fish. However, observed divergence in fin positioning was consistent with a family-wide association between habitat and morphology, and with empirical studies on other fish species. As predicted, decreased demand for sustained swimming in takes resulted in a reduction in caudal red muscle area of lake fish relative to their stream counterparts. Melanotaenia duboulayi lake fish also had slower sustained swimming speeds (U-crit) than stream conspecifics. In M. eachamensis, habitat affected U-crit of males and females differently. Specifically, females exhibited the pattern observed in M. duboulayi (lake fish had faster U-crit than stream fish), but the opposite association was observed in males (stream males had slower Ucrit than lake males). Stream M. eachamensis also exhibited a reversed pattern of sexual dimorphism in U-crit (males slower than females) relative to all other groups (males faster than females). We suggest that M. eachamensis males from streams responded to factors other than water velocity. Although replication of muscle and U,,it phenotypes across same habitat populations within and/or among species was suggestive of adaptation, the common garden experiment did not confirm a genetic basis to these associations. Kinematic studies should consider the effect of the position and base length of dorsal fins.
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What causes species richness to vary among different groups of organisms? Two hypotheses are that large geographical ranges and fast life history either reduce extinction rates or raise speciation rates, elevating a clade's rate of diversification. Here we present a comparative analysis of these hypotheses using data on the phylogenetic relationships, geographical ranges and life history of the terrestrial mammal fauna of Australia. By comparing species richness patterns to null models, we show that species are distributed nonrandomly among genera. Using sister-clade comparisons to control for clade age, we then find that faster diversification is significantly associated with larger geographical ranges and larger litters, but there is no evidence for an effect of body size or age at first breeding on diversification rates. We believe the most likely explanation for these patterns is that larger litters and geographical ranges increase diversification rates because they buffer species from extinction. We also discuss the possibility that positive effects of litter size and range size on diversification rates result from elevated speciation rates.
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Recent laboratory studies have demonstrated that Prunus necrotic ringspot virus (PNRSV) (family Bromoviridae) can be readily transmitted when thrips and virus-bearing pollen are placed together on to test plants. For this transmission mechanism to result in stonefruit tree infection in the field, PNRSV-bearing pollen must be deposited onto surfaces of stonefruit trees on which thrips also occur. In a previous paper, we demonstrated that almost all pollen in a PNRSV-infected Japanese plum orchard in southeastern Queensland was deposited onto flowers, whereas few grains occurred on leaves and none on stems. Here, we present results of our investigation of thrips species composition, distribution and abundance on stonefruit trees in the same study area as our previous pollen deposition study. We collected a total of 2010 adult thrips from 13 orchards during the 1989, 1991 and 1992 flowering seasons of which all but 14 were in the suborder Terebrantia. Most (97.4%) terebrantian thrips were of three species, Thrips imaginis, Thrips australis and Thrips tabaci. Thrips tabaci as well as species mixtures that included T imaginis, T australis and T tabaci have been shown to transmit PNRSV via infected pollen in laboratory tests. Adult thrips were frequently collected from flowers but rarely from leaves and never from stems. Large and significant differences in numbers of T imaginis, T australis and T tabaci adults in flowers occurred among orchards and between seasons. No factor was conclusively related to thrips numbers but flowers of late-flowering stonefruit varieties tended to hold more thrips than those of early-flowering varieties. Our results indicate that the common thrips species present on stonefruit trees in the Granite Belt are also ones previously shown to transmit PNRSV via infected pollen in the laboratory and that these thrips are concentrated in stonefruit flowers where most stonefruit pollen is deposited. These results contribute to mounting circumstantial evidence that stonefruit flowers may be inoculated with PNRSV via an interaction of thrips with virus-bearing pollen and that this transmission mechanism may be an important cause of new tree infections in the field.
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According to Wright [1] certification of products and processes began during the 1960’s in the manufacturing industry, as a tool to control and assure the quality/conformity of products and services provided by suppliers to customers/consumers. Thus, the series of ISO 9000 was published first time, in 1987 and it was been created with a flexible character, to be reviewed periodically. Later, were published others normative references, which highlight the ISO 14001 in 1996 and OHSAS 18001 in 1999. This was also, the natural sequence of the certification processes in the organizations, i.e., began with the certification of quality management systems (QMS) followed by the environmental management systems (EMS) and after for the Occupational Health and Safety Management System (OHSMS). Hence, a high percentage of organizations with an EMS, in accordance with the ISO 14001, had also implemented, a certified QMS, in accordance with ISO 9001. At first the implementation of a QMS was particularly relevant in high demanding activity sectors, like the automotive and aeronautical industries, but it has rapidly extended to every activity sector, becoming a common requisite of any company worldwide and a factor of competitiveness and survival. Due to the increasingly demanding environmental legislation in developed countries, companies nowadays are required to seriously take into consideration not only environmental aspects associated to the production chain itself, but also to the life cycle of their products.
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IRMA International Conference under the theme Managing Worldwide Operations and Communications with Information Technology, May 19-23, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
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Mestrado em Engenharia Química
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Dissertação de Mestrado em Ambiente, Saúde e Segurança.
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Trabalho Final de Mestrado elaborado no Laboratório Nacional de Engenharia Civil (LNEC) para a obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Civil pelo Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa no âmbito do protocolo de cooperação entre o ISEL e o LNEC
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A crescente preocupação com aspectos ambientais tornou-se uma questão incontornável para as empresas. Assim, a legislação aplicável obriga a maior controlo de qualquer tipo de perigo que ponha em causa a saúde humana ou o ambiente. Deste modo, a Swedwood Portugal é obrigada a implementar algumas medidas de controlo dos produtos químicos. Assim, os objectivos deste estágio curricular fundamentamse em identificar, avaliar e substituir ou minimizar os impactos dos produtos químicos (PQ’s) que, de acordo com especificações REACH (Regulamento da Comissão Europeia, relativo a Registo, Avaliação, Autorização e restrição de substâncias Químicas) e da Swedwood Internacional não podem ser utilizados. Como tal, o trabalho descrito nesta dissertação foi dividido em várias etapas. A primeira etapa consistiu em identificar todos os PQ’s utilizados no sector Board On Frame (BOF) da Swedwood Portugal. Feito este inventário, foi então criada uma base de dados em formato Microsoft Office Access que permitiu compilar a informação mais relevante dos PQ’s, para uma consulta mais simples e expedita, substituindo a já existente e desactualizada base de dados de PQ’s em formato Microsoft Office Excel. No total foram inventariados 243 PQ’s. Contudo, não foi possível obter as Fichas de Segurança de todos e, por isso, apenas 185 foram registados na base de dados. Estes 185 PQ’s existentes no sector BOF da Swedwood Portugal, foram submetidos a uma avaliação das substâncias que os compõem de acordo com uma ferramenta informática criada pela Swedwood Internacional – Substitution Evaluation Key (SEK). Esta ferramenta usa três listas europeias de substâncias químicas que permitem a avaliação de produtos químicos indirectos: Substances of Very High Concern (SVHC) da Agência Europeia de Produtos Químicos (ECHA), Substitute It Now (SIN) da ChemSec (Organização sueca dedicada ao ambiente) e PRIO da Agência Sueca de Produtos Químicos (Kemi). As três listas incluem substâncias de carácter de tal forma perigoso que a sua utilização deve ser restringida ou até eliminada. Logo, os PQ’s indirectos que contenham substâncias presentes em, pelo menos, uma destas listas devem ser imediatamente substituídos por outros cuja avaliação seja positiva. Por outro lado, para produtos químicos directos, as restrições encontram-se numa especificação imposta pela IKEA, IOS-MAT-0066. Concluída a avaliação, foi então necessário encontrar alternativas viáveis aos PQ’s avaliados negativamente. Como tal, a primeira abordagem consistiu em contactar os fabricantes dos PQ’s a substituir de modo a que estes pudessem apresentar as suas próprias alternativas. Caso estes não apresentassem alternativas viáveis, então contactarse- iam novos fornecedores. Dos 185 PQ’s registados na base de dados e avaliados, 30 produtos químicos indirectos existentes nas fábricas não obedeciam aos critérios impostos pela SEK, estando os produtos químicos directos todos de acordo com as imposições da IOS-MAT-0066. Os 30 PQ’s indirectos do Sector BOF da Swedwood Portugal que incluem as substâncias químicas com carácter perigoso apresentam características Cancerígenas, Mutagénicas e tóxicas para a Reprodução (CMR), irritantes e/ou sensibilizantes e perigosas, a longo prazo, para o ambiente. Para estes PQ’s foram apresentadas alternativas viáveis no que concerne a impactos para a saúde ou para o ambiente e os respectivos custos associados (admitindo quantidades mínimas vendidas). Contudo, não foi possível em tempo útil testar estas alternativas no funcionamento da empresa de modo a avaliar a sua eficiência técnica.