984 resultados para marginal impacts
Resumo:
We evaluated the effectiveness of wooden artificial reefs (ARs) as fish habitat. Three types of ARs, made of cedar logs, broadleaf tree logs, and PVC pipes, respectively, were deployed in triplicate at 8-m depth off Maizuru, Kyoto Prefecture, Sea of Japan, in May 2004. Fish assemblages associated with each of the nine ARs were observed by using SCUBA twice a month for four years. Fish assemblages in the adjacent habitat were also monitored for two years before and four years after reef deployment. In the surveyed areas (ca. 10 m2) associated with each of the cedar, broadleaf, and PVC ARs, the average number of fish species was 4.14, 3.49, and 3.00, and the average number of individuals was 40.7, 27.9, and 20.3, respectively. The estimated biomass was also more greater when associated with the cedar ARs than with other ARs. Visual censuses of the habitat adjacent to the ARs revealed that the number of fish species and the density of individuals were not affected by the deployment of the ARs. Our results support the superiority of cedar as an AR material and indicate that deployment of wooden ARs causes no reduction of fish abundance in adjacent natural reefs.
Resumo:
This study examines the vulnerability of fish pr oduction in Uganda, particularly as it r elates to the predicted impacts from climate change, using the concept of the value chain. The value chain approach has been recommended as a useful tool to study specific challenges facing a sector resulting from various drivers of change, including climate. Critically, such analyses can reveal context-specific response strategies to enhance a sector (Jacinto and Pomer oy 2010). The specific purpose of the study was to identify curr ent and potential impacts of climate change and corresponding adaptation strategies in fish value chains. The study builds upon information fr om earlier value chain analyses on fisheries and aquaculture production in Uganda to provide a more in-depth understanding of issues facing the fish industry, in particular, those to be incorporated in the CGIAR Resear ch Program Livestock and Fish.
Resumo:
South Africa's marine resources are essentially fully exploited and in some cases over exploited. The Government of National Unity has embarked on the ambitious Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) to: meet the basic needs; develop the country's human resources; build economy; and democratize the state and society. Although fisheries can only be expected to play a minor role in contributing to RDP, the Programme have a role to play in managing South Africa's living marine resources. The role of RDP in fisheries management is presented together with fisheries management approaches to help achieve the aims of the RDP.
Resumo:
The El Nino phenomenon is an "anomalous climatic condition in the tropical Pacific region which occurs every two to seven years and affects the global climate". There is a greater increase in the water surface temperature of the eastern tropical and central tropical Pacific during an El Nino episode relative to that of the western tropical Pacific. The phenomenon causes fluctuations in rainfall, resulting in drought in some areas and heavy rainfall in others. During the El Nino of 1990-1992, the damage caused by the drought in the Philippines was estimated to be P4.1 billion (PhP24 = US$1). While the damage to agriculture is well documented, the impact on fisheries has not been considered. The impacts of the El Nino episode of 1997-1998 were assessed in the Philippines by the filed personnel of the Department of Agriculture and representatives of the private sector in the 15 regions of the country. Data on the losses caused by the phenomenon were obtained from interviews, surveys and reports of local government units and provincial agricultural offices for the period October 1997-June 1998. The effects of El Nino on aquaculture, marine fisheries and inland fisheries were determined.
Resumo:
The Pond Dynamics/Aquaculture Collaborative Research Support Program (PDA/CRSP) is a global research network to generate basic science that may be used to advance aquaculture development. One of a family of research programs funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the CRSP focuses on improving the efficiency of aquaculture systems. The PDA/CRSP began work in 1982 in Thailand, and subsequently in the Philippines, Honduras, the US and, until recently, Rwanda. At all the sites, the goal is the same: to identify constraints to aquaculture production, and to design responses that are environmentally and culturally appropriate. The research network's global experiment has focused on tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), although some sites have devoted attention to marine shrimp and other locally significant species. Impact of the network's investigations with tilapia is examined in this article.
Resumo:
Este trabalho busca, através de um estudo que vincula literatura e pensamento crítico social, explorar as relações entre os processos de marginalização literária e algumas alternativas intelectivas acerca das noções de marginalidade e anormalidade. Seu corpus literário abarca três livros de escritores brasileiros, que, além de não terem logrado inserção no que poderia ser entendido como um cânone nacional, destacam-se ainda pela temática de suas obras, que, em si mesmas, trazem o problema da marginalização. Assim, Desabrigo, de Antônio Fraga; Quarto de despejo, de Carolina de Jesus; e Hospício é Deus, de Maura Lopes Cançado são abordadas a partir das reflexões desenvolvidas, especialmente, por Michel Foucault e Georges Canguilhem a respeito das estratégias de produção de anormais, revelando o quanto a marginalização, antes de ser uma consequência de uma inadequação a normas pré-existentes, pode, de fato, ser a própria fonte de produção destas normas. Buscando valorizar tanto as convergências, quanto as distinções possíveis nas obras daqueles três escritores, o trabalho procura se afastar de uma perspectiva que apreenderia suas obras como produções isoladas e desprestigiadas, para nelas encontrar a potência da afirmação de um discurso literário que tanto se apresentou como denúncia e contestação, quanto como um cuidadoso trabalho de expressão literária e, portanto, de expressão social.
Effects of human impacts on fine roots and soil organic matter of a pine forest in subtropical China
Resumo:
Despite considerable conservation efforts, many reef fish fisheries around the world continue to be in peril. Many are vulnerable to overexploitation because they have predictable and highly aggregated spawning events. In U.S. Caribbean waters, fishery managers are increasingly interested in advancing the use of closed areas as a means for rebuilding reef fisheries, protecting coral reef habitats, and furthering ecosystem-based management while maintaining the sustained participation of local fishing communities. This study details small-scale fishermen’s views on the Caribbean Fishery Management Council’s proposals to lengthen the current Bajo de Sico seasonal closure off the west coast of Puerto Rico to afford additional protection to snapper-grouper spawning populations and associated coral reef habitats. Drawing on snowball sampling techniques, we interviewed 65 small-scale fishermen who regularly operate in the Bajo de Sico area. Snowball sampling is a useful method to sample difficult-to-find populations. Our analysis revealed that the majority of the respondents opposed a longer seasonal closure in the Bajo de Sico area, believing that the existing 3-month closure afforded ample protection to reef fish spawning aggregations and that their gear did not impact deep-water corals in the area. Whilst fishermen’s opposition to additional regulations was anticipated, the magnitude of the socio-economic consequences described was unexpected. Fishermen estimated that a year round closure would cause their gross household income to fall between 10% and 80%, with an average drop of 48%. Our findings suggest that policy analysts and decision-makers should strive to better understand the cumulative impacts of regulations given the magnitude of the reported socio-economic impacts; and, more importantly, they should strive to enhance the existing mechanisms by which fishermen can contribute their knowledge and perspectives into the management process.
Resumo:
No presente trabalho, o objeto de análise é a Literatura Marginal produzida por Ferréz e seus pontos de contato com um deslocamento do lugar da periferia. Partindo dessa ideia, esta pesquisa pensa Ferréz, em alguns momentos, e dialoga com outros escritores da periferia e suas preferências temáticas. Falando da periferia como tema do escritor da nova geração da Literatura Marginal e como possibilidade de que essa Literatura despontasse, esta pesquisa tem início com a discussão do conceito de periferia e, em seguida, coloca em perspectiva e realiza um sobrevoo entre os diferentes sentidos do termo marginalidade no contexto da Literatura e nas artes de uma maneira ampla. A partir das referidas observações, são discutidas as primeiras expressões de marginalidade na literatura, especialmente aqui no Brasil e verificadas quando se começou, de fato, a aplicar essa expressão marginal na Literatura. Assim, são apresentadas as três principais conotações de marginalidade: (i) aquela que se refere à cultura marginal das décadas de 1960 e 1970; (ii) aquela que diz respeito à poesia marginal do mesmo período; e (iii) a que se relaciona aos escritores que trazem a periferia como tema ou, ainda, aqueles que são oriundos dela. Em seguida, são apresentados os traços da marginalidade literária da nova geração e algumas ações político-culturais de alguns escritores. Nesse momento, há um aprofundamento no objetivo desta pesquisa, que é discutir as mutações na Literatura Marginal e no discurso de Férrez dentro de uma nova concepção de marginalidade literária, inseparável de novos sentidos e contextos da ideia de periferia.