907 resultados para Botanic gardens
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Esta pesquisa tem em vista a influência geográfica do Cinema Guaraci, um artefato geográfico, colaborador do desenvolvimento econômico e na formação sociocultural da população de Rocha Miranda. Localizado na zona norte da cidade do Rio de Janeiro, descortinando esta parte da cidade pouco estudada nos estudos citadinos, constitui este o recorte espacial sob o marco temporal compreendendo o período de sua inauguração de 1953 a 2013, quando persistem os esforços em prol da reabertura desta sala de espetáculos. Através da relação de significações e topofilia, de moradores e frequentadores do lugar, para com este testemunho geográfico, foram escolhidos para esta investigação indivíduos de diversas gerações. Ressalta-se a importância deste símbolo, para a organização espacial do bairro, bem como a obstinada estima pela reabertura do Cine. Para alcançar a profundidade das expressões simbólica e geográfica deste bem, serão realizadas entrevistas e mesmo conversas informais com seus residentes e frequentadores. De igual modo, no processo de elaboração desta pesquisa ainda constam coleta de dados e material bibliográfico com respeito a informações sobre o bairro obtidos nos órgãos de pesquisa competentes, sede do Grupo Pró-Cine Guaraci, instituições como a Biblioteca Nacional, o Arquivo Geral da Cidade, a Fundação Parques e Jardins, o Instituto Pereira Passos, as bibliotecas da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, além do enriquecimento de obras de autores como Yi-Fu Tuan, David Seamon, Roberto L. Corrêa, Zeny Rosendahl, João B. F. Mello, Alice Gonzaga, Ecléa Bosi, entre outros. Desta feita, ao analisar a evolução de um símbolo, desde o seu surgimento, de como este influenciou na dinâmica e crescimento econômico de um bairro, testifica-se o quanto é fundamental sua permanência, especialmente quando sua influência distende na formação cultural de sua gente.
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A partir do consenso já existente, de que o desenvolvimento urbano é responsável, em parte, pelo desequilíbrio ambiental predominante nas cidades mais populosas, nas quais a administração dos resíduos gerados torna-se um grande desafio, este estudo foi realizado com a finalidade de desenvolver um modelo de gerenciamento para os resíduos de poda de árvores de espaços públicos, visando a utilização do material podado, considerado de boa qualidade, o que minimizaria a disposição de resíduos em aterros sanitários. Para tanto, foi desenvolvido um modelo diferenciado do ponto de vista de legal, gerencial, tecnológico e econômico, que pudesse servir de base à pesquisa e gerar estratégias para beneficiar o meio ambiente. A Unidade de Conservação, que pertence à Fundação Parques e Jardins da Prefeitura da Cidade do Rio de Janeiro, localizada na Taquara, foi analisada no Estudo de Caso. As espécies arbóreas que produzem maior volume de poda nessa seção foram selecionadas de modo que fosse possível o seu aproveitamento econômico-ecológico. Concluiu-se que há uma inviabilidade para segregação dos resíduos de poda por parte da Fundação Parques e Jardins e que os mesmos poderiam ser transferidos diretamente para o aterro receptor, em fase de encerramento de atividades, sem custos excedentes. Foi feita uma apreciação especial do Centro de Tratamento de Resíduos Sólidos de Gericinó, por ser grande receptor dos resíduos produzidos nas operações de manejo da área em evidência. Foi elaborada a proposta de criação de uma Usina Verde nas áreas já desativadas do aterro, como forma complementar ao processo de revitalização da área aterrada após o término de suas atividades. Esta ação contemplaria a região com um bosque, onde seriam absorvidos todos os produtos dos resíduos de poda. Haveria, também, a probabilidade de utilização operacional dos catadores nas etapas de obtenção de compostos orgânicos, cobertura morta e equipamentos paisagísticos entre outros.
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Since his last publication "Contribution to the Study of the Marine Algae of Ceylon"(1961), the author has made several collections which contain interesting material which he has not hitherto described. This and any other material which he come across in future surveys will be described in a series of papers of which this is the first. The present paper includes the description of fourteen species of which three are new to science. These are deposited in the Herbarium of the Royal Botanical Gardens, Peradeniya, Ceylon.
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The herbarium material belonging to the genus Laurencia kept at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Peradeniya together with my collections of material belonging to this genus from various parts of Ceylon have been examined. Most of the material belonging to the genus Laurencia had been incorrectly identified and their true identity has been determined. A key to the Ceylon species of Laurencia is given.
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Observations were made on six fig wasp species on Ficus racemosa growing in the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanic Garden, Yunnan Province, China. The oviposition sequence was determined for Apocryptophagus testacea, Apocrypta sp2, Apocryptophagus mayri, Cera
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Wydział Historyczny: Instytut Etnologii i Antropologii Kulturowej
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Projeto de Pós-Graduação/Dissertação apresentado à Universidade Fernando Pessoa como parte dos requisitos para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Ciências Farmacêuticas
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Alternative food initiatives (AFIs) have been described as an attempt to change and improve aspects of how the food system operates. They are focused around more traditional, local and sustainable food production and circulation. AFIs such as farmers’ markets, allotments and community gardens, share a desire to reduce the number of steps food goes through from production to plate. The role of these initiatives in the food system, and their potential to impact real change, has however been questioned. Working to better understand this issue is a central concern of this research. To do this a two tier analysis has been deployed. The first tier involves identifying the characteristics and general dynamics of AFIs. Bourdieu’s theory of practice, and the theories of field and capital, are the concepts applied. The research then uses these findings in the second tier of analysis concerned with relating AFI characteristics and dynamics back to their key traits, positive and negative, as well as arguments made about AFI’s role identified from previous research. Another part of this second tier of analysis is exploring if AFIs, the producers, consumers, organisations and groups that make up this phenomenon, can be considered a social movement. AFIs can be referred to collectively as a social movement, but are not often explored theoretically from this perspective. AFIs in Ireland provide the empirical context for this research. A series of qualitative interviews in four areas of Ireland, as well as evidence from primary and secondary sources are analysed. The research finds that AFIs can be understood as the potential beginnings of a lifestyle social movement. Leaders are of central importance to its development. It is also found that an important role of AFIs is revitalising, supporting and contributing to food culture.
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In the summers of 1998 and 1999, the Archaeology in Annapolis project carried out archaeological investigation at the eighteenth century Dr. Upton Scott House site (18AP18)located at 4 Shipwright Street in the historic district of Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, Maryland. The Upton Scott House is significant as one of only a few Georgian houses with remnants of its original plantation-inspired landscape still visible (Graham 1998:147). Investigation was completed in agreement with the owners of the historic property, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Christian, who were interested in determining the condition and arrangement of Dr. Upton Scott’s well-documented pleasure gardens. Betty Cosans’ 1972 Archaeological Feasibility Report, the first real archaeological study of the Upton Scott House site, guided the research design and recovery efforts. Cosans determined that testing and survey in the back and side yards of the Scott property would yield important information on the use and history of the property, including that of Scott’s famous gardens. Excavation units and trenches were placed within three separate areas of backyard activity on the site which included Area One: extant brick stables in the southwest of the property; Area Two: the brick foundations of a small outbuilding located in the northwest area of the site; and Area Three: the area of Scott’s formal gardens. The research design included an interest in recovering evidence of African-American spiritual practice and domestic life at the site. Also of significant importance was an analysis of Scott’s garden beds, concerning the order and layout. Also sought was an understanding of the change in perception and use of the backyard by the various owners of the property.
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AUTHOR's OVERVIEW This chapter attempts a definition of London eco-gothic, beginning with an ecocritical reading of the ubiquitous London rat. Following Dracula, popular London gothic has been overrun, from the blunt horror-schlock of James Herbert’s 1970s Rats series to China Miéville’s King Rat. Maud Ellman’s elegant discussion of the modernist rat as a protean figure associated with a ‘panoply of fears and fetishes’, underlines how the rat has always featured in anti-urban discourse: as part of racist representations of immigration; as an expression of fear of disease and poverty; or through a quasi-supernatural anxiety about their indestructible and illimitable nature which makes them a staple feature of post-apocalyptic landscapes. Even so, the London rat is a rather more mundane manifestation of urban eco-gothic than the ‘city wilderness’ metaphors common to representations of New York or Los Angles as identified by eco-critic Andrew White. London’s gothic noses its way out through cracks in the pavements, grows from seeds in suburban gardens or accumulates through the steady drip of rainwater. However, I will suggest, in texts such as Maggie Gee’s The Flood and P. D. James’ Children of Men, London eco-gothic becomes less local and familiar as it responds to global environmental crisis with more dramatic tales of minatorial nature.
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The botanic origin and the protein content of 15 honeys from small bee farms exploitations of Galicia, for family consume, were studied; the aim is to check if the protein wealth and the pollen wealth are dependent parameters. Seven honeys resulted to be Rhamnus frangula unifloral (pollen patterns with low diversity), two Castanea sativa Miller unifloral, other one heather unifloral, and five was multifloral honeys of various pollen patterns (four Castanea predominant and one Rhamnus frangula predominant). Their pollen wealth was low; eight honeys classified in the Maurizio Class I, 3 in Class II, 2 in Class III, and one in Maurizio Class IV. There has been a wide variability in its protein content (0.09- 4.83 mg prot./g honey). The relative amount of pollen from different taxa has a direct or inverse proportionality to wealth protein.
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In this paper we present a couple of sheets of Umbelliferae that are preserved in the RCAXII herbaria. One of them, Selinum carvifolia, where collected in the Gredos Mountains by Miguel Barnades Mainader and was identified by his son Miguel Barnades Clarís. The other, Tragium flabellifolium, was collected in Mieres (Asturias) by Esteban de Prado and identified by Mariano La Gasca.
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Este artículo resulta de investigaciones en torno al “enverdecimiento” de las ciudades y las oportunidades de la agricultura urbana para la alimentación de una población en constante aumento que no trabaja la tierra. También es fruto de actividades de mejora de ambientes urbanos realizadas con la Escuela de Ingenieros Agrónomos de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. A través de casos de agricultura urbana, entendiendo por ella el conjunto de prácticas para la producción de alimentos y plantas ornamentales dentro de las ciudades y en sus entornos, se analizan alternativas para la recuperación de espacios construidos e incremento de la calidad de vida de la población. Todo ello se traduce, además, en creación de riqueza y mejora del paisaje urbano, siempre desde criterios de sostenibilidad que favorecen el desarrollo local desde la Cumbre de la Tierra de Río de 1992 y la Conferencia sobre Desarrollo Sostenible Río+20 de 2013.
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Color plays an important biological role in the lives of many animals, with some species exhibiting preferences for certain colors over others. This study explored the color preferences of two species of ape, which, like humans, possess trichromatic color vision. Six western lowland gorillas, and six chimpanzees, housed in Belfast Zoological Gardens, were exposed to three stimuli (cloths, boxes, sheets of acetate) in red, blue, and green. Six stimuli of the same nature, in each of the three colors, were provided to both species for 5 days per stimulus. The amount of interest that the animals showed toward each stimulus of each color was recorded for 1 hr. Results showed that the apes, both when analyzed as two separate groups, and when assessed collectively, showed significant color preferences, paying significantly less attention to the red-, than to the blue- or green-colored stimuli. The animals' interest in the blue- and green-colored stimuli did not differ significantly. Overall, the findings suggest that gorillas and chimpanzees, our closest living relatives, may harbor color preferences comparable to those of humans and other species. © 2008 American Psychological Association.
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Reaxys Database Information|
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Mammillaria gaumeri (Britton & Ross) Orcutt (Cactaceae), an endemic plant of the Yucatan Peninsula, is included by the Mexican government in the list of species that require special protection. Its natural habitat is now restricted to fragmented areas and protection programs involve botanical gardens in growing individuals rescued from disturbed areas. Little information is available on the reproductive characteristics of this species and nothing is known of its pollinators. We investigated the visitors of M. gaumeri flowers, collecting and observing bee species in its natural habitat (i.e., coastal dune) and in a botanical garden, where coastal dune vegetation had been created. Observations were made on plants whose density was artificially increased by grouping flowering individuals. At each site, we: 1) collected insects visiting the flowers; 2) recorded number of visits; and 3) video-recorded bee movements on the flowers. As expected, the number of bee species and visitation frequency were higher at the botanical garden than at the coastal dune. After landing on a flower, bees either inspected the anthers or dived among them. These behaviors, carried out by all observed species, seemed related to the state of the anthers (full or empty of pollen) and stigma lobes (opened or closed). Specifically, visits lasted longer when anthers were full of pollen and stigma lobes were opened. The same bee species recorded on the dune were also recorded at the botanical garden, suggesting that the artificial dune at the botanical garden offered suitable conditions for the natural pollinators of this endangered cactus.