988 resultados para Landscape protection
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Experimental research on a 150 kW arc-heated plasma testing facility was conducted. Stable plasma jets with different gas compositions, temperatures and velocities were obtained at chamber pressure between 400 Pa – 100 kPa. Stagnation ablation experiments were conducted on samples of typical super alloys used for thermal protection systems. The microstructure and hardness of alloys before and after ablation were compared.
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Congress established a legal imperative to restore the quality of our surface waters when it enacted the Clean Water Act in 1972. The act requires that existing uses of coastal waters such as swimming and shellfishing be protected and restored. Enforcement of this mandate is frequently measured in terms of the ability to swim and harvest shellfish in tidal creeks, rivers, sounds, bays, and ocean beaches. Public-health agencies carry out comprehensive water-quality sampling programs to check for bacteria contamination in coastal areas where swimming and shellfishing occur. Advisories that restrict swimming and shellfishing are issued when sampling indicates that bacteria concentrations exceed federal health standards. These actions place these coastal waters on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agencies’ (EPA) list of impaired waters, an action that triggers a federal mandate to prepare a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) analysis that should result in management plans that will restore degraded waters to their designated uses. When coastal waters become polluted, most people think that improper sewage treatment is to blame. Water-quality studies conducted over the past several decades have shown that improper sewage treatment is a relatively minor source of this impairment. In states like North Carolina, it is estimated that about 80 percent of the pollution flowing into coastal waters is carried there by contaminated surface runoff. Studies show this runoff is the result of significant hydrologic modifications of the natural coastal landscape. There was virtually no surface runoff occurring when the coastal landscape was natural in places such as North Carolina. Most rainfall soaked into the ground, evaporated, or was used by vegetation. Surface runoff is largely an artificial condition that is created when land uses harden and drain the landscape surfaces. Roofs, parking lots, roads, fields, and even yards all result in dramatic changes in the natural hydrology of these coastal lands, and generate huge amounts of runoff that flow over the land’s surface into nearby waterways. (PDF contains 3 pages)
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Approximately two-thirds of coastal and Great Lakes states have some type of shoreline construction setback or construction control line requiring development to be a certain distance from the shoreline or other coastal feature (OCRM, 2008). Nineteen of 30 coastal states currently use erosion rates for new construction close to the shoreline. Seven states established setback distances based on expected years from the shoreline: the remainder specify a fixed setback distance (Heinz Report, 2000). Following public hearings by the County of Kauai Planning Commission and Kauai County Council, the ‘Shoreline Setback and Coastal Protection Ordinance’ was signed by the Mayor of Kauai on January 25, 2008. After a year of experience implementing this progressive, balanced shoreline setback ordinance several amendments were recently incorporated into the Ordinance (#887; Bill #2319 Draft 3). The Kauai Planning Department is presently drafting several more amendments to improve the effectiveness of the Ordinance. The intent of shoreline setbacks is to establish a buffer zone to protect shorefront development from loss due to coastal erosion - for a period of time; to provide protection from storm waves; to allow the natural dynamic cycles of erosion and accretion of beaches and dunes to occur; to maintain beach and dune habitat; and, to maintain lateral beach access and open space for the enjoyment of the natural shoreline environment. In addition, a primary goal of the Kauai setback ordinance is to avoid armoring or hardening of the shore which along eroding coasts has been documented to ultimately eliminate the fronting beach. (PDF contains 4 pages)
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Population pressure in coastal New Hampshire challenges land use decision-making and threatens the ecological health and functioning of Great Bay, an estuary designated as both a NOAA National Estuarine Research Reserve and an EPA National Estuary Program site. Regional population in the seacoast has quadrupled in four decades resulting in sprawl, increased impervious surface cover and larger lot rural development (Zankel, et.al., 2006). All of Great Bay’s contributing watersheds face these challenges, resulting in calls for strategies addressing growth, development and land use planning. The communities within the Lamprey River watershed comprise this case study. Do these towns communicate upstream and downstream when making land use decisions? Are cumulative effects considered while debating development? Do town land use groups consider the Bay or the coasts in their decision-making? This presentation, a follow-up from the TCS 2008 conference and a completed dissertation, will discuss a novel social science approach to analyze and understand the social landscape of land use decision-making in the towns of the Lamprey River watershed. The methods include semi-structured interviews with GIS based maps in a grounded theory analytical strategy. The discussion will include key findings, opportunities and challenges in moving towards a watershed approach for land use planning. This presentation reviews the results of the case study and developed methodology, which can be used in watersheds elsewhere to map out the potential for moving towns towards EBM and watershed-scaled, land use planning. (PDF contains 4 pages)
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Projects of the scope of the restoration of the Florida Everglades require substantial information regarding ecological mechanisms, and these are often poorly understood. We provide critical base knowledge for Everglades restoration by characterizing the existing vegetation communities of an Everglades remnant, describing how present and historic hydrology affect wetland vegetation community composition, and documenting change from communities described in previous studies. Vegetation biomass samples were collected along transects across Water Conservation Area 3A South (3AS).
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The aim of this paper is to summarize the present legislation aimed at protecting freshwater species in Britain, and briefly to review its effectiveness. Some areas have been deliberately omitted, such as fisheries legislation designed to conserve stocks, and the statutory protection of birds associated with fresh waters which forms a large subject area in its own right.
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A Bacia do Rio Iguaçu-Sarapuí integra a região hidrográfica da Baía de Guanabara. Sua área de drenagem, com cerca de 726 km2, corresponde a aproximadamente 20% do total da área de contribuição à Baía, da ordem de 4600 km2 . Os municípios abrangidos pela bacia do Rio Iguaçu são: Nova Iguaçu, Duque de Caxias, Belford Roxo, São João de Meriti, Nilópolis, Mesquita e uma pequena parte do município do Rio de Janeiro. O presente trabalho tem como objetivo utilizar metodologias destinadas à identificação das unidades de paisagem na Bacia Hidrográfica do Rio Iguaçu, baseado nos conceitos de Paisagem Integrada e utilizando como suporte tecnologias digitais de geoprocessamento. Para o desenvolvimento desta pesquisa foram utilizados dados de diferentes fontes e órgãos governamentais de planejamento que trate desta temática. Os dados ao qual o texto se refere são: bases cartográficas em diferentes escalas de abordagem, Imagens Sensoriais Landsat 7, relatórios e diagnóstico da área em estudo. A identificação das unidades de paisagem na bacia do Rio Iguaçu-Sarapuí é feita a partir da delimitação das unidades de relevo e informações sobre o uso do solo, aspectos geológicos e pedológicos. O trabalho foi baseado no apoio das tecnologias digitais de geoprocessamento que permite uma melhor correlação entre diferentes tipos de informações tanto dos aspectos físicos, geológicos como também das ações antrópicas, classificando-as quanto ao grau de intervenção. O resultado do trabalho nesta região foi a elaboração de um diagnóstico ambiental das limitações e susceptibilidade ao desenvolvimento de determinadas atividades distribuindo-as espacialmente na bacia. A utilização de um Sistema de Informação Geográfica, em especial o Arc Gis 9.2 teve uma importância relevante na elaboração da pesquisa. Uma vez que este sistema trabalha com grandes volumes de informações e na análise integrada de objetos complexos, além de permitir a elaboração de um banco de dados espacial no próprio projeto. O que o diferencia dos demais Sistema de Informação Geográfica, tornando-o uma ferramenta eficiente na gestão integrada dos recursos naturais.
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Este póster fue presentado en la Summer School on Evolution en Lisboa (15-19 julio de 2013)
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Background: Staphyloccocal nuclease domain-containing protein 1 (SND1) is involved in the regulation of gene expression and RNA protection. While numerous studies have established that SND1 protein expression is modulated by cellular stresses associated with tumor growth, hypoxia, inflammation, heat- shock and oxidative conditions, little is known about the factors responsible for SND1 expression. Here, we have approached this question by analyzing the transcriptional response of human SND1 gene to pharmacological endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in liver cancer cells. Results: We provide first evidence that SND1 promoter activity is increased in human liver cancer cells upon exposure to thapsigargin or tunicamycin or by ectopic expression of ATF6, a crucial transcription factor in the unfolded protein response triggered by ER stress. Deletion analysis of the 5'-flanking region of SND1 promoter identified maximal activation in fragment (-934, +221), which contains most of the predicted ER stress response elements in proximal promoter. Quantitative real- time PCR revealed a near 3 fold increase in SND1 mRNA expression by either of the stress- inducers; whereas SND1 protein was maximally upregulated (3.4-fold) in cells exposed to tunicamycin, a protein glycosylation inhibitor. Conclusion: Promoter activity of the cell growth- and RNA-protection associated SND1 gene is up-regulated by ER stress in human hepatoma cells.
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Coherent ecological networks (EN) composed of core areas linked by ecological corridors are being developed worldwide with the goal of promoting landscape connectivity and biodiversity conservation. However, empirical assessment of the performance of EN designs is critical to evaluate the utility of these networks to mitigate effects of habitat loss and fragmentation. Landscape genetics provides a particularly valuable framework to address the question of functional connectivity by providing a direct means to investigate the effects of landscape structure on gene flow. The goals of this study are (1) to evaluate the landscape features that drive gene flow of an EN target species (European pine marten), and (2) evaluate the optimality of a regional EN design in providing connectivity for this species within the Basque Country (North Spain). Using partial Mantel tests in a reciprocal causal modeling framework we competed 59 alternative models, including isolation by distance and the regional EN. Our analysis indicated that the regional EN was among the most supported resistance models for the pine marten, but was not the best supported model. Gene flow of pine marten in northern Spain is facilitated by natural vegetation, and is resisted by anthropogenic landcover types and roads. Our results suggest that the regional EN design being implemented in the Basque Country will effectively facilitate gene flow of forest dwelling species at regional scale.
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A influência humana sobre as unidades de conservação (UCs) deve ser considerada a partir de modelos mais amplos, entendendo que há influência dos processos sociais nas mesmas e que essa é uma dimensão a ser discutida no âmbito das práticas de proteção da natureza. É importante que seja levado em consideração na criação, na ampliação e na gestão de uma UC a participação dos atores envolvidos direta e indiretamente, já que o quadro mundial indica ser uma tendência a criação de novas áreas e o envolvimento da sociedade neste processo. Ante esta realidade objetivou-se, nesta tese, contribuir para o fortalecimento da gestão participativa em UCs no Cone Sul, aqui definido como o conjunto de quatro países: Brasil, Argentina, Uruguai e Chile e tendo como estudo de caso quatro áreas protegidas: Parque Nacional do Itatiaia - Brasil, Parque Nacional Lago Puelo - Argentina, Santuário da Natureza Parque Pumalín - Chile e Paisagem Protegida Lagoa de Rocha Uruguai. Tendo por base os instrumentos de gestão em unidades de conservação no Brasil: plano de manejo, zona de amortecimento, educação ambiental e conselho gestor e sendo os mesmos determinados por normas legais (Leis, Decretos, Resoluções, Instruções Normativas) tais normas foram analisadas e comparadas com a finalidade de averiguar se nos países estudados estes instrumentos eram determinados legalmente, da mesma forma como são no Brasil, bem como se a vertente participativa estava presente nesta determinação. Após verificou-se se na Argentina, no Uruguai e no Chile havia a aplicação dos mesmos instrumentos de gestão em áreas protegidas que no Brasil; bem como foi averiguada a situação dos mesmos nos estudos de caso tendo por base a vertente participativa. Depois houve a contextualização e apresentação das dificuldades na gestão e das pressões sofridas pelas áreas protegidas buscando trazer à tona a realidade em que estão inseridas e das quais compartilham. Para tanto se utilizou de levantamentos bibliográficos, documentais, entrevistas semi-estruturadas com pessoas que tiveram experiências práticas com o problema pesquisado e os estudos de caso. Constatou-se que a determinação legal de instrumentos que propiciem a participação não é, via de regra, essencial para efetivar a gestão participativa da UC, mas a existência dos mesmos sim. Verificou-se que um bom resultado está atrelado às qualidades técnicas e subjetivas da gestão e também dos gestores, que podem ajudar e muito na gestão participativa, juntamente com uma parceria bem fortalecida.
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For efficient use of conservation resources it is important to determine how species diversity changes across spatial scales. In many poorly known species groups little is known about at which spatial scales the conservation efforts should be focused. Here we examined how the community turnover of wood-inhabiting fungi is realised at three hierarchical levels, and how much of community variation is explained by variation in resource composition and spatial proximity. The hierarchical study design consisted of management type (fixed factor), forest site (random factor, nested within management type) and study plots (randomly placed plots within each study site). To examine how species richness varied across the three hierarchical scales, randomized species accumulation curves and additive partitioning of species richness were applied. To analyse variation in wood-inhabiting species and dead wood composition at each scale, linear and Permanova modelling approaches were used. Wood-inhabiting fungal communities were dominated by rare and infrequent species. The similarity of fungal communities was higher within sites and within management categories than among sites or between the two management categories, and it decreased with increasing distance among the sampling plots and with decreasing similarity of dead wood resources. However, only a small part of community variation could be explained by these factors. The species present in managed forests were in a large extent a subset of those species present in natural forests. Our results suggest that in particular the protection of rare species requires a large total area. As managed forests have only little additional value complementing the diversity of natural forests, the conservation of natural forests is the key to ecologically effective conservation. As the dissimilarity of fungal communities increases with distance, the conserved natural forest sites should be broadly distributed in space, yet the individual conserved areas should be large enough to ensure local persistence.