927 resultados para Endosteal niche


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This occasional paper examines the experiences of three leading global centres of the ICT industry – India, Silicon Valley, and Estonia – to reflect on how the lessons of these models can be applied to the context of countries in the Caribbean region.Several sectors of the technology industry are considered in relation to the suitability for their establishment in the Caribbean. Animation is an area that is showing encouraging signs of development in several countries, and which offers some promise to provide a significant source of employment in the region. However, the global market for animation production is likely to become increasingly competitive, as improved technology has reduced barriers to entry into the industry not only in the Caribbean, but around the world. The region’s animation industry will need to move swiftly up the value chain if it is to avoid the downsides of being caught in an increasingly commoditized market. Mobile applications development has also been widely a heralded industry for the Caribbean. However, the market for consumer-oriented smartphone applications has matured very quickly, and is now a very difficult sector in which to compete. Caribbean mobile developers would be better served to focus on creating applications to suit the needs of regional industries and governments, rather than attempting to gain notice in over-saturated consumer marketplaces such as the iTunes App Store and Google Play. Another sector considered for the Caribbean is “big data” analysis. This area holds significant potential for growth in coming years, but the Caribbean, which is generally considered to be a datapoor region, currently lacks a sufficient base of local customers to form a competitive foundation for such an industry. While a Caribbean big data industry could plausibly be oriented toward outsourcing, that orientation would limit positive externalities from the sector, and benefits from its establishment would largely accrue only to a relatively small number of direct participants in the industry. Instead, development in the big data sector should be twinned with the development of products to build a regional customer base for the industry. The region has pressing needs in areas such as disaster risk reduction, water resource management, and support for agricultural production. Development of big data solutions – and other technology products – to address areas such as these could help to establish niche industries that both support the needs of local populations, and provide viable opportunities for the export of higher-value products and services to regions of the world with similar needs.

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In the 1980s Butler adapted the life cycle product model to the tourism industry and created the “Tourism Area Life Cycle (TALC) model”. The model recognizes six stages in the tourism product life cycle: exploration, investment, development, consolidation, stagnation and followed, after stagnation, by decline or revitalization of the product. These six stages can in turn be regrouped into four main stages. The Butler model has been applied to more than 30 country cases with a wide degree of success. De Albuquerque and Mc Elroy (1992) applied the TALC model to 23 small Caribbean island States in the 1990s. Following De Albuquerque and Mc Elroy, the TALC is applied to the 32 member countries of the Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO) (except for Cancun and Cozumel) to locate their positions along their tourism life-cycle in 2007. This is done using the following indicators: the evolution of the level, market share and growth rate of stay-over arrivals; the growth rate and market share of visitor expenditures per arrival and the tourism styles of the destinations, differentiating between ongoing mass tourism and niche marketing strategies and among upscale, mid-scale and low-scale destinations. Countries have pursued three broad classes of strategies over the last 15 years in order to move upward in their tourism life cycle and enhance their tourism competitiveness. There is first a strategy that continues to rely on mass-tourism to build on the comparative advantages of “sun, sand and sea”, scale economies, all-inclusive packages and large amounts of investment to move along in Stage 2 or Stage 3 (Cuba, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico). There is a second strategy pursued mainly by very small islands that relies on developing specific niche markets to maintain tourism competitiveness through upgrading (Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, British Virgin Islands and Turks and Caicos), allowing them to move from Stage 2 to Stage 3 or Stage 3 to a rejuvenation stage. There is a third strategy that uses a mix of mass-tourism, niche marketing and quality upgrading either to emerge onto the intermediate stage (Trinidad and Tobago); avoid decline (Aruba, The Bahamas) or rejuvenate (Barbados, Jamaica and the United States Virgin Islands). There have been many success stories in Caribbean tourism competitiveness and further research should aim at empirically testing the determinants of tourism competitiveness for the region as a whole.

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Zoologia) - IBRC

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Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Zoologia) - IBRC

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Em geral, espécies próximas filogeneticamente usam recursos similares e podem ser potenciais competidores. No entanto, elas podem divergir em um dos três eixos que norteiam o seu nicho, temporal, espacial e trófico. Essas diferenças podem ser determinantes para a coexistência de populações. Pressupondo que as populações de Arthrosaura interagem, e pode ocorrer sobreposição de nicho, quais estratégias elas adotaram para minimizar a competição permitindo a convivência de ambas? O presente estudo tem como objetivo investigar o nicho espacial, temporal e trófico de Arthrosaura kockii e A. reticulata na Amazônia oriental (01°42'30"S, 51°31'45" W), localizada nos municípios de Melgaço e Portel, Pará, Brasil, onde foram realizadas três expedições. Os animais foram coletados através do método de Procura Ativa, iniciando as 06h e finalizando às 18h. Foram analisados 107 A. kockii e 115 A. reticulata, desses, 107 e 113 respectivamente, apresentaram itens alimentares. Foram contabilizados 26 itens, destes 25 itens foram consumidos por A. reticulata e 14 foram consumidos por A. kockii. A espécie A. reticulata apresentou uma maior amplitude trófica nos meses chuvosos e na maior parte do período seco, enquanto que A. kockii apresentou uma maior amplitude no início do período seco. Os itens mais importantes (IA%), para A. reticulata foram Araneae=0,64, Blattaria=0,17, Orthoptera-Gryllidae=0,09 e Homoptera=0,05, já para A. kockii foram Araneae=0,66, Blattaria=0,19, Orthoptera-Gryllidae=0,04 e Isoptera=0,04. Arthrosaura reticulata apresentou um maior período de atividade, iniciando as 07h: 50min e terminando às 17h: 00min, concentrando o seu pico de atividade no intervalo das 09h às 14h: 30min, esta espécie foi considerada não heliotémica. A. kockii, teve um menor período de atividade, iniciado as 08h:40min e finalizando as 15:h25min, seu pico de atividade ficou concentrado no intervalo das 10h as 14h:30min, esta espécie foi considerada heliotémica. A altura de serapilheira e a distância do corpo d’água foram significativas na distribuição das espécies, A. reticulata foi encontrado em serapilheira com alturas que variaram de 2,5 cm até 13 cm, já A. kockii ocorreu em intervalos de 1,5 cm até 10 cm,. A. reticulata ocorreu em diversos ambientes da floresta, sendo encontrado dentro de corpos d’água até a terra firme, por isso ocorreu em alturas de serapilheira maiores do que A. kockii que ficou limitado à terra firme. Duas espécies mostraram distinções no nicho espacial, temporal e trófico, que provavelmente está permitindo a coexistência das duas populações.