Search results for " Human impact"

showing 10 items of 15 documents

Prehistoric palaeodemographics and regional land cover change in eastern Iberia

2019

Much attention has been placed on the drivers of vegetation change on the Iberian Peninsula. While climate plays a key role in determining the species pools within different regions and exerts a strong influence on broad vegetation patterning, the role of humans, particularly during prehistory, is less clear. The aim of this paper is to assess the influence of prehistoric population change on shaping vegetation patterns in eastern Iberia and the Balearic Islands between the start of the Neolithic and the late Bronze Age. In all, 3385 radiocarbon dates have been compiled across the study area to provide a palaeodemographic proxy (radiocarbon summed probability distributions (SPDs)). Modelled…

010506 paleontologyArcheologyhuman impactLand covermedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesdiversityradiocarbon SPDPrehistoryland coverPeninsulaPollenmedicine0601 history and archaeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesGlobal and Planetary Changegeography.geographical_feature_category060102 archaeologyEcologyEcologyPaleontology06 humanities and the artsVegetationGeographydiversity; human impact; land cover; palaeodemographics; pollen; prehistory; radiocarbon SPD; SpainSpainpollenprehistoryKey (lock)palaeodemographicsThe Holocene
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Holocene history of Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis Mill.) woodlands in the Ebro Basin (NE Spain). Climate-biased or human-induced?

2020

Abstract This paper reviews the past distribution of Aleppo pine woodlands in the Ebro Basin, Northeastern Iberia, from the Mesolithic to Modern times based on wood charcoal data. The aim is to detail the chronological timing and the drivers explaining the long-term presence of Aleppo pine woodlands and associated thermophilous flora. The available charcoal data support the early spread of Pinus halepensis during the Mesolithic (ca. 9000 cal BP) accompanied by Mediterranean trees and shrubs like Quercus sp. evergreen, Juniperus sp., Arbutus unedo, Pistacia lentiscus, Rhamnus/Phillyrea, Cistaceae, and Rosmarinus officinalis, as a local response to global climate change in the Early Holocene.…

0106 biological sciencesMediterranean climate010506 paleontologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyPaleontologyForestryAnthropizationWoodlandEvergreenbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesbiogeography; Ebro basin; human impact; paleoclimate; Pinus halepensis; wood charcoal analysisShrublandDeciduousAleppo PineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHolocene0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Environmental Characteristics and Anthropogenic Impact Jointly Modify Aquatic Macrophyte Species Diversity

2018

Species richness and spatial variation in community composition (i.e. beta diversity) are key measures of biodiversity. They are largely determined by natural factors, but also increasingly affected by anthropogenic factors. Thus, there is a need for a clear understanding of the human impact on species richness and beta diversity, the underlying mechanisms, and whether human-induced changes can override natural patterns. Here, we dissect the patterns of species richness, community composition and beta diversity in relation to different environmental factors as well as human impact in one framework: aquatic macrophytes in 66 boreal lakes in Eastern Finland. The lakes had been classified as h…

0106 biological scienceshuman impactbiodiversity; beta diversity; community composition; eutrophication; human impact; null models species richness; water plantsBeta diversityBiodiversityPlant Sciencelcsh:Plant culture010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslcsh:SB1-1110community compositionOriginal ResearchbiodiversityCommunityEcologyrehevöityminen010604 marine biology & hydrobiologySpecies diversityluonnon monimuotoisuusbiodiversiteettiMacrophytenull models species richnesseutrophicationta1181Environmental sciencebeta diversitySpatial variabilitySpecies richnessWater qualitywater plantsvesikasvitFrontiers in Plant Science
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Quotas regulation is necessary but not sufficient to mitigate the impact of SCUBA diving in a highly visited marine protected area.

2021

Abstract When effectively managed, Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) can produce wide ecosystem benefits that can foster, directly and indirectly, local economies. Tourism is one of the sectors mainly benefited by the effect of conservation. SCUBA diving represents an important tourism activity, especially in the context of MPAs, where it is one of the few activities often fostered rather than limited, for its capacity to integrate environmental and socio-economic sustainability. However, SCUBA diving can also produce negative impacts on the environment when tourism frequentation exceeds a sustainable threshold, these potentially generating negative effects on the sector itself. In this study, …

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringDivingMarine reserveContext (language use)General MedicineManagement Monitoring Policy and LawAnthozoaScuba divingFisheryGeographySustainabilityEcological indicator Human impact Recreational diving Sustainable tourism Tourism hotspotMediterranean SeaAnimalsMarine protected areaWaste Management and DisposalRecreationSustainable tourismTourismEcosystemJournal of environmental management
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Water erosion prediction by stochastic and empirical models in the Mediterranean: A case study in Northern Sicily (Italy)

2012

The present thesis aimed to explore the methodological advantages as well as limitations in applying different modelling approaches to predict water soil erosion in Mediterranean environments. The research was accomplished in the central northern part of Sicily (Italy), considering this region to be representative of Mediterranean environmental conditions. In this region soil degradation problems, due to water erosion are becoming more and more serious. Consequently, defining models being able to predict erosion susceptibility and to discriminate environmental factors causing erosion is important to protect soil resources. The prediction of the spatial distribution of soil erosion processes…

EROSION550NORTHERN SICILYSettore GEO/04 - Geografia Fisica E GeomorfologiaSTOCHASTICSoil erosion Geographic information systems Remote sensing RUSLE USPED Human impact road Artificial channels DEM Erosion scenarioBodenerosion Geoinformationssystem Fernerkundung Anthropogener Einfluss Regressionsanalyse Bodenschutz Mittelmeerraum
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Chapter 4: Direct and indirect drivers of change in biodiversity and nature’s contributions to people.

2018

The aim of this chapter is to assess evidence of the status and trends of the drivers that affect biodiversity and nature’s contributions to people. There are three wider categories of nature’s contributions to people: regulating, material and non-material contributions, that are similar to, but not identical to classifications of ecosystem services (see Chapter 1). Ecosystems are dynamic interacting networks of animals, plants, fungi, and microorganisms, above and below ground and water-surfaces. These biodiverse networks of interacting organisms respond to a set of environmental factors such as climate, soil, or water conditions. Social-ecological systems also include human activities (di…

Ecosystem Services Human impact Assessment Ecosystems Environmental drivers
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Downy-oak woods of Italy: phytogeographical remarks on a controversial taxonomic and ecologic issue

2014

The importance of downy oak as an integral component of the "submediterranean" woods has been underscored by many studies. Nevertheless, terms like "submediterranean" and "downy oak" are some of the most poorly understood concepts in European phytogeographic and taxonomic research. Downy oak is well known to be a problematic taxon. The name "Quercus pubescens" (= Q. humilis) combines populations characterized by increasing phenotypic and genomic polymorphisms along north-south gradients, which is explained as the result of a "founder effect" produced by a relatively fast post-glacial re-colonization of the northern areas through rare long-distance dispersal events. On the other hand, polymo…

GeographyTaxonbiologyEcologyeducationBotanyBiological dispersalQuercus pubescensdowny oak ecological gradients syntaxonomy phytogeography coenologic variability distribution patterns human impactPhytogeographybiology.organism_classificationDowny oak Ecological gradients Syntaxonomy Phytogeography Coenologic variability Distribution patterns Human impactFounder effect
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Mid- and late-Holocene vegetation and fire history at Biviere di Gela, a coastal lake in southern Sicily, Italy

2009

The vegetation and fire history of few coastal sites has been investigated in the Mediterranean region so far. We present the first paleoecological reconstruction from coastal Sicily, the largest island in the Mediterranean Sea. We analysed pollen and charcoal in the sediments of Biviere di Gela, a lake (lagoon) on the south coast of Sicily. Our data suggest that the area became afforested after a marine transgression at ca. 7200 cal b.p. (5250 b.c.). Build-up of forest and shrublands took ca. 200–300 years, mainly with the deciduous trees Quercus, Ostrya and Fraxinus. Juniperus expanded ca. 6900 cal b.p. (4950 b.c.), but declined again 6600 cal b.p. (4650 b.c.). Afterwards, evergreen trees…

Mediterranean climateCharcoal analysis Pollen analysis Evergreen forest Human impact Mediterranean Quercus ilexOlea europaeaArcheologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturabiologyEcologyPaleontologyPlant ScienceVegetation580 Plants (Botany)OstryaEvergreenbiology.organism_classificationEvergreen forestShrublandDeciduousAnthracologyVegetation History and Archaeobotany
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Sistemi ambientali e Rete Natura 2000 della Regione Basilicata: scoprire e proteggere gli ambienti naturali e i paesaggi culturali della Lucania

2015

Natura 2000; Flora Fauna Landscape; Human Impact; Conservation; Management; Basilicata; Italy; Mediterranean Region;Human ImpactItalyMediterranean RegionFlora Fauna LandscapeNatura 2000BasilicataConservationManagement
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On the origin and evolution of the Mediterranean dry grasslands.

2006

A synthesis on the functional types of Mediterranean dry grasslands is outlined. Three different types are outlined: wintergreen perennial dry grasslands, wintergreen ephemeral dry grasslands, summergreen perennial dry grasslands. The first type is the most primitive, including several relict species, often characterized by very disjoint, sometimes anfi-saharian distribution ranges. The second type is resulting from an evolutionary trend towards short-lived life strategy, triggered by climatic and topographic perturbations that affected the Mediterranean region in the Plio- and Pleistocene. The third type, only marginally occurring in the Mediterranean region, is deriving from Holarctic and…

Settore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataMediterranean Region dry grasslands adaptation human impact homeorhesis
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