Search results for " succession"

showing 10 items of 346 documents

Por Leonardo Lucas de Miño, y consortes. Con Isabel de Tudela, viuda de Ioachin Plumet / [Luys de Cassanate

1601

Caplletra orlada Sign.: A-C2

Judicis Obres anteriors a 1800Herències i successions Obres anteriors a 1800
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Preguntòse si el substituto, que tacita, ò expressamente dà, y señala el Padre à su hijo, ò hijos pupilos, debe preferir à la Madre, de forma,…

1701

L'autor del dictamen al final: S.D.C Com a tít. el començament del text Caplletra grav. i banda a la p. 1 Sign.: A-E2 Reclams

Lleis de Toro Comentaris Obres anteriors al 1800Lleis de Toro Comentaris Obres anteriors a 1800Herències i successions Espanya Obres anteriors a 1800Herències i successions Espanya Obres anteriors al 1800
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Microbial Succession in the Gut: Directional Trends of Taxonomic and Functional Change in a Birth Cohort of Spanish Infants

2014

In spite of its major impact on life-long health, the process of microbial succession in the gut of infants remains poorly understood. Here, we analyze the patterns of taxonomic and functional change in the gut microbiota during the first year of life for a birth cohort of 13 infants. We detect that individual instances of gut colonization vary in the temporal dynamics of microbiota richness, diversity, and composition at both functional and taxonomic levels. Nevertheless, trends discernible in a majority of infants indicate that gut colonization occurs in two distinct phases of succession, separated by the introduction of solid foods to the diet. This change in resource availability causes…

MaleCancer ResearchGene Identification and AnalysisBiodiversityPathogenesisEcological successionGut floraPathology and Laboratory MedicineFecesDiversity indexMedicine and Health SciencesCommunity AssemblyGenome SequencingTaxonomic rankGenetics (clinical)EcologyEcologyMicrobiotaAge FactorsBiodiversityGenomicsBiotaFunctional GenomicsCommunity EcologyHost-Pathogen InteractionsFemaleTaxonomy (biology)Research ArticleAdultDNA Bacteriallcsh:QH426-470Microbial ConsortiaZoologyBiologyMicrobiologyMicrobial EcologyMolecular GeneticsGeneticsHumansMolecular Biology TechniquesSequencing TechniquesCommunity StructureMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0604 GeneticsBase SequenceEcology and Environmental SciencesInfant NewbornInfantBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologySequence Analysis DNAComparative Genomicsbiology.organism_classificationDietGastrointestinal Tractlcsh:GeneticsSpecies InteractionsTaxonSpainMetagenomicsSpecies richnessDevelopmental BiologyPLoS Genetics
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Pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry of soil organic matter extracted from a Brazilian mangrove and Spanish salt marshes

2009

The soil organic matter (SOM) extracted under different vegetation types from a Brazilian mangrove (Pai Matos Island, São Paulo State) and from three Spanish salt marshes (Betanzos Ría and Corrubedo Natural Parks, Galícia, and the Albufera Natural Park, Valencia) was investigated by pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS). The chemical variation was larger in SOM from the Spanish marshes than in the SOM of the Brazilian mangroves, possibly because the marshes included sites with both tidal and nontidal variation, whereas the mangrove forest underwent just tidal variation. Thus, plant-derived organic matter was better preserved under permanently anoxic environments. Moreove…

MarshSoil ScienceWetlandEarth System ScienceVegetation typeparticle-size fractionsrothamsted classical experimentsOrganic matteracidschemistry.chemical_classificationnw spaingeographyWIMEKgeography.geographical_feature_categorychemical characterizationEcologyhumic substancesSoil organic matterVegetationmass-spectrometrysao-paulovegetation successionmolecular compositionchemistrySalt marshLeerstoelgroep AardsysteemkundeEnvironmental scienceMangrove
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Trying to link vegetation units with biomass data: the case study of Italian shrublands

2014

Although their carbon stock is relevant in assessing the baseline for the negotiation of future agreements with respect to carbon balance, there still are few available studies concerning the biomass and the net ecosystem exchange capacity of Mediterranean shrublands. In this chapter a preliminary overview on the biomass values concerning Italian shrubland communities and/or their dominant/ characteristic woody species is provided. Many useful data on above- and belowground biomass issued from investigations carried out in other Mediterranean countries and concerning plant communities, which share the same ecological, floristic and structural traits of Italian shrublands. A preliminary find…

Mediterranean climateBiomass (ecology)geography.geographical_feature_categorySettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaAgroforestryEcologyPlant communityEcological successionVegetationShrublandBiomass Vegetation MediterraneanGeographyDisturbance (ecology)Ecosystem
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The impact of Pinus halepensis mill. afforestation on mediterranean spontaneous vegetation: do soil treatment and canopy cover matter?

2012

We investigated central Mediterranean Pinus halepensis plantations under semi-arid climate in order to evaluate the combined effect of soil treatment and afforestation practices on spontaneous plant species composition, richness and evenness, and on the trend and speed of vegetation dynamics. Phytosociological releves of three different plot typologies, i.e. (1) soil-treatment and plantation, (2) only soil-treatment, (3) no soil-treatment and no plantation, were compared by (a) multivariate analysis and (b) with reference to species richness and evenness. Moreover, in order to compare vegetation dynamics within the plantations with those ones ongoing in semi-natural garrigue communities, we…

Mediterranean climateCanopySettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaEcologyEnvironmental scienceAfforestationSpecies evennessForestryVegetationSpecies richnessUnderstoryEcological successionplant diversity understory vegetation dynamics plantation
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Olive agroforestry systems in Sicily: Cultivated typologies and secondary succession processes after abandonment

2011

The first part of this study provides an overview on Sicilian olive systems. Subsequently, the study describes the different typologies of cultivated agroforestry systems present in South-Eastern Sicily employing olive trees in association with other Mediterranean tree species, in particular for the production of firewood, coal and animal food (downy or pubescent oak, holm oak, cork oak), but also in association with forage or grazing species (oat, barley, vetch, etc.) or cereals. The study shows that Sicilian agroforestry systems are much more diversified than it was known so far. In the second part, the study describes the spontaneous colonization processes by plants, observed in abandone…

Mediterranean climateSecondary successionAnimal foodAgroforestryPlant ScienceEcological successionlanguage.human_languageOlive treesSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeGeographyGrazinglanguageEcosystemAgrosilvicultural systems Hyblaean Plateau landscape Olea europaea terracesSicilianEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Biosystems - An International Journal Dealing with all Aspects of Plant Biology
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Structural analysis of woody species in Mediterranean old fields.

2008

The first part of this study provides an overview on Sicilian olive systems. Subsequently, the study describes the different typologies of cultivated agroforestry systems present in South-Eastern Sicily employing olive trees in association with other Mediterranean tree species, in particular for the production of firewood, coal and animal food (downy or pubescent oak, holm oak, cork oak), but also in association with forage or grazing species (oat, barley, vetch, etc.) or cereals. The study shows that Sicilian agroforestry systems are much more diversified than it was known so far. In the second part, the study describes the spontaneous colonization processes by plants, observed in abandone…

Mediterranean climateSecondary successionEcologyAbandonmentspatial patternPlant ScienceEcological successionVegetationsecondary successionSpatial distributionBasal areaColonisationlandscape conservationGeographyCommon spatial patternSicilyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Fire disturbance disrupts co-occurrence patterns of terrestrial vertebrates in Mediterranean woodlands

2006

Aim  This paper uses null model analysis to explore the pattern of species co-occurrence of terrestrial vertebrate fauna in fire-prone, mixed evergreen oak woodlands. Location  The Erico–Quercion ilicis of the Mediterranean belt (50–800 m a.s.l.) in the Madonie mountain range, a regional park in northern Sicily (37°50′ N, 14°05′ E), Italy. Methods  The stratified sampling of vertebrates in a secondary succession of recent burned areas (BA, 1–2 years old), intermediate burned areas (INT, 4–10 years old) and ancient burned areas (CNB, > 50 years old), plus forest fragments left within burned areas (FF, 1–2 years old) permitted the comparison of patterns of species co-occurrence using a set of…

Mediterranean climateSecondary successionEcologyNull modelEcologyFaunaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaEcological successionWoodlandBiologyTerrestrial ecosystemSpecies richnessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCommunity disruption Madonie Park Mediterranean belt null models perturbation Sicily species co-occurrence terrestrial vertebrates wildfires.
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Integrating Extensive Livestock and Soil Conservation Policies in Mediterranean Mountain Areas for Recovery of Abandoned Lands in the Central Spanish…

2016

Land abandonment is a global issue with important implications in Mediterranean mountain areas. Abandoned Mediterranean croplands start a process of secondary succession that is initially colonized by grasslands, shrubs and forest. In Mediterranean mountain areas, the process is very slow, so the shrubs remain for decades, preventing livestock from accessing pastureland. Therefore, farmers have to burn or clear the shrubs in order to provide pasture, a practice that has recently been encouraged by several regional governments in Spain. Data from experimental plots of the Aisa Valley Experimental Station in the Spanish Pyrenees allow to evaluate the effects of burning and clearing shrubs on …

Mediterranean climateSecondary successionResource (biology)AgroforestrySoil Science04 agricultural and veterinary sciences010501 environmental sciencesDevelopment01 natural sciencesSoil quality040103 agronomy & agricultureClearing0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceSoil horizonSurface runoffSoil conservation0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceLand Degradation & Development
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