Search results for "CONSERVATION"

showing 10 items of 2328 documents

Composting rice straw with sewage sludge and compost effects on the soil-plant system.

2008

Composting organic residue is an interesting alternative to recycling waste as the compost obtained may be used as organic fertilizer. This study aims to assess the composting process of rice straw and sewage sludge on a pilot-scale, to evaluate both the quality of the composts obtained and the effects of applying such compost on soil properties and plant development in pot experiments. Two piles, with shredded and non-shredded rice straw, were composted as static piles with passive aeration. Throughout the composting process, a number of parameters were determined, e.g. colour, temperature, moisture, pH, electrical conductivity, organic matter, C/N ratio, humification index, cation exchang…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesisengineering.materialSoilWaste ManagementCation-exchange capacityEnvironmental ChemistryPlant StemsSewageCompostPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSoil classificationAgricultureOryzaGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryStrawPollutionHumusSoil conditionerAgronomyengineeringEnvironmental scienceHordeum vulgareOrganic fertilizerChemosphere
researchProduct

The impact of space development structure on the level of ecological footprint - Shift share analysis for European Union countries

2022

The impact of the space development structure on the level of the ecological footprint is an important element of the sustainable development policy, determining not only its directions, but also indicating the manner of respecting en- vironmental principles. The aim of the research is to assess the impact of the spatial development structure on the eco- logical footprint level. The considerations are based on the assumption that the spatial development structure is a determinant of the ecological footprint level. The study used the shift share analysis method. Selected European coun- tries were the subject of the research. The research period covered the years 2009–2019. The spatial differ…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringNatural resources' managementCarbon DioxidePollutionSustainability indicatorNatural ResourcesSustainable developmentShift share analysisCyprusEnvironmental ChemistryEcological footprintEuropean UnionEconomic DevelopmentWaste Management and DisposalHuman impact assessmentScience of the Total Environment
researchProduct

Fighting carbon loss of degraded peatlands by jump-starting ecosystem functioning with ecological restoration

2015

Degradation of ecosystems is a great concern on the maintenance of biodiversity and ecosystem services. Ecological restoration fights degradation aiming at the recovery of ecosystem functions such as carbon (C) sequestration and ecosystem structures like plant communities responsible for the C sequestration function. We selected 38 pristine, drained and restored boreal peatland sites in Finland and asked i) what is the long-term effect of drainage on the peatland surface layer C storage, ii) can restoration recover ecosystem functioning (surface layer growth) and structure (plant community composition) and iii) is the recovery of the original structure needed for the recovery of ecosystem f…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringPeatecosystem structure–function relationshipta1172BiodiversityWetlandCarbon sequestrationplant community compositionEcosystem servicesturveEnvironmental ChemistryEcosystemecosystem recoveryWaste Management and DisposalRestoration ecologyta116EcosystemEnvironmental Restoration and RemediationFinlandgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyPlant communityhiilensidontaBiodiversityPollutioncarbon sequestrationCarbonWetlandspeatEnvironmental scienceta1181ecosystem degradationScience of the Total Environment
researchProduct

The role of power line rights-of-way as an alternative habitat for declined mire butterflies

2011

Habitat loss is one of the greatest threats for biodiversity. In Finland, two thirds of natural mires have been drained for silviculture, which transforms open wetlands into dense forests. However, vegetation management of power line rights-of-way (ROW) maintain the drained mires as open areas. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of the power line ROW vegetation management on butterfly abundance, species richness and community structure by comparing the managed power line ROWs to unmanaged drained control sites and to natural mires. The species richness or abundance of mire butterflies did not differ between the power line ROWs and natural mires. In contrast, both species rich…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringPopulation DynamicsBiodiversityManagement Monitoring Policy and LawTreesElectric Power SuppliesSpecies SpecificityAbundance (ecology)MireAnimalsWaste Management and DisposalEcosystemTree canopyEcologyAgroforestryEndangered SpeciesOwnershipBiodiversityGeneral MedicineVegetationPlantsHabitat destructionGeographyHabitatWetlandsSpecies richnessButterfliesJournal of Environmental Management
researchProduct

Effect of river restoration on life-history strategies in fish communities

2019

Assessments of river restoration outcomes are mostly based on taxonomic identities of species, which may not be optimal because a direct relationship to river functions remains obscure and results are hardly comparable across biogeographic borders. The use of ecological species trait information instead of taxonomic units may help to overcome these challenges. Abundance data for fish communities were gathered from 134 river restoration projects conducted in Switzerland, Germany and Finland, monitored for up to 15 years. These data were related to a dataset of 22 categories of ecological traits describing fish life-history strategies to assess the outcome of the restoration projects. Restora…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringRiver restoration010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesta1172010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesLife history theoryRiversfunctional compositionAbundance (ecology)GermanyEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsfunctional traitsennallistaminenWaste Management and DisposalRestoration ecologyLife History TraitsEnvironmental Restoration and RemediationFinland0105 earth and related environmental sciencesLand useEcologyFishesvesiekosysteemitkalat (eläimet)fish life strategiesAquatic animalBiodiversityeliöyhteisötfunctional diversityPollutionbiodiversiteettilife-history traitsrestoration successGeographyinternationalTraitSpecies evennessta1181BiologieSwitzerlandjoetScience of the Total Environment
researchProduct

Assessing farming eco-efficiency: a Data Envelopment Analysis approach.

2010

This paper assesses farming eco-efficiency using Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) techniques. Eco-efficiency scores at both farm and environmental pressure-specific levels are computed for a sample of Spanish farmers operating in the rain-fed agricultural system of Campos County. The determinants of eco-efficiency are then studied using truncated regression and bootstrapping techniques. We contribute to previous literature in this field of research by including information on slacks in the assessment of the potential environmental pressure reductions in a DEA framework. Our results reveal that farmers are quite eco-inefficient, with very few differences emerging among specific environmental …

Conservation of Natural ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringTruncated regression modelbusiness.industryNitrogenRainPublic expenditureSample (statistics)AgricultureGeneral MedicineManagement Monitoring Policy and LawEnvironmental economicsEco-efficiencyEfficiency OrganizationalEconomyAgricultureSpainSurveys and QuestionnairesData envelopment analysisHumansRegression AnalysisBusinessWaste Management and DisposalCommon Agricultural PolicyAgricultural extensionJournal of environmental management
researchProduct

Depletion of coastal predatory fish sub-stocks coincided with the largest sea urchin grazing event observed in the NE Atlantic

2020

AbstractIn this contribution, we propose fishery driven predator release as the cause for the largest grazing event ever observed in the NE Atlantic. Based on the evolving appreciation of limits to population connectivity, published and previously unpublished data, we discuss whether overfishing caused a grazer bloom of the sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis) resulting in overgrazing of more than 2000 km2 kelp (Laminaria hyperborea) forest along Norwegian and Russian coasts during the 1970 s. We show that coastal fisheries likely depleted predatory coastal fish stocks through modernization of fishing methods and fleet. These fish were important predators on urchins and the reduct…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesFood ChainCoastal fisheriesGeography Planning and DevelopmentFishingPopulationFisheriesCoastal fishRussiaPredatory fishFisheries managementVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Basale biofag: 470Environmental ChemistryAnimalseducationEcosystemeducation.field_of_studyStrongylocentrotus droebachiensisRegime shiftsEcologyOverfishingbiologyFishesSea urchin grazingGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationKelp forestKelp forestFisheryGeographySea UrchinsPerspectiveFisheries management
researchProduct

Ecosystem restoration with teeth: what role for predators?

2011

Recent advances highlight the potential for predators to restore ecosystems and confer resilience against globally threatening processes, including climate change and biological invasions. However, releasing the ecological benefits of predators entails significant challenges. Here, we discuss the economic, environmental and social considerations affecting predator-driven ecological restoration programmes, and suggest approaches for reducing the undesirable impacts of predators. Because the roles of predators are context dependent, we argue for increased emphasis on predator functionality in ecosystems and less on the identities and origins of species and genotypes. We emphasise that insuffi…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesFood ChainEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEcology (disciplines)Environmental restorationContext (language use)BiologyBiotaPredationPredatory BehaviorAnimalsEcosystemPsychological resilienceSocial BehaviorRestoration ecologyEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonTrophic levelTrends in Ecology & Evolution
researchProduct

Organochlorine Pesticides and Polychlorinated Biphenyl Congeners in LannerFalco biarmicus feldeggiiSchlegel Chicks and Lanner Prey in Sicily, Italy

2008

This paper reports on research conducted to elucidate the risk posed to the Sicilian population of the endangered lanner falcon Falco biarmicus feldeggii Schlegel by organochlorine (OC) pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), as part of a wider study on contaminant risk to the lanner. Seventeen lanner nest sites were studied in northern and central Sicily. Sampling (in 2005) and analysis were carried out for selected OC pesticides and PCB congeners in lanner chick blood (15 chicks from 6 nest sites) and in two of the main lanner prey species, magpie Pica pica (36 individuals from 6 lanner nest sites) and rock dove Columba livia (10 individuals from 2 lanner nest sites). No OC and P…

Conservation of Natural ResourcesFood ChainPopulation DynamicsGeography Planning and DevelopmentPopulationEndangered speciesZoologyExtinction BiologicalModels BiologicalPredationchemistry.chemical_compoundNestHydrocarbons ChlorinatedAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistryLanner falconeducationSicilyFalconiformeseducation.field_of_studyEcologybiologyEcologyReproductionPolychlorinated biphenylGeneral MedicinePesticidebiology.organism_classificationPolychlorinated BiphenylsCongenerchemistryEnvironmental PollutantsEnvironmental MonitoringAMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment
researchProduct

Forest management is associated with physiological stress in an old–growth forest passerine

2003

We investigated how physiological stress in an area-sensitive old-growth forest passerine, the Eurasian treecreeper (Certhia familiaris), is associated with forest fragmentation and forest structure. We found evidence that the concentrations of plasma corticosterone in chicks were higher under poor food supply in dense, young forests than in sparse, old forests. In addition, nestlings in large forest patches had lower corticosterone levels and a better body condition than in small forest patches. In general, corticosterone levels were negatively related to body condition and survival. We also found a decrease in corticosterone levels within the breeding season, which may have been a result …

Conservation of Natural ResourcesForest managementAnimals WildGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyFood SupplySongbirdschemistry.chemical_compoundStress PhysiologicalCorticosteronebiology.animalSeasonal breederAnimalsPhysiological stressGeneral Environmental Sciencegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyBird DiseasesEcologyForestryGeneral MedicineCerthia familiarisOld-growth forestbiology.organism_classificationPasserinechemistryBody ConstitutionTreecreeperCorticosteroneGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch ArticleProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
researchProduct