Search results for "Ecos"

showing 10 items of 1898 documents

Plant-herbivorous beetle networks : molecular characterization of trophic ecology within a threatened steppic environment

2015

DNA barcoding facilitates many evolutionary and ecological studies, including the examination of the dietary diversity of herbivores. In this study, we present a survey of ecological associations between herbivorous beetles and host plants from seriously threatened European steppic grasslands. We determined host plants for the majority (65%) of steppic leaf beetles (55 species) and weevils (59) known from central Europe using two barcodes (trnL and rbcL) and two sequencing strategies (Sanger for mono/oligophagous species and Illumina for polyphagous taxa). To better understand the ecological associations between steppic beetles and their host plants, we tested the hypothesis that leaf beetl…

media_common.quotation_subjectMolecular Sequence DataInsectDNA barcodingEcology and EnvironmentCompetition (biology)Curculionidaehost plantGeneticsAnimalsDNA Barcoding TaxonomicDNA barcodingHerbivorymolecular ecologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemPhylogenymedia_commonTrophic levelHerbivorebiologyEcologyChrysomelidaeWeevilfungifood and beveragesPlantsbiology.organism_classificationColeopteraEuropeCurculionidaexero- thermic grasslandsWeevilsLeaf beetle
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Data from: The relevance of ecological status to ecosystem functions and services in a large boreal lake

2015

1. Environmental conventions aim to protect ecosystem structures and functions to provide goods and services for mankind. The degree of aquatic ecosystem naturalness, or ecological status as it is defined in the Water Framework Directive (WFD) of the European Union, is notionally linked to supplies of ecosystem services. In practice these links have rarely been documented or even investigated and, to justify conservation and management objectives based on the status indicators, it is essential to demonstrate their relationships to ecosystem functions and services. 2. The WFD requires member states to classify their surface waters aiming to achieve good ecological status of water bodies. How…

medicine and health carebioassessmentWater Framework DirectiveHoloceneecological classificationlake ecosystemsLife SciencesMedicineecosystem functionslake managementlake recovery
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Data from: The role of fish life histories in allometrically scaled food-web dynamics

2019

1. Body size determines key ecological and evolutionary processes of organisms. Therefore, organisms undergo extensive shifts in resources, competitors and predators as they grow in body size. While empirical and theoretical evidence show that these size-dependent ontogenetic shifts vastly influence the structure and dynamics of populations, theory on how those ontogenetic shifts affect the structure and dynamics of ecological networks is still virtually absent. 2. Here, we expand the Allometric Trophic Network (ATN) theory in the context of aquatic food webs to incorporate size-structure in the population dynamics of fish species. We do this by modifying a food web generating algorithm, th…

medicine and health carebioenergetics modelLife historiesMedicineLife sciencesaquatic ecosystems
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Data from: Environmentally-induced noise dampens and reddens with increasing trophic level in a complex food web

2018

Stochastic variability of key abiotic factors including temperature, precipitation and the availability of light and nutrients greatly influences species’ ecological function and evolutionary fate. Despite such influence, ecologists have typically ignored the effect of abiotic stochasticity on the structure and dynamics of ecological networks. Here we help to fill that gap by advancing the theory of how abiotic stochasticity, in the form of environmental noise, affects the population dynamics of species within food webs. We do this by analysing an allometric trophic network model of Lake Constance subjected to positive (red), negative (blue), and non-autocorrelated (white) abiotic temporal …

medicine and health careecosystem dynamicscoloured noiseLife SciencesMedicine
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Patterns and rates of nucleotide substitution, insertion and deletion in the endosymbiont of antsBlochmannia floridanus

2009

Genome reduction is a general process that has been studied in numerous symbiotic bacteria associated with insects. We investigated the last stages of genome degradation in Blochmannia floridanus, a mutualistic bacterial endosymbiont of the ant Camponotus floridanus. We determined the tempo (rates of insertion and deletion) and mode (size and number of insertion-deletion events) of the process in the last 200,000 years by analysing a total of 16 intergenic regions in several strains of this endosymbiont from different ant populations. We provide the first calculation of the reduction rate for noncoding DNA in this endosymbiont (2.2 x 10(-8) lost nucleotides/site/year) and compare it with th…

medicine.disease_causePolymerase Chain ReactionPolymorphism Single NucleotideGenomeIntergenic regionGeneticsmedicineAnimalsSymbiosisIndelEscherichia coliEcosystemPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSequence DeletionGeneticsGenomeBase SequencebiologyAntsbiology.organism_classificationNoncoding DNADNA Transposable ElementsFloridaMicrosatelliteCamponotus floridanusBuchneraMolecular Ecology
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Aspects of excessive antibiotic consumption and environmental influences correlated with the occurrence of resistance to antimicrobial agents

2021

International audience; This article explores the correlation between specific aspects of antibiotic usage, their resistance development, and environmental factors. The indiscriminate use of antibiotics led to environment contamination, selection and spreading of antibiotic-resistant organisms, and alteration of the microbial ecosystems balance. Sociobehavioural environmental factors and changes in the natural environment are major contributors to resistance development. Resistant bacteria strains' isolation in food, water, soil etc. demonstrates the environmental influence on the strains through antibiotics accumulation in the environment. It is difficult to assess the impact of antibiotic…

medicine.medical_specialtyAntibiotic resistancemedicine.drug_classHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesis0208 environmental biotechnologyAntibiotics02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesBiologyExcessive antibiotic consumption01 natural sciencesAntibiotic resistanceEnvironmental factorsmedicineEnvironmental ChemistryEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciences2. Zero hungerResistance (ecology)business.industryPublic healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthInternational healthContaminationAntimicrobial6. Clean water020801 environmental engineering3. Good healthBiotechnologyHealth13. Climate action[SDE]Environmental SciencesbusinessCurrent Opinion in Environmental Science & Health
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Disposal Behavior of Used Masks during the COVID-19 Pandemic in the Moroccan Community: Potential Environmental Impact.

2021

The spread of coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) levied on the Moroccan authorities to increase their mask production capacity, which reached up to 12 million facemask units produced per day. This increase in personal protective equipment (PPE) production and consumption is an efficient tool to address the spread of COVID-19. However, this results in more plastic and microplastic debris being added into the land and marine environments, which will harm the ecosystem, wildlife, and public health. Such a situation needs deep individual behavior observation and tracking, as well as an assessment of the potential environmental impact of this new type of waste. For this reason, we assessed the …

medicine.medical_specialtyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPopulation010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesFacemasksenvironmental impactArticleEnvironmental impact03 medical and health sciencesplastic pollution0302 clinical medicineCOVID‐19Environmental healthmedicineHumansEnvironmental impact assessment030212 general & internal medicineeducationPersonal protective equipmentPandemicsPersonal Protective EquipmentEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesConsumption (economics)education.field_of_studyBehaviorPublic healthbehaviorSARS-CoV-2Public healthpublic healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthRMasksCOVID-19MoroccoHarmGeographyGreenhouse gasPlastic pollutionCommunicable Disease ControlfacemasksMedicinePlastic pollutionPlasticsInternational journal of environmental research and public health
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Libri e reciprocità. Aspetti simbolici della circolazione libraria tra Cicerone e Tacito

2015

In this ‘late age of printing’, while we still feel part of a book culture, other media have taken the place of books in important respects. The change has affected not only the objects used for writing or reading or communicating, but also the frames of meaning hitherto associated with these practices. This paper sets out to discuss some types of meaning attaching to books in Latin literature from Cicero to Tacitus. Reconstructing the cultural meanings of books in literary representations from the Latin world could prove helpful by raising questions about our ability to orient ourselves in the present period of change.

memorialibriTacitodonoCiceroneportabilitàSenecaecosistema del libroSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura Latina
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Premessa a Metafisica in Jacques Derrida

2014

al di là dell'interesse per la decostruzione della metafisica, si mostra l'importanza del riesame del concetto di metafisica

metafisica decostruzione DerridaSettore M-FIL/01 - Filosofia Teoretica
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The urban regeneration of the peripheral areas. The case study of Tor Vergata (Rome, Italy)

2018

The ‘Urban Regeneration of Peripheral Areas’ workshop experimented with an innovative design model for the urban regeneration of Rome. The working method of the workshop is based on diachronic analysis of the evolution of the combined natural history and culture of the area, the architectural, technological, environmental and landscape situation and relation-ship with the surrounding territory. The workshop dealt with the mutual relationships, which run through and characterise the dimensional and relational scales of the environments of metropolitan ecosystems as structures and landscapes. The strategy for urban and territorial integration is left to the procedures and policies of the comm…

metropolitan ecosystemsarchitectureUrban RegenerationSettore ICAR/14 - Composizione Architettonica E UrbanalandscapeSettore ICAR/21 - Urbanisticadiachronic analysiSettore ICAR/12 - Tecnologia Dell'Architettura
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