Search results for "Fish"

showing 10 items of 3164 documents

An assessment of factors controlling N2O and CO2 emissions from crop residues using different measurement approaches

2017

Management of plant residues plays an important role in maintaining soil quality and nutrient availability for plants and microbes. However, there is considerable uncertainty regarding the factors controlling residue decomposition and their effects on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the soil. This uncertainty is created both by the complexity of the processes involved and limitations in the methodologies commonly used to quantify GHG emissions. We therefore investigated the addition of two soil residues (durum wheat and faba bean) with similar C/N ratios but contrasting fibres, lignin and cellulose contents on nutrient dynamics and GHG emission from two contrasting soils: a low-soil org…

Crop residueSoil Science010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyGreenhouse gaCrop residueOrganic matterResidue decomposition0105 earth and related environmental scienceschemistry.chemical_classificationCambisolNitrous oxideSoil classification04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesMineralization (soil science)Soil qualitySettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeCarbon dioxideAgronomychemistryGreenhouse gasEnvironmental chemistrySoil water040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiology and Fertility of Soils
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Out of sight : Profiling soil characteristics, nutrients and bacterial communities affected by organic amendments down to one meter in a long-term ma…

2019

Common soil characteristics, nutrients and microbial activity at deeper soil depths are topics seldom covered in agricultural studies. Biogeochemical cycles in deep soils are not yet fully understood. This study investigates the effect of different mineral and organic fertilisation on soil organic matter dynamics, nutrients and bacterial community composition in the first meter of the soil profiles in the long-term maize cropping system experiment Tetto Frati, near the Po River in northern Italy. The following treatments have been applied since 1992: 1) crop residue removal (CRR), 2) crop residue incorporation (CRI), 3) crop residue removal with bovine slurry fertilisation (SLU), 4) crop re…

Crop residueeloperäiset lannoitteetta1172typpilannoitteetSoil Scienceengineering.materialDeep soil03 medical and health sciencesBovine slurry fertilisationLong-term experimentFarmyard manure fertilisationsoil microbiomebovine slurry fertilisation030304 developmental biologyOrganic amendments2. Zero hunger0303 health sciencesTopsoilSoil microbiomemaaperäEcologySoil organic matter04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesSoil carbonta411115. Life on landBovine slurry fertilisation; Deep soil; Farmyard manure fertilisation; Long-term experiment; Organic amendments; Soil microbiome; Ecology; Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous); Soil ScienceAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)6. Clean waterlannoitusmikrobistoAgronomyorganic amendmentsSoil water040103 agronomy & agricultureengineering0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceSoil horizondeep soilFertilizerfarmyard manure fertilisationlannoitteetOrganic fertilizerlong-term experiment
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Nutrient removal by rice–wheat cropping system as influenced by crop establishment techniques and fertilization options in conjunction with microbial…

2020

AbstractNutrient uptake by the rice–wheat cropping system (RWCS) is an important indicator of soil fertility and plant nutrient status. The hypothesis of this investigation was that the rate and sources of nutrient application can differentially influence nutrient removal and soil nutrient status in different crop establishment techniques (CETs). Cropping system yield was on par in all the CETs evaluated, however, there were significant changes in soil nutrient availability and microbiological aspects. The system nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), potassium (K) and zinc (Zn) uptake in aerobic rice system followed by zero tillage wheat (ARS-ZTW) was 15.7–17.6 kg ha−1, 0.7–0.9 kg ha−1, 7–9.8 kg ha…

Crops Agricultural0106 biological sciencesScienceIndiachemistry.chemical_elementBiologyMicrobiology01 natural sciencesArticleCropSoilchemistry.chemical_compoundNo-till farmingHuman fertilizationNutrientCropping systemFertilizersTriticumMultidisciplinaryPhosphorusQRfood and beveragesOryzaNutrients04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesAgricultural InoculantsAgronomychemistryChlorophyll040103 agronomy & agricultureMedicine0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSoil fertilityPlant sciences010606 plant biology & botanyScientific Reports
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Birch (Betula spp.) wood biochar is a potential soil amendment to reduce glyphosate leaching in agricultural soils

2015

Glyphosate (N-(phosphonomethyl) glycine), a commonly used herbicide in agriculture can leach to deeper soil layers and settle in surface- and ground waters. To mitigate the leaching of pesticides and nutrients, biochar has been suggested as a potential soil amendment due to its ability to sorb both organic and inorganic substances. However, the efficiency of biochar in retaining agro-chemicals in the soil is likely to vary with feedstock material and pyrolysis conditions. A greenhouse pot experiment, mimicking a crop rotation cycle of three plant genera, was established to study the effects of pyrolysis temperature on the ability of birch (Betula sp.) wood originated biochar to reduce the l…

Crops AgriculturalEnvironmental EngineeringGlycineAmendment010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesSlash-and-charSoilBiocharSoil PollutantsPesticidesLeaching (agriculture)CharcoalWaste Management and DisposalBetula0105 earth and related environmental sciences2. Zero hungerHerbicidesChemistryWater PollutionTemperatureAgriculturePhosphorus04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral Medicine15. Life on landCrop rotationWood6. Clean waterAgronomy13. Climate actionCharcoalvisual_artSoil water040103 agronomy & agriculturevisual_art.visual_art_medium0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSoil horizonJournal of Environmental Management
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“C’est la vie, c’est la narration”: The Reader in Christine Brooke-Rose’s Textermination and David Lodge’s Small World

2016

Abstract This article considers two metafictional academic novels from the reader’s point of view. It argues that this critical vantage point is suggested (if not imposed) by the fictional texts themselves. The theoretical texts informing this reading pertain either to reader response or to theories of metafiction, in an attempt to uncover conceptual commonalities between the two. Apart from a thematic focus on academic conferences as pilgrimages and the advocacy of reading as an ethically valuable activity, the two novels also share a propensity for intertextuality, a blurring of the boundaries between fictional and critical discourse, as well as a questioning of the borderline between fic…

Cultural StudiesRose (mathematics)wolfgang iserSociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectlinda hutcheonself-reflexivityArtpatricia waughComputer Science Applicationsmetafictionstanley fishMetafictionreader response theoryAnthropologyacademic fictionAZ20-999Literary criticismNarrativeHistory of scholarship and learning. The humanitiesHumanitiesmedia_commonAmerican, British and Canadian Studies Journal
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Tourism livelihoods in Smøla, Norway

2017

Tourism in islands and archipelagos provides numerous advantages and disadvantages. This paper analyses a previously unpublished case study of island tourism livelihoods from the archipelago of Smøla, Norway, examining the pros and cons of implemented or proposed tourism livelihoods based on a snapshot from 2008-2009. Smøla’s tourism livelihoods are categorised by nature, technology focusing on the wind farm, fishing and hunting, cultural landscapes, culture, and history. As with many other island and archipelago case studies, the most suitable approach could be tourism-supplemented, rather than tourism-dependent, livelihoods with the principal challenge being finding the right scale for Sm…

Cultural Studiesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryCultural landscapeVDP::Zoologiske og botaniske fag: 480FishingManagement Monitoring Policy and LawLivelihoodAnthropologyScale (social sciences)ArchipelagoVDP::Zoology and botany: 480Environmental planningTourismNature and Landscape ConservationJournal of Marine and Island Cultures
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Influence of Temperature, Hypercapnia, and Development on the Relative Expression of Different Hemocyanin Isoforms in the Common CuttlefishSepia offi…

2012

The cuttlefish Sepia officinalis expresses several hemocyanin isoforms with potentially different pH optima, indicating their reliance on efficient pH regulation in the blood. Ongoing ocean warming and acidification could influence the oxygen-binding properties of respiratory pigments in ectothermic marine invertebrates. This study examined whether S. officinalis differentially expresses individual hemocyanin isoforms to maintain optimal oxygen transport during development and acclimation to elevated seawater pCO2 and temperature. Using quantitative PCR, we measured relative mRNA expression levels of three different hemocyanin isoforms in several ontogenetic stages (embryos, hatchlings, juv…

Cuttlefish0303 health sciencesPhysiologyEcology030310 physiologyOntogenymedicine.medical_treatmentOxygen transportHemocyaninMarine invertebratesBiologybiology.organism_classificationCephalopod03 medical and health sciencesBiochemistryHemolymphGeneticsmedicineAnimal Science and Zoology14. Life underwaterSepiaMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyJournal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological Genetics and Physiology
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Warmer climates boost cyanobacterial dominance in shallow lakes

2011

Dominance by cyanobacteria hampers human use of lakes and reservoirs worldwide. Previous studies indicate that excessive nutrient loading and warmer conditions promote dominance by cyanobacteria, but evidence from global scale field data has so far been scarce. Our analysis, based on a study of 143 lakes along a latitudinal transect ranging from subarctic Europe to southern South America, shows that although warmer climates do not result in higher overall phytoplankton biomass, the percentage of the total phytoplankton biovolume attributable to cyanobacteria increases steeply with temperature. Our results also reveal that the percent cyanobacteria is greater in lakes with high rates of ligh…

CyanobacteriaAquatic Ecology and Water Quality Managementphytoplankton communitymerenClimate changefish community structureoppervlaktewaterkwaliteitcyanobacterianitrogentrophic stateNutrientmesocosm experimentsPhytoplanktonlakestemperatuurklimatologieEnvironmental ChemistryDominance (ecology)cyanobacteriënfytoplanktonphosphorusTransectGeneral Environmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangebloomsWIMEKEcologybiologyEcologynutrienttemperatureclimatologyAquatische Ecologie en Waterkwaliteitsbeheerbiology.organism_classificationSubarctic climateOceanographyeutrophicationinternationalphytoplanktonEnvironmental scienceEutrophicationsurface water quality
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The occurrence of serological H-Y antigen (Sxs antigen) in the diandric protogynous wrasse, Coris julis (L.) (Labridae, Teleostei)

1987

Abstract The serological sex-specific (Sxs) antigen (previously called ‘H-Y antigen’) has been shown, in various vertebrate species ranging from fish to mammals, to be characteristic of the heterogametic sex. We studied a protogynous hermaphrodite, Coris julis , in order to examine whether the change of a female to a secondary male also involves a change in the Sxs-antigen phenotype. The (homogametic) females of this species were found to be Sxs negative, while both primary and secondary males were Sxs positive. This was true not only for gonads but also for nongo-nadal tissues. The administration of androgen to females is known to cause sex inversion in this species; we were able to demons…

Cytotoxicity ImmunologicMaleCancer Researchmedicine.drug_classH-Y AntigenCorisZoologyEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayBiologyAntigenHermaphroditeTestismedicineAnimalsTestosteroneMolecular BiologyDrug ImplantsH-Y antigenOvaryFishesCell BiologyAnatomySex reversalAndrogenbiology.organism_classificationSpermatogoniaWrasseOocytesFemaleHeterogametic sexDevelopmental BiologyDifferentiation
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Benefits of the European Agri-Environment Schemes for Wintering Lapwings : A Case Study from Rice Fields in the Mediterranean Region

2020

Mediterranean European rice fields provide important habitats for migrating waterbirds. In winter. one waterbird species that particularly benefits from rice fields is the Northern Lapwing (VaneIlus vanellas), a species threatened in Europe. To assess the effect of agii-environmental measures on rice field selection and use by wintering lapwings, bird counts were conducted in northeastern Spain during two consecutive winters (2005-2006 and 2006-2007). Information on two mandatory post-harvest management prescriptions of the agri-environment schemes was collected, namely winter flooding (percent ground surface covered by water) and whether fields were rolled or not. The number of lapwings in…

DECOMPOSITION0106 biological sciencesMediterranean climateCONSERVATIONBiodiversityympäristönhoitohabitaattiLIMOSA-LIMOSAMediterranean010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencespost-harvest managementLapwingtalvehtiminen010605 ornithologytöyhtöhyyppäVanellusAREASmuuttolinnutMANAGEMENTmaatalousympäristöriisiNorthern lapwingpellotvesilinnutHABITAT1172 Environmental sciencesLapwing2. Zero hungerWETLANDSWATERFOWLbiologyricewaterbirdslapwingagri-environmental measuresAgri-environmental measures15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationMIGRATORY WATERBIRDSFisheryGeographyHabitatThreatened speciesPaddy fieldAnimal Science and ZoologyVANELLUS-VANELLUS
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