Search results for "Landscape"

showing 10 items of 1561 documents

Augkopība: saīsināts kurss

1926

Uz grāmatas vāka norādīts atšķirīgs izdošanas gads 1927. Tekstu ilustrē 78 zīmējumi.

BumbuļaugiAugkopībaLapaugiŠķiedraugiPākšaugiGraudzāles:FORESTRY AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES and LANDSCAPE PLANNING::Plant production [Research Subject Categories]LabībaEļļas kultūraugiHorticultureGaršaugiSakņaugi
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Incidental catch of marine turtles by Spanish bottom trawlers in the western Mediterranean

2014

A questionnaire-based survey of fishermen was conducted in the Valencia region (eastern Spain) to assess the levels of marine turtle bycatch. Interviews covered 41.3% of the bottom trawling fleet in the region and included 111 fishermen (one per boat). Results were combined with those from previous studies conducted in neighbouring regions using the same methodology to assess the global impact of bottom trawling on the western Mediterranean stock of the loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta). Estimated turtle catch per unit effort (CPUE) is 0.09 turtles per vessel per month, according to the information reported by fishermen. As a consequence, the whole fleet of bottom trawlers operating off t…

BycatchFisheryRookeryGeographyEcologyTrawlingFishingEndangered speciesAquatic ScienceCatch per unit effortIncidental catchBottom trawlingNature and Landscape ConservationAquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems
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BOTANICAL CONTRIBUTION TO ARCHAEOLOGICAL LAND EVALUATION IN THE FP7 MEMOLA PROJECT

2014

CULTURAL LANDSCAPE HERITAGE LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY TRADITIONAL PEASANT KNOWLEDGE ECOSYSTEM SERVICE LAND USE EVALUATION SOIL WATER ENVIRONMENT SUSTAINABILITY MEDITERRANEAN MOUNTAIN AGROSYSTEMSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata
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NUOVI SISTEMI DI GESTIONE E STRATEGIE DI SVILUPPO PER IL PAESAGGIO CULTURALE DELL'AREA MEDITERRANEA

2022

CULTURAL LANDSCAPEPatrimonio culturaleMappa di comunitàPaesaggio culturaleMetaversoCULTURAL HERITAGEMETAVERSESettore ICAR/21 - Urbanistica
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Regulating Internet Trade in CITES Species

2013

International trade in species that are or may be endangered by collection from the wild is regulated under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of wild fauna and flora (CITES) for 176 member States (Parties). Internet commerce is a relatively new route for such trade. In 2007, the CITES Secretariat asked Parties to collect information on internet wildlife trade and report problems and implemented regulations. The reports indicated it was difficult to even approximate the influence of e-commerce on CITES-listed species (CITES Secretariat 2009). We report a case study in which we quantified international transactions over an internet auction site of CITES-listed cacti …

CactaceaeSettore BIO/07 - EcologiaConservation of Natural ResourcesInternationalityInternational tradeBiologyConference of the partiesmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEuropean unionTreatyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonInternetDiversityEcologyCITESEcologybusiness.industryEndangered SpeciesCommerceRange stateCITES Internet trade international Cactaceae cactiEnvironmental PolicyWildlife tradeSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataListing (finance)businessDatabase transaction
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The role of native flower visitors in pollinating Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill., naturalized in Sicily

2011

Abstract The role of insects in pollination and consequently in fruit set and quality was assessed in two commercial orchards of the cactus pear, Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill., in Agrigento Province, Sicily. In 1997, insects visiting flowers were sampled during May–June (the first bloom) and July (the second bloom, induced by the “scozzolatura” practise). More than 50 insect species belonging to 10 orders were collected in May–June, while only five species of Hymenoptera Apoidea were collected in July. The quality of fruits arising from the second bloom showed that Hymenoptera alone were able to guarantee effective pollination. To verify the role of insects in pollination in 1996 (during …

Cactus pear Outcrossing Flower insects First and second blooms Fruit quality Alien plantPEARbiologyPollinationEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectOpuntia ficusHymenopteraInsectbiology.organism_classificationApoideaBotanyCactusBloomEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonActa Oecologica
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Fake Landscapes

2016

L'articolo affronta i risvolti architettonici del camuffamento strategico effettuato per scopi militari durante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale. Si tratta di una pratica particolare messa in atto soprattutto in California nascondendo con enormi teloni dipinti interi edifici o capannoni facendolo apparire come altre cose e quindi evitando il riconoscimento da parte dei bombardieri. Si trattava quindi di fatto di ampie operazioni di land art o di un ambito dove l'architettura del paesaggio incontra la scenografia. Camouflage was a strategic technique used during the Second World War mainly in California but aslo elsewhere. It consisted in a massive operation on the landscape. The essay analyses it…

CamouflageMimesiSettore ICAR/14 - Composizione Architettonica E UrbanaArchitettura del PaesaggioLand artScenografiaPaesaggioLandscape Design
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Relationship between recruitment and mother plant vitality in the alien species Acacia cyclops A. Cunn. ex G. Don

2014

Acacia cyclops is a widespread invader in Mediterranean-climate regions. However, although its naturalization in the Mediterranean Basin dates back only a few years ago, and the invasion process has not been studied hitherto. We investigated seedlings recruitment strategy adopted by A. cyclops in a small island (Lampedusa, Italy) where its natural regeneration was strictly confined under mother plants canopy. Healthy plants (DCP), plants at incipient senescence (SCP) and dead plants (DP) were distinguished according to vitality and canopy status. Living plants were also characterized in relation to leaf C and N isotope composition. Regeneration pattern (seedlings and saplings abundance) was…

CanopyAustralian AcaciasbiologySettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaMediterranean islandsForestryIntroduced speciesManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationCyclopsSoil fertilityInvasive speciesSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeNutrientSeedling establishmentAgronomySeedlingAcacia cyclopsBotanySeedling establishment Soil fertility Mediterranean islands Stable isotopes Australian AcaciasSoil fertilityNature and Landscape ConservationStable isotopes
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Patterns of algal recovery and small-scale effects of canopy removal as a result of human trampling on a Mediterranean rocky shallow community.

2004

The ecological importance of marine algae is widely known but in shallow coastal areas the composition and structure of algal communities may be affected by different human activities. Recovery from different trampling disturbances of two competing morphological groups (i.e. macroalgae and algal turfs) and effects of macroalgal canopy removal on the dominant associated fauna were examined using controlled trampling experiments. Six months after trampling disturbance was removed, the two morphological groups closely resembled control (untrampled) conditions, both in terms of cover and canopy (%). In particular, macroalgal recovery seemed to be very rapid: the higher the impact on the system …

CanopyMediterranean climatebiologyEcologyPlant communitybiology.organism_classificationMediterranean seaAlgaeDisturbance (ecology)Environmental scienceTramplingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationInvertebrate
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Effects of spatial scale and vegetation cover on predation of artificial ground nests

1995

Scale-dependent effects of landscape heterogeneity on predation of artificial ground nests were studied. Two spatial scales were selected: landscape grain size and single stand size. The landscape types did not differ from each other in their total predation intensity. Depredation was highest in larger stands in all the landscape types studied and the highest predation rate was detected in the largest stands within the most fragmented landscapes. This is possibly due to concentration of rodent-eating predators from surrounding open areas into large stands in the study year when their main prey, voles, crashed. In crash years, alternative predation on e.g. forest bird nests may play an impor…

CanopyTree canopyNestEcologySpatial ecologyVegetationManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBiologyBird nestEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationVegetation coverPredationWildlife Biology
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