Search results for "Resource management"

showing 10 items of 1491 documents

Assessment of the Pressure Level over Lentic Waterbodies through the Estimation of Land Uses in the Catchment and Hydro-Morphological Alterations: Th…

2021

The features of lentic waterbodies largely depend on the surrounding environment. Mediterranean coastal lagoons have been historically altered, with their catchment being highly modified for agricultural, livestock, or urban uses. Changes in land uses induce pressures that impact the waterbodies and alter their ecological status. The objectives of this paper were: to develop a methodological approach (LUPLES: Land Uses for estimating Pressure Levels to approach the Ecological Status), to quantify the main pressures on the waterbodies and to forecast the possible impacts of these pressures on their ecological status. Corine-Land Cover maps and Geographic Information System technics were used…

Mediterranean climateecological statusGeographic information system010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesDrainage basin010501 environmental sciencesStructural basinlcsh:Technology01 natural scienceslcsh:Chemistrywater framework directivecatchment areasGeneral Materials Sciencelcsh:QH301-705.5Instrumentation0105 earth and related environmental sciencesFluid Flow and Transfer Processesgeographywater pollutiongeography.geographical_feature_categoryLand uselcsh:Tbusiness.industry[SDE.IE]Environmental Sciences/Environmental EngineeringProcess Chemistry and TechnologyMediterranean coastal lagoonsGeneral EngineeringLake ecosystemGIS analysis15. Life on landlcsh:QC1-9996. Clean waterComputer Science Applicationslcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999Water Framework Directivelcsh:TA1-204013. Climate actionAgricultureEnvironmental science[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologylcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)Water resource managementbusinesslcsh:PhysicsApplied Sciences
researchProduct

The crisis facing Tunisian drainage tunnels: identification, analysis and evaluation of water heritage in the Mediterranean region

2014

In regions with Mediterranean and steppe climates, the presence of surface water is sporadic, and a unique – but fragile and undervalued – element of water capture for irrigation and human supply is the ‘qanats’, ‘foggaras’, ‘mkoulas’ or water tunnels. The central objective of this project has been the full study of Tunisia's drainage tunnels. The inventory, analysis and heritage evaluation of Tunisia's ‘qanats’ have been possible through the application of a particular methodology during four annual sessions of fieldwork and analysis in the geographic information system (GIS) laboratory. The results have been: the creation of a spatial data and cartography infrastructure for the Tunisian ‘…

Mediterranean climategeographyIrrigationgeography.geographical_feature_categoryGeographic information systemSteppebusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementDrainagebusinessSurface waterSpatial analysisWater useWater Science and TechnologyWater Supply
researchProduct

Political and economic fisheries management in the Channel of Sicily

2006

Fishery activities in the Mediterranean Sea are characterized by a number of distinctive features which include relative extension of national to international waters, straddling and shared stocks, overall characteristics of fishing activities, availability of scientific information and the absence of a policy fisheries management in many coastal States. Therefore, the principal objective of this paper is to portray a framework on the politics of management of the fish resources in the Channel of Sicily, by examining both the CFP in the Mediterranean or the Italian–Tunisian relationship, and then to inspect the fishing effort of the Sicilians and Tunisian productive structures to carry out …

Mediterranean climategeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryTunisiaEcologybusiness.industryeconomic parametersEnvironmental resource managementFishingPoliticsIntervention (law)Mediterranean seaInternational watersGeneral Earth and Planetary Sciencesfishing effortFisheries managementbusinessInternational cooperationSicilyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsChannel (geography)General Environmental Science
researchProduct

Drought Management Decision Support System by Means of Risk Analysis Models

2007

Droughts in arid and semiarid Mediterranean river basins have an increasing socioeconomic and environmental impact. The problem is especially complex in basins where droughts are very frequent and intense and where water resources are under a massive use. For that reason in the Mediterranean basins it is necessary to manage the water resources in constant alert in order to relieve the consequences of a drought. In this chapter a complete methodology for the mitigation of the droughts is defined. The methodology includes different tools: from the definition of an alert system for the different types of drought up to the simulation and optimization software for water system management. This m…

Mediterranean climategeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementDrainage basincomputer.software_genreAridWater scarcityWater resourcesRisk analysis (business)Systems managementEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental impact assessmentWater resource managementbusinesscomputer
researchProduct

Platform GenoSol: a new tool for conserving and exploring soil microbial diversity

2009

International audience; Soils are the principal reservoirs of microbial diversity and represent a core component of terrestrial ecosystems. There is an increasing demand for assessing the impact of agricultural and industrial practices on the environment at large scales in a context of global change. To address this demand, taxonomic and functional diversity of soil microbial communities, and their stability over time need to be characterized for predicting soil quality upon human activities, the evolution of this quality being expected to affect environment quality and public health. Recent methodological progresses have led to the development and automation of molecular biological tools (…

Microbial diversity[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Context (language use)03 medical and health sciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology2. Zero hunger0303 health sciencesPLATEFORMEAgroforestrybusiness.industryScale (chemistry)Environmental resource managementGlobal change04 agricultural and veterinary sciences15. Life on landBIOLOGIE MOLECULAIREAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Soil quality13. Climate actionAgricultureSoil water[SDE]Environmental Sciences040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceTerrestrial ecosystembusinesshuman activities
researchProduct

The role of public biological resource centers in providing a basic infrastructure for microbial research

2009

Public collections of microorganisms have been established since the late 19th century, and currently 573 service collections are registered at the World Data Center for Microorganisms (www.wdcm.org). All together, they hold more than 1.5 million microorganisms. By implementing guidelines compiled by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), many public service collections evolve into professional ex situ repositories of biodiversity and distribution nodes for known, validated and precisely identified microbial resources and associated information to legitimate end-users. These Biological Resource Centers (BRCs) may be the preferred mechanism for the appropriate exp…

Microbiological TechniquesQuality ControlConvention on Biological DiversityBiomedical ResearchResource (biology)Information Disseminationbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectEnvironmental resource managementInteroperabilityInformation DisseminationInternational AgenciesBiodiversityGeneral MedicineBiologyMicrobiologyTransparency (behavior)Technology TransferService (economics)Public servicebusinessCommonsMolecular BiologyBiological Specimen Banksmedia_commonResearch in Microbiology
researchProduct

Perspectives on the Impact of Sampling Design and Intensity on Soil Microbial Diversity Estimates

2019

Soil bacterial communities have long been recognized as important ecosystem components, and have been the focus of many local and regional studies. However, there is a lack of data at large spatial scales, on the biodiversity of soil microorganisms; national or more extensive studies to date have typically consisted of low replication of haphazardly collected samples. This has led to large spatial gaps in soil microbial biodiversity data. Using a pre-existing dataset of bacterial community composition across a 16-km regular sampling grid in France, we show that the number of detected OTUs changes little under different sampling designs (grid, random, or representative), but increases with t…

Microbiology (medical)Biomelcsh:QR1-502BiodiversityDistribution (economics)Sample (statistics)Microbiologylcsh:Microbiology03 medical and health sciencesglobal datasetsSampling designCitizen scienceEcosystemnational datasetsbiogeography030304 developmental biologybiodiversity0303 health sciences030306 microbiologybusiness.industrysoil bacteriaEnvironmental resource managementSampling (statistics)PerspectiveEnvironmental sciencebusinessFrontiers in Microbiology
researchProduct

Wine Yeast Terroir: Separating the Wheat from the Chaff-for an Open Debate.

2020

Wine terroir is characterized by a specific taste and style influenced by the cultivar of the fermented grapes, geographical factors such as the vineyard, mesoclimate, topoclimate, and microclimate, soil geology and pedology, and the agronomic approach used. These characteristics together define the concept of “terroir”. Thus, regional distinctive flavors in wine have been the subject of many studies aimed at better understanding the link between the wine and the vineyard. Indeed, the identification of key environmental elements involved in the regional variation of grape and wine quality characteristics is a critical feature for improving wine production in terms of consumer preference and…

Microbiology (medical)Opiniongrape vineyeastMicrobiologyVineyard03 medical and health sciencesalcoholic fermentationVirologyPedologyQuality characteristicslcsh:QH301-705.5030304 developmental biologyTerroiryeast biodiversityWine0303 health sciences030306 microbiologybusiness.industryterroirEnvironmental resource managementmicrobial terroirExperimental researchYeast in winemakinglcsh:Biology (General)Identification (biology)next-generation sequencingbusinessMicroorganisms
researchProduct

Commitment and strikes in wage bargaining

2000

Abstract This paper analyzes the long-run strategic relationship between a firm and a union as a repeated bargaining game, where there is incomplete information on the player's motivation on both sides and each party has a fall-back position. The firm and the union will engage in a reputation-building activity, that will produce a limited number of strikes over time. The bargainer that succeeds in building up a reputation for toughness and obtains a favorable payoff in the long-run is, either the more patient (or alternatively the more centralized), or the party with a higher initial probability of stubbornness, or the party with a smaller fall-back position. Our model also offers predictio…

MicroeconomicsOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and EconometricsLabour economicsComplete informationmedia_common.quotation_subjectStochastic gameEconomicsPosition (finance)Reputationmedia_commonWage bargainingLabour Economics
researchProduct

Are you a good employee or simply a good guy? Influence costs and contract design

2013

We develop a principal–agent model with a moral hazard problem in which the principal has access to a hard signal (the level of output) and a soft behavioral signal (the supervision signal) about the agent's level of effort. In our model, the agent can initiate influence activities and manipulate the behavioral signal. These activities are costly for the principal as they detract the agent from the productive task. We show that the agent's ability to manipulate the behavioral signal leads to low-powered incentives and increases the cost of implementing the efficient equilibrium as a result. Interestingly, the fact that manipulation activities entail productivity losses may lead to the desig…

MicroeconomicsOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and EconometricsLevel of EffortIncentiveMoral hazardSIGNAL (programming language)Principal (computer security)EconomicsProductivityTask (project management)Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
researchProduct