Search results for "banc"
showing 10 items of 782 documents
Reviving extinct Mediterranean forest communities may improve ecosystem potential in a warmer future
2015
The Mediterranean Basin is the region of Europe most vulnerable to negative climate-change impacts, including forest decline, increased wildfire, and biodiversity loss. Because humans have affected Mediterranean ecosystems for millennia, it is unclear whether the region's native ecosystems were more resilient to climate change than current ecosystems, and whether they would provide sustainable management options if restored. We simulated vegetation with the LandClim model, using present-day climate as well as future climate-change scenarios, in three representative areas that encompass a broad range of Mediterranean conditions and vegetation types. Sedimentary pollen records that document n…
Impact of tillage system on arbuscular mycorrhiza fungal communities in the soil under Mediterranean conditions.
2012
A more diverse arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) fungal community should be more versatile and resilient to variation in environmental conditions over space and time. To evaluate the effect of no-till and conventional tillage systems, AM fungal diversity was assessed as part of a long term field experiment by sequencing of DNA, extracted from soil, that encoded the large ribosomal sub-unit and was obtained by nested-PCR. In comparison with no-till, conventional tillage decreased AM fungal diversity by 40%. Differences between treatments in the frequency of the operational taxonomic units (OTUs) present in soil, confirm that AM fungi are differently vulnerable to soil disturbance.
Multi-temporal Forest Cover Change and Forest Density Trend Detection in a Mediterranean Environment
2015
The loss of forests along with the various types of shrubs in the Mediterranean region is seen as an important driver of climate change and has been repeatedly related with the observed land degradation and desertification in the region. Nevertheless, the extent of woody perennial vegetation cover (WPVC) and its density remain largely unclear. Here, we apply a series of algorithms and methods operationally used in Australia for large-scale WPVC mapping and monitoring and demonstrate their applicability in the Mediterranean region using a Spanish area as the trial site. Five Landsat TM and ETM+ images from various dates spanning 14 years are used to map changes in the extent of WPVC and to i…
FT-IR spectroscopy reveals that ash water repellency is highly dependent on ash chemical composition
2013
Abstract After a fire, an ash layer is commonly present, which influences soil properties and hillslope hydrology. The wettability of ash, which can vary from highly absorbent to water repellent, is an important characteristic in this context. Recent work has suggested that ash wettability is related to its degree of combustion, which in turn, can be expected to determine ash chemical composition. In this paper we therefore examine the relationship between ash water repellency and ash chemical composition. Ten ash samples with different wettability were each taken from four burned Mediterranean forest sites located at Albaida (A), Lliber (L), Navalon (N), and Pinoso (P), in the east of Spai…
Un enfoque alternativo para la medicion del riesgo de interes en el ámbito de la renta variable
2002
Roman.Ferrer@uv.es El presente trabajo se plantea como objetivo primordial la derivación de una fórmula teórica de validez general para la duración de las acciones que supere las principales limitaciones de las tradicionales medidas de la duración obtenidas en el ámbito del Modelo del Descuento de Dividendos (DDM) en su versión simplificada de crecimiento constante. Con tal fin, se presta una atención preferente a las posibles interrelaciones existentes entre la tasa de crecimiento de los dividendos de las acciones y los tipos de interés nominales. En esencia, la medida de la duración generada con este enfoque alternativo se caracteriza básicamente por la incorporación de un factor de ajust…
Lula, en un pais dependiente
2002
Changes in chemical and biological soil properties as induced by anthropogenic disturbance: A case study of an agricultural soil under recurrent floo…
2006
Abstract Monitoring the environmental impact of anthropogenic disturbance on soil ecosystem is of great importance for optimizing strategies for soil use, conservation and remediation. The aim of this study was to assess whether and to what extent a long-term, human-induced disturbance could have affected main chemical and biological properties in an agricultural soil. The study site was a hazel (Corylus avellana L.) orchard located in the area surrounding the volcanic apparatus of Somma-Vesuvius (Southern Italy). For the last two decades, the site has been repeatedly subjected to floodings by wastewaters containing not only alluvial sediments but also potentially hazardous compounds from i…
2020
Microbial communities are continuously exposed to the arrival of alien species. In complex environments such as soil, the success of invasion depends on the characteristics of the habitat, especially the diversity and structure of the residing bacterial communities. While most data available on microbial invasion relies on experiments run under constant conditions, the fate of invading species when the habitat faces disturbances has not yet been addressed. Here, we designed experiments to assess the consequences of habitat disturbance on the success of ongoing microbial invasion. We investigated (i) if disturbance-induced alterations in resident microbial communities could mitigate or facil…
On the absorbance changes in the photocycle of the photoactive yellow protein: A quantum-chemical analysis
2001
Spectral changes in the photocycle of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) are investigated by using ab initio multiconfigurational second-order perturbation theory at the available structures experimentally determined. Using the dark ground-state crystal structure [Genick, U. K., Soltis, S. M., Kuhn, P., Canestrelli, I. L. & Getzoff, E. D. (1998) Nature (London) 392, 206–209], the ππ* transition to the lowest excited state is related to the typical blue-light absorption observed at 446 nm. The different nature of the second excited state ( n π*) is consistent with the alternative route detected at 395-nm excitation. The results suggest the low-temperature photoproduct PYP HL as the mo…
The map of biodiversity : from local to global scales
2018
Species richness is not homogeneous in space and it normally presents differences when comparing among different sites. These differences often respond to gradients in one or several factors which create biodiversity patterns in space and are scale-dependent. At a local scale, diversity patterns depend on the habitat size (species-area relationship), the productivity, the environmental harshness, the frequency and intensity of disturbance, or the regional species pool. Regional diversity may be influenced by environmental heterogeneity (increasing dissimilarity), although it could act also at smaller or larger spatial scales, and the connectivity among habitats. Finally, at a global scale, …