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Kinds of Environmental Terms modified by Environmental Selected AbstractsTHE EVOLUTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC SEX DETERMINATION IN FLUCTUATING ENVIRONMENTSEVOLUTION, Issue 12 2003Tom J. M. Van Dooren Abstract Twenty years ago, Bulmer and Bull suggested that disruptive selection, produced by environmental fluctuations, can result in an evolutionary transition from environmental sex determination (ESD) to genetic sex determination (GSD). We investigated the feasibility of such a process, using mutation-limited adaptive dynamics and individual-based computer simulations. Our model describes the evolution of a reaction norm for sex determination in a metapopulation setting with partial migration and variation in an environmental variable both within and between local patches. The reaction norm represents the probability of becoming a female as a function of environmental state and was modeled as a sigmoid function with two parameters, one giving the location (i.e., the value of the environmental variable for which an individual has equal chance of becoming either sex) and the other giving the slope of the reaction norm for that environment. The slope can be interpreted as being set by the level of developmental noise in morph determination, with less noise giving a steeper slope and a more switchlike reaction norm. We found convergence stable reaction norms with intermediate to large amounts of developmental noise for conditions characterized by low migration rates, small differential competitive advantages between the sexes over environments, and little variation between individual environments within patches compared to variation between patches. We also considered reaction norms with the slope parameter constrained to a high value, corresponding to little developmental noise. For these we found evolutionary branching in the location parameter and a transition from ESD toward GSD, analogous to the original analysis by Bulmer and Bull. Further evolutionary change, including dominance evolution, produced a polymorphism acting as a GSD system with heterogamety. Our results point to the role of developmental noise in the evolution of sex determination. [source] THE ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC CONTROL OF SEASONAL POLYPHENISM IN LARVAL COLOR AND ITS ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE IN A SWALLOWTAIL BUTTERFLYEVOLUTION, Issue 2 2002Wade N. Hazel Abstract Seasonal polyphenism, in which different forms of a species are produced at different times of the year, is a common form of phenotypic plasticity among insects. Here I show that the production of dark fifth-instar caterpillars of the eastern black swallowtail butterfly, Papilio polyxenes, is a seasonal polyphenism, with larvae reared on autumnal conditions being significantly darker than larvae reared on midsummer conditions. Both rearing photoperiod and temperature were found to have individual and synergistic effects on larval darkness. Genetic analysis of variation among full-sibling families reared on combinations of two different temperatures and photoperiods is consistent with the hypothesis that variation in darkness is heritable. In addition, the genetic correlation in larval darkness across midsummer and autumnal environments is not different from zero, suggesting that differential gene expression is responsible for the increase in larval darkness in the autumn. The relatively dark autumnal form was found to have a higher body temperature in sunlight than did the lighter midsummer form, and small differences in temperature were found to increase larval growth rate. These results suggest that this genetically based seasonal polyphenism in larval color has evolved in part to increase larval growth rates in the autumn. [source] Integrated Environmental and Financial Performance Metrics for Investment Analysis and Portfolio ManagementCORPORATE GOVERNANCE, Issue 3 2007Simon Thomas This paper introduces a new measure, based on a study by Trucost and Dr Robert Repetto, combining external environmental costs with established measures of economic value added, and demonstrates how this measure can be incorporated into financial analysis. We propose that external environmental costs are relevant to all investors: universal investors are concerned about the scale of external costs whether or not regulations to internalise them are likely; mainstream investors need to understand external costs as an indication of future regulatory compliance costs; and SRI investors need to evaluate companies on both financial and social performance. The paper illustrates our new measure with data from US electric utilities and illustrates how the environmental exposures of different fund managers and portfolios can be compared. With such measures fund managers can understand and control portfolio-wide environmental risks, demonstrate their environmental credentials quantitatively and objectively and compete for the increasing number of investment mandates that have an environmental component. [source] The Electrochemical Behavior of ,-Ketoglutarate at the Hanging Mercury Drop Electrode in Acidic Aqueous Solution and Its Practical Application in Environmental and Biological SamplesELECTROANALYSIS, Issue 12 2004Li Yang Abstract The voltammetric behavior of ,-ketoglutarate (,-KG) at the hanging mercury drop electrode (HMDE) has been investigated in acetate buffer solution. Under the optimum experimental conditions (pH,4.5, 0.2,M NaAc-HAc buffer solution), a sensitive reductive wave of ,-KG was obtained by linear scan voltammetry (LSV) and the peak potential was ,1.18,V (vs. SCE), which was an irreversible adsorption wave. The kinetic parameters of the electrode process were ,=0.3 and ks=0.72,1/s. There was a linear relationship between peak current ip, ,-KG and ,-KG concentration in the range of 2×10,6,8×10,4,M ,-KG. The detection limit was 8×10,7,M and the relative standard deviation was 2.0% (C,-KG=8×10,4,M, n=10). Applications of the reductive wave of ,-KG for practical analysis were addressed as follows: (1) It can be used for the quantitative analysis of ,-KG in biological samples and the results agree well with those obtained from the established ultraviolet spectrophotometric method. (2) Utilizing the complexing effect between ,-KG and aluminum, a linear relationship holds between the decrease of peak current of ,-KG ,ip and the added Al concentration C in the range of 5.0×10,6,2.5×10,4,M. The detection limit was 2.2×10,6,M and the relative standard deviation was 3.1% (C=4×10,5,M, n=10). It was successfully applied to the detection of aluminum in water and synthetic biological samples with satisfactory results, which were consistent with those of ICP-AES. (3) It was also applied to study the effect of AlIII on the glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) activity in the catalytically reaction of ,-KG+NH+NADH,L -glutamate+NAD++H2O by differential pulse polarography (DPP) technique. By monitoring DPP reductive currents of NAD+ and ,-KG, an elementary important result was found that Al could greatly affect the activity of GDH. This study could be attributed to intrinsic understanding of the aluminum's toxicity in enzyme reaction processes. [source] Analysis and Speciation of Traces of Arsenic in Environmental, Food and Industrial Samples by Voltammetry: a ReviewELECTROANALYSIS, Issue 9 2004Andrea Cavicchioli Abstract Voltammetric approaches for the determination of arsenic and speciation at trace levels are critically appraised in a review covering the literature from 1970 to 2002. Special attention is devoted to stripping modes and to issues related to the choice of working material and supporting electrolyte. A section is dedicated to the management of real samples and aspects of sample preparation. An extensive compilation, organized by real sample type, gathers essential experimental conditions. Potentiometric stripping analysis is introduced for sake of comparison. The coupling of voltammetric detection or preaccumulation with FIA, chromatography, capillary electrophoresis and ICP techniques is also addressed. [source] Special issue: The 25th anniversary of Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis (II)ENVIRONMENTAL AND MOLECULAR MUTAGENESIS, Issue 2-3 2005Suzanne M. Morris Guest Editor No abstract is available for this article. [source] Iron availability affects mcyD expression and microcystin-LR synthesis in Microcystis aeruginosa PCC7806ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 10 2008Emma Sevilla Summary Microcystins are toxins produced by cyanobacteria that entail serious health and environmental problems. They are cyclic heptapeptides synthesized via a mixed polyketide synthase/non-ribosomal peptide synthetase system called microcystin synthetase. Environmental and nutritional factors that trigger microcystin synthesis are still debated and this work deals with the study of the influence of iron nutritional status on the microcystin synthesis. The results indicate that iron deficiency could be one of the inducing factors of the microcystin synthesis. For the first time, increased transcription of an essential mcy gene and correlative microcystin synthesis has been established. Real-time PCR analysis of mcyD, and microcystin-LR synthesis were studied on Microcystis aeruginosa PCC7806 grown in iron-replete and iron-deplete media. Iron starvation causes an increase of mcyD transcription, correlative to the increase of microcystin-LR levels. Four transcription start points were identified for mcyD and two for mcyA, and they are not changed as a consequence of iron deficiency. [source] Environmental and economic development issues in the Polish motorway programme: a review and an analysis of the public debateENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE, Issue 2 2002E. J. Judge This paper examines the development of the Polish motorway programme, though the lessons apply generally throughout the central and east European (CEE) region. This has particular significance for European transport policy as three major corridors of the Polish motorway network also form crucial links of the Trans European Network (TEN). Thus, until recently, motorways have been presented on the one hand (by the Polish government and its supporters) as a boost to national and regional development, and on the other (by its detractors, principally the environmental lobby) as a threat that will suck development out of the country, while saddling it with substantial environmental costs. Environmental pressure groups have sought to refute economic development arguments using Western research, and have seen such research as influential in public debate and decision making. Based on evidence drawn from official reports and documents and a content analysis of the public debate on motorway development using the media archive of the Polish Motorways Agency, this paper suggests that these arguments have so far in fact been overshadowed by environmental considerations, and even more by financing issues. However, the future direction of policy is uncertain because of political changes after the September 2001 election. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [source] Nuclear power in the global warming era: Environmental, economic, and policy considerationsENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2010Begum Sertyesilisik First page of article [source] Developing China's coalbed methane: Environmental and resource security benefitsENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT, Issue 4 2008Yajun Li First page of article [source] Conducting Third-Party Evaluations of Environmental, Health, and Safety Audit ProgramsENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2002Lawrence B. Cahill First page of article [source] Environmental impoverishment and aging alter object recognition, spatial learning, and dentate gyrus astrocytesEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 3 2010Daniel G. Diniz Abstract Environmental and age-related effects on learning and memory were analysed and compared with changes observed in astrocyte laminar distribution in the dentate gyrus. Aged (20 months) and young (6 months) adult female albino Swiss mice were housed from weaning either in impoverished conditions or in enriched conditions, and tested for episodic-like and water maze spatial memories. After these behavioral tests, brain hippocampal sections were immunolabeled for glial fibrillary acid protein to identify astrocytes. The effects of environmental enrichment on episodic-like memory were not dependent on age, and may protect water maze spatial learning and memory from declines induced by aging or impoverished environment. In the dentate gyrus, the number of astrocytes increased with both aging and enriched environment in the molecular layer, increased only with aging in the polymorphic layer, and was unchanged in the granular layer. We suggest that long-term experience-induced glial plasticity by enriched environment may represent at least part of the circuitry groundwork for improvements in behavioral performance in the aged mice brain. [source] Environmental and frequency effects on fatigue crack growth rate and paths in aluminium alloyFATIGUE & FRACTURE OF ENGINEERING MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES, Issue 1-2 2005S. A. MICHEL ABSTRACT The environmental and frequency effects on fatigue crack growth in aluminium alloys are studied theoretically and experimentally. 2024-T351 and 7075-T651 tested in corrosive environments (humid air or technically purified nitrogen) show a constant crack growth rate (da/dN) at low values of the effective stress intensity range (,Keff). Typical well-known fits of this curve (da/dN vs ,Keff) do not reflect the plateau-like region. A new model of crack growth is presented, which physically attributes this region to the formation and subsequent fracture of a crack tip oxide layer. The thickness of this layer is measured with X-ray photon electron spectroscopy. At higher loads, other mechanisms are understood to be active. The model parameters are determined from constant amplitude tests, and are valid for a given material and environment. In 7075-T651 tested in nitrogen, with R= 0.1 and 83 Hz, unexpected macroscopical crack branching is observed when ,Keff reaches approximately 3.0 MPa ,m. [source] Air-Operable, High-Mobility Organic Transistors with Semifluorinated Side Chains and Unsubstituted Naphthalenetetracarboxylic Diimide Cores: High Mobility and Environmental and Bias Stress Stability from the Perfluorooctylpropyl Side ChainADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 17 2010Byung Jun Jung Abstract N,N,-bis(3-(perfluoroctyl)propyl)-1,4,5,8-naphthalenetetracarboxylic acid diimide (8,3-NTCDI) was newly synthesized, as were related fluorooctylalkyl-NTCDIs and alkyl-NTCDIs. The 8,3-NTCDI-based organic thin-film transistor (OTFT) on an octadecyltrimethoxysilane (OTS)-treated Si/SiO2 substrate shows apparent electron mobility approaching 0.7 cm2 V -1s -1 in air. The fluorooctylethyl-NTCDI (8,2-NTCDI) and fluorooctylbutyl-NTCDI (8,4-NTCDI) had significantly inferior properties even though their chemical structures are only slightly different, and nonfluorinated decyl and undecyl NTCDIs did not operate predictably in air. From atomic force microscopy, the 8,3-NTCDI active layer deposited with the substrate at 120 °C forms a polycrystalline film with grain sizes >4,m. Mobilities were stable in air for one week. After 100 days in air, the average mobility of three OTFTs decreased from 0.62 to 0.12 cm2 V -1s -1, but stabilized thereafter. The threshold voltage (VT) increased by 15 V in air, but only by 3 V under nitrogen, after one week. On/off ratios were stable in air throughout. We also investigated transistor stability to gate bias stress. The transistor on hexamethlydisilazane (HMDS) is more stable than that on OTS with mobility comparable to amorphous Si TFTs. VT shifts caused by ON (30 V) and OFF (,20 V) gate bias stress for the HMDS samples for 1 hour were 1.79 V and 1.27 V under N2, respectively, and relaxation times of 106 and 107 s were obtained using the stretched exponential model. These performances are promising for use in transparent display backplanes. [source] The effect of a closed area and beach seine exclusion on coral reef fish catchesFISHERIES MANAGEMENT & ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2001T. R. McClanahan Fish landing data from the Mombasa Marine National Park (MNP) and a marine reserve exploited by various gears were studied over a 5-yr period to determine the influence of the closed area and different gears in fisheries. The number fishing and boats per landing site was constant, but total and catch per unit effort progressively declined in all sites on an annual basis irrespective of the existence of a marine reserve, exclusion of the beach seines or use of gear. Differences between landing sites were most pronounced when analysed on a catch per area as opposed to the more standard catch per fisherman, suggesting compensation in human effort when catches decline. A marine reserve next to a closed area that excluded beach seines had the highest catch per area (5.5 kg ha,1 month,1) despite having the highest density of fishermen (0.07 ± 0.02 fishermen ha,1 month,1). The annual rate of decline in the catch was lower than the other sites at around 250 g day,1 compared with 310,400 g day,1 in the other sites. One landing site, which excluded beach seine landings for more than 20 yrs, had a high catch per area (,5.3 kg ha,1 month,1), but after experiencing a doubling in the effort of other gears (line, speargun and trap), the catch per fisherman and area were reduced. Environmental or habitat degradation and excessive effort remain the most likely explanation for the overall declines in catch from 1995 to 1999. Closed areas and beach seine exclusion have the potential to increase catch rates, but the first often reduces the total fishing area and possibly leads to a loss of total catch, at least on a time scale of less than 10 yrs. The exclusion of beach seines can lead to an increase in other gear types that can also cause reductions in catch. [source] Environmental and spatial effects on the distribution of blue marlin (Makaira nigricans) as inferred from data for longline fisheries in the Pacific OceanFISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, Issue 6 2008NAN-JAY SU Abstract Blue marlin is distributed throughout tropical and temperate waters in the Pacific Ocean. However, the preference of this species for particular habitats may impact its vulnerability to being caught. The relationship between spatio-temporal patterns of blue marlin abundance and environmental factors is examined using generalized additive models fitted to catch and effort data from longline fisheries. The presence of blue marlin, and the catch rate given presence, are modeled separately. Latitude, longitude, and sea-surface temperature explain the greatest proportion of the deviance. Spatial distributions of relative density of blue marlin, based on combining the probability of presence and relative density given presence, indicate that there is seasonal variation in the distribution of blue marlin, and that the highest densities occur in the tropics. Seasonal patterns in the relative density of blue marlin appear to be related to shifts in SST. The distribution and relative abundance of blue marlin are sufficiently heterogeneous in space and time that the results of analyses of catch and effort data to identify ,hotspots' could be used as the basis for time-area management to reduce the amount of blue marlin bycaught in longline fisheries. [source] Environmental ,loopholes' and fish population dynamics: comparative pattern recognition with focus on El Niño effects in the PacificFISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, Issue 4-5 2003Andrew Bakun Abstract A process of comparative pattern recognition is undertaken for the purpose of garnering insights into the mechanisms underlying some currently puzzling conundrums in fishery resource ecology. These include (a) out-of-phase oscillations between anchovies and sardines, (b) the remarkable fish productivity of the Peru,Humboldt marine ecosystem, (c) sardine population increases in the eastern Pacific during El Niños, (d) basin-wide synchronies in large-amplitude abundance variations, (e) characteristic spawning of large tuna species in poorly productive areas, (f) contrary trends in Pacific tropical tuna abundance during the 1970s and early 1980s. It is found that each of the items appears to become less enigmatic when the conceptual focus shifts from conventional trophodynamics to the idea that ,loopholes' in the fields of biological controls (i.e. of predators of early life stages), produced by poor ocean productivity or by disruptive environmental perturbations, may in fact lead to remarkable reproductive success. Implications include the following: (1) El Niño, rather than being an unmitigated disaster for Peruvian fisheries, may in the long run be a prime reason for the remarkable fishery productivity of the Peru,Humboldt large marine ecosystem. (2) Globally-teleconnected climatic trends or shifts might produce globally-coherent population expansions even when local environmental expressions may be quite different. (3) It may be unreasonable to expect any management methodologies to be able to keep the fish populations of highly climatically-perturbed systems such as the Peruvian LME always at stable high levels; an alternative approach, for example, might be to take optimal advantage of the transient opportunities afforded by the high fish productivity of such inherently erratic systems. [source] Environmental and developmental controls on specific leaf area are little modified by leaf allometryFUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2008R. Milla Summary 1Recent work shows that large leaves tend to require higher biomass investments per unit leaf area than small leaves. As a consequence, specific leaf area (SLA), which is a focus trait for a bulk of physiological and ecological research programs, is dependent on leaf size variation. Here, we address whether size dependency alters the outcome of research dealing with SLA responses to environmental or developmental change. 2We compiled lamina mass (M) and surface area (A) data for 2158 leaves of 26 species, coming from studies investigating the reaction of SLA to variation in rainfall, growth,season length, light intensity, atmospheric CO2, fire frequency, type of branch and leaf and plant age. We fitted the function M = a Ab to the data of each experimental situation separately, and implemented a method to split SLA response as measured in the original study (SLADm) into response due to leaf size dependency (SLADa), and response due to treatment effects, after controlling for leaf size dependency (SLADt). 3The sign of the reaction did not differ between SLADm and SLADt. However, the magnitude of that response changed for most contrasts, though in variable ways. 4Conclusions of past experiments hold, for the most part, after re-analysis including size dependency. However, given the large heterogeneity found here, we advise that future work investigating SLA be prepared to account for leaf size dependency when the factors under focus are suspected to alter leaf size. [source] Environmental and economic analysis of the fully integrated biorefineryGCB BIOENERGY, Issue 5 2009ELIZABETH D. SENDICH Abstract Cellulosic biofuel systems have the potential to significantly reduce the environmental impact of the world's transportation energy requirements. However, realizing this potential will require systems level thinking and scale integration. Until now, we have lacked modeling tools for studying the behavior of integrated cellulosic biofuel systems. In this paper, we describe a new research tool, the Biorefinery and Farm Integration Tool (BFIT) in which the production of fuel ethanol from cellulosic biomass is integrated with crop and animal (agricultural) production models. Uniting these three subsystems in a single combined model has allowed, for the first time, basic environmental and economic analysis of biomass production, possible secondary products, fertilizer production, and bioenergy production across various regions of the United States. Using BFIT, we simulate cellulosic ethanol production embedded in realistic agricultural landscapes in nine locations under a collection of farm management scenarios. This combined modeling approach permits analysis of economic profitability and highlights key areas for environmental improvement. These results show the advantages of introducing integrated biorefinery systems within agricultural landscapes. This is particularly true in the Midwest, which our results suggest is a good setting for the cellulosic ethanol industry. Specifically, results show that inclusion of cellulosic biofuel systems into existing agriculture enhances farm economics and reduces total landscape emissions. Model results also indicate a limited ethanol price effect from increased biomass transportation distance. Sensitivity analysis using BFIT revealed those variables having the strongest effects on the overall system performance, namely: biorefinery size, switchgrass yield, and biomass farm gate price. [source] Environmental and heritable causes of cancer among 9.6 million individuals in the Swedish family-cancer databaseINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 2 2002Kamila Czene Abstract The genetic and environmental components in 15 common cancers were estimated using the nationwide Swedish Family-Cancer Database. Tetrachoric correlations were used to describe similarity in cancer liability among family members. Structural equation modeling was used to derive estimates of the importance of genetic and environmental effects. Statistically significant estimates of proportion of cancer susceptibility, accounted for by genetic effects, were obtained for all studied cancers except for leukemia. The estimate was highest in thyroid cancer (53%), followed by tumors at endocrine glands (28%), testis (25%), breast (25%), cervix (22%), melanoma (21%), colon (13%), nervous system (12%), rectum (12%), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (10%), lung (8%), kidney (8%), urinary bladder (7%), stomach (1%) and leukemia (1%). The estimates of shared environmental effects ranged from 0% (cervix) to 15% (stomach). The childhood shared environmental effects were most important in testicular cancer (17%), stomach cancer (13%) and cervix in situ (13%). Our results indicate that environment has a principal causative role in cancer at all studied sites except for thyroid. The relatively large effect of heritability in cancer at some sites, on the other hand, indicates that even though susceptibility genes have been described at many cancer sites, they are likely to explain only part of the genetic effects. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Environmental and sustainability aspects of hydrogen and fuel cell systemsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH, Issue 1 2007Ibrahim DincerArticle first published online: 1 AUG 200 Abstract Discussed in this paper are current environmental problems, potential solutions to these problems, possible future hydrogen energy-utilization patterns for better environment and sustainable development through life cycle assessment (LCA), and how the principles of thermodynamics via exergy can be beneficially used to evaluate hydrogen and fuel cell systems and their role in sustainable development. Throughout the paper current and future perspectives of hydrogen and fuel cell systems based on exergetic, LCA and sustainability aspects development are considered. The results will likely be useful to scientists, researchers and engineers as well as policy and decision makers. Two case studies on the LCA aspects of hydrogen and fuel cell systems are presented to highlight the importance of the hydrogen and fuel cell systems and show that these can help achieve better environment and sustainability. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The needs of older people with dementia in residential careINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, Issue 1 2006Geraldine A. Hancock Abstract Background People with dementia often move into care homes as their needs become too complex or expensive for them to remain in their own homes. Little is known about how well their needs are met within care homes. Method The aim of this study was to identify the unmet needs of people with dementia in care and the characteristics associated with high levels of needs. Two hundred and thirty-eight people with dementia were recruited from residential care homes nationally. Needs were identified using the Camberwell Assessment of Needs for the Elderly (CANE). Results Residents with dementia had a mean of 4.4 (SD 2.6) unmet and 12.1 (SD 2.6) met needs. Environmental and physical health needs were usually met. However, sensory or physical disability (including mobility problems and incontinence) needs, mental health needs, and social needs, such as company and daytime activities, were often unmet. Unmet needs were associated with psychological problems, such as anxiety and depression, but not with severity of dementia or level of dependency. Conclusion Mental health services and residential home staff need to be aware that many needs remain unmet and much can be done to improve the quality of life of the residents with dementia. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Environmental and Varietal Influences on the Fatty Acid Composition of Rapeseed, Soybeans and SunflowersJOURNAL OF AGRONOMY AND CROP SCIENCE, Issue 1 2010M. Werteker Abstract The fatty acid (FA) composition of oil crops is of some importance under technological as well as under nutritional aspects. The influence of temperature on this parameter in rapeseed, soybeans and sunflowers was investigated under practical agricultural conditions, whereby varietal variations were taken into account. The analysed plant material originated from variety testing trials located in different climatic zones of Austria. As a measure of the climatic conditions of a location, the mean temperature of the last 30 days before harvest was calculated. Despite the low temperature differences between the various locations, moderate but significant negative correlations between temperature and the share of linolenic (18 : 3), respectively, linoleic (18 : 2) acid on the whole quantity of FAs in rapeseed (R² = 0.18,0.42), soybeans (R² = 0.11,0.13) and sunflowers (R² = 0.15) were found. Furthermore, there was a good negative correlation in the case of sunflower seeds between temperature and oil level (R² = 0.45). The environmental influence on the share of polyunsaturated FAs differed between the different species. The results show that quality of vegetable oils is as well a question of environment as of variety. [source] Environmental and Genotypic Effects on Pod Characteristics Related to Common Bean QualityJOURNAL OF AGRONOMY AND CROP SCIENCE, Issue 4 2004Dr A. M. De Ron Abstract A collection of 121 common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) landraces from Spain and Portugal (Iberian Peninsula) was evaluated in six environments (three locations and 2 years). Significant differences among landraces were found for period of flowering, pod maturity and pod morphology (weight, length, width/thickness and curvature). Wide variation among landraces was revealed by the range of variation observed. Environmental effects were not significant although year × location and landrace × year × location interactions were significant for all traits studied except for pod curvature. Poor consistent expression across the different environments for most of the traits studied was expressed by the low values of constancy (C) with the exception of width/thickness indicating that pod shape (round or flat) was expressed regularly across different environments. Principal component analysis enhanced differences among environments affecting the performance of the bean landraces evaluated. Analysis by environment showed that 51 landraces were adapted to specific environments and only four of them had broad geographical adaptability with similar performance under different conditions. These results could be a starting point for selection of new inbred lines adapted to distinct environments with potential for the improvement of current snap bean cultivars. [source] A review of marine aquaculture in Spain: production, regulations and environmental monitoringJOURNAL OF APPLIED ICHTHYOLOGY, Issue 4-5 2000A. Sánchez-Mata Summary In this review the main aspects concerning Spanish marine aquaculture production, and its control, are summarized. Aquaculture in Spain has been dominated by extensive shellfish farming, mainly mussels (3242 rafts; 260 000 t year -1 in 1998), since the beginning of the 1950s. This type of farming was the most lucrative marine aquaculture activity in the Galician Rías (NW of the Iberian Peninsula) in terms of production. In recent years, finfish farming has developed in a number of Mediterranean locations, with turbot, sea bream and sea bass as the most important species produced (18 300 t year -1 in 1998). Environmental, food-quality and medicine standards are also reviewed in this paper including the regulations, rules, farm licensing, permits and monitoring programmes involved. [source] Environmental- and parental condition-related variation in sex ratio of kestrel broodsJOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2000Erkki Korpimäki Variation of brood sex ratio was studied in a Finnish population of Eurasian Kestrels Falco tinnunculus breeding in an unpredictably variable environment. From those young that survived until 2,4 weeks of age, blood was collected and their sex determined from polymorphic DNA profiles produced by hybridisation with a human minisatellite probe. The sex ratio was male-biased during a year of food (vole) scarcity. Furthermore, in broods without mortality, contrasting seasonal trends in sex ratios emerged. In this subsample, the proportion of males increased with later laying date during years of low and moderate food supply, whereas the opposite was true in a year of relatively high food supply. These trends may indicate circumstances that favour the raising of different sex. The proportion of males in the brood was negatively correlated with body condition of both male and female parents, also reflecting an adaptive condition-dependent sex-ratio adjustment, or alternatively the inability of the parents to meet the requirements of the more energetically expensive female offspring. We discuss the limitations that unpredictable conditions during brood raising can impose on adaptive sex-ratio manipulation, particularly in species with sexual size dimorphism and consequent differences in the cost of raising the two sexes. [source] Ethical values and motives driving organic food choiceJOURNAL OF CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR, Issue 5 2006Pirjo Honkanen The role of ethical motives in consumers' choice of organic food was investigated. A self-administered questionnaire was conducted on a representative sample of 1283 Norwegian adults. The relations between ethical food choice motives, attitudes and intention to consume organic food was studied by estimating a structural equation model. Environmental and animal rights issues had a strong influence on attitudes towards organic food, suggesting that the more people are concerned about these issues, the more positive attitude they have towards organic food, and the more likely it is that they will consume organic food. Also, political motives had some positive influence on attitudes, while religion was not important as a food choice criterion. Implications of our findings for marketers are discussed. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Partitioning the effects of biodiversity and environmental heterogeneity for productivity and mortality in a tropical tree plantationJOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2008Chrystal Healy Summary 1Over 5000 trees were grown in plots of differing diversity levels (1, 3 and 6 species) in a plantation established in Panama. Four and five years after establishment, we analysed parameters related to the productivity of this tropical plantation (tree survival, height and biomass as well as plot basal area) to test for the presence of biodiversity effects. The relative importance of environmental heterogeneity (such as soil, topography, and drainage) and biodiversity on tree growth and mortality was determined using partial redundancy analysis. 2Hierarchical clustering revealed nine different soil clusters based on soil quality and drainage. By chance, the six-species plots were apparently established on more variable soils then on the other diversity levels. We found little evidence for spatial autocorrelation between subplots, with the exception of four subplots located on a ridge that extends on the North,South axis of the plantation and corresponds to a zone of higher productivity. 3The redundancy analysis indicated that environmental heterogeneity and biodiversity together explained around 50% of the variation in subplot productivity and tree mortality. Environment explained 35,57% of the variation in productivity and mortality, respectively, whereas diversity explained an additional 23,30%. 4Our simulation model revealed a significant positive effect of biodiversity on growth but no effect of biodiversity on mortality. The standardized effect sizes that we used to detect over- or under-yielding or no effect in comparison with monoculture were highly variable and the variability was largely explained by traits related to site topography. 5Synthesis. In our tropical tree plantation, we detected biodiversity effects at a scale relevant to conservation and quantified the relative importance of environmental heterogeneity and diversity on tree growth and mortality. Our results support the idea that environmental factors could act as hidden sources of variability in biodiversity experiments. Environmental and spatial heterogeneity induced variable responses to biodiversity and amplified the differences between three- and six-species plots. Species identity explained more variation in productivity than did the species diversity. One species, Cedrela odorata, was associated with increased productivity. [source] Environmental and Material Flow Cost Accounting: Principles and Procedures edited by Christine JaschJOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2009Rick Reibstein No abstract is available for this article. [source] Comparative Energy, Environmental, and Economic Analysis of Traditional and E-commerce DVD Rental NetworksJOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2007Deepak Sivaraman This study is a comparative life-cycle assessment (LCA) of two competing digital video disc (DVD) rental networks: the e-commerce option, where the customer orders the movies online, and the traditional business option, where the customer goes to the rental store to rent a movie. The analytical framework proposed is for a customer living in the city of Ann Arbor, Michigan in the United States. The primary energy and environmental performance for both networks are presented using a multicriterion LCA. The package selected by the traditional network is responsible for 67% of the difference in total energy consumption of the two alternatives. Results show that the e-commerce alternative consumed 33% less energy and emitted 40% less CO2 than the traditional option. A set of sensitivity analyses test the influence of distance traveled, transportation mode, and reuse of DVD and DVD packaging on the final results. The mode of transportation used by the customer in the traditional business model also affects global emissions and energy consumption. The customer walking to the store is by far the best option in the traditional network; however, the e-commerce option performed comparatively better despite all transportation modes tested. A novel economic indicator, ESAL, is used to compare different transportation modes based on the level of stress exerted on the pavement. The two networks are compared on the basis of cost accounting; consistent with its energy and environmental advantages, the e-commerce network also exerts lesser economic impact, by $1.17, for the functional unit tested. [source] |