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Shifting cultivation in peatlands

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2007
Indonesia

Transboundary haze pollution from smoke from land preparation fires has become a perennial problem in Indonesia, especially in the last 10 years during the dry season. Most of that smoke originates from illegal land preparation fires for oil palm and industrial forest plantation as well as from shifting cultivation, which is usually blamed for the smoke.

Livestock water productivity: implications for sub-Saharan Africa

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2009
África

Water is essential for agriculture including livestock. Given increasing global concern that access to agricultural water will constrain food production and that livestock production uses and degrades too much water, there is compelling need for better understanding of the nature of livestock-water interactions. Inappropriate animal management along with poor cropping practices often contributes to widespread and severe depletion, degradation and contamination of water.

Mapping and Monitoring Cheatgrass Dieoff in Rangelands of the Northern Great Basin, USA ☆,☆☆,★

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2015
Estados Unidos de América

Understanding cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) dynamics in the Northern Great Basin rangelands, USA, is necessary to effectively manage the region's lands. This study's goal was to map and monitor cheatgrass performance to identify where and when cheatgrass dieoff occurred in the Northern Great Basin and to discover how this phenomenon was affected by climatic, topographic, and edaphic variables. We also examined how fire affected cheatgrass performance.

Corn Belt Assessment of Cover Crop Management and Preferences

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2008

Surveying end-users about their use of technologies and preferences provides information for researchers and educators to develop relevant research and educational programs. A mail survey was sent to Corn Belt farmers during 2006 to quantify cover crop management and preferences. Results indicated that the dominant cereal cover crops in Indiana and Illinois are winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and cereal rye (Secale cereale L.), cereal rye and oat (Avena sativa L.) in Iowa, and oat in Minnesota.

Constraints of philanthropy on determining the distribution of biodiversity conservation funding

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2016

Caught between ongoing habitat destruction and funding shortfalls, conservation organizations are using systematic planning approaches to identify places that offer the highest biodiversity return per dollar invested. However, available tools do not account for the landscape of funding for conservation or quantify the constraints this landscape imposes on conservation outcomes.

Roosting behaviour and habitat selection of Pteropus giganteus reveal potential links to Nipah virus epidemiology

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2014
Bangladesh
Asia meridional

Flying foxes Pteropus spp. play a key role in forest regeneration as seed dispersers and are also the reservoir of many viruses, including Nipah virus in Bangladesh. Little is known about their habitat requirements, particularly in South Asia. Identifying Pteropus habitat preferences could assist in understanding the risk of zoonotic disease transmission broadly and, in Bangladesh, could help explain the spatial distribution of human Nipah virus cases.

REGION LAND AND PROPERTY COMPLEX MANAGEMENT: METHODOLOGICAL AND APPLIED ASPECTS

Journal Articles & Books
Abril, 2015

In the article the questions of the land and real estate taxation, objects’ cadastral and market price, land relations forming and their role in social and economic development of the region are considered.

В статье рассматриваются вопросы налогообложения земли и недвижимого имущества, кадастровой и рыночной цены объектов, формирования земельных отношений и их роли в социально-экономическом развитии региона.

Pollinator diversity increases fruit production in Mexican coffee plantations: The importance of rustic management systems

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2009
México

Pollination is an ecological process that provides important services to humans. Pollination service in agroecosystems depends on several factors, including the land management systems used by farmers. Here we focused on the effects of insect pollinator diversity on coffee fruit production along a gradient of management systems in central Veracruz, Mexico. The gradient ranged from low environmental impact management systems (the native forest is not completely removed) to high environmental impact management systems (the native forest is completely removed).

High‐severity fire corroborated in historical dry forests of the western United States: response to Fulé et al

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2014
Estados Unidos de América

Accurate assessment of changing fire regimes is important, since climatic change and people may be promoting more wildfires. Government wildland fire policies and restoration programmes in dry western US forests are based on the hypothesis that high‐severity fire was rare in historical fire regimes, modern fire severity is unnaturally high and restoration efforts should focus primarily on thinning forests to eliminate high‐severity fire.

Landscape context and plant community composition in grazed agricultural systems of the Northeastern United States

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2010
Estados Unidos de América

Temperate humid grazing lands are an important component of the landscape of the northeastern United States, as well as of the economy of this region. Unlike their European counterparts, little is known about the basic ecology of managed grasslands in this region. During an 8-year survey of 28 farms across the northeastern United States, we sampled the vegetation on 95 grazed plots, identifying 310 plant species, and collected data on topography, climate and soils.

Vegetation Monitoring to Guide Management Decisions in Miami's Urban Pine Rockland Preserves

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2014

We developed a monitoring program to assess the health of urban fragments of pine rockland, a globally critically imperiled, fire-dependent plant community, in order to provide feedback for adaptive land management. Our results showed negative effects of fire exclusion, including low native herb and grass cover, excessive leaf litter accumulation, and high densities of native trees in most of the twelve preserves sampled.