scholarly journals The ecology of the Tamar estuary. VII. Observations on the interstitial salinity of intertidal muds in the estuarine habitat of Nereis diversicolor

Author(s):  
Ralph I. Smith

The polychaete Nereis diversicolor F. O. Müller is one of the most characteristic elements of the brackish-water fauna of north-western Europe, and inhabits an extremely wide range of salinities. As a background for comparative physiological studies of chloride regulation in worms from different parts of the geographical range, the writer has attempted to describe the salinities and the variations in salinity endured by populations of N. diversicolor in eco-logically distinct and geographically well separated areas. Three principal environments have been studied:

Author(s):  
Eduard Koster ◽  
Tim Favier

Peatlands are fascinating wetland ecosystems. They provide a habitat for a wide range of highly adapted plant and animal species. In addition to the floristic and ornithological richness, peatlands have been recognized for many other values. For instance, drained peatland soils often have good agricultural properties, and peat has been and still is in some places extensively used as fuel. In coastal wetlands peat has even been used for salt extraction. Furthermore, peat is an interesting material for science, as it contains information on the palaeoecological environment, climate change, carbon history, and archaeology. In north-western Europe, peatlands were once quite extensive, covering tens of thousands of square kilometres. However, most of them have been strongly exploited by humans during past centuries. Many peatlands have been cultivated for agriculture and forestry, or have been exploited by commercial or domestic peat extraction for fuel. As a result, only a very small part of north-western Europe’s peatlands remains today in a more or less natural state. This chapter focuses on the peat deposits and peatlands in north-western Europe that have formed since the Late Glacial (c.13 ka BP). First, the most common concepts in peatland terminology are explained, and the distribution of peatlands is described. Next, processes of peat formation and the relationship between peatforming processes and climate, hydrology, vegetation, and other factors are discussed. In the following section, frequently used classification methods are presented. A historical overview of the cultivation and exploitation of peatlands is given and the present land use and characteristics of peatland soils are discussed. The following section deals with methods of conservation and rehabilitation of the remaining mires. The importance of peatlands as palaeoecological archives is examplified. Finally, the role of peatlands as a source and/or sink of CO2 and the relations with climate change are briefly explained. Peat is the unconsolidated material that predominantly consists of slightly decomposed or undecomposed organic material in which the original cellular and tissue structures can often be identified. Peat forms in lakes and mires under waterlogged, anaerobic conditions.


Author(s):  
Michael Anderson ◽  
Corinne Roughley

Throughout the period covered by this book there have been major contrasts between different parts of Scotland: in population change, migration, nuptiality, fertility, and mortality. Across all these variables, there have also been major and most often negative contrasts with England and other parts of north-western Europe. Compared with similar areas elsewhere, these contrasts were pervasive across the country and persistent over time. This suggests that, compared with England in particular, ‘Scottish-wide effects’ have underpinned them. A number of largely Scottish-specific employment practices, social and housing policies, and local government weaknesses have been important. But, above all, a shortage of opportunities relative to expectations, occupational insecurity, slow development of new manufacturing industries, and various factors undermining confidence in the future have been crucial. Scottish population has grown in the early twenty-first century. But maintaining positive demographic momentum remains a challenge.


1934 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. A. Rubtzov

Summary1. The number of egg-tubes and the number of eggs in each tube varies in accordance with the food and the climatic and microclimatic conditions of each habitat. The majority of Siberian grasshoppers have adaptations in the ovaries which enable them to take full advantage of the available heat.2. In the species possessing 10 or more egg-tubes, their number varies in different parts of the distribution area. It decreases towards the centre of the area with increasing warmth and dryness, and increases towards the colder and more humid margins of that area (e.g., in the Far East and in Western Europe).3. The potential fertility is more or less stable in different species of grasshoppers, and in the species studied it fluctuates between 84 and 388 eggs per female.4. There is no correlation between the potential fertility and the abundance of the species in nature, for the greatest fertility is met with in those species which occur but rarely. The injurious (i.e., very numerous) grasshoppers have a medium, or somewhat less than a medium, potential fertility.5. The actual fertility is greatly dependent on the environment and has a wide range of fluctuation.6. Lack of food in reservations was observed to lower the fertility of grasshoppers by 30–40 per cent. The parasites (Blaesoxiphaspp.,Mermisspp.) greatly reduce the degree of fertility of the Siberian grasshoppers. However, the percentage of infestation by these parasites is low, but in the reservations it is somewhat higher than outside. Thus, the actual fertility in reservations is rather lower than outside.7. The outbreaks of the Siberian grasshoppers are determined by the climatic and microclimatic conditions. The fluctuations in fertility never have any real importance in causing the outbreaks. Lack of food, parasites, predators and diseases are of minor importance; among the latter the main factors are the diseases of the egg-pods, which again depend on the microclimate.


2014 ◽  
Vol 955-959 ◽  
pp. 1267-1271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Valerievna Sirotina ◽  
Igor Georgievich Krinitsyn ◽  
Dmitriy Nikolaevich Zontikov ◽  
Ivan Yurievich Parnikoza

In this analysis we present the characteristics of the habitats of a species rare in Europe - Botrychium virginianum (L.) Sw., in remote parts of the geographical range on the territories of USA and Russia. The analysis confirms the possibility of the the growth of this species in naturally recovering forests, gives an update of the information about a variety of environmental conditions of growth of this species and shows its similarity in different parts of Europe. At the time of research conducted in Bethlehem this species appeared to be rare, their populations small, which is connected with the cryptic character of the populations of this species as well as with the ability of showing a wide range of polyvariety of ontogenesis. Only in one of the examined populations the age spectre is fully represented and we can see all the basic states of ontogenesis. This species is also rare on the territory of the Kostroma region while the populations are larger and contain all states of ontogenesis of sporophyte. The phenology of the species was examined. The analysis points to the vista of creation of new populations by introduction of spores in new areas and shows the necessity of monitoring in order to develop mechanisms of protection if the species.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 359
Author(s):  
Niamh Roche ◽  
Steve Langton ◽  
Tina Aughney ◽  
Deirdre Lynn ◽  
Ferdia Marnell

Organization ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 135050842110209
Author(s):  
Martin Parker

In this review I consider the 20 years that have passed since the publication of my book Against Management. I begin by locating it in the context of the expanding business schools of the UK in the 1990s, and the growth of CMS in north western Europe. After positioning the book within its time, and noting that the book is now simultaneously highly cited and irrelevant, I then explore the arguments I made in the final chapter. If the book is of interest for the next two decades, it because it gestures towards the importance of alternative forms of organization, which I continue to maintain are not reducible to ‘management’. Given the intensifying crises of climate, ecology, inequality and democracy, developing alternatives must be understood as the historical task of CMS within the business school and I propose a ten-point manifesto in support of that commitment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Yan ◽  
Chun-lian Wang ◽  
Steffen Mischke ◽  
Jiu-yi Wang ◽  
Li-jian Shen ◽  
...  

AbstractMajor, trace and rare earth element (REE) geochemistry of the late Cretaceous lower Zhoutian Formation from the Jitai Basin of Southeast China were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) analysis to infer the provenance of the sediments and to reconstruct the palaeoenvironment and palaeoclimate. The wide range of Sr/Cu ratios point to a fluctuating palaeoclimate, and the negative correlation between the FeO/MnO and Al2O3/MgO ratios and the Sr/Cu ratio indicates that the late Cretaceous climate during the lower Zhoutian Formation in the Jitai Basin can be divided into two parts. The lower part experienced two cooling periods, whilst the upper part was dominated by warm-humid climate. Mostly corresponding trends of the B/Ga, Sr/Ba and Sr/Cu ratios show that the salinity changed consistently with the late Cretaceous climate during the lower Zhoutian Formation in the Jitai Basin. During the lower part, the salinity changed from salt water to fresh/brackish water. In the upper part, water was mainly fresh/brackish, and there were many changes from fresh/brackish water to salt water. The relatively stable Ni/Co, V/Cr, V/(V + Ni) and Ce/Ce* data indicate a long period of oxic conditions. The La-Th-Sc, Th-Sc-Zr/10 and La/Th-Hf data of the silt- and sandstones of the lower Zhoutian Formation show that its provenance was mainly a mixture of felsic upper crust sediments and older sedimentary rocks.


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