scholarly journals Log Data Structure for Illegal Logging Tracking System

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.44) ◽  
pp. 147
Author(s):  
Yunanta Ilham Nugraha ◽  
Giva Andriana Mutiara ◽  
Rini Handayani

Forest is a natural ecosystem that plays an important role in human life. Unfortunately, due to the exploitation of the forest wealth, the forest ecosystem becomes increasingly diminished. One of the most significant forest damages caused by illegal logging. In some cases, sometimes the information about log harvest that obtained from the logging area always has a discrepancy. To reduce the cunning which is done by the perpetrators, however, a system that can track and monitor the log position from a remote area is needed. This system using APC220 as a WSN using Star topology, embed with RFID reader and Arduino Uno. By designing a log data structure, the tracking and monitoring log is possible to build. This system was testing by three scenarios. The log data structure can be interpreted 100% by the system. According to the resulting test, it can be concluded that this system can track down the position of the log, and inform the forest patrol officer the predictable place where the log is missing.  

Author(s):  
V. Annapoorani ◽  
P. Rathna ◽  
C. Priyanka ◽  
B. Maheshwari ◽  
E. Leela

The paper reports an Internet of Thing (IoT) based health monitoring and tracking system for soldiers. The proposed system can be mounted on the soldier’s body to track their health status and current location using GPS. These information will be transmitted to the control room through IoT. The proposed system comprise of tiny wearable physiological equipment’s, sensors, transmission modules. Hence, with the use of the proposed equipment, it is possible to implement a low cost mechanism to protect the valuable human life on the battlefield


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (22) ◽  
pp. 9517
Author(s):  
Łukasz Wyciślik ◽  
Elżbieta Marcinkowska

The article presents the concept of application DLT (distributed ledger technologies) for building the electronic clinical documentation tracking system. After a short introduction to block chain issues, and discussion about the attempts of its application on various fields of everyday human life, including healthcare, basic requirements for tracking of clinical documentation system are presented, followed by the proposition of its architecture leveraging the distributed ledger technologies. The paper is concluded with a discussion about the possibilities of running such a system, regarding constraints coming from local legal regulations and general data protection regulation (GDPR), but also economic and social conditions, including ecological ones, which are part of the sustainable development trend.


2020 ◽  
pp. 56-62
Author(s):  
Muh Khusaini

Plant physiology is one of the subjects in higher education, where the material and the subjects studied in this course is implemented in daily life related to human needs thathave the opportunity to be developed into business capital by modifying it according to needs, because the nutrient content and the secondary metabolites possessed by green plants studied in plant physiology courses are very useful for the growth and development of the plant itself. Plant of Mantangan (Merremia peltata (L) Merril.) is a plant that is classified as an Invasive Allien Species which grows and develops well although it is not in its natural ecosystem. The effort to prevent Mantangan at this time is still very minimal so that it is necessary to find the right way to anticipate the speed of growth and development of these plants such as by utilizing these invasive plants as ingredients for organic fertilizer for plants. Plants that are considered detrimental such as Mantangan turned out to have great potential to be used again as ingredients that have value and are very useful for human life. This research was conducted to analyze the nutrient content of the plant Mantangan (Merremia peltata (L) Merr.) and its potential as organic fertilizer in supporting the subject of plant physiology. The study was conducted at the Laboratory of the Agricultural Technology Study Center in East Kalimantan from March 27 to May 19, 2018.The results of the study show that the leaves, stems and flowers of the plants of Mantangan have the potential to be used as organic fertilizer. This can be seen from the nutrient content of Mantangan leaves, namely 10.25 water content, 44.87 C-organic, 1.68 N total, P 0.15, and 5.14 K. Stems of Mantangan have a water content of 15.18, C-Organic 42.91, N Total 1.19, P 0.18, K 2.54. Mantangan Flowers have 15.78, C-organic 39.35, N total 1.58, and K 2.11. The potential of the plant as an organic fertilizer can support plant physiology courses because the procedure for making organic fertilizer is contained in a Student Activity Sheet which can be done by students themselves.


Author(s):  
Patrick Huntjens

AbstractThe nature of the social, environmental, and economic problems we face today requires a new social contract, a Natural Social Contract. A Natural Social Contract does justice to a human being’s natural state (human life is group life) and to the natural position of humankind and society within a larger ecosystem, that of planet Earth. The Natural Social Contract regards society as a social-ecological system, focusing on people as members of a community and as part of a natural ecosystem. It emphasizes long-term sustainability and general welfare by combining human and nature, and recalibrating our unfettered approach to unlimited economic growth, overconsumption, and over-individualization. The end result, I argue, is for the benefit of ourselves, our planet, and future generations.If you are concerned about our society and our planet, and keeping both healthy for future generations, then this book is written for you. And if you have an interest in the systemic changes required to fundamentally shift our social, economic, ecological, and institutional perspectives, this book is for you too. Together, we can promote a sustainable, healthy, and just society and achieve change on the ground. This book offers a way forward.


2021 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 384-398
Author(s):  
Jeet Singh

This in-depth analysis of the aesthetics of place and person in ‘Toba Tek Singh’, a famous short story by Saadat Hassan Manto, and a masterpiece of South Asian literature in English, presents a re-reading in the light of ecotheoretical concepts of ‘place’. It theorises how material space as ‘place’ is represented in literature and brings to light the hegemony of sociocultural discourses in relation to space, belittling its connection to nature. Ecotheory raises concerns of human and non-human life within the natural ecosystem of specific indigenous places. The protagonist of the story, Bishan Singh, ultimately also the namesake of a place, Toba Tek Singh, dies a terrible death while desperately searching for his native place. The article presents the story as a powerful literary attempt to re-imagine the places and spaces where we live and our relations to them.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor Leshyk

<p>As the Anthropocene progresses into more and more dire territory, research continues to refine quantifiable, predictive narratives about the changes that will unfold in the very near future — heat waves, droughts, rising seas, and other shifts in climate that threaten aspects of human life worldwide, from agriculture and industry to medicine and human quality of life as a whole.  This evolving, cross-referenced narrative should create a perfect warning to correct our course on carbon emissions, our ongoing ecosystem damage from modern agriculture, and other effects tied to current unsustainable practices such as overuse of fossil fuels and reliance on plastic materials.  </p><p>However, when these science narratives are placed directly in the spotlight of press and social media, they often merge into a large uncompelling whole, much as many unique and attractive bricks together might combine to create a uniform and ominous wall. The end result is audience disengagement in the face of daunting information. </p><p>This effect is so substantiated that studies now recommend that science communicators should avoid “intimidating” and “demoralizing” global audiences with vivid Anthropocene scenarios, and instead focus on creating less-threatening “feel-good” engagement that can serve as a bridge to positive public action that supports renewable energy, organic agriculture, and other corrective changes to the societal footprint.  </p><p>As a professional science communicator, I reject the advice to avoid painting an ever more clear portrait of the Anthropocene: I believe the problem that “demoralizes” the public is not Anthropocene content, but poor presentation, often driven by journalistic trends to sensationalize future apocalyptic scenarios that create titillating fear.  Through my work, I rely not so much on creating a fascination with doomsday scenarios but instead create a fascination with the detailed mechanisms by which the Anthropocene is forcing change: by thawing permafrost, threatening forests, destroying biodiversity, all the while showing how these processes fit within the context of deep time.  With a rich deep time perspective, viewers can see why the Anthropocene is such a distortion of natural ecosystem services, and how human technology and habits could instead be changed to work within the carrying capacity of earth systems.</p><p>In this presentation, I share my science illustration portfolio to explain my unique approach that fuses the charisma of “fine art” approaches using metaphor, hyper-realism, and didactic compositions with new research findings to reach beyond sensationalist Anthropocene imagery and create a new visual vocabulary for ecosystem research that unites experts and lay public with a common scientific worldview. I have given this personal philosophy of creative science illustration the name “Accurate Passion” and employ it for a range of topics and clients, including my in-house colleagues at a university research center focusing on ecosystem science, and graduate-level students of my university-level science illustration courses for the past three years.<br> </p>


2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 (0) ◽  
pp. _2A1-C09_1-_2A1-C09_4
Author(s):  
Kouji MURAKAMI ◽  
Kosuke SHIGEMATSU ◽  
Yasunobu NOHARA ◽  
Tsutomu HASEGAWA ◽  
Ryo KURAZUME ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Nickel ◽  
Winfried Schröder ◽  
Barbara Völksen

Abstract Background Implementation Action 5 of the EU Biodiversity Strategy to 2020 includes that Member States map and assess the state of ecosystems and their services in their national territory. A fundamental component of the respective methodology developed in Germany is the classification of semi-natural ecosystems. In this context, this study aims to examine the quality and re-usability of the map of current semi-natural ecosystem types (cEsT) in Germany (1: 500,000; Jenssen et al. in Forschungsvorhaben 3710 83 214, UBA-FB 001834. UBA-Texte 87/2013. Dessau, Textband + 9 Anhänge, 381 S, 2013; Schröder et al. in Sci Total Environ 521–522:108–122, 2015, in Abschlussbericht Forschungsvorhaben UFOPLAN 3713 83 254 im Umweltforschungsplan des Bundesministeriums für Umwelt, Naturschutz, Bau und Reaktorsicherheit, Bd. 1:1–493 + 7 Anhänge, Bd. 2:1–343, Bd. 3:1–303. Dessau, 2018]) as well as the cEsT map of the Kellerwald National Park (1: 25,000). Results Based on DIN EN ISO 19113 and (DDGI in Qualitätsmodell für die Beschreibung von Geodaten (PAS 1071:2007-10), Beuth Verlag, Berlin, 14 S. + Anh, 2007), the positional accuracy (absolute positional accuracy) and thematic accuracy (classification correctness) were quantitatively determined. For this purpose, a comparison was made with geometrical data of well-known positional accuracy such as ATKIS-DLM (Hesse), mapping of biotopes and habitat types (Hesse, Germany), current vegetation surveys from the Kellerwald National Park (Hesse; permanent random sample inspection, own survey) as well as vegetation surveys available Germany-wide after 1990 from the database of the Institute of Forestry Eberswalde (Waldkunde-Institut Eberswalde; W.I.E.). The map of cEsT Germany has an absolute positional accuracy of ± 42.29 m (≈ ± 42 m) and has been classified correctly by about 30%. Another approximately 35% are ecologically similar to the existing forest ecosystem types (together 65%). In a further approximately 15%, the ecosystem types were correctly classified, but only occur as accompanying ecosystem types. About 15% occurred as an ecologically related accompanying ecosystem type (together 30%). 5% of the spatial objects were mapped incorrectly. In the Kellerwald National Park (1: 25,000), about 22% of the cEsT were classified correctly. Misclassifications on both scale levels concerned the assignments to the elevation levels (e.g., Eb-5n-C2 instead of D1-5n-C2) and, respectively, to the humus species (e.g., Eb-5n-D1 instead of Eb-5n-D1a). The main reason for misclassifications can be seen in high thematic differentiation of the ecosystem classification according to Jenssen et al. (2013). The biotope and habitat mappings are, due to their generally lower thematic differentiation, more appropriate for a falsification than for a verification of the cEsT approach. However, the spatial information content is valuable for comparisons with regard to the occurrence of cEsT as the main or concomitant ecosystem type. Conclusions The correctness of the classification can best be verified by vegetation samplings, but only at the site level. Any deviations found could then be used to improve the quality of the cEsT mapping, particularly at the regional level (1:5000 to 1:25,000). In principle, the use of the identification key for forest and forest ecosystem types (Schröder et al. 2018, vol. 3) is recommended for mapping on a regional scale.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 1875-1877
Author(s):  
Vasilka Gjurchinovski

One of the key features of education today are clear and high standards, which help assess and evaluate the performance of educational institutions, as well as schools, student dormitories, teachers and students, to insure quality and equalization of educational outcomes. Evaluation, as an integral element in process of curriculum, takes an important place as a finishing and starting point in educational process. Concept of evaluation in educational process can be used to assess educational programmеs and their quality. Student dormitories, as an integral part of the educational system in the Republic of Macedonia, work to evaluate the educational process, to build their own tracking system, collect data, analyze and evaluate the results that they achieve. Evaluation of the educational process is a process that exists since when exist dormitories. Evaluation of the educational work also stems from the fact that the student dormitory, as an institution, plays an important role in the upbringing and education of new generations that are the driving force of the entire social human life, and who are educated outside of their place of living. In the evaluation process, the basic areas of the entire educational process are always taken into consideration. According to this, it can be argued with certainty that evaluation is immanent to the educational work as such.


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