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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-03-05
    Description: Con sus 220 km2 la región geográfica de Bahía de Nipe es el mayor acuatorio en su tipo en Cuba, donde se encuentran representaciones de diversos ecosistemas a lo largo de sus costas. Los asentamientos humanos y sus múltiples actividades productivas de importancia y magnitud, le dan a esta bahía relevancia como recurso natural que sustenta usos estratégicos para el país.
    Description: Other
    Keywords: Contaminación ; Metales pesados ; Fuentes contaminantes ; Pesquerías ; Pollution ; Heavy metals ; Plaguicides ; Fisheries ; Plaguicidas ; Sources pollution
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Thesis/Dissertation
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-01-11
    Description: The 60–80s of the last century were the period of the most rapid development of commercial oceanology in the Azov and Black Sea Scientific Research Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanography (AzCherNIRO, further renamed YugNIRO). In addition to the monitoring of oceanographic processes, it was involved in the areas of general marine ecology, monitoring of marine pollution, and space oceanology. Oceanographic information is used in forecasting the state of aquatic ecosystems at various timescales and is crucial for fishing forecasts. In 1981, a satellite data reception center was established in AzCherNIRO. In the 80–90s, in YugNIRO, an optimal procedure was created for multidimensional predictive monitoring of the state of the Black Sea ecosystem. In September 1986, within the Laboratory of Commercial Oceanology of the Black Sea, a group for the conservation of marine ecosystems was created, which turned into a sector in January 1989, and into a separate laboratory in December 1996. Its reasearchers carried out multidisciplinary environmental studies, investigating the ecological status of the aquatic areas affected by the facilities of the marine industry during their operation, monitoring the level of soil contamination, and excercising the toxicological control of fish and fish products. YugNIRO oceanological studies conducted in the World Ocean from the early 1970s to the early 1990s made it possible to link the productivity and catches of exploitable species to the atmospheric circulation, changes in the climatic fields of currents, as well as to the geo- and heliophysical factors, which enabled the fishing predictions with a one-year lead time or more for the fishing areas of the Central, Southeastern and Southwestern Indian Ocean, the Patagonian Shelf, and the Indian Ocean sector of Antarctica. In the 70–90s and early 2000s, YugNIRO conducted marine geological studies facilitating fishing operations and environmental protection in the Gulf of Aden, on the bottom elevations of the tropical and subtropical parts of the Indian Ocean, in the Antarctic Shelf area, and in the Black and Azov Seas. This article lays down the current major goals and prospects of commercial oceanology.
    Description: 60–80-е годы прошедшего столетия были в АзЧерНИРО (ЮгНИРО) периодом наиболее активного развития промысловой океанологии. Кроме мониторинга океанографических процессов она начала внедряться в сферы общей экологии моря, мониторинга загрязнения моря, космической океанологии. Океанографическая информация используется при разработке прогнозов состояния водных экосистем различной заблаговременности и является неотъемлемой составляющей рыбопромысловых прогнозов. В 1981 г. в АзЧерНИРО был создан центр приема спутниковой информации. В 1980–1990-х гг. в ЮгНИРО была создана оптимальная для Черного моря схема комплексного прогностического мониторинга состояния его экосистемы. В сентябре 1986 г. в составе лаборатории промысловой океанологии Черного моря была создана группа, в январе 1989 г. — сектор, в декабре 1996 г. — лаборатория охраны морских экосистем. Сотрудниками лаборатории проводились комплексные экологические исследования состояния акваторий предприятий морехозяйственого комплекса в условиях их производственной деятельности, контроль уровня загрязненности почв, токсикологический контроль рыбы и рыбопродукции. Океанологические исследования ЮгНИРО, проводимые в Мировом океане с начала 1970-х до начала 1990-х гг., позволили получить систему связей урожайности и вылова промысловых объектов с особенностями атмосферной циркуляции, изменениями макромасштабных полей течений, гео- и гелиофизическими факторам для прогноза промысловых характеристик с заблаговременностью год и более в промысловых районах центральной, юго-восточной и юго-западной частей Индийского океана, в районе Патагонского шельфа, в индоокеанском секторе Антарктики. Выполнение морских геологических работ в рыбопромысловых и природоохранных целях проводилось ЮгНИРО в 1970–1990-х и в начале 2000-х гг. в Аденском заливе, на поднятиях тропической и субтропической частей Индийского океана, на шельфе Антарктиды, в Черном и Азовском морях. В статье формулируются основные современные цели и пути развития промысловой океанологии.
    Description: Published
    Description: Non Refereed
    Keywords: Commercial oceanography ; Marine geology ; Ecosystems ; Fisheries ; Промысловая океанография ; Морская геология ; Экосистемы ; АзЧерНИРО ; ЮгНИРО ; Промысловые прогнозы ; Океанографическая информация ; Океанологические исследования ; YugNIRO ; AzCherNIRO ; ASFA_2015::F::Fishery oceanography ; ASFA_2015::F::Forecasting ; ASFA_2015::F::Fishery institutions ; ASFA_2015::M::Monitoring
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution
    Format: pp.159-169
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-01-25
    Description: La producción de ostión en Cuba aumenta hacia el este, y los máximos de abundancia y captura se presentan en la zona costera cercana a la cuenca del río Cauto, en la región correspondiente al municipio Manzanillo, provincia de Granma. En esta región habitan el ostión de mangle antillano (Crassostrea rhizophorae Guilding, 1828), y el ostión americano (Crassostrea virginica Gmelin, 1791). Aunque la tendencia histórica ha sido al incremento, posterior a 2013 (853 t) la producción promedio anual disminuye a 307 t. El objetivo de esta investigación fue evaluar el estado actual del recurso ostión y su aprovechamiento industrial en la región del golfo de Guacanayabo, en relación a la situación ambiental de sus hábitats. Se realizó un diagnóstico de la pesquería de ostión y de la gestión ambiental de la pesca extractiva para determinar impactos ecosistémicos. Se identificaron como principales factores de impacto negativo, que inciden sobre las poblaciones de ostión y sus hábitats, el incumplimiento del periodo de veda, el manejo inadecuado de la pesca extractiva, y eventos de contaminación, que afectan los bienes y servicios ecosistémicos del manglar y reducen las poblaciones de ostión. Se propone la ostricultura artesanal como alternativa pesquera sostenible y se proyectó un plan de producción de ostión para 2023-2030. Se estimó que a calidad ambiental de la región donde se desarrollan las especies de interés es adecuada para su desarrollo.
    Description: Oyster production in Cuba increases to the east, and the maximum abundance and catch occur in the coastal zone near the Cauto river basin, in the region corresponding to the Manzanillo municipality, Granma province. The West Indian mangrove oyster (Crassostrea rhizophorae Guilding, 1828), and the American oyster (Crassostrea virginica Gmelin, 1791) inhabit this region. Although the historical trend has been to increase, after 2013 (853 t) the average annual production decreases to 307 t. The objective of this research was to evaluate the current state of the oyster resource and its industrial use in the region of the Guacanayabo Gulf, in relation to the environmental situation of its habitats. A diagnosis of the oyster fishery and the environmental management of extractive fishing was carried out to determine ecosystem impacts. The main factors of negative impact, which affect oyster populations and their habitats, were identified as non-compliance with the closed season, inadequate management of extractive fishing, and pollution events, which affect the goods and ecosystem services of the mangrove and reduce oyster populations. Artisanal oyster farming is proposed as a sustainable fishing alternative and an oyster production plan was projected for 2023-2030. It is estimated that the environmental quality of the region where the species of interest develop is adequate for their development.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Golfo de Guacanayabo ; Gestión ambiental ; Pesquería ; Ostricultura ; Gulf of Guacanayabo ; Environmental management ; Fisheries ; Ostrich farming
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-05-20
    Description: To ensure the long-term sustainable use of African Great Lakes (AGL), and to better understand the functioning of these ecosystems, authorities, managers and scientists need regularly collected scientific data and information of key environmental indicators over multi-years to make informed decisions. Monitoring is regularly conducted at some sites across AGL; while at others sites, it is rare or conducted irregularly in response to sporadic funding or short-term projects/studies. Managers and scientists working on the AGL thus often lack critical long-term data to evaluate and gauge ongoing changes. Hence, we propose a multi-lake approach to harmonize data collection modalities for better understanding of regional and global environmental impacts on AGL. Climate variability has had strong impacts on all AGL in the recent past. Although these lakes have specific characteristics, their limnological cycles show many similarities. Because different anthropogenic pressures take place at the different AGL, harmonized multilake monitoring will provide comparable data to address the main drivers of concern (climate versus regional anthropogenic impact). To realize harmonized long-term multi-lake monitoring, the approach will need: (1) support of a wide community of researchers and managers; (2) political goodwill towards a common goal for such monitoring; and (3) sufficient capacity (e.g., institutional, financial, human and logistic resources) for its implementation. This paper presents an assessment of the state of monitoring the AGL and possible approaches to realize a long-term, multi-lake harmonized monitoring strategy. Key parameters are proposed. The support of national and regional authorities is necessary as each AGL crosses international boundaries.
    Description: Published
    Description: 101988
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Pollution ; Biodiversity ; Climate change ; Erosion
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-06-10
    Description: This draft White Paper has been prepared as part of the Vision 2030 process of the United Nations (UN) Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (hereafter, Ocean Decade). The Vision 2030 process aims to identify tangible measures of success for each of the ten Ocean Decade Challenges by 2030. From a starting point of existing initiatives underway in the Ocean Decade and beyond, and through a lens of priority user needs, the process determines critical gaps in science and knowledge, needs for capacity development, priority datasets, infrastructure, and technology for each Challenge. Focusing investments in science and knowledge to address these needs will help ensure progress towards meeting each critical Challenge by the end of the Ocean Decade in 2030. The results of the process will contribute to the scoping of future Decade Actions, identification of resource mobilisation priorities, and ensure relevance of the Challenges over time. This draft White Paper is one of a series of ten White Papers, all of which have been authored by an expert Working Group and discussed at the 2024 Ocean Decade Conference. A synthesis report, authored by the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO/IOC), will accompany the White Papers. With a substantial portion of people depending on the ocean as a primary source of nutrition and livelihood, a significant challenge comes into focus: How can we ensure that the ocean's resources continue to effectively nourish an expanding global population? The Ocean Decade responds to this critical concern through its Challenge 3: “Sustainably nourish the global population”.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Food ; Agriculture ; Sustainable economy ; Fisheries ; World population ; Ocean economy ; Nutrition ; Aquatic foods ; Aquaculture ; Sustainable production ; Forward look ; Vision paper
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
    Format: 33pp.
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  • 6
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-08-08
    Description: The plant kingdom, with its terrestrial and marine natural products, has been widely explored. Plant-based products have long been used to prevent and treat various ailments. Many natural compounds have been reported to have a variety of interesting and significant biological activities, including antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antitumor, antibacterial, antiviral, antifungal, antiparasitic, analgesic, antidiabetic, anti-atherogenic, and antiproliferative, as well as cardioprotective and neuroprotective properties. Therefore, researchers pay special attention to the bioactive compounds synthesized by plants. Opportunities in functional ingredients and treatment of NCDs (oxidative stress, diabetes, obesity, metabolic syndrome, etc.) are widely explored. However, many therapeutic properties of plants are still to be discovered. This Special Issue reprint intends to substantially contribute to our knowledge of their beneficial properties. Natural products could be a vast resource in respect of human well-being improvement. This Special Issue reprint also aims to disseminate some of the most recent and significant contributions in natural product research on phytochemicals and biological activity.
    Keywords: Sempervivum tectorum L. ; mineral content ; bioavailable fraction ; heavy metals ; open-field plants ; tissue culture plants ; in vitro callus culture ; Rubus subg. Rubus Watson ; Vaccinium corymbosum L. ; phenolics ; radical scavenging activities ; ferric reducing power ; waste peel ; essential oil ; GC-MS ; volatile compounds ; antimicrobial activity ; chemical composition ; antioxidant activity ; fluorescence ; total phenolic content ; Aspergillus flavus ; maize ; peel extracts ; AFB1 ; qRT-PCR ; Opuntia spp. ; phytochemicals ; biological activities ; antioxidant capacity ; chemopreventive effect ; integrated pest management ; Oriental fruit fly ; pomology ; post-harvest disease control ; Sambucus nigra L. ; medicinal plants ; flavonoids ; phenols ; carbohydrates ; amino acids ; Flos Abelmoschus manihot ; medicinal part ; non-medicinal parts ; UFLC-Triple TOF-MS/MS ; metabolite profiling ; multivariate statistical analysis ; juniper ; natural products ; tree ; leaves ; disease ; bioactive compounds ; microbial resistance ; turmeric ; Curcuma aromatica ; Curcuma caesia ; Curcuma longa ; Curcuma zanthorrhiza ; enantiomeric distribution ; chiral ; cultivars ; foliar sprays ; Humulus lupulus ; liming ; phenolic compounds ; plant vigour ; polyphenols ; antimicrobial activity enhancement ; ascorbic acid ; Maillard reaction products ; laccase–mediator system ; horseradish peroxidase–H2O2 system ; tomato pomace ; by-product utilization ; finger millet ; gluten-free ; potato flour ; convenience food ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences::PSB Biochemistry
    Language: English
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  • 7
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-28
    Description: Food systems are under increasing pressure. They must meet the food requirements of a growing world population, and socio-economic changes also influence the type of foods which are under demand. At the same time, food systems are a major contributor to global environmental change, and environmental changes adversely impact agricultural productivity. This Special Issue explores opportunities and challenges towards achieving more sustainable food systems. Essential changes required in food systems are highlighted, such as more effective food distribution, the avoidance or valorisation of food waste, and less meat consumption. How to actually achieve these required changes across food value chains is also presented. This Special Issue supports solution-oriented approaches towards addressing one of most complex challenges of this century. The reader is invited to study the publications included in this Special Issue in detail.
    Keywords: consumer attitudes ; meat avoiders ; meat reducers ; environmental concerns ; global warming ; climate change ; sustainability ; ecology ; planetary health ; food security ; land ; land use consolidation ; land-use planning ; land tenure ; rural development ; Rwanda ; tenure responsive ; tenure responsive land-use planning ; tenure security ; demographic correlates ; food access ; household ; food insecurity experience scale ; Zanzibar ; sub-Saharan Africa ; vulnerability of food systems ; food neophobia ; environmental concern ; global environmental change ; behavior change ; willingness to pay (WTP) ; organic foods ; China ; Bibliometrics ; food rescue ; convention center ; greenhouse gas emissions ; landfill diversion ; anaerobic digestion ; codigestion ; food waste ; organic waste ; energy and resource recovery ; food waste disposal ; loss aversion ; dead hogs ; policy evaluation ; hog production ; chilli pepper ; organic manure ; application rate ; elevated temperature ; rain-shelter plastic house ; greenhouse ; field ; maize ; agrobiodiversity ; traditional food systems ; local knowledge ; cultural practices ; sustainable agriculture ; supply chain coordination ; supply chain sustainability ; livestock industry ; guanxi ; trust ; dynamic environment ; repeated purchase intention ; agricultural food system ; food policy ; food system sustainability ; urban agriculture ; local development ; food governance ; stakeholder engagement ; food systems ; global food regimes ; innovation ; political–economy ; social–ecological systems ; transformation ; regime shifts ; resilience ; sustainability in the food sector ; food supply chains ; food insecurity ; food waste and loss ; innovation and change ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general ; thema EDItEUR::K Economics, Finance, Business and Management::KC Economics::KCV Economics of specific sectors::KCVG Environmental economics
    Language: English
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  • 8
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-11-30
    Description: Remote sensing is a powerful technique for characterizing and monitoring crop or vegetation properties at reasonable temporal and spatial resolutions. Remote sensing uses airborne and spaceborne platforms to collect various imageries and is widely applied for the vegetation monitoring of local- or large-scale interest concerning the effect of geophysical and climate parameters. The Special Issue highlights vegetation monitoring using remote sensing data acquired from satellite or unmanned aerial vehicle platforms. In addition to the optical data, thermal data is utilized to estimate crop yield or production, orchard water status, chlorophyll content, forest diversity mapping, or vegetation phenology.
    Keywords: rice and wheat ; nitrogen remote sensing ; quantitative retrieval ; research prospect ; vegetation phenology ; snow cover ; vegetation index ; SOS ; Tibetan Plateau ; remote sensing ; forest diversity ; GEDI LiDAR ; Sentinel-2 ; machine Learning ; yield forecasting ; logistic model ; normalization method ; crop canopy temperature ; maize ; broadband vegetation indices ; chlorophyll content ; leaf angle distribution ; WorldView-2 ; RapidEye ; GaoFen-6 ; random forest ; land evaluation ; soil ; biomass ; Hungary ; gross primary productivity ; soil health ; soil quality ; coastal marsh ; continuum removal ; hyperspectral ; spectral signatures ; unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) ; vegetation species discrimination ; second derivative transformation ; canopy temperature ; crop water status index ; accuracy assessment ; peach orchard ; stem water potential ; backscatter ; gradient boosting ; machine learning ; NDVI ; precision agriculture ; forest stock volume ; NDVIRE ; Helan mountains ; convolutional neural networks (CNNs) ; unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) ; semi-natural grasslands ; plant communities ; time series ; reconstruction algorithm ; smoothing ; optical remote sensing ; cropping intensity ; temporal mixture analysis ; endmember ; unmixing ; time series images ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::R Earth sciences, geography, environment, planning::RG Geography
    Language: English
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  • 9
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-09-11
    Description: Plants under natural conditions often face multiple stresses, including drought, salinity, temperature extremes, submergence stress, bacteria, viruses, fungi, insects, etc. These biotic and abiotic stresses negatively influence plant growth and productivity. Various approaches have recently been used to overcome stresses in plants. It is necessary to evaluate and explore how diverse molecular techniques can be applied to different biological studies to improve biotic and abiotic stress tolerance in plants. This will help reduce production losses and increase crop tolerance to various stresses. It is now the time to make a difference by developing plants that can withstand biotic and abiotic stresses.
    Keywords: antioxidants ; drought ; oxidative stress ; pearl millet ; redox implications ; ROS ; chlorophyll fluorescence efficiency ; photosynthetic responses ; enzyme activity ; sugarcane ; smut ; circadian clock ; reactive oxygen species ; Al-induced PCD ; photoperiodism ; peanut ; phylogenetic ; virus-induced gene silencing ; transgenic lines ; physiological and biochemical analysis ; Glycine max L. ; PR proteins ; chitinase ; genome-wide ; plant stresses ; crop residues ; profitability ; soil fertility ; soil biology ; allelopathy ; heat shock protein 20 ; maize ; abiotic stress ; yeast-one-hybrid ; abiotic stresses ; cotton ; hormones ; signaling pathway ; WRKY ; papaya (Carica papaya) ; brassicales ; late embryogenesis abundant protein ; orthogroup ; expression profile ; artificial light ; auxins ; chicory ; callus cells ; inulin ; plant growth regulators ; milk thistle ; secondary metabolites ; ecotypes ; salinity ; growth attributes ; biotic stress ; phenolic compounds ; seaweed ; Dendrobium catenatum ; lipase ; multi-omics ; expression pattern ; gene family ; bio-fertilizer ; ionic homeostasis ; organic amendments ; vermicompost ; cold stress ; PKS5 ; stomatal aperture ; microbiota ; natural farming ; physical factors ; physiological changes ; signal transduction and stressed conditions ; Rhizobium leguminosarum ; PGPR ; Triticum aestivum L. ; cadmium stress ; tolerance ; ascorbate ; glutathione ; malondialdehyde ; chlorophylls ; disease gradient ; disease outbreak ; Puccinia ; wheat stripe rust ; plant epidemic ; dispersal ecology ; alternative plant vitrification solution ; ammonium-free medium ; cytotoxicity ; droplet-vitrification ; endangered species ; liquid overlay ; regrowth medium ; within-plant phenotypic plasticity ; combined stresses ; additive ; antagonistic and synergic effects ; VOCs ; potassium ; soybean ; water logging ; yield ; non-thermal plasma ; plant defense ; glucosinolates ; nitriles ; RNA sequencing ; Arabidopsis thaliana ; Bt toxins ; Cry1Ah1 transgenic poplar ; ecology ; environment ; rhizosphere ; candidate genes ; drought tolerance ; crop improvement ; climate change ; adaptation ; Chenopodium quinoa Willd. ; genotypes ; Sahara ; Algeria ; chitosan ; pathogen ; sustainable ; plant protection ; tomato ; melatonin ; photosynthesis ; climate changes ; antioxidant system ; Malus seedlings ; NaCl treatments ; membrane damage ; osmotic regulation ; archives ; botanical collection ; Greece ; landscape ; pre-rebellion period ; wheat ; priming ; Aspergillus niger ; qRT-PCR ; wilting ; TLP ; β-1,3-glucanase ; biostimulants ; biofertilizers ; soil microorganisms ; phytostimulator ; jewel sweet potato ; shoot tip ; axillary bud ; different MS salts concentration ; micropropagation ; plant performance ; C4 species ; heterozygosity ; transient soil salinity ; soil layers ; desertification ; arid regoins ; total flavonoid ; phenolics ; antioxidant activity ; centella ; Na+ content ; molecular markers ; MAS ; oilseeds ; SSRs ; molecular breeding ; dehydration-responsive element binding (DREB) transcription factors ; gene expression ; mosses ; stress tolerance ; common centaury ; salinity stress ; antioxidative protection ; sodium nitroprusside ; proteomic analysis ; drought stress ; sorghum ; RNS ; RSS ; signaling ; post-translational modification ; microorganisms ; stressful conditions ; sustainability ; nutrition ; Brassicaceae ; Cicer arietinum L. ; chlorophyll a fluorescence transient ; physiological and biochemical traits ; high temperature ; chocolate spot disease ; Botrytis fabae ; faba bean ; antioxidant enzymes ; protein banding and anatomy ; actinobacteria ; Streptomyces tuirus ; chilli fruit rot ; Colletotrichum scovillei ; Colletotrichum truncatum ; Fusarium oxysporum ; liquid bio-formulation ; corn smut ; fungus infection ; MDA ; proline ; quality ; halophytes ; Tripolium pannonicum ; hydrogen peroxide ; cell wall extensibility ; cell wall polysaccharide ; coleoptile ; growth inhibition ; lead (Pb) ; rice ; Bactrocera oleae ; spinosad ; kaolin ; organic oliviculture ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; leaf gas exchange ; physiological traits ; BAG (Bcl-2-associated anthanogene) family proteins ; molecular chaperone ; metabolomics ; metabolic responses ; metabolites variation ; surveillance ; Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus ; comprehensive control ; distribution ; screen house ; Copper hyperaccumulation ; stress mitigation ; EDTA and IAA ; sunflower ; Fusarium wilt ; conventional breeding ; molecular makers ; QTLs ; genomics ; transcriptomics ; metabolomics and proteomics ; bread wheat ; AMF ; zinc ; growth parameters ; osmolyte ; osmoprotector ; ionic attributes ; PGPBs ; growth-promoting fungi ; crop productivity ; plant tolerance ; arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi ; aerobic rice ; soil enzymes ; phosphorus utilization ; P-deficient ; plant growth promotion ; chickpea ; selection indices ; drought tolerant genotypes ; abiotic and biotic stress ; CRISPR ; mega nucleases ; TALEN ; ZFN ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences
    Language: English
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  • 10
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-04-05
    Description: This Special Issue “Innovative Conservation Cropping Systems and Practices” is focused on the development and assessment of innovative conservation cropping systems and practices in determining system productivity and enhancing crop production and soil quality. It covers applied engineering for achieving a sustainable balance between productivity, environmental, and profitability factors, presenting a collection of research articles that cover a broad range of cropping systems and practices from the farmland ecosystem.
    Keywords: straw management ; potassium fertilizer ; rice–oilseed rape rotation ; yield ; bacterial community ; fungal community ; rice ; intercropping ; water mimosa ; pest and disease ; microclimate ; grain quality ; maize ; root system architecture ; nitrogen rates ; cultivars ; phytoremediation ; secondary salinization ; salt tolerance ; microbial diversity ; nutrient accumulation ; conservation tillage ; metabarcoding ; smash ridging ; soil chemical properties ; soil microbial diversity ; sugarcane ; coastal salt-affected soil ; one-crop-per-annum cropping ; fallow mulching ; salt accumulation ; crop growing ; nitrogen rate ; nitrogen ratio ; regenerative ability ; reduced tillage ; no tillage ; side deep fertilizing of machine-transplanted rice ; root function ; photosynthesis ; ammonia-oxidizing bacteria ; integrated fertilization regime ; N2O emission factor ; N2O flux ; purple caitai fields ; C:N ratio ; net ecosystem exchange ; soil microbial carbon ; soil microbial nitrogen ; rice production ; CH4 ; N2O ; water productivity ; global warming ; interspecific competition ; land equivalent ratio ; planting pattern ; root length density ; root morphological characteristics ; biochar ; maize–cabbage system ; crop quality ; N utilization efficiency ; soil inorganic N ; straw returning ; soil microbes ; carbon source utilization ; grey relational analysis ; path analysis ; ratoon rice ; nitrogen balance ; reactive nitrogen losses ; nitrogen surplus ; nitrogen-use efficiency ; no-till ; straw return ; soil organic carbon fractions ; soil aggregate ; bacterial diversity ; rice–crayfish coculture ; different rice varieties ; controlled-release fertilizer ; dry matter accumulation ; rice growth characteristics parameters ; apple-ryegrass intercropping ; photosynthetic characteristics ; soil salinity ; soil moisture content ; fruit quality ; lake sediment ; phosphorus ; Chinese cabbage ; phoD gene ; high-throughput sequencing ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences ; bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture
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  • 11
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-28
    Description: This Special Issue contains 28 papers covering a wide range of topics related to plant genomics and genetics. The papers utilize a variety of genomic tools and techniques to explore topics such as identification of quantitative trait loci associated with flax seed yield and oil quality, mucilage and hull content in flax seeds, and genomic prediction for pasmo resistance in flax. Other papers focus on the identification and characterization of specific genes, such as the EXO70 gene family in wheat and related species, hydroxycinnamoyl transferase in tea plants, and the WRKY transcription factor GmWRKY12 in soybeans. Several papers examine gene expression and regulation in response to abiotic stress, such as drought and salt tolerance in moso bamboo, and the response to chilling in bell peppers. Other topics include genetic diversity analysis of crested wheatgrass, genome-wide analysis of chitin-binding protein gene family in peppers, and genome-wide bioinformatics analysis of MAPK gene family in kiwifruit. Overall, this Special Issue provides a comprehensive view of the current state of plant genomics research, showcasing the diversity of approaches and tools being used to better understand and improve crop plants.
    Keywords: Solanum lycopersicum ; UGlcAE gene family ; identification ; characterization ; plant hormones ; gene expression ; Jatropha curcas ; Dof gene family ; transcription factor ; phylogenetic analysis ; gene expression analysis ; warming ; BrHSFA2 ; BrHSP18.2s ; transcriptome ; alternative splicing ; Kenshin ; Verbena bonariensis ; drought stress ; transcriptome sequencing ; differentially expressed genes ; analysis ; non-coding RNA ; transcriptomes ; bell pepper ; chilling injury ; longan ; WRKY ; expression analysis ; flower induction ; abiotic stress ; chitin-binding protein ; chitinase ; pepper ; expression ; biotic stress ; flax ; genome-wide association study (GWAS) ; selective sweep ; genotyping by sequencing (GBS) ; bi-parental population ; single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) ; seed yield ; plant height ; maturity ; fatty acid composition ; DNA methylation ; flower color chimera ; bisulfate sequencing ; comparative epigenomes ; transposon ; ornamental Prunus mume ; novel accessions ; PIC ; PCR ; EST-gSSRs ; genes ; genetic distance ; apple ; SAP gene family ; function analysis ; osmotic stress ; mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) ; kiwifruit ; phylogenetic relationships ; biotic and abiotic stresses ; genotyping-by-sequencing ; Agropyron ; genetic diversity ; genetic structure ; SNP ; flaxseed ; Linum usitatissimum ; GWAS ; seed mucilage content ; seed hull content ; ZmWRKY106 ; drought tolerance ; thermotolerance ; maize ; Pyrus hopeiensis ; cp genome ; IR boundary ; phylogeny ; Betula halophile ; salt stress ; Cleistogenes songorica ; LEA proteins ; abiotic stresses ; flow cytometry ; genome size ; nuclear DNA content ; reference genome assembly ; standardization ; upland cotton ; TCP genes ; miR319 ; target genes ; tea ; hydroxycinnamoyl transferase ; ABA signaling ; hormone ; stress responsive mechanism ; salt tolerance ; transgenic hairy root assay ; soybean ; regulation and efficiency of translation ; genome-wide scale ; experimental approaches ; computational algorithms ; features of plant mRNAs ; EXO70 ; Haynaldia villosa ; gene family ; phylogenetic relationship ; subcellular localization ; expression profiling ; rice ; trihelix transcription factor ; stress response ; light ; genomic selection ; genomic prediction ; genotyping by sequencing ; pasmo resistance ; pasmo severity ; quantitative trait loci ; single nucleotide polymorphism ; Septoria linicola ; Phyllostachys edulis ; Dof transcription factor ; flowering time ; satellite DNA ; genome evolution ; plants ; next-generation sequencing ; high order repeats ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2024-04-14
    Description: Aflatoxins pose a significant public health risk, decrease productivity and profitability and hamper trade. To minimize aflatoxin contamination a biocontrol technology based on atoxigenic strains of Aspergillus flavus that do not produce aflatoxin is used widely in the United States. The technology, with the generic name Aflasafe, has been improved and adapted for use in Africa. Aflasafe products have been developed or are currently being developed in 20 African countries. Aflatoxin biocontrol is being scaled up for use in several African countries through a mix of public, private, and public-private interventions. Farmers in several countries have commercially treated nearly 400,000 ha of maize and groundnut achieving 〉90% reduction in aflatoxin contamination. This chapter summarizes the biology of aflatoxin-producing fungi and various factors affecting their occurence, including climate change. Various management practices for aflatoxin mitigation are then discussed. These include biological control, which is increasingly being adopted by farmers in several countries. We discuss biocontrol product development and commercialization in various African countries. Subsequently, we highlight some barriers to adoption and other challenges.
    Keywords: mycotoxin ; biological control ; maize ; groundnut ; manufacturing ; commercialization ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TV Agriculture and farming::TVK Agronomy and crop production ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TV Agriculture and farming::TVF Sustainable agriculture ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TV Agriculture and farming::TVP Pest control / plant diseases ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences::PST Botany and plant sciences
    Language: English
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  • 13
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-28
    Description: Plant responses to environmental factors are extraordinarily complex. They can be observed at various levels of plant organization, ranging from changes in the intensity of basic biochemical processes, such as respiration, photosynthesis, and transpiration, to morphological and anatomical changes in organs. However, these biochemical changes are preceded by the activation of an efficient signaling system which endures environmental fluctuations. This Special Issue showcases the latest reports on the impact of abiotic factors on plant responses. It contains 3 reviews and 9 original works and is preceded by an editorial summarizing the most important issues discussed in the publications.
    Keywords: abiotic stress ; GWAS ; Oryza sativa L. ; plant omics ; Triticum aestivum L. ; Sorghum bicolor L. ; transcription factors ; Zea mays L. ; Oryza sativa ; Hordeum vulgare ; hypoxia tolerance ; nitric oxide ; imbibition ; reactive oxygen species ; ATP/ADP ratio ; biotic stress ; cereal ; crosstalk ; drought ; heavy metal ; phytohormone ; salinity ; pathogen ; pest ; LBD ; drought stress ; ROS ; stomata ; maize ; Arabidopsis thaliana ; ABI4 ; MAPK ; ABA ; proteasome ; transcription factor ; transcriptional memory ; grazing ; T. mongolicum ; Robinia pseudoacacia seedlings ; photosynthesis ; chloroplast ; salt stress ; Prunus persica (L.) Batsch ; lauric acid ; physiological indicators ; transcriptome ; rice ; water management ; nitrogen metabolism genes ; primary metabolites ; mulberry ; waterlogging ; gene regulation ; bHLH transcription factors ; transcriptional regulation ; post-translational regulation ; ovules ; plant stress ; fertility ; seed formation ; reactive oxygen ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences ; thema EDItEUR::K Economics, Finance, Business and Management::KN Industry and industrial studies::KNA Agribusiness and primary industries::KNAL Forestry industry
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  • 14
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-09-11
    Keywords: Laurus nobilis ; medicinal plant ; mobile genomic elements ; germplasm characterization ; Mediterranean region ; chloroplast ; Ipomoea batatas ; simple sequence repeat ; sweet potato ; plant germplasm ; landrace rice ; fat-soluble nutraceuticals ; β-sitosterol ; genetic variability ; cluster analysis ; Solanum melongena ; germplasm ; Greece ; islands ; mainland ; phenotyping ; genotyping ; mineral composition ; landraces ; genetic diversity ; genetic structure ; Panax ginseng ; Triticum turgidum ; HMW glutenins ; LMW glutenins ; gluten quality ; non-allelic interactions ; combined analysis ; evolution ; genetic resources ; Zea mays ; Blumeria graminis ; disomic addition line ; molecular cytogenetics ; wheat ; Psathyrostachys huashanica ; natural variation ; maize ; root length ; domestication selection ; ZmMADS60 gene ; genetic basis ; GWAS ; eating and cooking qualities ; rice ; genetic variation ; eggplant ; cropping condition ; yield ; agro-morphological characterization ; chili pepper ; gene bank ; molecular markers ; morphological descriptor ; DArTseq markers ; GBS ; Triticum aestivum ; starch ; SNP ; InDel ; CAPS ; intron-loss ; NGS ; phosphorus use efficiency ; phosphorus ; proteomics ; grain hardness ; PIN ; kernel texture ; triticum ; SKCS ; Cucumis sativum ; downy mildew ; genetics ; inheritance ; oomycetes ; resistance ; rice genotypes ; blast resistant genotype ; genotypic coefficient of variation (GCV) ; phenotypic coefficient of variation (PCV) ; heritability values ; DArT SNP markers ; early maturity ; heat and drought tolerance ; salt stress ; nitrogen metabolism ; oxidative stress response ; G6PDH ; GDH ; GS/GOGAT ; Triticum aestivum L. ; γ-gliadins ; Gli-B1 ; polymorphism ; PCR analysis ; ginseng ; genetic composition ; SSR ; fonio ; fonio millet ; white fonio ; Digitaria exilis ; agro morphological descriptors ; phenotypic diversity ; neglected and underutilized species (NUS) ; genetic improvement ; catechin ; phytochemicals ; targeted-oriented core collection ; tea germplasm ; agronomic performance ; correlation analysis ; malawi ; pigeonpea ; yield stability ; bermudagrass ; forage breeding ; genetic parameters ; genotype by harvest interaction ; Tifton 85 ; accessions ; descriptors ; anthracnose ; Colletotrichum lentis ; disease screening ; lentil ; plant resistance ; tall wild pea ; Pisum sativum subsp. elatius ; neoplasm ; pea weevil ; Bruchus pisorum ; expressivity ; Africa ; cowpea ; microsatellites ; Aegilops ; triticale ; leaf rust ; stripe rust ; yellow rust ; Puccinia ; drought ; Phaseolus vulgaris L. ; plant breeding ; rhizobia ; stress ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences
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  • 15
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: Vols 1 and 2 contain 57 papers in the Special Issue of ‘Plant Genomics 2009’ and cover a wide range of topics, highlighting the significant progress that has been made in recent years in our understanding of the genetics and genomics of plants’ growth, development, and stress responses. These studies provide valuable insights into the potential applications of genomic tools and technologies for crop improvement and sustainable agriculture, as well as fundamental questions about the evolution and function of plant genes and genomes.
    Keywords: Aristolochia ; chloroplast genome ; molecular evolution ; compare analysis ; phylogeny ; brassinosteroid-signaling kinase ; gene family ; expression profile ; alternative splicing ; intron retention ; genome-wide analysis ; drought tolerance ; foxtail millet ; LIM genes ; transgenic rice ; protein phosphatase (PP2C) ; cotton ; syntenic relationships ; expression patterns ; evolutionary analysis ; Populus trichocarpa ; multiple organellar RNA editing factor ; drought stress ; RNA editing ; genome ; β-glucosidase ; Brassica rapa ; BrBGLU10 ; pollen development ; co-expression analysis ; VQ genes family ; Eucalyptus grandis ; expression pattern ; plant hormones ; abiotic stress ; calcium-dependent protein kinases ; CDPK-related kinases ; cucurbitaceae ; hst1 ; Na+ accumulation ; SNP ; rapid generation advance ; salt tolerant ; variant annotation ; whole-genome sequencing ; expression ; genome-wide ; identification of peroxidase genes ; duplication pattern ; stress ; cassava ; ABCDE model ; cereals ; evolutionary relationships ; flower organ identity ; floral speciation ; MADS-box genes ; maize ; ZmTCP ; natural variation ; subgroup IId ; CsWRKY7 ; flowering ; Arabidopsis ; Camellia sinensis ; pomegranate ; sequence diversity ; site-specific selection ; tomato ; MADS-box ; floral organ ; fruit development ; polygalacturonase (PGs), pectin methylesterase (PMEs), collinearity analysis ; gene duplications ; expression profiling ; grapevine ; Rehmannia glutinosa L. ; replant disease ; rhizosphere microbes ; NB-LRR ; plant hormone ; apple ; aquaporin ; functional analysis ; stress tolerance ; Salicaceae ; phylogenetic relationship ; plastid genome ; comparative genomics ; repeat sequences ; stress marker genes ; sesame ; gene co-expression ; abiotic stress tolerance ; hub genes ; meta-analysis ; agrobacterium ; transient expression ; virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) ; tobacco rattle virus (TRV) ; cassava (Manihot esculenta) ; chalcone synthase ; chromatin accessibility ; epigenetic inheritance ; genetic engineering ; methylation ; ODNs ; CRISPR/Cas9 ; genome editing ; plant breeding ; multiplex genome editing ; crop improvement ; TALEN ; ZFN ; biotic stress ; avocado ; carotenoid biosynthesis ; mesocarp ; seed ; de novo assembly from short read sequencing ; full-length transcript sequencing ; differentially expressed genes ; gene dosage ; pigment ; turnip ; gene expression ; antioxidant ; nutritional quality ; B3 superfamily ; transcription factor ; ovule abortion ; Vitis vinifera ; expression analysis ; cold response ; Pittosporum tobira ; leaf variegation ; linoleic acid ; ROS scavenging enzyme ; heat shock protein ; invasive weed ; Rhizoctonia solani ; phytohormone signaling ; systemic signal ; plant defense ; calcium signaling ; ABA ; drought ; salinity ; citrulline ; genome-wide association study ; haplotype ; watermelon ; acetolactate synthase ; ferrochelatase ; rice ; large grain gene ; large grain-isogenic Koshihikari ; fine mapping ; NGS ; GW2 ; co-integration ; gene recombination ; semidwarf gene ; d60 ; linkage ; chromosome 2 ; Brachypodium ; comparative chromosome barcoding ; dysploidy ; karyotype structure and evolution ; model grass genus ; molecular cytogenetics ; polyploidy ; plant genome ; artificial microRNA ; gene silencing ; Lagerstroemia indica ; ornamental value ; anthocyanins ; leaf coloration ; directional improvement ; YABBY ; pineapple ; subcellular localization ; oak species identification ; Quercus ; mutation hotspots ; Centranthera grandiflora Benth ; transcriptome ; catalpol biosynthesis ; acteoside biosynthesis ; azafrin biosynthesis ; wheat ; Dasypyrum villosum ; alien substitution line ; GISH ; molecular marker ; marker-assisted selection ; regulation ; RNA-seq ; biosynthesis pathway ; chalcones ; stilbenes ; common bean ; Fusarium oxysproum ; plant–pathogen interaction ; metabolome ; evolution ; genome fractionation ; ABC transporters ; transcription factors ; transposable elements ; whole-genome duplication ; RNA-sequencing ; ChIP-sequencing ; transcriptional regulatory mechanism ; data integration ; karyopherin ; solanum tuberosum ; chemical fungicide ; disease control ; Neoscytalidium dimidiatum ; royal poinciana ; stem canker ; UAE ; bioinformatics ; VvGAST ; GASR ; Cis-elements ; wheat genome ; kernel hardness ; Puroindoline ; Puroindoline b-2 variants ; genotype-to-phenotype association ; synteny ; phylogenetic analysis ; genomic selection ; missing data ; minor allele frequency ; GDSL lipase ; GPAT6 ; cutin ; habaneros ; Capsicum chinense ; fruit ; RNA-Seq ; flax ; genome-wide association study (GWAS) ; single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) ; prediction accuracy ; quantitative trait loci (QTL) ; quantitative trait nucleotides (QTNs) ; Fabaceae ; Lupinus ; glutamine synthetase (GS) ; phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) ; gene families ; duplication/triplication ; structural genomics ; genome organization ; genome evolution ; microRNA ; miRNA156 ; seed development ; fatty acid synthesis ; linseed flax ; anthocyanin biosynthetic genes ; cis-regulatory motifs ; DEGs ; network analysis ; qRT-PCR ; reddish purple Chinese cabbage ; abscisic acid ; flavonolignans ; metabolite profiling ; Silybum marianum ; silymarin ; aquaporins ; bright yellow-2 suspension cells ; Nicotiana tabacum ; substrate specificity ; TaCKX1 ; TaCKX expression ; grain yield ; cytokinins ; phytohormones ; RNAi ; wheat spikes ; genome-wide identification ; 2OGD family ; hormone biosynthetic and metabolism genes ; tomato fruit ripening ; DNA methylation ; phenomics ; thema EDItEUR::Q Philosophy and Religion::QD Philosophy
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  • 16
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-28
    Description: Fast, non-destructive detection technology and equipment for food quality and safety is a powerful technical support tool to ensure the development of food industry informatization and intelligence, with the advantages of fast speed, convenient operation, and easy online inspection. During the past two decades, such technologies have found numerous successful applications for food and agricultural product detection and processing. Owing to improvements in the manufacturing of photoelectric sensor pieces and progress in artificial intelligence and software algorithms, fast non-destructive detection technologies are able to provide more accurate, reliable, and stable solutions for food quality and safety detection and processing. They are closely integrated with the Internet of Things and intelligent manufacturing, promoting a new wave of innovation in intelligent manufacturing in the food industry. The application of new sensing technology and equipment in the fast, non-destructive detection of food has always been at the forefront of scientific and technological research. This Special Issue aims to focus on the latest research progress of this application and jointly discuss the focus of development of this research direction.
    Keywords: maize ; moldy level ; catalase activity ; hyperspectral image ; data fusion ; feature selection ; fruit quality monitoring ; room-temperature ethylene sensor ; density functional theory ; adsorption energy ; band energy alignment ; apple ; NIR ; size correction ; extinction coefficient ; fruit diameter difference ; acceptability ; benchtop NMR ; mandarins ; NMR ; successive projective algorithm ; uninformative variable elimination ; support vector regression ; Korla fragrant pear ; stone cell content ; intelligent evaluation ; cultivation ; visible/near infrared spectrum ; fresh jujube ; model update ; variable fusion ; defective apples ; apple grading ; deep learning ; object detection ; semantic segmentation ; shrimp ; hot air drying ; quality change ; hyperspectral images ; low field magnetic resonance ; micro Raman ; microfluidic chip ; fungal spores ; crop disease ; numerical simulation ; degree of milling ; multi-scale information fusion ; residual network model ; Bayesian optimization algorithm ; hyperspectral imaging ; maize seeds ; defect detection ; convolutional neural network ; tomato ; leaf mildew ; terahertz time-domain spectroscopy ; near infrared hyperspectral technology ; multi-source information fusion ; YOLOv5 ; walnut kernels ; impurities detection ; small object detection ; liposomes ; high stability ; freshness ; bi-layer indicator ; light penetration depth ; spatial-frequency domain imaging ; depth-resolved ; bruise ; scattering ; near infrared spectroscopy ; vegetables ; anthocyanidins ; fast determination ; Curcumae Longae Rhizoma ; volatile oil ; 60Co ; GC–IMS ; SERS detection ; chromium contamination ; tea sample ; carbimazole hydrolysate ; Au@Ag nanoparticles ; PAEs ; Raman ; DFT ; HF ; theoretical study ; gas sensor ; spoilage monitoring ; early warning ; logistics control ; simulated annealing ; surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ; flexible substrate ; polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons ; in situ detection ; common carp ; texture ; machine learning ; visualization ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes
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  • 17
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-09-11
    Description: Plants under natural conditions often face multiple stresses, including drought, salinity, temperature extremes, submergence stress, bacteria, viruses, fungi, insects, etc. These biotic and abiotic stresses negatively influence plant growth and productivity. Various approaches have recently been used to overcome stresses in plants. It is necessary to evaluate and explore how diverse molecular techniques can be applied to different biological studies to improve biotic and abiotic stress tolerance in plants. This will help reduce production losses and increase crop tolerance to various stresses. It is now the time to make a difference by developing plants that can withstand biotic and abiotic stresses.
    Keywords: antioxidants ; drought ; oxidative stress ; pearl millet ; redox implications ; ROS ; chlorophyll fluorescence efficiency ; photosynthetic responses ; enzyme activity ; sugarcane ; smut ; circadian clock ; reactive oxygen species ; Al-induced PCD ; photoperiodism ; peanut ; phylogenetic ; virus-induced gene silencing ; transgenic lines ; physiological and biochemical analysis ; Glycine max L. ; PR proteins ; chitinase ; genome-wide ; plant stresses ; crop residues ; profitability ; soil fertility ; soil biology ; allelopathy ; heat shock protein 20 ; maize ; abiotic stress ; yeast-one-hybrid ; abiotic stresses ; cotton ; hormones ; signaling pathway ; WRKY ; papaya (Carica papaya) ; brassicales ; late embryogenesis abundant protein ; orthogroup ; expression profile ; artificial light ; auxins ; chicory ; callus cells ; inulin ; plant growth regulators ; milk thistle ; secondary metabolites ; ecotypes ; salinity ; growth attributes ; biotic stress ; phenolic compounds ; seaweed ; Dendrobium catenatum ; lipase ; multi-omics ; expression pattern ; gene family ; bio-fertilizer ; ionic homeostasis ; organic amendments ; vermicompost ; cold stress ; PKS5 ; stomatal aperture ; microbiota ; natural farming ; physical factors ; physiological changes ; signal transduction and stressed conditions ; Rhizobium leguminosarum ; PGPR ; Triticum aestivum L. ; cadmium stress ; tolerance ; ascorbate ; glutathione ; malondialdehyde ; chlorophylls ; disease gradient ; disease outbreak ; Puccinia ; wheat stripe rust ; plant epidemic ; dispersal ecology ; alternative plant vitrification solution ; ammonium-free medium ; cytotoxicity ; droplet-vitrification ; endangered species ; liquid overlay ; regrowth medium ; within-plant phenotypic plasticity ; combined stresses ; additive ; antagonistic and synergic effects ; VOCs ; potassium ; soybean ; water logging ; yield ; non-thermal plasma ; plant defense ; glucosinolates ; nitriles ; RNA sequencing ; Arabidopsis thaliana ; Bt toxins ; Cry1Ah1 transgenic poplar ; ecology ; environment ; rhizosphere ; candidate genes ; drought tolerance ; crop improvement ; climate change ; adaptation ; Chenopodium quinoa Willd. ; genotypes ; Sahara ; Algeria ; chitosan ; pathogen ; sustainable ; plant protection ; tomato ; melatonin ; photosynthesis ; climate changes ; antioxidant system ; Malus seedlings ; NaCl treatments ; membrane damage ; osmotic regulation ; archives ; botanical collection ; Greece ; landscape ; pre-rebellion period ; wheat ; priming ; Aspergillus niger ; qRT-PCR ; wilting ; TLP ; β-1,3-glucanase ; biostimulants ; biofertilizers ; soil microorganisms ; phytostimulator ; jewel sweet potato ; shoot tip ; axillary bud ; different MS salts concentration ; micropropagation ; plant performance ; C4 species ; heterozygosity ; transient soil salinity ; soil layers ; desertification ; arid regoins ; total flavonoid ; phenolics ; antioxidant activity ; centella ; Na+ content ; molecular markers ; MAS ; oilseeds ; SSRs ; molecular breeding ; dehydration-responsive element binding (DREB) transcription factors ; gene expression ; mosses ; stress tolerance ; common centaury ; salinity stress ; antioxidative protection ; sodium nitroprusside ; proteomic analysis ; drought stress ; sorghum ; RNS ; RSS ; signaling ; post-translational modification ; microorganisms ; stressful conditions ; sustainability ; nutrition ; Brassicaceae ; Cicer arietinum L. ; chlorophyll a fluorescence transient ; physiological and biochemical traits ; high temperature ; chocolate spot disease ; Botrytis fabae ; faba bean ; antioxidant enzymes ; protein banding and anatomy ; actinobacteria ; Streptomyces tuirus ; chilli fruit rot ; Colletotrichum scovillei ; Colletotrichum truncatum ; Fusarium oxysporum ; liquid bio-formulation ; corn smut ; fungus infection ; MDA ; proline ; quality ; halophytes ; Tripolium pannonicum ; hydrogen peroxide ; cell wall extensibility ; cell wall polysaccharide ; coleoptile ; growth inhibition ; lead (Pb) ; rice ; Bactrocera oleae ; spinosad ; kaolin ; organic oliviculture ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; leaf gas exchange ; physiological traits ; BAG (Bcl-2-associated anthanogene) family proteins ; molecular chaperone ; metabolomics ; metabolic responses ; metabolites variation ; surveillance ; Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus ; comprehensive control ; distribution ; screen house ; Copper hyperaccumulation ; stress mitigation ; EDTA and IAA ; sunflower ; Fusarium wilt ; conventional breeding ; molecular makers ; QTLs ; genomics ; transcriptomics ; metabolomics and proteomics ; bread wheat ; AMF ; zinc ; growth parameters ; osmolyte ; osmoprotector ; ionic attributes ; PGPBs ; growth-promoting fungi ; crop productivity ; plant tolerance ; arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi ; aerobic rice ; soil enzymes ; phosphorus utilization ; P-deficient ; plant growth promotion ; chickpea ; selection indices ; drought tolerant genotypes ; abiotic and biotic stress ; CRISPR ; mega nucleases ; TALEN ; ZFN ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences
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  • 18
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-28
    Description: Due to increasing concern about the use of pesticides and its potential side effects, this book considers the development and application of alternative, environmental-friendly, plant protection methods for the control of weeds, disease, and pests (predators, parasitoids, competitors, plant-plant interactions, microelements, biopesticides). Some of the main advantages of the measures presented in papers are the absence of toxicity to humans and vertebrates, beneficial organisms, and the environment, as well as the absence of pest resistance. In order to provide sustainable and eco-friendly food production, those are important subjects, both in conventional, organic and integrated agricultural farming. Through reviews and original research articles, this reprint covers all aspects of alternative measures in plant protection.
    Keywords: biopesticides ; agriculture ; food supply ; microorganisms ; antifungal ; Botryosphaeriaceae ; chitosan ; GTDs ; madder ; stevioside ; Vitis vinifera ; biocontrol ; Heterorhabditis ; pest and pathogen management ; Photorhabdus ; marketing ; fungi ; Fusarium ; selenium ; micronutrient ; inhibition ; bioactivity ; biologically active compounds ; fungistatic effects ; quercetin ; red alga ; rosmarinic acid ; basal stem rot (BSR) ; phenolic compounds ; lignin ; cellulose ; hemicellulose ; silica body ; crystalline cellulose ; biodegradation ; nematode management ; biological control ; mechanisms ; host plant resistance ; synthetic nematicide ; botanicals ; optimizing strategies ; allelopathy ; oxidative stress ; maize ; soybean ; sunflower ; entomopathogenic fungi ; Tenebrio molitor ; virulence ; pathogenicity ; growth stimulation ; plant–microbe–pest interactions ; rhizosphere competence ; gallic acid ; catechin ; epicatechin ; fungal diseases ; grape berry ; hybrids ; Penicillium ; Botrytis ; Colletotrichum ; Alternaria ; Monilinia ; post-harvest diseases ; Tetranychus urticae ; Euseius stipulatus ; Typhlodromus sp. ; Phytoseiulus persimilis ; citrus orchard ; monitoring ; predators ; pest ; treatments ; aphid ; conservation biocontrol ; parasitoid ; Aphidius colemani ; floral resource plant ; field margin ; Erysiphe alphitoides ; the shoot-biomass amount ; Compu Eye, Leaf & Symptom Area ; antifungal endophytes ; secondary metabolites ; volatile compounds ; anti-oomycete ; Phytophthora infestans ; sporangia germination ; Solanum lycopersicum ; integrated disease management ; plant extracts ; defense inducers ; incidence ; AUDPC ; germination ; biopesticide ; plant–nematode interactions ; nematode effectors and control ; plant resistance ; amino acids ; biostimulant ; glutathione ; herbicide ; safener ; organic waste ; formulation ; improvement ; antifungal activity ; marine ; saline ; wetland ; post-harvest ; antifungal effect ; chloroxylenol ; phenic ; phenol ; Sclerotium rolfsii ; tomato plants ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences
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  • 19
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-11-30
    Description: Modernization in the agriculture sector is important to ensure food security and poverty alleviation, which are the primary themes of UN-SDGs. There are many challenges in developing advanced agricultural techniques, tools, and systems, by which sustainable agriculture and food security can be satisfied. Worldwide, agricultural mechanization and modernization can be attained with advancements in agricultural engineering technologies and their associated applications. The concept is directly linked to the technological advancements in agricultural automation and robotics; precision agriculture; high-efficiency irrigation systems; farm energy systems; handling, storage, and processing of agricultural products; livestock and poultry sheds; farm water/wastewater management; biomass, biogas, and biochar; remote sensing and geographical studies; societal aspects in agriculture; and the associated bioenvironment. Such advances in agricultural engineering technologies and applications are the need of the 21st century, particularly from the viewpoint of the agricultural water–energy–food security nexus. Therefore, this Special Issue comprises original research and review studies in the abovementioned research areas.
    Keywords: wet rice ; adhesion ; hot airflow ; dispersion characteristic ; minimum suspension speed ; surface water content ; pipe diameter ; operation frequency ; genetic algorithm ; rotation irrigation sectoring ; irrigation cost ; energy cost ; network cost ; pick-up device ; stretchable style ; kinematical analysis ; seedling picking test ; cropping pattern ; water stress ; LCC area ; surface water availability ; CROPWAT ; Ananas comosus ; somatic embryogenesis ; micropropagation ; organogenesis ; SSR markers ; ISSR markers ; pineapple ; cantaloupe bowl seedlings transplanting ; mechanical equipment ; institutional design ; field test ; data analysis and discussion ; up-cut rotary blade ; edge curve ; Cyperus esculentus plant ; flexible model ; arch shed ; automatic cuttage ; force feedback ; simulation design ; trajectory planning ; Chrysanthemum indicum L. ; maximum shear force ; finite element ; calibration ; single-bud ; billet planter ; planting uniformity ; numerical simulation ; seed-filling ; single-bud billet ; seed-metering ; EDEM ; wheel-track high clearance chassis ; walking performance ; climbing angle ; simulation ; rape windrower ; longitudinal axial flow ; flexible ; millet threshing device ; staggered threshing element ; micro rotary tubular concave screen ; machine learning ; deep learning ; plant leaf diseases ; photovoltaic module ; LED lighting system ; power grid ; step-up converter ; efficient power take-off ; monitoring system ; Codonopsis planting ; ditching device ; working parameters ; EDEM simulation ; orthogonal test ; air-blast sprayer ; precision spraying ; spray control parameter ; three-factor regression analysis ; highly efficient soil return ; liquid fertilizer deep application technique ; DEM ; soil bin test ; combine harvester ; differential inverse gearbox ; order analysis ; fault diagnosis method ; fatigue test ; tractor ; diesel engine ; emission ; artificial neural network ; improved particle swarm algorithm ; computational fluid dynamics (CFD) ; eave height ; natural ventilation ; venlo greenhouse ; fertilization uniformity ; closed-loop control ; single-chip microcomputer ; fuzzy PID ; solid-fertilizer-dissolving device ; precision fertilizer application ; BP neural network ; PSO optimization algorithm ; PID control ; watermelon ; sonication ; microwave ; synergistic effects ; quality characteristics ; electro-hydraulic hitch system ; tillage depth adjustment ; tillage depth control algorithm ; key components ; maize ; soil ; cavity planter ; interaction mechanism ; verification ; ultrasonic sensor ; canopy leaf area density ; ultrasonic echo signal ; verification experiment ; potato planter ; soil cultivation ; mechanization ; seed metering device ; intelligent seeding ; broiler house ; building energy simulation ; forecasting system ; heat stress index ; temperature humidity index (THI) ; smart agriculture ; greenhouse technologies ; artificial intelligence ; agricultural waste ; nano-activated carbon ; adsorption ; wastewater treatment ; modification ; agricultural engineering ; irrigation and drainage system ; pumping station ; sump ; hydraulic characteristics ; entropy production ; onion ; transplanting ; air-feeding seed discharge system ; seed tube ; gas-solid two-phase flow ; computer simulation ; discrete element method ; cotton stalk particles ; contact parameters ; response surface methodology ; image classification ; lightweight neural networks ; zea mays ; ECA attention ; CycleGAN ; tangential threshing ; vibration analysis ; FFT demodulation ; random vibration analysis ; bearing fault ; machine condition ; sustainable development goals ; agri-food security ; equality ; information and communication technologies ; technology 4.0 ; uplift resistance ; continuous pipe foundation ; single-span plastic greenhouse ; pipe connector ; vegetable greenhouses ; multi-arch greenhouses ; arch cross type ; resistance to the typhoon ; online non-destructive detection ; structure of plant stems ; ultrasonic feature ; feature extraction ; feature contribution ; backyard farming ; self-assembly ; vertical expansion ; factory in a box ; automated farming ; vertical farming ; sustainable farm ; aerogels ; porous materials ; agricultural activated carbon ; fine-grained ; attention mechanism ; maturity classification ; open-world ; solar air heater (SAH) ; computational fluid dynamics ; performance optimization ; milk powder ; agricultural drying ; post-harvest losses ; spices ; paneer ; storage ; proximate ; composition ; sensory evaluation ; antioxidant potential ; environmental monitoring ; imputation ; pig house ; recurrent neural network ; agriculture advancement ; large scale solar ; natural cooling ; agrivoltaic ; sustainability ; tractor-trailer ; trajectory tracking ; prescribed performance ; model predictive control ; robust sliding mode control ; stubble-crushing ; plain straight blade ; DEM-CFD ; dynamic motion ; seedbed preparation ; strip tillage ; energy saving ; F-ASHP model ; nursery pig ; storage pen ; Simulink ; industrial hemp ; bionic blade ; cutting energy consumption ; parameter optimization ; conservation tillage technology ; adoption of time persistence ; nonparametric K-M survival analysis method ; discrete duration model ; cavitation ; pretreatment ; jet-driven Helmholtz oscillator ; anaerobic digestion ; tea bud detection ; YOLOv5 ; depth camera ; pose estimation ; CAM ; OPVSM ; prediction models ; hyperspectral image ; PLSR model ; AdaBoost ; XGBoost ; LightGBM ; agricultural sensor network ; EMP-ZBR ; network topology ; routing transmission algorithm ; UV-A LED ; laser fly control ; light trap ; fungus gnats ; mushroom pests ; corn seeds ; collision recovery coefficient ; static friction coefficient ; multi-point collision ; sound waveform ; characteristic dimensions ; bulb tubular pump ; bulb form ; optimization design ; hydraulic performance ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences ; bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture
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  • 20
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: Vols 1 and 2 contain 57 papers in the Special Issue of ‘Plant Genomics 2009’ and cover a wide range of topics, highlighting the significant progress that has been made in recent years in our understanding of the genetics and genomics of plants’ growth, development, and stress responses. These studies provide valuable insights into the potential applications of genomic tools and technologies for crop improvement and sustainable agriculture, as well as fundamental questions about the evolution and function of plant genes and genomes.
    Keywords: Aristolochia ; chloroplast genome ; molecular evolution ; compare analysis ; phylogeny ; brassinosteroid-signaling kinase ; gene family ; expression profile ; alternative splicing ; intron retention ; genome-wide analysis ; drought tolerance ; foxtail millet ; LIM genes ; transgenic rice ; protein phosphatase (PP2C) ; cotton ; syntenic relationships ; expression patterns ; evolutionary analysis ; Populus trichocarpa ; multiple organellar RNA editing factor ; drought stress ; RNA editing ; genome ; β-glucosidase ; Brassica rapa ; BrBGLU10 ; pollen development ; co-expression analysis ; VQ genes family ; Eucalyptus grandis ; expression pattern ; plant hormones ; abiotic stress ; calcium-dependent protein kinases ; CDPK-related kinases ; cucurbitaceae ; hst1 ; Na+ accumulation ; SNP ; rapid generation advance ; salt tolerant ; variant annotation ; whole-genome sequencing ; expression ; genome-wide ; identification of peroxidase genes ; duplication pattern ; stress ; cassava ; ABCDE model ; cereals ; evolutionary relationships ; flower organ identity ; floral speciation ; MADS-box genes ; maize ; ZmTCP ; natural variation ; subgroup IId ; CsWRKY7 ; flowering ; Arabidopsis ; Camellia sinensis ; pomegranate ; sequence diversity ; site-specific selection ; tomato ; MADS-box ; floral organ ; fruit development ; polygalacturonase (PGs), pectin methylesterase (PMEs), collinearity analysis ; gene duplications ; expression profiling ; grapevine ; Rehmannia glutinosa L. ; replant disease ; rhizosphere microbes ; NB-LRR ; plant hormone ; apple ; aquaporin ; functional analysis ; stress tolerance ; Salicaceae ; phylogenetic relationship ; plastid genome ; comparative genomics ; repeat sequences ; stress marker genes ; sesame ; gene co-expression ; abiotic stress tolerance ; hub genes ; meta-analysis ; agrobacterium ; transient expression ; virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) ; tobacco rattle virus (TRV) ; cassava (Manihot esculenta) ; chalcone synthase ; chromatin accessibility ; epigenetic inheritance ; genetic engineering ; methylation ; ODNs ; CRISPR/Cas9 ; genome editing ; plant breeding ; multiplex genome editing ; crop improvement ; TALEN ; ZFN ; biotic stress ; avocado ; carotenoid biosynthesis ; mesocarp ; seed ; de novo assembly from short read sequencing ; full-length transcript sequencing ; differentially expressed genes ; gene dosage ; pigment ; turnip ; gene expression ; antioxidant ; nutritional quality ; B3 superfamily ; transcription factor ; ovule abortion ; Vitis vinifera ; expression analysis ; cold response ; Pittosporum tobira ; leaf variegation ; linoleic acid ; ROS scavenging enzyme ; heat shock protein ; invasive weed ; Rhizoctonia solani ; phytohormone signaling ; systemic signal ; plant defense ; calcium signaling ; ABA ; drought ; salinity ; citrulline ; genome-wide association study ; haplotype ; watermelon ; acetolactate synthase ; ferrochelatase ; rice ; large grain gene ; large grain-isogenic Koshihikari ; fine mapping ; NGS ; GW2 ; co-integration ; gene recombination ; semidwarf gene ; d60 ; linkage ; chromosome 2 ; Brachypodium ; comparative chromosome barcoding ; dysploidy ; karyotype structure and evolution ; model grass genus ; molecular cytogenetics ; polyploidy ; plant genome ; artificial microRNA ; gene silencing ; Lagerstroemia indica ; ornamental value ; anthocyanins ; leaf coloration ; directional improvement ; YABBY ; pineapple ; subcellular localization ; oak species identification ; Quercus ; mutation hotspots ; Centranthera grandiflora Benth ; transcriptome ; catalpol biosynthesis ; acteoside biosynthesis ; azafrin biosynthesis ; wheat ; Dasypyrum villosum ; alien substitution line ; GISH ; molecular marker ; marker-assisted selection ; regulation ; RNA-seq ; biosynthesis pathway ; chalcones ; stilbenes ; common bean ; Fusarium oxysproum ; plant–pathogen interaction ; metabolome ; evolution ; genome fractionation ; ABC transporters ; transcription factors ; transposable elements ; whole-genome duplication ; RNA-sequencing ; ChIP-sequencing ; transcriptional regulatory mechanism ; data integration ; karyopherin ; solanum tuberosum ; chemical fungicide ; disease control ; Neoscytalidium dimidiatum ; royal poinciana ; stem canker ; UAE ; bioinformatics ; VvGAST ; GASR ; Cis-elements ; wheat genome ; kernel hardness ; Puroindoline ; Puroindoline b-2 variants ; genotype-to-phenotype association ; synteny ; phylogenetic analysis ; genomic selection ; missing data ; minor allele frequency ; GDSL lipase ; GPAT6 ; cutin ; habaneros ; Capsicum chinense ; fruit ; RNA-Seq ; flax ; genome-wide association study (GWAS) ; single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) ; prediction accuracy ; quantitative trait loci (QTL) ; quantitative trait nucleotides (QTNs) ; Fabaceae ; Lupinus ; glutamine synthetase (GS) ; phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) ; gene families ; duplication/triplication ; structural genomics ; genome organization ; genome evolution ; microRNA ; miRNA156 ; seed development ; fatty acid synthesis ; linseed flax ; anthocyanin biosynthetic genes ; cis-regulatory motifs ; DEGs ; network analysis ; qRT-PCR ; reddish purple Chinese cabbage ; abscisic acid ; flavonolignans ; metabolite profiling ; Silybum marianum ; silymarin ; aquaporins ; bright yellow-2 suspension cells ; Nicotiana tabacum ; substrate specificity ; TaCKX1 ; TaCKX expression ; grain yield ; cytokinins ; phytohormones ; RNAi ; wheat spikes ; genome-wide identification ; 2OGD family ; hormone biosynthetic and metabolism genes ; tomato fruit ripening ; DNA methylation ; phenomics ; thema EDItEUR::Q Philosophy and Religion::QD Philosophy
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  • 21
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-28
    Description: Modernization in the agriculture sector is important to ensure food security and poverty alleviation, which are the primary themes of UN-SDGs. There are many challenges in developing advanced agricultural techniques, tools, and systems, by which sustainable agriculture and food security can be satisfied. Worldwide, agricultural mechanization and modernization can be attained with advancements in agricultural engineering technologies and their associated applications. The concept is directly linked to the technological advancements in agricultural automation and robotics; precision agriculture; high-efficiency irrigation systems; farm energy systems; handling, storage, and processing of agricultural products; livestock and poultry sheds; farm water/wastewater management; biomass, biogas, and biochar; remote sensing and geographical studies; societal aspects in agriculture; and the associated bioenvironment. Such advances in agricultural engineering technologies and applications are the need of the 21st century, particularly from the viewpoint of the agricultural water–energy–food security nexus. Therefore, this Special Issue comprises original research and review studies in the abovementioned research areas.
    Keywords: wet rice ; adhesion ; hot airflow ; dispersion characteristic ; minimum suspension speed ; surface water content ; pipe diameter ; operation frequency ; genetic algorithm ; rotation irrigation sectoring ; irrigation cost ; energy cost ; network cost ; pick-up device ; stretchable style ; kinematical analysis ; seedling picking test ; cropping pattern ; water stress ; LCC area ; surface water availability ; CROPWAT ; Ananas comosus ; somatic embryogenesis ; micropropagation ; organogenesis ; SSR markers ; ISSR markers ; pineapple ; cantaloupe bowl seedlings transplanting ; mechanical equipment ; institutional design ; field test ; data analysis and discussion ; up-cut rotary blade ; edge curve ; Cyperus esculentus plant ; flexible model ; arch shed ; automatic cuttage ; force feedback ; simulation design ; trajectory planning ; Chrysanthemum indicum L. ; maximum shear force ; finite element ; calibration ; single-bud ; billet planter ; planting uniformity ; numerical simulation ; seed-filling ; single-bud billet ; seed-metering ; EDEM ; wheel-track high clearance chassis ; walking performance ; climbing angle ; simulation ; rape windrower ; longitudinal axial flow ; flexible ; millet threshing device ; staggered threshing element ; micro rotary tubular concave screen ; machine learning ; deep learning ; plant leaf diseases ; photovoltaic module ; LED lighting system ; power grid ; step-up converter ; efficient power take-off ; monitoring system ; Codonopsis planting ; ditching device ; working parameters ; EDEM simulation ; orthogonal test ; air-blast sprayer ; precision spraying ; spray control parameter ; three-factor regression analysis ; highly efficient soil return ; liquid fertilizer deep application technique ; DEM ; soil bin test ; combine harvester ; differential inverse gearbox ; order analysis ; fault diagnosis method ; fatigue test ; tractor ; diesel engine ; emission ; artificial neural network ; improved particle swarm algorithm ; computational fluid dynamics (CFD) ; eave height ; natural ventilation ; venlo greenhouse ; fertilization uniformity ; closed-loop control ; single-chip microcomputer ; fuzzy PID ; solid-fertilizer-dissolving device ; precision fertilizer application ; BP neural network ; PSO optimization algorithm ; PID control ; watermelon ; sonication ; microwave ; synergistic effects ; quality characteristics ; electro-hydraulic hitch system ; tillage depth adjustment ; tillage depth control algorithm ; key components ; maize ; soil ; cavity planter ; interaction mechanism ; verification ; ultrasonic sensor ; canopy leaf area density ; ultrasonic echo signal ; verification experiment ; potato planter ; soil cultivation ; mechanization ; seed metering device ; intelligent seeding ; broiler house ; building energy simulation ; forecasting system ; heat stress index ; temperature humidity index (THI) ; smart agriculture ; greenhouse technologies ; artificial intelligence ; agricultural waste ; nano-activated carbon ; adsorption ; wastewater treatment ; modification ; agricultural engineering ; irrigation and drainage system ; pumping station ; sump ; hydraulic characteristics ; entropy production ; onion ; transplanting ; air-feeding seed discharge system ; seed tube ; gas-solid two-phase flow ; computer simulation ; discrete element method ; cotton stalk particles ; contact parameters ; response surface methodology ; image classification ; lightweight neural networks ; zea mays ; ECA attention ; CycleGAN ; tangential threshing ; vibration analysis ; FFT demodulation ; random vibration analysis ; bearing fault ; machine condition ; sustainable development goals ; agri-food security ; equality ; information and communication technologies ; technology 4.0 ; uplift resistance ; continuous pipe foundation ; single-span plastic greenhouse ; pipe connector ; vegetable greenhouses ; multi-arch greenhouses ; arch cross type ; resistance to the typhoon ; online non-destructive detection ; structure of plant stems ; ultrasonic feature ; feature extraction ; feature contribution ; backyard farming ; self-assembly ; vertical expansion ; factory in a box ; automated farming ; vertical farming ; sustainable farm ; aerogels ; porous materials ; agricultural activated carbon ; fine-grained ; attention mechanism ; maturity classification ; open-world ; solar air heater (SAH) ; computational fluid dynamics ; performance optimization ; milk powder ; agricultural drying ; post-harvest losses ; spices ; paneer ; storage ; proximate ; composition ; sensory evaluation ; antioxidant potential ; environmental monitoring ; imputation ; pig house ; recurrent neural network ; agriculture advancement ; large scale solar ; natural cooling ; agrivoltaic ; sustainability ; tractor-trailer ; trajectory tracking ; prescribed performance ; model predictive control ; robust sliding mode control ; stubble-crushing ; plain straight blade ; DEM-CFD ; dynamic motion ; seedbed preparation ; strip tillage ; energy saving ; F-ASHP model ; nursery pig ; storage pen ; Simulink ; industrial hemp ; bionic blade ; cutting energy consumption ; parameter optimization ; conservation tillage technology ; adoption of time persistence ; nonparametric K-M survival analysis method ; discrete duration model ; cavitation ; pretreatment ; jet-driven Helmholtz oscillator ; anaerobic digestion ; tea bud detection ; YOLOv5 ; depth camera ; pose estimation ; CAM ; OPVSM ; prediction models ; hyperspectral image ; PLSR model ; AdaBoost ; XGBoost ; LightGBM ; agricultural sensor network ; EMP-ZBR ; network topology ; routing transmission algorithm ; UV-A LED ; laser fly control ; light trap ; fungus gnats ; mushroom pests ; corn seeds ; collision recovery coefficient ; static friction coefficient ; multi-point collision ; sound waveform ; characteristic dimensions ; bulb tubular pump ; bulb form ; optimization design ; hydraulic performance ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes
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  • 22
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2022-08-12
    Description: Silica and silicon-based nanostructures are now well-understood materials for which the technologies are mature. The most obvious applications, such as electronic devices, have been widely explored over the last two decades. The aim of this Special Issue is to bring together the state of the art in the field and to enable the emergence of new ideas and concepts for silicon and silica-based nanostructures.
    Keywords: maize ; NPK ; SiO2-NPs ; productivity ; fertilizer ; mineral ; weevils ; LC50 ; toxicity ; mesoporous silica ; nanomaterials ; desulfurization ; fuel ; JP-8 ; black silicon ; light absorption enhanced ; micro-nano manufacturing ; nanometer surface ; nano-silica ; tricalcium aluminate ; pozzolanic reaction ; C-A-S-H gel ; silicon nanoparticles ; silicon nanowires ; synthesis ; high energy density ; lithium-ion batteries ; high-capacity anode ; VLS ; laser pyrolysis ; size effect ; shape effect ; biomass rice husk ; silicon ; nanocrystals ; luminescence ; high porosity ; pH sensor ; temperature sensor ; dual sensor ; metal-assisted chemical etching ; Si nanostructures ; high aspect ratio ; zone plate ; silicon nanowire ; nanowire array ; silicon anode ; n-type silicon anode ; Li-ion battery ; nanowires ; nanonets ; transistor ; integration process ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PH Physics
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  • 23
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2022-12-06
    Description: This book focuses on the up-to-date studies on the sustainability with changing climate and extremes. The main contributors discussed the changing climate and extreme events, as well as their impacts on natural and human dimension sustainability, including the incorporated social–ecologic and socioeconomic processes. Special attention is given to four main sections: natural disasters in agriculture; urban/rural ecosystem, tourism, and ecosystem service; extreme climate indices, and newly created dataset for climate change.
    Keywords: trade conflict ; carbon emissions ; import and export trade ; cooperative emission reduction ; meteorological hazards ; risk assessment ; spatial pattern ; population exposure ; Qinghai-Tibet Plateau ; climate change ; slope geohazards ; new geohazard clusters ; extreme cooling events ; Arctic Oscillation ; winter in China ; atmospheric circulation ; GPP ; CMIP6 ; ESM ; STA ; China ; warm days ; cold days ; warm nights ; cold nights ; hot days ; frost days ; compound drought and heatwave events ; complex network ; event synchronization ; atmospheric circulation patterns ; urban agglomeration ; drought ; heat wave ; flood ; GM (1, 1) ; Arctic ; universal thermal climate index (UTCI) ; spatial-temporal changes ; 1979–2019 ; ecosystem services trade-offs ; land-use change ; soil conservation ; carbon storage ; water yield ; precipitation gradient ; Loess Plateau ; climate hazards ; geospatial analysis ; urban adaptation ; risk management ; snow disaster ; risk zoning ; Heilongjiang Province ; precipitation ; model resolutions ; cold region of China ; spatiotemporal distribution ; spatiotemporal variation ; 1961–2019 ; high-resolution and high-quality precipitation data ; independent and non-independent test ; the 0.01° multi-source fusion precipitation product ; extreme precipitation event ; forest types ; NDVI ; AVHRR GIMMS ; temperature range ; precipitation range ; snow cover ; black carbon concentration ; radiative forcing ; northeast China ; high temperature ; mobile phone data ; impact factor ; Zhuhai City ; WRF model ; projection ; short-lived heatwave event ; long-lived heatwave event ; Yangtze River Basin ; central and western Pacific ; thermocline ; yellowfin tuna ; CPUE ; El Niño ; La Niña ; GAM model ; spring soil moisture ; impact mechanism ; Songnen Plain ; Sanjiang Plain ; maize ; diurnal temperature range ; fresh air index ; natural microclimate comfort index ; fresh air–natural microclimate comfort index ; scenic spots ; Fujian province ; extreme climate indices ; temporal and spatial dynamics ; linear trend ; climate abrupt change ; central China ; peanut drought ; Shandong Province ; natural disaster risk assessment principles ; dry-hot wind disaster ; Shandong province ; natural disaster risk assessment principle ; summer maize ; inter- and mixed cropping ; flowering period ; yield ; potato climatic productivity potential ; Inner Mongolia ; effect ; human mobility ; rainfall ; taxi GPS data ; community ; Zhuhai central areas ; citrus ; quality ; future projection ; state-owned forest farms ; human resource allocation ; industrial structure ; coordination and adaptation ; personal structure ; contiguous poverty-stricken areas ; rainstorms and droughts ; direct economic losses ; disaster-affected population ; drought and flood ; vulnerability ; risk prediction ; agroecosystem ; heatwaves ; population exposure change ; global warming ; 1.5 °C warming scenario ; 2.0 °C warming scenario ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::K Economics, finance, business & management::KC Economics::KCN Environmental economics
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  • 24
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: Agricultural practices involving the excessive use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides pose major risks to the environment and to human health. The development and adoption of sustainable ecofriendly agricultural management to preserve and enhance the physical, chemical, and biological properties of soils and improve agroecosystem functions is a challenge for both scientists and farmers. The Special Issue entitled “Sustainable Agricultural Practices—Impact on Soil Quality and Plant Health” is a collection of 10 original contributions addressing the state of the art of sustainable agriculture and its positive impact on soil quality. The content of this Special Issue covers a wide range of topics, including the use of beneficial soil microbes, intercropping, organic farming and its effects on soil bacteria and nutrient stocks, application of plant-based nematicides and zeolite amendments, sustainability in CH4 emissions, and the effect of irrigation, fertilization, and environmental conditions as well as land suitability on crop production.
    Keywords: natural substances ; nematicidal ; root-knot nematodes ; oregano ; soil amendments ; basic substances ; PCA ; land capability ; crop suitability ; GIS ; NWCE ; Egypt ; microbial inoculants ; soil enzyme activities ; soil microbes ; 16S rRNA ; planting pattern ; soil chemical properties ; soil microbial community ; genotype × environment interaction ; maize ; yield ; soil amelioration ; resource use efficiency ; water conservation ; nutrient retention ; heavy metal toxicity ; Cucumis melo L. ; chemical composition ; cultivar ; drip irrigation ; fruit quality ; long term field experiment ; sustainable crop production ; nutrient balances ; legume nutrition ; drained peat ; greenhouse gas ; global warming ; organic soil ; pineapple ; water table ; AMF ; enzyme activity ; microbial communities ; PGPR ; plant growth ; PLFAs ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
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  • 25
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: Mixed cropping, also known as inter-cropping or co-cultivation, is a plant production system that involves planting two or more species (or cultivars) in the same field in a variable order—row or rowless—simultaneously. Mixed cropping plays an important role in sustainable agriculture by adding value to crop rotations and agroecosystems. Scientific investigations on environmentally friendly mixed cropping should be supported by studies on the direct costs and long-term benefits that are the most relevant to farmers. Meeting the need to strengthen the scientific basis for mixed crops, the papers in this Special Issue enhance our understanding of the following: The selection of species and cultivars for a mixed crop system as well as the choice of agricultural treatments that will secure a stable yield of mixtures; Inter- and intra- species competition of plants in a canopy; Ecological intensification approaches and opportunities for maximizing crop performance and yield in mixtures; The effects of mixed crops on crop rotations; The short- and long-term ecosystem benefits of mixtures; The effects on pests and the biodiversity of agroecosystems provided by mixtures; The economic aspects of adopting the mixtures in farms; The nutritive value of mixtures for livestock; Other topics related to the mixed cropping.
    Keywords: barley ; oats ; triticale ; yield ; leaf area index ; land equivalent ratio ; standard gross margin ; brachiaria ; cereal-livestock production ; perception ; push-pull technology ; smallholder farmers ; proximity effect ; border effect ; neighbor effect ; strip intercropping ; legume ; cereals ; Hordeum vulgare ; Lolium multiflorum ; phosphorus ; water stress ; competition indices ; plant development stages ; spring cereal mixtures ; grain yield ; protein yield ; metabolic energy yield ; differentiations of cereal mixture ; sustainable agriculture ; maize ; Zea mays L. ; biodiversity ; intercropping ; silage ; growth ; quality ; non-legume ; mixed crop ; herbivores ; pest population ; natural enemy ; cereal–legume mixture ; common vetch ; cultivar ; soil quality ; cereal-legume mixture ; organic farming ; conventional farming ; leaf greenness index ; seed yield ; yield components ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
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  • 26
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2022-02-01
    Description: The papers included in this Special Issue address a variety of important aspects of plant biodiversity and genetic resources, including definitions, descriptions, and illustrations of different components and their value for food and nutrition security, breeding, and environmental services. Furthermore, comprehensive information is provided regarding conservation approaches and techniques for plant genetic resources, policy aspects, and results of biological, genetic, morphological, economic, social, and breeding-related research activities. The complexity and vulnerability of (plant) biodiversity and its inherent genetic resources, as an integral part of the contextual ecosystem and the human web of life, are clearly demonstrated in this Special Issue, and for several encountered problems and constraints, possible approaches or solutions are presented to overcome these.
    Keywords: climate change ; combined drought and heat stress ; drought ; heat ; landraces ; maize ; Rhododendron ; conservation strategies ; genetic differentiation ; gene flow ; populations contraction ; AFLP ; genetic diversity ; invasive ; Poaceae ; population genetics ; range expansion ; genebanks ; forage germplasm ; grasses ; legumes ; seed storage ; conservation ; seed longevity ; seed germination ; monitoring ; regeneration ; pea landraces ; Amorgos ; Schinoussa ; DNA Barcoding ; ISSR genotyping ; HRM analysis ; powdery mildew ; ex situ conservation ; germination ; longevity ; plant genetic resources ; agrobiodiversity ; genebank ; genebank management ; seed physiology ; seed quality management ; Carthamus tinctorius ; genotyping by sequencing ; germplasm characterization ; GWAS ; oilseed crop ; DArT markers ; macadamia ; dendrogram ; principal coordinate analysis ; population structure ; wild species ; malnutrition ; food security ; vegetables ; genetic resources ; home gardens ; community seedbanks ; variety introduction ; vegetable breeding ; high-throughput phenotyping ; statistical modelling ; phenotypic breeding ; genomic selection ; Solanum chacoense ; stress tolerance ; Brassica oleracea ; diversity ; SNP ; atolls ; leafy vegetables ; non-communicable diseases (NCD) ; nutrition security ; mineral nutrients ; natural biofortification ; crop wild relatives ; biological features ; use ; local ; national and global efforts ; policy ; gene donors ; pre-breeding ; breeding ; cross-sectoral collaboration ; crop wild relatives (CWR) ; drylands ; Kitui county ; wild food plants ; Cyprus ; domestication ; microsatellites ; Vitis vinifera subsp. sativa ; Vitis vinifera subsp. Sylvestris ; Fraxinus spp. ; manna ; local varieties nSSR ; cpSSR ; cytometry ; morphological traits ; documentation ; agricultural biodiversity ; wheat ; genome-wide association studies ; association mapping ; stripe rust ; anti-inflammatory activity ; antioxidants ; catechin ; Erodium crassifolium ; underutilized species ; agro-biodiversity ; centres of origin ; geographic distribution ; phylogenetic diversity ; useful plants ; Vavilov centres ; plant breeding ; climate change adaptation ; developing countries ; Punica protopunica Balf. ; Punica granatum L. ; Punica genera ; Lythraceae ; nitrogen fixation ; symbiosis ; bean ; landrace ; PPB ; participatory breeding ; climate resilient ; Honduras ; banana ; desiccation tolerance ; Musa ; Papua New Guinea ; seed conservation ; seed storage behaviour ; crop diversity ; drought tolerance ; genetic approaches ; neglected and underutilized species ; plant genetic resources for food and agriculture ; access and benefit sharing ; multilateral system ; CGIAR ; nutrition data ; multi-sectoral collaboration ; payment for ecosystem services ; payment for environmental services ; agrobiodiversity conservation ; agricultural adaptation ; clonal crops ; collection management ; cryobiotechnology ; cryopreservation ; field collections ; field maintenance ; germplasm storage ; in vitro conservation ; recalcitrant seeds ; genetic erosion ; ex situ and in situ conservation ; diversification ; sustainability ; food and nutrition security ; crop genetic resources ; diagnostics ; germplasm ; crop breeding ; pathogen ; pest ; Plant Treaty ; phytosanitary regulations ; transboundary pests ; invasive species ; prevention ; quarantine ; seed ; seed health ; virus indexing ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences
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  • 27
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-28
    Description: Developing sustainable organic agriculture and resilient agribusiness sector is fundamental, keeping in mind the value of the opportunity presented by the growing demand for healthy and safe food globally, with the expectation for the global population to reach 9.8 billion by 2050, and 11 billion by 2100.Lately, the main threats in Europe, and worldwide, are the increasingly dynamic climate change and economic factors related to currency fluctuations. While the current environmental policy provides several mechanisms to support agribusinesses in mitigating organic food for daily increasing human population and stability of the currency, it does not contemplate the relative readiness of individuals and businesses to act correctly.Organic farming is the practice that relies more on using sustainable methods to cultivate crops and produce food animals, avoiding chemicals and dietary synthetic drug inputs that do not belong to the natural ecosystem. Organic agriculture can also contribute to meaningful socioeconomic, ecologically sustainable development, and significantly in the development of the agribusiness sector, especially in developing countries.
    Keywords: Moringa oleifera ; Japanese quail ; fertility ; egg production ; livestock ; agriculture ; organic production ; land ; taxation ; tax incentives ; income ; revenue ; property ; medicinal plants ; sustainable ; poultry ; organic ; eggs ; fatty acids ; organic farming ; production structure ; production intensity ; Ukraine ; meat ; biotic ; natural ; economic efficiency ; costs ; willingness to pay ; honey ; local ; Serbia ; bank ; job satisfaction ; team ; rural ; urban ; the Republic of Serbia ; biomass ; crop residue ; crop production ; energy purposes ; sustainability ; apiculture investment ; research and development ; beekeepers ; geographical origin ; food ; label ; Apis mellifera ; Nosema spp. ; Protofil® ; biochemical analysis ; sustainable livestock production ; added value ; buffalo milk ; dairy products ; chemical composition ; nutritional properties ; kids ; Garganica ; Maltese ; Derivata di Siria ; meat quality ; biodiversity ; marketing in higher education ; marketing mix instruments in higher education ; higher education institutions ; students’ satisfaction ; Republic of Serbia ; Spain ; dyslipidemia ; sea buckthorn ; grape ; high-fat diet ; rats ; phytotherapy ; atorvastatin ; sustainable development ; sustainable tourism development ; rural tourism ; image of a rural tourism destination ; cognitive component ; dimensions of the cognitive component ; farm development ; farm machinery ; labor ; farm investment ; productivity ; sustainable public procurement (SPP) ; green public procurement (GPP) ; consumer behavior ; GPP barriers ; green Romanian agriculture ; consumption ; green marketing ; organic consumer ; cost-effectiveness ; flame weeding ; maize ; organic agricultural production ; plant protection product residues ; organic and conventional agriculture ; LC-MS/MS ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes
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  • 28
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: This Special Issue on ‘Advances in Cereal Crops Breeding’ comprises 10 papers covering a wide range of subjects, including the expression-level investigation of genes in terms of salinity stress adaptations and their relationships with proteomics in rice, the use of genetic analysis to assess the general combining ability (GCA) and specific combining ability (SCA) in promising hybrids of maize, the use of DNA markers based on PCR in rice, the identification of quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in wheat and simple sequence repeats (SSR) in rice, the use of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) in a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in cereals, and Nanopore direct RNA sequencing of related with LTR RNA retrotransposon in triticale prior to the genomic selection of heterotic maize hybrids.
    Keywords: maize ; density tolerance ; combining ability ; gene effects ; genetic diversity ; rice ; salinity ; submergence tolerance ; blast ; SSR markers ; PCR analysis ; long non-coding RNAs ; seed development ; Nanopore sequencing ; retrotransposons ; triticale ; prediction accuracy ; mixed linear and Bayesian models ; machine learning algorithms ; training set size and composition ; parametric and nonparametric models ; drought stress ; dendrogram ; barley ; breeding ; marker-assisted selection ; genes ; genetic resources ; genome editing ; health benefits ; metabolomics ; oat ; QTL ; wheat ; Triticum aestivum L. ; QMrl-7B ; root traits ; grain yield ; nitrogen use efficiency ; GWAS ; salinity tolerance ; Vietnamese landraces ; abiotic stress ; root ; auxin ; YUCCA ; PIN ; proteomics ; mass spectrometry ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
    Language: English
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  • 29
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2022-02-24
    Description: Sustainable development in the agriculture sector is crucial to achieve the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set by the United Nations (UN). There are lots of challenges to developing modern and intelligent agricultural techniques, tools, and systems, by which sustainable agriculture and food security can be satisfied. In addition, carbon-neutral development and clean energy utilization are also associated with the UN-SDGs. Such agricultural, biological, and environmental engineering studies are needed in the 21st century, particularly from the viewpoint of the agricultural water–energy–food security nexus. This book focuses on the recent proliferation and technological advancements in these engineering applications. This book aims to share recent updates on agricultural, biological, and environmental engineering, and the application of these engineering techniques in the agriculture sector. It presents such engineering technologies and applications in seven categories that include energy system applications in agriculture (three studies); irrigation and drainage (four studies); biomass, biogas, and biochar (three studies); farm mechanization and soil science (three studies); remote sensing and geographical studies (two studies); wastewater and biological studies (two studies); and case studies and societal aspects in agriculture (five studies). The editors believe that this book will be useful for agricultural scientists, researchers, and students.
    Keywords: air heat pump ; carbon dioxide ; formaldehyde ; electricity consumption ; ultra-fine dust ; municipal waste ; biological fertilizer ; phytopathogens ; sustainable agriculture ; organic waste treatment ; optical remote sensing ; microwave remote sensing ; phenology-based method ; forest conservation ; forest management ; rural residents ; economic incentives ; Pakistan ; less-favoured areas ; agricultural policy ; farm profitability ; traction ; soil ; sinkage ; single-track shoe ; penetration ; cohesion ; adhesion ; ANOVA ; Brassica chinensis ; coefficient of variation ; double-row ; metering device ; pneumatic ; greenhouse ; computational fluid dynamics ; airflow ; temperature ; humidity ; horticulture ; Zagazig ; Egypt ; willingness to accept ; gross margin ; mixed cropping ; ordered logistic regression ; bioresources ; circular bioeconomy ; economic analysis ; Nitrification inhibitor ; smog ; Wheat straw ; poultry farms ; air-conditioning ; evaporative cooling systems ; temperature-humidity index ; temperature-humidity-velocity index ; soil erosion ; sediment yield ; RUSLE ; sediment transport modeling ; Gomal River ; arid regions ; surface drain system ; design ; drainage effluent ; GF-6 ; maize ; straw ; support vector machine ; random forest ; red-edge wavelength ; biomass ; furnace ; efficiency ; economics ; carbon nanotubes ; surface modification ; heavy metals ; adsorption ; water and wastewater treatment ; renewable energy ; biogas production ; livestock manure ; anaerobic digestion ; COVID-19 ; Iran ; food security ; economic crisis ; agriculture ; food supply chain ; agricultural economy ; drip irrigation system ; net revenue ; small landholders ; sustainable irrigation ; agroforestry ; allometric equations ; carbon stock ; organic carbon ; potassium ; zinc ; physiological attributes ; climate change ; environment ; human health ; resources ; wastewater ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences ; bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture
    Language: English
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2022-05-06
    Description: Many agricultural crops worldwide suffer from zinc (Zn) deficiency. Despite widespread interest in Zn, plant professionals often lack current information on this indispensable essential mineral nutrient. G. Hacisalihoglu, PhD, in Unraveling the Mechanisms of Zinc Efficiency in Crop Plants, and a host of recognized experts address this gap with the up-to-date importance of Zn nutrition. This book examines research aimed at understanding how plants uptake and utilize Zn. It has been peer-reviewed and multi-authored by expert plant biology scientists with related expertise. The editor provides a comprehensive overview of zinc (Zn) nutrition in plants, seeds, roots, and soil, which renders this book a good reference for plant biology professionals. Agricultural sustainability in the time of the growing world population will be one of the major challenges in the next 30 plus years. Zn is one of the most important essential mineral nutrients required for metabolic processes, so a shortage of Zn constrains crop yield and quality worldwide. Zinc efficiency and higher growth and yield under low Zn supply make it a promising sustainable solution for developing cultivars that are zinc efficient. Several articles are included in this book that provide an overview of current developments and trends in the times of high-throughput genomics and phenomics data analysis. Furthermore, this book presents research findings in various experimental models and areas ranging from maize to alfalfa, flax, and sorghum.Unraveling the Mechanisms of Zinc Efficiency in Crop Plants is a must read for researchers and plant biology professionals.
    Keywords: zinc ; sustainability ; food security ; seed quality ; zinc efficiency ; staple foods ; crops ; functional genomics ; homeostasis ; hormonal regulation ; iron ; maize ; malnutrition ; photosynthesis ; Adsorption ; desorption ; landscape position ; isotherm ; plant available Zn ; bioindication ; bryophytes ; moss ; cell shape ; particulate matter ; biofortification ; micronutrients ; nutrient uptake ; plant nutrition ; ZIP transporters ; nicotianamine ; metal tolerance protein (MTP) ; yellow stripe-like protein (YSL) ; zinc-induced facilitators (ZIF) ; heavy metal transporters (HMA) ; sodium selenate ; zinc sulfate ; cereal ; rainfed conditions ; forage yield ; 65Zn ; soil ; soil solution ; barley ; lability ; specific activity ; potential buffer capacity ; forms ; labile zinc pool ; silicon ; Zn-deficiency ; Zn-sufficiency ; Zn re-fertilization ; n/a ; nutrient dense ; superfood ; multi minerals ; health benefits ; gluten free ; percent daily value ; elevated CO2 ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences ; bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: Soil degradation is one of the most topical environmental threats. A number of processes causing soil degradation, specifically erosion, compaction, salinization, pollution, and loss of both organic matter and soil biodiversity, are also strictly connected to agricultural activity and its intensification. The development and adoption of sustainable agronomic practices able to preserve and enhance the physical, chemical, and biological properties of soils and improve agroecosystem functions is a challenge for both scientists and farmers. The Special Issue entitled “Sustainable Agriculture and Soil Conservation” collects 12 original contributions addressing the state of the art of sustainable agriculture and soil conservation. The papers cover a wide range of topics, including organic agriculture, soil amendment and soil organic carbon (SOC) management, the impact of SOC on soil water repellency, the effects of soil tillage on the quantity of SOC associated with several fractions of soil particles and depth, and SOC prediction, using visible and near-infrared spectra and multivariate modeling. Moreover, the effects of some soil contaminants (e.g., crude oil, tungsten, copper, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) are discussed or reviewed in light of the recent literature. The collection of the manuscripts presented in this Special Issue provides a relevant knowledge contribution for improving our understanding on sustainable agriculture and soil conservation, thus stimulating new views on this main topic.
    Keywords: Tungsten ; corn uptake ; soil characteristics ; Freundlich model ; Biolog® ; community-level physiological profiling (CLPP) ; functional diversity indices ; metabolic bacterial diversity ; olive ; soil fertility ; soil quality ; maize ; stomata ; soil ; phenanthrene ; remediation ; qualitative multi-attribute model ; total energy output ; agro-ecological service crops ; ex-post sustainability ; organic systems ; amendment ; biochar ; brewers’ spent grain ; hop ; image analysis ; plant growth ; Beerkan method ; infiltration ; forest restoration ; soil water repellency ; tillage ; fertilization ; soil depth ; organic carbon ; clay minerals ; diffuse reflectance ; infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy ; bioremediation ; composting ; PAHs ; organic co-substrates ; mulching ; flattening ; irrigation ; photosynthesis ; transpiration ; water stress integral ; fruit growth ; water use efficiency ; productivity ; soil organic matter ; near-infrared spectroscopy ; spatial heterogeneity ; multivariate adaptive regression splines ; partial least squares regression ; anaerobic digestion residues ; soil amendment ; soil fertilization ; soil organic C ; soil porosity ; soil microbial community ; copper ; rhizosphere ; smart agriculture ; microbes ; vineyard ; organic agriculture ; soil organic carbon ; soil management ; soil contamination ; soil remediation ; sustainable fruit growing ; water conservation practices ; multivariate statistical models for SOC prediction ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2023-05-10
    Description: As everyone knows, cereal and oil are still the main part of our diet and provide essential nutrients and energy every day. With the progress of food processing technology, the quality of cereal and oil food is also improved significantly. Behind this, major nutrients of grain and oil, including protein, carbohydrate, lipid, and functional components, have experienced a variety of physical, chemical, and biological reactions during food processing. Moreover, research in this field also covers the multi-scale structural changes of characteristic components, such as component interaction and formation of key domains, which is essential for the quality enhancement of cereal and oil food. Based on the increasing consumer demand for nourishing, healthy, and delicious cereal and oil food, it might be interesting to report the latest research on the application of novel technology in food processing, multi-scale structural changes of characteristic components in food processing, structure-activity mechanism of food functional components. This book aimed to provide useful reference and guidance for the processing and utilization of cereal and oil food so as to provide technical support for the healthy development of cereal a oil food processing industry wordwide.
    Keywords: macadamia oil ; cultivars ; minor components ; antioxidant capacity ; triacylglycerols ; tofu ; protein ; structure ; mechanism ; sesame oil ; gelation ; oleogels ; controlled volatile release ; adzuki bean ; acrylamide ; volatile ; microwave baking ; drum roasting ; peanut ; high-oleic ; peanut oil ; volatiles ; precursors ; tree peony seed oil ; heating pretreatment ; microstructure ; volatile compounds ; bioactive compounds ; oxidative stability ; natural repose angle ; point source ; velocity characteristics ; mechanical characteristics ; distribution ; peanut protein ; hydrothermal cooking ; combined modification ; low pH ; physicochemical properties ; protein structure ; ultrasonic ; maize ; germination ; physiological and biochemical indicators ; γ–aminobutyric acid ; instant flavor peanut powder ; heat treatment ; flavor ; MR ; functional properties ; peanut meal ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences ; bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture
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  • 33
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-11
    Description: This book focuses on the fundamental and applied research of the non-destructive estimation and diagnosis of crop leaf and plant nitrogen status and in-season nitrogen management strategies based on leaf sensors, proximal canopy sensors, unmanned aerial vehicle remote sensing, manned aerial remote sensing and satellite remote sensing technologies. Statistical and machine learning methods are used to predict plant-nitrogen-related parameters with sensor data or sensor data together with soil, landscape, weather and/or management information. Different sensing technologies or different modelling approaches are compared and evaluated. Strategies are developed to use crop sensing data for in-season nitrogen recommendations to improve nitrogen use efficiency and protect the environment.
    Keywords: UAS ; multiple sensors ; vegetation index ; leaf nitrogen accumulation ; plant nitrogen accumulation ; pasture quality ; airborne hyperspectral imaging ; random forest regression ; sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) ; SIF yield indices ; upward ; downward ; leaf nitrogen concentration (LNC) ; wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) ; laser-induced fluorescence ; leaf nitrogen concentration ; back-propagation neural network ; principal component analysis ; fluorescence characteristics ; canopy nitrogen density ; radiative transfer model ; hyperspectral ; winter wheat ; flooded rice ; pig slurry ; aerial remote sensing ; vegetation indices ; N recommendation approach ; Mediterranean conditions ; nitrogen ; vertical distribution ; plant geometry ; remote sensing ; maize ; UAV ; multispectral imagery ; LNC ; non-parametric regression ; red-edge ; NDRE ; dynamic change model ; sigmoid curve ; grain yield prediction ; leaf chlorophyll content ; red-edge reflectance ; spectral index ; precision N fertilization ; chlorophyll meter ; NDVI ; NNI ; canopy reflectance sensing ; N mineralization ; farmyard manures ; Triticum aestivum ; discrete wavelet transform ; partial least squares ; hyper-spectra ; rice ; nitrogen management ; reflectance index ; multiple variable linear regression ; Lasso model ; Multiplex®3 sensor ; nitrogen balance index ; nitrogen nutrition index ; nitrogen status diagnosis ; precision nitrogen management ; terrestrial laser scanning ; spectrometer ; plant height ; biomass ; nitrogen concentration ; precision agriculture ; unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) ; digital camera ; leaf chlorophyll concentration ; portable chlorophyll meter ; crop ; PROSPECT-D ; sensitivity analysis ; UAV multispectral imagery ; spectral vegetation indices ; machine learning ; plant nutrition ; canopy spectrum ; non-destructive nitrogen status diagnosis ; drone ; multispectral camera ; SPAD ; smartphone photography ; fixed-wing UAV remote sensing ; random forest ; canopy reflectance ; crop N status ; Capsicum annuum ; proximal optical sensors ; Dualex sensor ; leaf position ; proximal sensing ; cross-validation ; feature selection ; hyperparameter tuning ; image processing ; image segmentation ; nitrogen fertilizer recommendation ; supervised regression ; RapidSCAN sensor ; nitrogen recommendation algorithm ; in-season nitrogen management ; nitrogen use efficiency ; yield potential ; yield responsiveness ; standard normal variate (SNV) ; continuous wavelet transform (CWT) ; wavelet features optimization ; competitive adaptive reweighted sampling (CARS) ; partial least square (PLS) ; grapevine ; hyperparameter optimization ; multispectral imaging ; precision viticulture ; RGB ; multispectral ; coverage adjusted spectral index ; vegetation coverage ; random frog algorithm ; active canopy sensing ; integrated sensing system ; discrete NIR spectral band data ; soil total nitrogen concentration ; moisture absorption correction index ; particle size correction index ; coupled elimination ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TB Technology: general issues ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TB Technology: general issues::TBX History of engineering and technology ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TQ Environmental science, engineering and technology
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2023-05-10
    Description: The rising shortage of water resources in crop-producing regions worldwide and the need for irrigation optimisation call for sustainable water savings. The allocation of irrigation water will be an ever-increasing source of pressure because of vast agricultural demands under changing climatic conditions. Consequently, irrigation has to be closely linked with water-use efficiency with the aim of boosting productivity and improving food quality, singularly in those regions where problems of water shortages or collection and delivery are widespread. The present Special Issue (SI) showcases 19 original contributions, addressing water-use efficiency in the context of sustainable irrigation management to meet water scarcity conditions. These papers cover a wide range of subjects including (i) interaction mineral nutrition and irrigation in horticultural crops, (ii) sustainable irrigation in woody fruit crops, (iii) medicinal plants, (iv) industrial crops, and (v) other topics devoted to remote sensing techniques and crop water requirements, genotypes for drought tolerance, and agricultural management. The studies were carried out in both field and laboratory surveys, with modelling studies also being conducted, and a wide range of geographic regions are also covered. The collection of these manuscripts presented in this SI updates on and provides a relevant contribution for efficient saving water resources.
    Keywords: fruit size ; Manzanilla ; olive ; regulated deficit irrigation ; water potential ; water relation ; leaf area ; Manihot esculenta ; photosynthesis ; tuber ; water status ; antioxidant capacity ; bioactive compounds ; growth ; hydroxycinnamic acids ; hydroponics ; preformed plastic mulch film ; crop water productivity ; biodegradation ; crop productivity ; spray-on mulch ; water use efficiency ; almond cultivars ; crop physiological response ; irrigation water productivity ; nut yield ; drip irrigation ; silicon ; mineral nutrients ; oxidative stress ; osmolytes ; yield ; Zea mays ; ERP ; GIS ; internet of things ; precision agriculture ; quality ; environment ; water ; software ; platform ; web application ; crop coefficient ; drought stress ; evapotranspiration ; maize ; water productivity ; Prunus dulcis ; Vairo ; water stress ; sustained deficit irrigation ; quality markers ; leaf greenness index ; root morphology ; almond quality ; sustainability ; marketability ; semiarid Mediterranean environment ; root components ; yield components ; fruit quality ; deficit irrigation ; leaf area index ; harvest index ; photosynthetic rate ; transpiration rate ; greenhouse ; in vitro culture ; apple ; cherries ; midday stem water potential ; sap flow ; stomatal conductance ; FDR probes and daily fraction of intercepted photosynthetically active radiation ; abiotic stress ; Linum album Ky. ex Boiss. ; morphological properties ; phenology ; pigments ; diversity ; root length density ; root weight density ; root-shoot relationships ; benefit-cost ratio ; nitrogen ; root growth ; tomato ; water saving ; Jerusalem artichoke ; mineral fertilization ; irrigation ; diseases ; fungi ; crop suitability ; remote sensing ; ALES-Arid ; SEBAL ; landsat ; crop-water requirements ; smart farming ; crop-production functions ; food quality ; crop physiological response to drought scenarios ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences ; bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture
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  • 35
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: The exploitation of biodiversity is essential to select resilient genotypes for sustainable cropping systems as one of the main challenges for plant breeding. Mapping traits of agronomic interest in specific genomic regions appears as another pivotal effort for the future development of novel cultivars. For this purpose, there is evidence that MAGIC and other exotic populations will play a major role in the coming years in allowing for impressive gains in plant breeding for developing new generations of improved cultivars. This Special Issue focused on the application of advanced technologies devoted to crop improvement and exploit the available biodiversity in crops. In detail, next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies supported the development of high-density genotyping arrays for different plants included in this issue.
    Keywords: natural variation ; maize ; nucleotide diversity ; domestication selection ; ZmPGP1 gene ; Ipomoea batatas ; genetic diversity ; SSR markers ; qualitative traits ; pure lines ; F1 hybrids ; microsatellite markers ; marker-assisted breeding ; crop improvement ; varieties ; Fragaria ; Rubus ; microsatellites ; transferability ; polymorphism ; introns ; exons ; flavonoid biosynthesis pathway ; transcription factor genes ; chitinase ; multiple population ; linkage mapping ; JLAM ; QTL ; validation ; genomic prediction ; maize lethal necrosis ; herbaceous peony ; molecular marker ; next-generation sequencing ; pedigree ; Vicia faba L., genetic diversity ; in situ conservation ; Olea europaea L. ; olive ; cpSSR ; nuSSR ; population structure ; Mediterranean Region ; GWAS ; drought ; barley ; spikelet development ; candidate gene ; linkage map ; RAD ; Solanum melongena ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
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  • 36
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2022-05-06
    Description: The global food supply chain relies on engineered systems, operational practices, and logistics to preserve, protect, process, and deliver agricultural crops along complex supply lines from farmers in low-, middle-, and high-income countries to markets around the world. Food and nutrition security is compromised by post-harvest losses (and food waste) that have been estimated to be as high as 20% in durable and 40% in perishable crops. Preserving crops using technologies and practices such as timely harvesting, evaporative cooling, cold and frozen storage, drying, and dehydrating, and protecting crops using technologies and practices such as damage-less handling, controlled and modified atmosphere storage, non-chemical heat and gas treatment, plant-derived protective films for individual fruits and vegetables, and improved packaging containers are critical to preserving nutrients, improving livelihoods, and realizing an efficient food system. This Special Issue aims to cover recent progress and innovations in science, technology, engineering, operational practices, and logistics related to post-harvest preservation and protection of durable and perishable agricultural crops. It seeks contributions that improve effectiveness, efficiency, reliability and sustainability in post-harvest handling of crops from field to end use that preserve product quality and result in foods and feeds which are nutritious and safe for human and animal consumption.
    Keywords: cold storage ; fresh arils ; dried methods ; total soluble solids ; total phenolic content ; storage stability ; maize ; storage systems ; financial profitability ; aeration ; finite element modeling ; stored products ; temperature sensors ; chlorophyll ; fluorescence ; storage atmosphere ; superficial scald ; rootstock ; 1-MCP ; cost-effectiveness of technology ; controlled atmosphere ; ORAC ; TSS ; acidity ; firmness ; biomass utilization ; economic analysis ; grain dryer ; maize drying ; technical performance ; postharvest technologies ; mango postharvest loss ; Yieldwise Initiative ; IRIV ; LS-SVM ; Korla fragrant pear ; quality parameter ; evaluation ; maize grain storage ; hermetic storage bags ; polypropylene storage bags ; quality attributes ; pesticide residues ; grapes ; cluster fruits ; packaging materials ; transportation and placing ; excitation ; vibration ; signals ; postharvest loss ; shelf stable ; nutrition ; bioactive ; byproducts ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general
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    The International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF) | India
    Publication Date: 2022-02-21
    Description: Yemaya No. 63, dated May 2021, features articles from US, The Netherlands, Myanmar, Senegal, and an article on women in fisheries and human rights. The article from the US by Linda Behnken argues that a growing coalition of small-scale, community-based fishers is calling for the recognition and protection of Alaska’s invaluable coastal fisheries during COVID-19. The article from the Netherlands by Cornelie Quist looks at the challenges facing women engaged in small-scale fishing and supplying fish through retailers and how they found new ways to directly reach consumers. The conversation between Miranda Bout and Cornelie Quist focuses on how they combined new product development with the use of social media to contact their customer base during the pandemic-induced disruption of traditional marketing chains. The article by Elena Finkbeiner, Juno Fitzpatrick and Whitney Yadao-Evans looks at recent media revelations and scientific research that have brought increased attention to human-rights violations and the myriad social issues facing fisheries, but with a disproportionate focus on labour-rights violations at sea and in industrial fishing operations. The systemic inequalities combined with the effects of COVID-19 exacerbated vulnerabilities of women to health risks, food and livelihood security. The article from Senegal by Aby Dia from Lumière Synergie pour le Développement (LSD), in collaboration with WoMin African Alliance, South Africa, narrates the story of traditional women fish processors from the Bargny who have been, for more than a decade, struggling against development projects that jeopardise their environment, health and livelihoods. In order to preserve their livelihoods, women processors in Senegal have come together to oppose the Tosyali steel project. The European Network of Women in Fisheries and Aquaculture in Europe (AKTEA) urges the Office of the Commissioner for the Environment, Oceans and Fisheries to integrate gender into all aspects of European fishing policy. The Profile column looks at how Linda Behnken became a fisher in Alaska and how fishing has shaped her individuality and work. Natalie Sattler says that fishing for halibut, sablefish and salmon from the sparkling waters of the Pacific along with her children and at the same time passion for working with the Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association and the Alaska Sustainable Fisheries Trust is an immense challenge.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Fishing Communities ; Women in fisheries ; Gender ; Small-scale fisheries ; Aquaculture ; Fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2022-06-28
    Description: Las pesquerías basadas en las agregaciones reproductivas pueden amenazar a especies como los pargos que tienen conductas gregarias durante el período reproductivo. Esta nota ofrece elementos que sugieren la existencia de sitios de agregación no registrados previamente y no protegidos en el Parque Nacional Cayos de San Felipe (PNCSF), región suroccidental de Cuba. La información tradicional obtenida de pescadores locales y trabajadores del parque se corroboró con muestreos cualitativos y cuantitativos de peces de arrecifes y datos de pesquerías locales del 2014. En la época de reproducción de pargos (mayo a julio) se observaron grupos de entre 40-100 ejemplares de Lutjanus cyanopterus, Lutjanus synagris y Lutjanus jocu en los arrecifes de la zona occidental del PNCSF (camellones entre 15-30 m de profundidad cerca del borde de la plataforma). Dentro de esa área, se señalan dos sitios que parecen ser utilizados para agregaciones de predesove, por lo que requieren protección y ser estudiados. Los censos cuantitativos confirmaron que en mayo y junio la zona occidental tiene densidad alta de pargos adultos. También, el pico de captura de estas especies ocurrió en la época reproductiva. Se comprobó que las pesquerías se realizaron durante las migraciones de peces hacia el borde de la plataforma en áreas de la zona occidental del PNCSF, y que más del 60% de los individuos tuvieron gónadas maduras (antes de desovar). Esta información debe incentivar el estudio de las agregaciones de desove en esta región de Cuba, la protección de especies amenazadas y áreas de alta significación ecológica y la implementación de pesquerías sostenibles.
    Description: Fisheries based on reproductive aggregations can threaten species such as snappers that have gregarious behavior during the reproductive period. This note provides evidence to support the existence of aggregation sites, not previously registered and unprotected, in the National Park San Felipe Keys (NPSFK), southwestern region of Cuba. Traditionalinformation obtained from local fishermen and from the park staff was complemented with qualitative and quantitative fish reef censuses and local fisheries data in 2014. In the reproductive season of snappers (May to July) groups of between 40-100 specimens of Lutjanus cyanopterus, Lutja- nus synagris and Lutjanus jocu were observed in the western area of the NPSFK on the reefs (spoor and grove between 20-30 m deep close to the platform edge). Within that area two sites are indicated that can be used for prespawning aggregation, so they require protection and study. Quanti- tative censuses confirmed that in May and June the western zone has high density of adult snappers. Also, the peak of capture of these snapper species occurred in the reproduc- tive season. It was found that fisheries carried out during fish migrations to the edge of the shelf in areas of the western area of the NPSFK and more than 60% of the individuals had mature gonads (before spawning). This information should promote the study of spawning aggregations in this region of Cuba, the protection of threatened species and areas of high ecological significance and the implementation of sustainable fisheries.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Región suroccidental de Cuba ; Desove ; Pesquerías ; Migration routes ; Spawning ; Fisheries ; Rutas migraciones
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution
    Format: pp.54-65
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2022-09-14
    Description: The ICES Workshop on ICES reference points (WKREF2) was tasked review the WKREF1 report and based on the outcome develop updated guidelines for the ICES reference points system and recommendations for ACOM consideration. The WKREF1 report has suggested 5 key recom- mendations to simplify and harmonise the ICES reference points framework representing a ma- jor change to the current guidelines. At WKREF2, we detailed discussions and four key concerns were raised about the proposed approach. The first related to the simplification of rules to define Blim. Around two thirds of category 1 stocks would end up as WKREF1 “Blim Type 2” where Blim would be set as a fraction of B0. The Allee effect or “depensation” maybe more important than previously thought and should be furthered explored for ICES stocks since it has important consequences for Blim. A number of challenges and issues around defining Blim using the current guidelines were documented. Some suggestions on improvement criteria were discussed including using classifiers to define spas- modic stocks and using change point algorithms to address non-stationary productivity regimes. However, further work is need to make these approaches operational and there was no consen- sus that the WKREF1 Blim types should replace the current guidelines. WKREF1 recommended that the FMSY proxy should be based on a biological proxies and should be less than the deterministic FMSY. It was pointed out that the stochastic FMSY estimated in EqSim for example, is lower than the deterministic FMSY and that the current guidelines ensure that the FMSY should not pose a more than 5% risk to Blim. A large amount of work described in WD 1 was carried out to develop an MSE framework to consistency and robustness test a candidate refer- ence point system for North East Atlantic stocks. However, WKREF2 recommended that further work needs to be carried out to condition and test the simulation framework before the conclu- sions could be adopted by ICES and incorporated into the guidelines. A number of considerations for defining MSY related reference points were discussed including using model validation and prediction skill to ensure that ICES provide robust and credible ad- vice. There is evidence that density dependence (DD) is important in the majority of ICES stocks (68% in recruitment and 54% in growth). The correct prediction of the shape and strength of density-dependence in productivity is key to predicting future stock development and providing the best possible long-term fisheries management advice. A suggested approach to use surplus production models (SPMs) to account for DD in FMSY was suggested and discussed but there was no consensus on whether that approach was appropriate. There was consensus that the FECO approach as a means of adapting target fishing mortality to medium-term changes in productiv- ity should be included in the guidelines subject to a benchmark and ACOM approval. While WKREF1 and 2 focused mainly on Category 1 stocks ToR c) called for a “simplified and harmonised set of guidelines for estimating MSY and precautionary reference points applicable in the advice framework across various ICES stock categories.” Ideally the ICES assessment cat- egories should provide equivalent risk across all stocks. This issue was discussed but no recom- mendations emerged. There was no consensus a revised reference point framework was proposed at WKREF2. How- ever, it was agreed that it should be presented here for further discussion at ACOM and other fora. The key feature of the suggested approach is that the stock status evaluation is treated in- dependent of the Advice Rule (AR). The main feature of the system is that the biomass trigger is not linked to a stock status evaluation, it is linked to the expected biomass when fishing at the target fishing mortality, in contrast to the current ICES approach. It also entailed that FMSY would also become an upper limit of fishing mortality and that the advised fishing mortality would be set at or lower than that level. WKREF2 did not discuss what to do in situations where SSB〈 Blim or alternative forms of HCR for the advice rule. Building community understanding and con- sensus around simplified and harmonised guidelines has yet to be achieved. A further workshop WKREF3 will be required to achieve that aim. The report includes 6 recommendations for ACOM consideration.
    Description: ICES
    Description: The main objective of the workshop was to review the recommendations of WKREF1 and con- sider how these might feed into a new reference points framework and guidelines for ICES. There were a number of presentations on the wider issues of best practice for reference points, the Allee effect, density dependence and the WKIRISH approach. The starting point was to try and develop a set of simplified and harmonised guidelines based on the WKREF1 report rather than evolving the current guidelines to include the WKREF1 conclusions. A key aspect of the meeting was to allow for discussions in order to build a shared understanding of the strengths and weakness of the current framework and of the new framework emerging from WKREF1.
    Description: Published
    Description: Non Refereed
    Keywords: ICES ; Reference points ; Management advice ; Fisheries ; Fishery management reference points
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
    Format: 103pp
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2022-10-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2022. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Dowd, S., Chapman, M., Koehn, L., & Hoagland, P. The economic tradeoffs and ecological impacts associated with a potential mesopelagic fishery in the California Current. Ecological Applications, 32(4), (2022): e2578, https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2578.
    Description: The ocean's mesopelagic zone (200–1000 m) remains one of the most understudied parts of the ocean despite knowledge that mesopelagic fishes are highly abundant. Apex predators from the surface waters are known to consume these fishes, constituting an important ecological interaction. Some countries have begun exploring the potential harvest of mesopelagic fishes to supply fishmeal and fish oil markets due to the high fish abundance in the mesopelagic zone compared with overfished surface waters. This study explored the economic and ecological implications of a moratorium on the harvest of mesopelagic fishes such as lanternfish off the US West Coast, one of the few areas where such resources are managed. We adapted a bioeconomic decision model to examine the tradeoffs between the values gained from a hypothetical mesopelagic fishery with the potential values lost from declines in predators of mesopelagic fishes facing a reduced prey resource. The economic rationale for a moratorium on harvesting mesopelagics was sensitive both to ecological relationships and the scale of the nonmarket values attributed to noncommercial predators. Using a California Current-based ecological simulation model, we found that most modeled predators of mesopelagic fishes increased in biomass even under high mesopelagic harvest rates, but the changes (either increases or decreases) were small, with relatively few predators responding with more than a 10% change in their biomass. While the ecological simulations implied that a commercial mesopelagic fishery might not have large biomass impacts for many species in the California Current system, there is still a need to further explore the various roles of the mesopelagic zone in the ocean.
    Description: Sally Dowd acknowledges sponsorship from the WHOI Summer Student Fellowship and the Rausser College of Natural Resources Honors Program at UC Berkeley. This project would not have been possible without the guidance provided by Kama Thieler and Carl Boettiger. Porter Hoagland acknowledges funding from the Audacious Project, a collaborative endeavor, housed at TED and the J. Seward Johnson Fund in support of the Marine Policy Center at WHOI.
    Keywords: Bioeconomic model ; Fisheries ; Mesopelagic fishes ; Moratorium ; Nonmarket value ; Predators ; Rpath ; Willingness-to-pay values
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2022-05-27
    Description: Buesseler, K., Jin, D., Kourantidou, M., Levin, D., Ramakrishna, K., Renaud, P., Ausubel, J., Baltes, K., Gjerde, K., Holland, M., Kostel, K., LaCapra, V., Martin, A., Sosik, H., Thorrold, S., Tierney, T., Joyce, K., Renier, N., Taylor, E. (2022). The Ocean Twilight Zone’s Role in Climate Change. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 32 pp.
    Description: The ocean twilight zone (more formally known as the mesopelagic zone) plays a fundamental role in global climate. It is the mid-ocean region roughly 100 to 1000 meters below the surface, encompassing a half-mile deep belt of water that spans more than two-thirds of our planet. The top of the ocean twilight zone only receives 1% of incident sunlight and the bottom level is void of sunlight. Life in the ocean twilight zone helps to transport billions of metric tons (gigatonnes) of carbon annually from the upper ocean into the deep sea, due in part to processes known as the biological carbon pump. Once carbon moves below roughly 1000 meters depth in the ocean, it can remain out of the atmosphere for centuries to millennia. Without the benefits of the biological carbon pump, the atmospheric CO 2 concentration would increase by approximately 200 ppm 1 which would significantly amplify the negative effects of climate change that the world is currently trying to curtail and reverse. Unfortunately, existing scientific knowledge about this vast zone of the ocean, such as how chemical elements flow through its living systems and the physical environment, is extremely limited, jeopardizing the efforts to improve climate predictions and to inform fisheries management and ocean policy development.
    Description: Funding is: The Audacious Project housed at TED
    Keywords: Climate ; Mesopelagic ; Twilight Zone ; Fisheries ; Carbon Dioxide Removal ; Ocean ; Biological Carbon Pump ; Solubility Pump ; Carbon ; Marine Snow
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Other
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2024-06-13
    Description: In a marine environment that is rapidly changing due to anthropogenic activities and climate change, area-based management tools are often used to mitigate threats and conserve biodiversity. Marine protected areas (MPAs) are amongst the most widespread and recognized marine conservation tools worldwide, however, MPAs alone are inadequate to address the environmental crisis. The promotion of other effective area-based conservation measures (OECMs) under draft Target 3 of the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework, i.e., conserving 30% of marine areas by 2030, holds promise to acknowledge sites and practices occurring beyond MPAs that contribute to conservation. Here, we evaluate the potential recognition of OECMs into Indonesia's national policy framework on marine resource management and provide the first-ever overview of distribution and types of potential marine OECMs in Indonesia, including a review of the existing evidence on conservation effectiveness. We identified 〉 390 potential marine OECMs, led by government, customary and local communities, or the private sector, towards diverse management objectives, including habitat protection, traditional/customary management, fisheries, tourism, or other purposes. While some evidence exists regarding the conservation effectiveness of these practices, the long-term impacts on biodiversity of all potential marine OECMs in Indonesia are unknown. Many OECM elements have been included in several national policies, yet there are no established mechanisms to identify, recognize and report sites as OECMs in Indonesia. We propose four transformational strategies for future OECM recognition in Indonesia, namely: (i) safeguard customary and traditional communities, (ii) leverage cross-sector and cross-scale collaboration, (iii) focus on delivering outcomes, and (iv) streamline legal frameworks. Our study shows that OECMs have the potential to play a significant role in underpinning marine area-based conservation in Indonesia, including supporting the Government of Indonesia in reaching national and international conservation targets and goals.
    Keywords: Area-based management ; Biodiversity conservation ; Customary management ; Fisheries ; Co-management ; Sustainable marine management
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: This book provides a collection of research and review articles useful for researchers, engineers, students and industry experts in the bioenergy field. The practical and valuable information can be utilized for developing and implementing renewable energy projects, selecting different waste feedstocks, technologies, and products. A detailed insight into advanced technologies such as hydrothermal liquefaction, torrefaction, and supercritical CO2 extraction for making sustainable biofuels and chemicals is provided. A case study on food waste-to-energy valorization processes in Latin America provides experts’ insights to promote a circular economy.
    Keywords: Koelreuteria paniculata biodiesel ; non-edible feedstock ; transesterification ; physicochemical characterization ; optimization ; phenol ; hydrogenation ; Ni/CNT ; cyclohexanol ; transfer hydrogenation ; microalga ; fatty acid ; Vietnam ; Nannochloropsis ; Desmodesmus ; lignocellulosic ; bio-oil ; biocrude ; upgrading ; supercritical extraction ; supercritical CO2 ; hydrotreatment ; biorefinery ; pyrolysis ; hydrothermal liquefaction ; torrefaction ; oats ; maize ; straw ; biochar ; centralized waste valorization ; lifecycle thinking ; AHP ; side flow ; anaerobic digestion ; composting ; rice straw ; bio-crude ; methanol ; phenols ; esters ; energy-consumption ratio ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
    Language: English
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: Integrative omics of plants in response to stress conditions play more crucial roles in the post-genomic era. High-quality genomic data provide more deeper understanding of how plants to survive under environmental stresses. This book is focused on concluding the recent progress in the Protein and Proteome Atlas in plants under different stresses. It covers various aspects of plant protein ranging from agricultural proteomics, structure and function of proteins, and approaches for protein identification and quantification.
    Keywords: QH301-705.5 ; QK1-989 ; Q1-390 ; phosphoproteomics ; GLU1 ; somatic embryogenesis ; CHA-SQ-1 ; nitrogen fertilizer ; chilling stress ; differentially abundant proteins ; ATP synthase ; photosynthetic parameters ; photosynthesis ; constitutive splicing ; phosphorylation ; Jatropha curcas ; plants under stress ; postharvest freshness ; Alternanthera philoxeroides ; rubber latex ; Millettia pinnata ; molecular and biochemical basis ; filling kernel ; drought stress ; comparative proteomic analysis ; domain ; micro-exons ; phylogeny ; phos-tagTM ; E. angustifolia ; root cell elongation ; ABA ; pollen abortion ; lncRNA ; transcriptome ; radish ; redox homeostasis ; Nelumbo nucifera ; sugar beet ; shotgun proteomics ; proteomes ; high-temperature stress ; post-genomics era ; model plant ; salt tolerance ; miRNA ; wheat ; physiological response ; stress ; visual proteome map ; transcriptional dynamics ; leaf ; maize ; Dunaliella salina ; phosphatidylinositol ; S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase ; Gossypium hirsutum ; flavonoid biosynthesis ; phosphatase ; wood vinegar ; heat shock proteins ; silicate limitation ; purine metabolism ; natural rubber biosynthesis ; ancient genes ; cotton ; rubber grass ; abiotic stress ; heat stress ; maturation ; low-temperature stress ; molecular basis ; transcriptome sequencing ; ROS scavenging ; widely targeted metabolomics ; transdifferentiation ; seed development ; alternative splicing ; cultivars ; inositol ; salt stress ; chlorophyll fluorescence parameters ; proteome ; carbon fixation ; AGPase ; transcript-metabolite network ; molecular mechanisms ; Triticum aestivum L. ; Zea mays L. ; ROS ; label-free quantification ; woody oilseed plants ; heat-sensitive spinach variety ; MIPS ; quantitative proteomics ; regulated mechanism ; two-dimensional gel electrophoresis ; potassium ; glutathione ; Salinity stress ; integrated omics ; diatom ; ATP synthase CF1 alpha subunit (chloroplast) ; root ; proteome atlas ; brittle-2 ; mass spectrometry ; genomics ; Taraxacum kok-saghyz ; cytomorphology ; proteomics ; arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi ; signaling pathway ; proteomic ; loss-of-function mutant ; rice ; seedling ; wucai ; leaf sheath ; root and shoot ; antioxidant enzyme ; exon-intron structure diversity ; isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation ; regulation and metabolism ; concerted network ; drought ; heat response ; VIGS ; iTRAQ ; nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) ; stem ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences
    Language: English
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    Publication Date: 2024-04-04
    Description: This eBook is a collection of articles from a Frontiers Research Topic. Frontiers Research Topics are very popular trademarks of the Frontiers Journals Series: they are collections of at least ten articles, all centered on a particular subject. With their unique mix of varied contributions from Original Research to Review Articles, Frontiers Research Topics unify the most influential researchers, the latest key findings and historical advances in a hot research area! Find out more on how to host your own Frontiers Research Topic or contribute to one as an author by contacting the Frontiers Editorial Office: frontiersin.org/about/contact
    Keywords: living marine resources ; Forecasting ; prediction ; fish ; Fisheries ; Seasonal to Decadal Prediction ; Climate services ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PD Science: general issues ; thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RB Earth sciences::RBK Hydrology and the hydrosphere::RBKC Oceanography (seas and oceans)
    Language: English
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-12-21
    Description: This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue Promising Detoxification Strategies to Mitigate Mycotoxins in Food and Feed that was published in Toxins
    Keywords: R5-920 ; RA1190-1270 ; Trichoderma ; n/a ; photodegradation product ; physical decontamination ; growth performance ; toxigenic Fusarium ; curcumin ; mitigation ; Aspergillus flavus ; food and beverage ; ascladiol ; biological control ; antioxidant capability ; trichothecene ; bioprospecting ; turkey ; processing ; chicks ; Sporobolomyces sp. IAM 13481 ; mycotoxins ; epimer ; Tri101 ; enzymes ; neutral electrolyzed water ; antioxidant function ; purification ; ameliorating effects ; aflatoxin-degrading enzyme ; chemical decontamination ; desoxypatulinic acid ; furan rings ; maize ; atmospheric pressure ; biotransformation ; estrogen receptor (ER) ; oxidative stress ; decontamination ; Bacillus shackletonii ; hyssop ; DBD ; degradation ; TQEF-MS/MS ; CYP450 ; enzymatic detoxification ; low temperature plasma ; Fusarium ; AFBO–DNA ; modified mycotoxin ; Bacillus subtilis ANSB060 ; polarity ; thermal treatment ; serum hormones ; mycotoxins mitigation ; mycotoxin ; zearalenone (ZEA) ; cell viability ; detoxification ; patulin ; biodegradation ; interactions ; intracellular and extracellular enzymes ; Bacillus licheniformis CK1 ; deoxynivalenol ; aflatoxins ; aflatoxin B1 ; biological decontamination ; Corylus avellana ; molecular ; Pichia caribbica ; mild technologies ; microbial patulin degradation ; enzyme ; proteomics ; fatty acids ; spores of Ganoderma lucidum ; inhibition ; residue ; food safety ; cold atmospheric pressure plasma technology ; application ; post-weaning female piglets ; laccase ; aflatoxin biodegradation preparation ; Aflatoxin B1 ; microorganism identification ; bic Book Industry Communication::M Medicine
    Language: English
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue Fertilizer Application on Crop Yield that was published in Agronomy
    Keywords: QH301-705.5 ; Q1-390 ; S1-972 ; organic N ; ammonia ; NPK amendments ; corn–soybean rotation ; soil acidity ; phosphorous ; maize yield response to K ; biofertilizer ; agroforestry system ; Copper ; organic farming ; soil nitrogen pools ; net returns ; mineral N ; grain quality ; fertilizer management ; nutrient expert for maize ; sustainability ; organic nutrients ; conservation agriculture ; agronomic response ; S fertilization ; global food demand ; Zea mays L. ; N fertilizer ; nitrogen recovery efficiency ; Bacillus pumilus ; Orychophragmus violaceus L. ; soil erosion ; soil health ; saline tract ; soil K supply ; soil N mineralization ; soil biota ; potassium ; production system ; nitrate reductase activity ; site-specific K management ; Value Cost Ratio ; durum wheat ; conventional farming ; nitrate ; soil organic matter ; grain yield ; integrated nutrient management ; K use efficiency ; rice-wheat system ; forage legume ; nitrogen physiological recovery ; NADH ; chemical fertilizers ; evergreen agriculture ; green manure ; N fertilization ; yield ; NADH-dehydrogenase ; wheat ; site-specific nutrient management ; hybrid rice ; NUE ; balanced use of fertilizers ; growth promotion ; calcium ; humid Mediterranean climate ; Complex I ; rice ; maize ; Zinc ; potentially mineralizable N ; Agrotain® urea ; economics ; nitrate assimilation ; management ; nitrogen uptake ; wheat yields ; nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) ; soil N supply ; maize crop manager ; long-term productivity ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences
    Language: English
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  • 48
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: International trade is highly affected by mycotoxin contaminations, which result in an annual 5% to 10% loss of global crop production. In the last decade, the mycotoxin scenario has been complicated by the progressive understanding—alongside emerging mycotoxins—of the parallel presence of modified (masked and conjugated) forms, in addition to the previously free known ones. The present Toxins Special Issue presents original research papers and reviews that deal with the fates of all these forms of mycotoxins with respect to aspects that cover traditional and industrial food processing, yearly grain campaign peculiar conditions and management, novel analytical solutions, consumer exposure, and biomarker-assessment directions. It gives a taste of an exciting scientific field that has several implications for our daily life because (i) it covers our diet practically and from every point of view, (ii) it intersects with our culinary uses and customs, but also industrial production processes, and (iii) it involves a careful evaluation of costs and benefits and a constant and continuous improvement of mycotoxin mitigation strategies.
    Keywords: mycotoxin ; milling ; bran ; semolina ; cooking ; dietary exposure ; aflatoxins ; alkaline ; hydrolyzed fumonisins ; fumonisins ; food processing ; maize ; masa ; matrix-associated mycotoxins ; modified mycotoxins ; tortillas ; mycotoxins ; trichothecenes ; thermal degradation ; decontamination ; mass spectrometry ; detoxification ; design of experiment ; LC-MS/MS ; Ochratoxin A ; 2′R-ochratoxin A ; 14(R)-ochratoxin A ; coffee ; degradation ; processing ; roasting ; masked mycotoxins ; emerging mycotoxins ; Fusarium ; Serbia ; fluorescence polarization immunoassay ; T-2 toxin ; HT-2 toxin ; T-2 glucoside ; HT-2 glucoside ; wheat ; validation study ; screening method ; deoxynivalenol ; children ; adolescents ; pregnant women ; vegetarians ; biomonitoring ; acrylamide ; multiple mitigation strategies ; design of experiments ; bakery food processing ; biscuits ; Fusarium toxins ; beer ; malt ; risk assessment ; deoxynivalenol-3-glucoside ; conversion ; Chinese steamed bread ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
    Language: English
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  • 49
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-12-21
    Description: Contamination of foods and agricultural commodities by various types of toxigenic fungi is a concerning issue for human and animal health. Moulds naturally present in foods can produce mycotoxins and contaminate foodstuffs under favourable conditions of temperature, relative humidity, pH, and nutrient availability. Mycotoxins are, in general, stable molecules that are difficult to remove from foods once they have been produced. Therefore, the prevention of mycotoxin contamination is one of the main goals of the agriculture and food industries. Chemical control or decontamination techniques may be quite efficient; however, the more sustainable and restricted use of fungicides, the lack of efficiency in some foods, and the consumer demand for chemical-residue-free foods require new approaches to control this hazard. Therefore, food safety demands continued research efforts for exploring new strategies to reduce mycotoxin contamination. This Special Issue contains original contributions and reviews that advance the knowledge about the most current promising approaches to minimize mycotoxin contamination, including biological control agents, phytochemical antifungal compounds, enzyme detoxification, and the use of novel technologies.
    Keywords: R5-920 ; RA1190-1270 ; n/a ; decontamination ; superheated steam ; quercetin glycosides ; antagonism ; mode of action ; corn ; Botrytis sp. ; AITC ; binding ; degradation ; brine shrimp bioassay ; apple pomace ; nanoparticles ; enzymatic detoxification ; Bacillus ; estrogen response element ; Fusarium ; biological detoxification ; abiotic factors ; stability ; fumonisin esterase FumD ; mycotoxigenic fungi ; Aspergillus flavus ; Aflatoxin M1 ; Fusarium graminearum ; milk ; Penicillium digitatum ; biocontrol agents ; biological control ; dry-cured ham ; mycotoxin reduction ; Fusarium sp. ; enzyme kinetics ; Penicillium nordicum ; Satureja montana ; roasted coffee ; fermentation ; crisp biscuit ; detoxification ; essential oils ; gene expression ; probiotics ; zearalenone ; mycotoxins ; degradation products ; Geothrichum citri-aurantii ; garlic-derived extracts ; Zearalenone ; biodegradation ; EU limits ; storage ; Origanum virens ; aflatoxin ; fungal growth reduction ; green chemistry ; Penicillium italicum ; deoxynivalenol ; ?-Fe2O3 ; ochratoxin A (OTA) ; wheat ; cell-free extracts of Aspergillus oryzae ; photocatalysis ; wheat quality ; post-harvest phytopathogen ; cold plasma ; pinnatifidanoside D ; ochratoxin A ; oats ; cell proliferation ; estrogen receptor ; Penicillium verrucosum ; pig production performance ; phloridzin ; maize ; biotransformation ; fumonisin ; fungi ; bic Book Industry Communication::M Medicine
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  • 50
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: Advancements in high-throughput “Omics” techniques have revolutionized plant molecular biology research. Proteomics offers one of the best options for the functional analysis of translated regions of the genome, generating a wealth of detailed information regarding the intrinsic mechanisms of plant stress responses. Various proteomic approaches are being exploited extensively for elucidating master regulator proteins which play key roles in stress perception and signaling, and these approaches largely involve gel-based and gel-free techniques, including both label-based and label-free protein quantification. Furthermore, post-translational modifications, subcellular localization, and protein–protein interactions provide deeper insight into protein molecular function. Their diverse applications contribute to the revelation of new insights into plant molecular responses to various biotic and abiotic stressors.
    Keywords: SB1-1110 ; QH301-705.5 ; Q1-390 ; 14-3-3 proteins ; n/a ; targeted two-dimensional electrophoresis ; somatic embryogenesis ; nitrogen metabolism ; subtilase ; Sporisorium scitamineum ; non-orthodox seed ; antioxidant activity ; sweet potato plants infected by SPFMV ; photosynthesis ; B. acuminata petals ; chlorophyll deficiency ; seed proteomics ; imbibition ; pollination ; Sarpo Mira ; qRT-PCR ; holm oak ; tuber phosphoproteome ; isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ) ; Quercus ilex ; nucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase ; lettuce ; ?-subunit ; protein phosphatase ; germination ; drought stress ; pyruvate biosynthesis ; weakening of carbon metabolism ; differential proteins ; heterotrimeric G protein ; organ ; LC-MS-based proteomics ; potato proteomics ; smut ; gel-free/label-free proteomics ; ? subunit ; shotgun proteomics ; 2D ; chloroplast ; proteome functional annotation ; Phalaenopsis ; Clematis terniflora DC. ; wheat ; Dn1-1 ; carbon metabolism ; physiological responses ; Zea mays ; phenylpropanoid biosynthesis ; ISR ; mass spectrometric analysis ; patatin ; leaf ; pea (Pisum sativum L.) ; maize ; ergosterol ; Camellia sinensis ; seed storage proteins ; silver nanoparticles ; elevated CO2 ; metacaspase ; SPV2 and SPVG ; SnRK1 ; MALDI-TOF/TOF ; (phospho)-proteomics ; leaf spot ; rice isogenic line ; wheat leaf rust ; pathway analysis ; phosphoproteome ; sugarcane ; senescence ; Oryza sativa L. ; Arabidopsis thaliana ; heat stress ; gene ontology ; innate immunity ; Pseudomonas syringae ; bolting ; chlorophylls ; shoot ; Simmondsia chinensis ; RT-qPCR ; stresses responses ; Solanum tuberosum ; seeds ; GC-TOF-MS ; sucrose ; proteome ; Puccinia recondita ; cultivar ; Zea mays L. ; secondary metabolism ; ROS ; Ricinus communis L. ; after-ripening ; cadmium ; Stagonospora nodorum ; virus induced gene silencing ; quantitative proteomics ; sweet potato plants non-infected by SPFMV ; affinity chromatography ; population variability ; GS3 ; fungal perception ; ammonium ; transcriptome profiling ; mass spectrometry analysis ; papain-like cysteine protease (PLCP) ; cold stress ; nitrate ; late blight disease ; early and late disease stages ; seed imbibition ; lesion mimic mutant ; protease ; proteome map ; seed dormancy ; petal ; 2-DE proteomics ; 2D DIGE ; root ; Phytophthora infestans ; differentially abundant proteins (DAPs) ; polyphenol oxidase ; degradome ; flavonoid ; 14-3-3 ; caspase-like ; proteomics ; RGG4 ; co-infection ; plasma membrane ; chlorotic mutation ; Medicago sativa ; RGG3 ; glycolysis ; barley ; 2-DE ; protein phosphorylation ; western blotting ; N utilization efficiency ; rice ; plant pathogenesis responses ; high temperature ; data-independent acquisition ; pattern recognition receptors ; vegetative storage proteins ; leaf cell wall proteome ; plant-derived smoke ; iTRAQ ; starch ; proteome profiling ; Morus
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  • 51
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: Global crop production must substantially increase to meet the needs of a rapidly growing population. This is constrained by the availability of nutrients, water, and land. There is also an urgent need to reduce the negative environmental impacts of crop production. Collectively, these issues represent one of the greatest challenges of the twenty-first century. Sustainable cropping systems based on ecological principles are the core of integrated approaches to solve this critical challenge. This special issue provides an international basis for revealing the underlying mechanisms of sustainable cropping systems to drive agronomic innovations. It includes review and original research articles that report novel scientific findings on improvement in cropping systems related to crop yields and their resistance to biotic and abiotic stressors, resource use efficiency, environmental impact, sustainability, and ecosystem services.
    Keywords: QH301-705.5 ; Q1-390 ; S1-972 ; nutrient use efficiency ; organic fertilization ; system approach ; Helianthus annuus L. ; catch crop ; Texas High Plains ; forage yield and quality ; living mulch ; nutrient cycling ; quality ; leguminous cover crop ; conservation ; light ; sustainable crop production ; crop rotation ; WHCNS ; stemborer ; complexity ; perennial ; manure ; maize production ; SOC and STN stocks ; cover crops ; forage pea ; yield ; SDS-PAGE analysis ; vineyard system ; double cropping ; wheat ; partial returns ; soybean ; vetch ; nitrogen use efficiency ; enzyme activities ; agrobiodiversity ; gross margin ; residue C and N release ; systematic review ; maize ; protein crops ; no-tillage ; environmental quality ; fall grazing ; kura clover ; cover crop ; organization ; scenario analyses ; cropping system design ; irrigation ; sustainable yield index ; multiple correspondence analysis (MCA) ; Acidic soil ; Europe ; Zea mais L. ; shade ; up-scaling ; water ; conservation agriculture ; water use efficiency ; Triticum aestivum L. ; forage sorghum ; N use efficiency ; nutrient balance ; organic cropping system ; forage ; durum wheat ; cropping systems ; nitrate ; grain yield ; nitrogen nutrition ; conventionalization ; crop residue incorporation ; cereal rye ; green manure ; straw decomposition ; hierarchical patch dynamics ; N uptake ; farmer’s perception ; pearl millet ; nitrogen ; faba bean ; agroecology ; harvesting strategies ; rice ; gluten fractions ; weed suppression ; economics ; mineral N fertilization ; push-pull technology ; growth ; potato (Solanum tuberosum) ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: The bioeconomy concept aims to add sustainability to the production, transformation, and trade of biological goods. Though implemented around the world, the development of national bioeconomies is uneven, especially in the global South, where major challenges exist in Sub-Saharan Africa. In this context, the international BiomassWeb project aimed to underpin the bioeconomy concept by applying the value web approach, which seeks to uncover complex interlinked value webs instead of linear value chains. The project also aimed to develop intervention options to strengthen and optimize the synergies and trade-offs among different value chains. The Special Issue “Advances in Food and Non-Food Biomass Production, Processing and Use in Sub-Saharan Africa: Toward a Basis for a Regional Bioeconomy"" compiles 23 articles produced in this framework. The articles are grouped in four sections: the value web approach; the production side; processing, transformation and trade; and global views.
    Keywords: QH301-705.5 ; Q1-390 ; S1-972 ; value addition ; cassava variants ; Biomass ; pollution ; welfare ; biomass scenarios ; equity ; bio-based ; husk ; bioproductivity ; transdisciplinary research ; groundnut ; land-use ; mucilage ; fiber ; corncob ; neighborhoods ; mixed methods ; crop residue ; impact ; Ghana ; germination ; bamboo ; rural development ; multipurpose tree on farmland ; knowledge-based bioeconomy ; multi-functionality ; access ; value chain ; availability ; development policy ; biomass utilization ; homegarden ; adoption ; primary sector ; cluster analysis ; Nigeria ; food bearing ; innovation ; CGE ; value web ; biomass ; bioenergy ; comparative advantage ; maize ; Policy Analysis Matrix ; basic needs ; multistorey coffee system ; collaboration ; solid waste ; traditional agroforestry ; amylose ; edible ; pulp ; governance ; intensification options ; parchment ; green economy ; farmland ; value-added ; renewable energy ; endogenous switching regression ; smallholders ; food and non-food benefit ; crop model ; carotenoids retention ; family farming ; contract farming ; contract design ; richness ; development ; biological goods ; soil amendment ; Biomass-based value web ; sustainability ; deforestation ; sustainable development ; typology ; cassava smallholders ; push–pull technology ; circular economy ; methane ; Ethiopia ; willingness to pay ; cassava farmers ; biochar ; Yayu Biosphere Reserve ; bioeconomy ; bio-based economy ; food and non-food ; self-purging pyrolysis ; productivity ; demand-driven research ; cassava ; leadership ; probit ; intragenerational justice ; fairness ; productivity differentials ; technology ; high-tech bioeconomy ; cassava processors ; intensity ; phytotoxicity ; global biomass ; food security ; cassava processing ; yellow cassava ; plantain residues ; fertilizer-yield-response ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences
    Language: English
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  • 53
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    Springer Nature | Palgrave Macmillan
    Publication Date: 2024-03-29
    Description: This open access book explores fishing livelihoods in the context of the wider contexts in which they are embedded. Drawing on case studies from across the Asia-Pacific region, the book highlights how fishing livelihoods are shaped by globalisation, social relationships and governance. The book concludes by showing how better understanding these relationships can contribute to governance for healthier ecosystems and social wellbeing. This is an open access book. This is an open access book.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; marine social science ; fishing livelihoods in the Asia-Pacific ; sustainable fishing ; environmental sustainability ; food security ; coastal conservation ; fish stocks ; fisheries governance ; Fishing livelihoods and social diversity ; Fishing livelihoods and wellbeing ; Open Access ; thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JP Politics and government::JPQ Central / national / federal government::JPQB Central / national / federal government policies ; thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHB Sociology ; thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment ; thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RG Geography::RGB Physical geography and topography ; thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment::RNF Environmental management ; thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RG Geography::RGC Human geography
    Language: English
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  • 54
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-09
    Description: This book focuses on the utilization of biomass for energy applications and mainly covers the original research and studies related to thermochemical conversion, biological conversion and physical conversion. It contains a summary the current scientific knowledge in the field of biomass utilization, which is the first of its kind in the literature. Energy potentials and different principles of energy transformation from various renewable energy sources (bamboo, wood residue, straw, sorrel, hay, pines, sunflower stalks, hazelnut husks, quinoa, camelina, crambe, safflower, muscantus and municipal sewage sludge, among others) are described in detail in this book. Different types of pyrolysis or torrefaction processing, combustion, thermal degradation, mechanical properties affecting processing, pre-treatment or treatment processes, or other processes based on thermochemical methods are described as well. The integral part of this book is the bibliometric analysis of worldwide publication trends on biomass and bioenergy with respect to the research evolution with the possibility of predicting future scenarios and the participation of stakeholders in the sector.
    Keywords: pyrolysis ; catalyst ; wood ; waste ; energy ; biogas ; biomass ; cropping system ; establishment ; intercropping ; low-input ; maize ; miscanthus ; methane yield ; perennial crop ; solid biofuel ; waste management ; Coffea spp. ; waste biomass ; calorific value ; mechanical durability ; Pinus pseudostrobus ; Pinus leiophylla ; Pinus montezumae ; pyrolysis kinetics ; TGA-DTG ; Friedman-OFW-KAS models ; FT-IR ; deposit ; biomass industrial boiler ; alkali metal ; circulating fluidized bed ; olive mill solid wastes ; natural binder ; densification ; compressive strength ; Physico-chemical properties ; kinetic parameters ; hydrogen ; reactor headspace ; product inhibition ; kinetic modelling ; clostridium acetobutylicum ; biomass analysis ; alternative biofuels ; emissions ; sewage sludge ; biofuels ; combustion ; grate furnace ; emission ; ash deposition ; biomass densification ; mechanical compaction ; processing factors ; briquette durability ; multivariate tests of significance ; renewable energy ; bioenergy scenario ; biomasses ; systematic review ; pressure torrefaction ; pellet ; renewable energy sources ; energy consumption ; grinding ; thermogravimetric analysis ; proximate analysis ; high heating value ; torrefied biomass ; biochar ; one-pot fractionation with acidic 1,4-dioxane ; Moso bamboo ; furfural ; phenolated lignin ; enzymatic hydrolysis ; high-efficiency fractionation ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TB Technology: general issues
    Language: English
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  • 55
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: Dietary trace minerals are pivotal and hold a key role in numerous metabolic processes. Trace mineral deficiencies (except for iodine, iron, and zinc) do not often develop spontaneously in adults on ordinary diets; infants are more vulnerable because their growth is rapid and their intake varies. Trace mineral imbalances can result from hereditary disorders (e.g., hemochromatosis, Wilson disease), kidney dialysis, parenteral nutrition, restrictive diets prescribed for people with inborn errors of metabolism, or various popular diet plans. The Special Issue “Dietary Trace Minerals” comprised 13 peer-reviewed papers on the most recent evidence regarding the dietary intake of trace minerals, as well as their effect on the prevention and treatment of non-communicable diseases. Original contributions and literature reviews further demonstrated the crucial and central part that dietary trace minerals play in human health and development. This editorial provides a brief and concise overview of the content of the Dietary Trace Minerals Special Issue.
    Keywords: QH301-705.5 ; Q1-390 ; TX341-641 ; serum iron ; polyphenols ; Caco-2 cell bioassay ; copper metabolic system ; phytate ; copper/silver transport ; international nutrition ; body composition ; children ; healthy food ; biofilm ; yellow bean ; iron deficiency ; iron bioavailability ; stress sentinel ; zinc ; zinc deficiency ; Gallus gallus ; vitamin D supplements ; adolescents ; germ ; Arab ; anemia ; metagenome ; bioavailability ; Langerhans cells ; iron absorption ; magnesium ions ; ferritin ; ascorbic acid ; adults ; cell membrane ; cooking time ; dietary trace minerals ; gut microbiome ; kaempferol 3-glucoside ; selenium ; Caco-2 ; Nrf2 ; beans ; Biofortification ; epicatechin ; Phaseolus vulgaris L. ; copper ; intestinal morphometry ; biotin deficiency ; diet ; in vitro digestion ; biofortification ; vitamin D ; microbial development ; dairy food ; bioimpedance ; bioassay ; acrodermatitis enteropathica ; iron transport and metabolism ; maize ; iron deficiency anemia ; homeostasis ; silicon ; silver nanoparticles ; deficiency ; hemochromatosis ; adenosine triphosphate ; iron ; Mexico ; plasma ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences
    Language: English
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  • 56
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-11
    Description: Water Footprint Assessment is a young research field that considers how freshwater use, scarcity, and pollution relate to consumption, production, and trade patterns. This book presents a wide range of studies within this new field. It is argued that collective and coordinated action - at different scale levels and along all stages of commodity supply chains - is necessary to bring about more sustainable, efficient, and equitable water use. The presented studies range from farm to catchment and country level, and show how different actors along the supply chain of final commodities can contribute to more sustainable water use in the chain.
    Keywords: TA1-2040 ; T1-995 ; TA170-171 ; effective rain ; cabbage ; urban area ; water footprint benchmarks ; value addition ; threshold ; Haihe River Basin ; land footprint ; irrigation intensity ; environmental sustainability ; water resources ; virtual water trade ; land use change ; blue water footprint ; embedded resource accounting ; multi-level governance ; soil type ; cattle ; crop water demand ; lettuce ; modelling ; sustainability ; water scarcity footprint ; water scarcity ; green water availability ; root water uptake ; water footprint ; water productivity ; South Africa ; economic land productivity ; crop trade ; Amazon ; Cerrado ; wheat-bread ; international trade ; life cycle analysis ; broccoli ; value chain ; oil palm (Eleasis guineensis) ; crop choice ; water accounting ; retail ; Malawi ; river basin management ; Steenkoppies Aquifer ; carrots ; consumers ; wheat ; silk ; soybean ; water footprint assessment ; CSR ; sericulture ; food self-sufficiency ; water management ; water footprint accounting ; packhouse ; economic water productivities ; groundwater ; consumption ; Central Europe ; maize ; beetroot ; economic water productivity ; Mato Grosso ; regulation ; food security ; water saving ; crop ages ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TB Technology: general issues::TBX History of engineering and technology
    Language: English
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  • 57
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    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-11-17
    Description: Mycotoxins are secondary metabolites produced by the fungi of different species (mainly Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Penicillium), with toxic effects for humans and animals. These mycotoxins can contaminate food and feed. The European Union (EU) has established the maximum permitted or recommended levels for well-known mycotoxins in different foodstuffs. However, there are other mycotoxins that are not included in the regulations: the “emerging mycotoxins” (whose toxicity is still not clear), and the “modified or masked mycotoxins” (produced as a consequence of a detoxification strategy of the host plant of the fungus or during food processing). These mycotoxins could pose a risk and should also be taken into account. In order to assure consumers’ health, analytical methods for the accurate determination of mycotoxins in different food matrices and feeds are required. In this sense, liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) is a powerful tool for their unique identification and quantification. Moreover, the use of high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) allows one to identify novel mycotoxins and targeted/untargeted approaches for study. This Special Issue compiles recent applications of LC–MS/MS in mycotoxin studies, as well as the development and validation of new analytical methods for their identification and quantification in different food matrices and feed, occurrence studies, and the biomonitoring of mycotoxins and their metabolites in biological fluids.
    Keywords: cereals ; mycotoxigenic fungi ; phylogeny ; deoxynivalenol ; zearalenone ; Sub-Saharan Africa ; aflatoxins ; mycotoxins ; total diet study ; food contaminants ; LC-MS/MS ; Alternaria toxins ; grape ; modified QuEChERS ; UHPLC-MS/MS ; n/a ; traditional sorghum malts ; Aspergillus ; LC/MS/MS ; Biomarkers ; exposure ; LC-HRMS ; pig ; broiler chicken ; multi-mycotoxin ; stability ; malting ; brewing ; beer ; feed ; liquid chromatography ; fluorescence detection ; mass spectrometry ; solid-liquid extraction ; co-occurrence ; metabolism ; high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) ; microsomal incubation ; glucuronidation ; human ; biomonitoring ; UPLC-MS/MS ; rumen fluid ; maize silage ; matrix-matched ; moniliformin ; lanthanide complexes ; LC-UV ; collaborative study ; isotopic dilution ; compliance ; infant food ; emergent mycotoxins ; urine ; dispersive solid-phase extraction ; magnetic carbon nanotube composite ; pesticides ; Q-Exactive Orbitrap ; CBD capsule ; nutraceutical ; Fusarium ; maize ; masked mycotoxins ; agricultural regions ; South Africa ; Mycotoxins ; exposure assessment ; Algeria ; mixed feed rations ; QuEChERS ; dispersive solid phase extraction ; high-resolution mass spectrometry ; data independent SWATH ; bic Book Industry Communication::M Medicine
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  • 58
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: - Water resources management should be assessed under climate change conditions, as historic data cannot replicate future climatic conditions. - Climate change impacts on water resources are bound to affect all water uses, i.e., irrigated agriculture, domestic and industrial water supply, hydropower generation, and environmental flow (of streams and rivers) and water level (of lakes). - Bottom-up approaches, i.e., the forcing of hydrologic simulation models with climate change models’ outputs, are the most common engineering practices and considered as climate-resilient water management approaches. - Hydrologic simulations forced by climate change scenarios derived from regional climate models (RCMs) can provide accurate assessments of the future water regime at basin scales. - Irrigated agriculture requires special attention as it is the principal water consumer and alterations of both precipitation and temperature patterns will directly affect agriculture yields and incomes. - Integrated water resources management (IWRM) requires multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches, with climate change to be an emerging cornerstone in the IWRM concept.
    Keywords: Precipitation ; Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM) ; Multi-Satellite Precipitation Analysis (TMPA) ; Upper Indus Basin (UIB) ; Himalaya ; streamflow ; extreme rainfall ; watershed ; dynamics of saline lakes ; extremely changing points ; extreme weather ; temporal trend ; climate change ; salinization ; water resources management ; drinking water ; debris ; water balance ; climatic change ; dam capacity ; simulation of sediment transport ; Athabasca River ; climate projection ; hydrologic modelling ; peak-flow ; return period ; stationary analysis ; non-stationary analysis ; global ; temperature ; precipitation ; Net Irrigation Water Requirement ; maize ; hydrologic modeling ; reanalysis gridded datasets ; ERA-Interim ; Balkan Peninsula ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
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  • 59
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    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-12-20
    Description: Quantitative land remote sensing has recently advanced dramatically, particularly in China. It has been largely driven by vast governmental investment, the availability of a huge amount of Chinese satellite data, geospatial information requirements for addressing pressing environmental issues and other societal benefits. Many individuals have also fostered and made great contributions to its development, and Prof. Xiaowen Li was one of these leading figures. This book is published in memory of Prof. Li. The papers collected in this book cover topics from surface reflectance simulation, inversion algorithm and estimation of variables, to applications in optical, thermal, Lidar and microwave remote sensing. The wide range of variables include directional reflectance, chlorophyll fluorescence, aerosol optical depth, incident solar radiation, albedo, surface temperature, upward longwave radiation, leaf area index, fractional vegetation cover, forest biomass, precipitation, evapotranspiration, freeze/thaw snow cover, vegetation productivity, phenology and biodiversity indicators. They clearly reflect the current level of research in this area. This book constitutes an excellent reference suitable for upper-level undergraduate students, graduate students and professionals in remote sensing.
    Keywords: G1-922 ; Q1-390 ; gross primary production (GPP) ; interference filter ; Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) ; cost-efficient ; precipitation ; topographic effects ; land surface temperature ; Land surface emissivity ; scale effects ; spatial-temporal variations ; statistics methods ; inter-annual variation ; spatial representativeness ; FY-3C/MERSI ; sunphotometer ; PROSPECT ; passive microwave ; flux measurements ; urban scale ; vegetation dust-retention ; multiple ecological factors ; leaf age ; standard error of the mean ; LUT method ; spectra ; SURFRAD ; Land surface temperature ; aboveground biomass ; uncertainty ; land surface variables ; copper ; Northeast China ; forest disturbance ; end of growing season (EOS) ; random forest model ; probability density function ; downward shortwave radiation ; machine learning ; MODIS products ; composite slope ; daily average value ; canopy reflectance ; spatiotemporal representative ; light use efficiency ; hybrid method ; disturbance index ; quantitative remote sensing inversion ; SCOPE ; GPP ; South China’s ; anisotropic reflectance ; vertical structure ; snow cover ; land cover change ; start of growing season (SOS) ; MS–PT algorithm ; aerosol ; pixel unmixing ; HiWATER ; algorithmic assessment ; surface radiation budget ; latitudinal pattern ; ICESat GLAS ; vegetation phenology ; SIF ; metric comparison ; Antarctica ; spatial heterogeneity ; comprehensive field experiment ; reflectance model ; sinusoidal method ; NDVI ; BRDF ; cloud fraction ; NPP ; VPM ; China ; dense forest ; vegetation remote sensing ; 〈i〉Cunninghamia〈/i〉 ; high resolution ; geometric-optical model ; phenology ; LiDAR ; ZY-3 MUX ; point cloud ; multi-scale validation ; Fraunhofer Line Discrimination (FLD) ; rice ; fractional vegetation cover (FVC) ; interpolation ; high-resolution freeze/thaw ; drought ; Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) ; controlling factors ; sampling design ; downscaling ; n/a ; Chinese fir ; MRT-based model ; RADARSAT-2 ; northern China ; leaf area density ; potential evapotranspiration ; black-sky albedo (BSA) ; decision tree ; CMA ; fluorescence quantum efficiency in dark-adapted conditions (FQE) ; surface solar irradiance ; validation ; geographical detector model ; vertical vegetation stratification ; spatiotemporal distribution and variation ; gap fraction ; phenological parameters ; spatio-temporal ; albedometer ; variability ; GLASS ; gross primary productivity (GPP) ; EVI2 ; machine learning algorithms ; latent heat ; GLASS LAI time series ; boreal forest ; leaf ; maize ; heterogeneity ; temperature profiles ; crop-growing regions ; satellite observations ; rugged terrain ; species richness ; voxel ; LAI ; TMI data ; GF-1 WFV ; spectral ; HJ-1 CCD ; leaf area index ; evapotranspiration ; land-surface temperature products (LSTs) ; SPI ; AVHRR ; Tibetan Plateau ; snow-free albedo ; PROSPECT-5B+SAILH (PROSAIL) model ; MCD43A3 C6 ; 3D reconstruction ; photoelectric detector ; multi-data set ; BEPS ; aerosol retrieval ; plant functional type ; multisource data fusion ; remote sensing ; leaf spectral properties ; solo slope ; land surface albedo ; longwave upwelling radiation (LWUP) ; terrestrial LiDAR ; AMSR2 ; geometric optical radiative transfer (GORT) model ; MuSyQ-GPP algorithm ; tree canopy ; FY-3C/MWRI ; meteorological factors ; solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence ; metric integration ; observations ; polar orbiting satellite ; arid/semiarid ; homogeneous and pure pixel filter ; thermal radiation directionality ; biodiversity ; gradient boosting regression tree ; forest canopy height ; Landsat ; subpixel information ; MODIS ; humidity profiles ; NIR ; geostationary satellite ; bic Book Industry Communication::R Earth sciences, geography, environment, planning::RG Geography
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  • 60
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-04-09
    Description: Quantitative land remote sensing has recently advanced dramatically, particularly in China. It has been largely driven by vast governmental investment, the availability of a huge amount of Chinese satellite data, geospatial information requirements for addressing pressing environmental issues and other societal benefits. Many individuals have also fostered and made great contributions to its development, and Prof. Xiaowen Li was one of these leading figures. This book is published in memory of Prof. Li. The papers collected in this book cover topics from surface reflectance simulation, inversion algorithm and estimation of variables, to applications in optical, thermal, Lidar and microwave remote sensing. The wide range of variables include directional reflectance, chlorophyll fluorescence, aerosol optical depth, incident solar radiation, albedo, surface temperature, upward longwave radiation, leaf area index, fractional vegetation cover, forest biomass, precipitation, evapotranspiration, freeze/thaw snow cover, vegetation productivity, phenology and biodiversity indicators. They clearly reflect the current level of research in this area. This book constitutes an excellent reference suitable for upper-level undergraduate students, graduate students and professionals in remote sensing.
    Keywords: G1-922 ; Q1-390 ; gross primary production (GPP) ; interference filter ; Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) ; cost-efficient ; precipitation ; topographic effects ; land surface temperature ; Land surface emissivity ; scale effects ; spatial-temporal variations ; statistics methods ; inter-annual variation ; spatial representativeness ; FY-3C/MERSI ; sunphotometer ; PROSPECT ; passive microwave ; flux measurements ; urban scale ; vegetation dust-retention ; multiple ecological factors ; leaf age ; standard error of the mean ; LUT method ; spectra ; SURFRAD ; Land surface temperature ; aboveground biomass ; uncertainty ; land surface variables ; copper ; Northeast China ; forest disturbance ; end of growing season (EOS) ; random forest model ; probability density function ; downward shortwave radiation ; machine learning ; MODIS products ; composite slope ; daily average value ; canopy reflectance ; spatiotemporal representative ; light use efficiency ; hybrid method ; disturbance index ; quantitative remote sensing inversion ; SCOPE ; GPP ; South China’s ; anisotropic reflectance ; vertical structure ; snow cover ; land cover change ; start of growing season (SOS) ; MS–PT algorithm ; aerosol ; pixel unmixing ; HiWATER ; algorithmic assessment ; surface radiation budget ; latitudinal pattern ; ICESat GLAS ; vegetation phenology ; SIF ; metric comparison ; Antarctica ; spatial heterogeneity ; comprehensive field experiment ; reflectance model ; sinusoidal method ; NDVI ; BRDF ; cloud fraction ; NPP ; VPM ; China ; dense forest ; vegetation remote sensing ; 〈i〉Cunninghamia〈/i〉 ; high resolution ; geometric-optical model ; phenology ; LiDAR ; ZY-3 MUX ; point cloud ; multi-scale validation ; Fraunhofer Line Discrimination (FLD) ; rice ; fractional vegetation cover (FVC) ; interpolation ; high-resolution freeze/thaw ; drought ; Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) ; controlling factors ; sampling design ; downscaling ; n/a ; Chinese fir ; MRT-based model ; RADARSAT-2 ; northern China ; leaf area density ; potential evapotranspiration ; black-sky albedo (BSA) ; decision tree ; CMA ; fluorescence quantum efficiency in dark-adapted conditions (FQE) ; surface solar irradiance ; validation ; geographical detector model ; vertical vegetation stratification ; spatiotemporal distribution and variation ; gap fraction ; phenological parameters ; spatio-temporal ; albedometer ; variability ; GLASS ; gross primary productivity (GPP) ; EVI2 ; machine learning algorithms ; latent heat ; GLASS LAI time series ; boreal forest ; leaf ; maize ; heterogeneity ; temperature profiles ; crop-growing regions ; satellite observations ; rugged terrain ; species richness ; voxel ; LAI ; TMI data ; GF-1 WFV ; spectral ; HJ-1 CCD ; leaf area index ; evapotranspiration ; land-surface temperature products (LSTs) ; SPI ; AVHRR ; Tibetan Plateau ; snow-free albedo ; PROSPECT-5B+SAILH (PROSAIL) model ; MCD43A3 C6 ; 3D reconstruction ; photoelectric detector ; multi-data set ; BEPS ; aerosol retrieval ; plant functional type ; multisource data fusion ; remote sensing ; leaf spectral properties ; solo slope ; land surface albedo ; longwave upwelling radiation (LWUP) ; terrestrial LiDAR ; AMSR2 ; geometric optical radiative transfer (GORT) model ; MuSyQ-GPP algorithm ; tree canopy ; FY-3C/MWRI ; meteorological factors ; solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence ; metric integration ; observations ; polar orbiting satellite ; arid/semiarid ; homogeneous and pure pixel filter ; thermal radiation directionality ; biodiversity ; gradient boosting regression tree ; forest canopy height ; Landsat ; subpixel information ; MODIS ; humidity profiles ; NIR ; geostationary satellite ; thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RG Geography
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10949 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:57:52 | 10949 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Salmonid & Freshwater Fisheries Statistics for England & Wales 1992 produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) in 1994. This report is focused on the maintenance, improvement and development of fisheries of England and Wales. This report is the fourth compilation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales published by the National Rivers Authority. For the years 1983-88, these statistics were published by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAFF), Directorate of Fisheries Research in their Data Report Series. Other than for rod catches, the 1992 data have been presented in a broadly similar format to those of 1991, Presentation of the rod data however has changed considerably due to the introduction in January 1992 of the first National Rod Fishing Licence. This report makes a general review of different catches: Northumbria, Yorkshire, Anglian, Thames, Southern, Wessex, South West, Severn-Trent, Welsh and North West.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Northumbria ; Yorkshire ; Anglian ; Thames ; Southern ; Wessex ; South West ; Severn-Trent ; Welsh ; North West ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Fishery management ; Fishery data ; Fish catch statistics ; Migratory species ; Licensing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 51
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10950 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:57:26 | 10950 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Salmonid & Freshwater Fisheries Statistics for England & Wales 1994 produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) in 1995. This report is focused on the maintenance, improvement and development of fisheries of England and Wales. This report is the sixth compilation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales produced by the National Rivers Authority. For the years 1983-88, these statistics were published by the Ministry o f Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAFF), Directorate of Fisheries Research in their Data Report Series. The 1994 data have been presented in a broadly similar format to those of 1993.This report makes a general review of different catches: Northumbria, Yorkshire, Anglian, Thames, Southern, Wessex, South West, Severn-Trent, Welsh and North West.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Northumbria ; Yorkshire ; Anglian ; Thames ; Southern ; Wessex ; South West ; Severn-Trent ; Welsh ; North West ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Fishery management ; Fishery data ; Fish catch statistics ; Migratory species ; Licensing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 57
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    National Rivers Authority South West | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10954 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:56:29 | 10954 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Roy of the Rivers (cartoon) report produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) South West Region. This NRA document is a leaflet comic format which looks at the fishing and safe issues in rivers. This comic highlights the community policing to help guard the water environment. It gives a 24 hour emergency number and three steps to be followed in case of pollution, dead, distressed fish or suspects someone of illegally catching or selling fish.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; NRA ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Poaching ; Freshwater pollution
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    Environment Agency North West | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10956 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:56:11 | 10956 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the River Ehen and Tributaries SSSI consultation Protocol for the Environment Agency with English Nature, produced in 1998. The Protocol is intended to provide for consistency of approach, to clarify responsibilities and help to streamline the statutory consultation and consenting procedures in which both organisations are involved. It provides guiding principles on the approach to management issues. Based on the operations likely to damage the special interest (OLDSI) which forms part of the SSSI notification, the protocol identified acceptable management activities which contribute to the special interest of the site and those which may adversely affect that interest. OLDSI includes activities such: land drainage consents, discharge consents, herbicides approvals, fish-stocking consents, fishing licences, abstraction and impoundment licences, consents to construct/test pump boreholes, integrated pollution Control Licences and Waste Management Licences, capital projects, flood defence maintenance works, water resources, fisheries, pollution control, ecology surveys and Recreation works.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Ehen catchment ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freshwater lakes ; Nature conservation ; SSSI ; OLDSI ; Freshwater pollution ; water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
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    Lancaster Universtiy | Lancaster, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10958 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:55:54 | 10958 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the River Leven (at Newby Bridge) freeze coring report produced by Lancaster University in 2000. This study looks at fine materials in river Leven that may have to be considered detrimental to successful salmonid spawning. Following an observed decline in quality of salmonid fisheries at the site an investigation was initiated to assess the extent of ingress of fine sediments into the spawning gravels. A broader picture was sought by sampling both above and below the weir and close to both banks of the river. A comparison of the fine sediment from each sample site was undertaken. All the freeze cores used in this report contained distinct horizontal strata down through their length. The cores often penetrated into a highly compacted layer of light grey coloured material. The upper surface of this highly compacted layer is considered as a boundary between fine materials of different origin. Considerable variability was observed in the median grain size (D50) of the gravels from the cores. In addition variability was observed in the thickness of the upper less compacted layers. The role of regulated river flow across the weir in clearing fines from river gravels is briefly considered.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: +appendices
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Leven ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freshwater fish ; Migratory species ; Sediment cores ; Environmental assessment ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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    National Rivers Authority | Warrington, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10961 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:55:26 | 10961 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Acid waters in North West England: The effect of liming agricultural land on the chemistry and biology of the River Esk, North West England report produced by National Rivers Authority in 1992. This report focuses on the study of Acid Waters in the North West Region of England, UK, which began in 1982 and sampling was completed in October 1990. This work was initiated because of the observation of the simultaneous mortality of adult and juvenile salmon and sea-trout in both the River Esk and adjacent River Duddon in June 1980. Investigations at that time indicated that an "acid episode" was the most likely cause of this mortality. A land use study indicated that a reduction in agricultural liming may have been a major factor in the development of acid episodes and consequent fish kills in the River Esk and River Duddon. However there was no evidence that the mortalities of salmonids in the early 1980's were due to a reduction in agricultural liming. They were due to some other phenomenon such as a period of intense acid deposition.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: +appendices
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; North West ; Esk ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freshwater pollution ; Freshwater fish ; Migratory species ; Fish counter data ; Mortalities ; Invertebrates ; Acid Waters ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    National Rivers Authority Thames Region | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10978 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:51:58 | 10978 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Fluvial Geomorphology Report produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) in 1994. The purpose of this paper is to briefly outline the relevance of fluvial geomorphology and the substantial benefits which could accrue from applying it nationally across the NRA. It compliments information given in a previous paper dated 27 October 1993 which was presented to a national FRCN meeting on 9 March 1994.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: +tables and figures
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Inland Waters ; Rivers ; River banks ; Flood defence ; Geomorphology ; Engineering ; Erosion
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 5
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    Environment Agency | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10969 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:54:54 | 10969 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Investigation of rising nitrate concentrations in groundwater in the Eden Valley, Cumbria report produced by the Environment Agency in 2003. This report focuses on groundwater nitrate concentrations in the Eden Valley. Most boreholes in the Eden Valley had nitrate concentrations less than 20 mg/l but a significant number had higher concentrations, some exceeding the EC maximum admissible concentration for drinking water of 50 mg/l. The main objectives of this report were to investigate the causes of rising nitrate concentrations in groundwater in the Permo-Triassic sandstone aquifers of the Eden Valley area and provide sufficient understanding of the groundwater and surface water flow system, including the sources of the nitrate contamination and the processes controlling nitrate movement, so that possible management options for reversing this trend can be considered.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Cumbria ; Eden valley ; Rivers ; Aquifers ; Boreholes ; Freshwater pollution ; Water quality ; Nitrate concentrations ; Hydrology ; Modelling
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 86
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    North West Water Authority | Warrington, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10975 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:52:48 | 10975 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the assessment of the flow requirements for upstream migration of salmonids in some rivers of North West England produced by the North West Water Authority in 1985. This report focuses on the automatic fish counters operating on the resistivity principle used for several years in North West England. This report aims to investigate the flow requirements for upstream migration of salmon and migratory trout. The data obtained confirmed that during summer months most fish movement occurs in the higher range of the available flows, but the migration flow range varied from year to year, depending on prevailing river levels. Of the other environmental variables measured, only water temperature and incident light intensity appear to have any direct association with fish movement. Information on migration flow ranges were used in conjunction with computer simulations of the effects of abstraction proposals on historical flows to assess the implications of these proposals for migratory fish.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: +1figure
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; North West ; Inland Water ; Rivers ; Fish counters ; Fish populations ; Migratory species ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    Egremont and District Anglers Association | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10971 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:53:52 | 10971 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the report on the Fisheries Aspects of North West Water Authority Schemes to Increase Water Abstraction in West Cumbria by the Egremont and District Anglers’ Association. Existing river pollution and water abstraction in the Ennerdale Lake-River Ehen system is shown to have caused a major deterioration in the conditions in the Ehen fishery. This is reflected by the fact that catches of salmon, sea trout and smelts on the Ehen have all fallen to roughly 6% of the 1965 level; wich is far worse than the deterioration shown in salmon catches for S. W. Cumberland as a whole. Recommendations are made, in the light of proposals by North West Water Authority to increase water abstraction in West Cumbria, to prevent further deterioration in the Ehen fishery in the short term and to improve the situation in the longer term. It contains sections on pollution, water abstraction and fisheries background, flow statistics for and discussion of high water-droughts on the River Ehen, effects of droughts on Tidal Water and a discussion of N.W.W.A. Paper entitled `Water Resources in West Cumbria’ in the light of conditions on the River Ehen.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: +tables and maps
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Ennerdale Lake ; River Ehen ; North West Water Authority ; Fish catch statistics ; Water management ; River fisheries ; Environmental assessment ; Pollution effects
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    North West Water Authority | Warrington, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10976 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:52:30 | 10976 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the episodic variations in stream water chemistry associated with acid rainfall and run-off and the effect on aquatic ecosystems, with particular reference to fish populations in North West England produced by the North West Water Authority in 1985. This report looks at the biological, physical and chemical information collected over a five year period from over 100 sites on upland streams in the North West Region of which drained rocks of low buffering capacity. In both Lake District and South Pennine sites striking differences were found between the composition of invertebrate communities inhabiting acid-stressed and less acid-stressed streams. Electric fishing surveys showed that acidic streams (geometric mean pH 〈5.5) generally had abnormally low densities of salmonids ( 〈 0 .2m2) and that 0+ fish were very few or absent. The latter indicates recruitment failure. Salmon were more sensitive than trout to low pH.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: +9appendices
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; North West ; Inland Water ; Rivers ; Fish populations ; Migratory species ; Fish counters ; Fish surveys ; Population dynamics ; Mortalities ; Invertebrates ; Acid rainfall ; Freshwater pollution ; Pollution effects ; Water quality ; Water monitoring
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    English Nature and Environment Agency | Peterborough, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10981 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:51:49 | 10981 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is a handbook about Chalk Rivers Nature Conservation and Management from March 1999 by the Water Research Centre and commissioned by English Nature and the Environment Agency, primarly provides an objective basis for formulating conservation strategies for relevant Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) and Special Areas of Conservation (SACs). It was also seen as being applicable to chalk rivers more generally and has increasingly been regarded as important to the work of the Biodiversity Action Plan Steering Group on chalk rivers, which is led by the Environment Agency.This report contains information on characteristic wildlife communities, their habitat requirements and the ecological impact of activities that are relevant to the chalk river environment. It provides guidance on setting management objectives, options for mitigating impacts, and measures for the maintaining and enhancing the river channel, riparian and floodplain areas associated. The term `chalk river’ is used to describe watercourses dominated by groundwater discharge from chalk geology, including those that flow over a range of non-chalk surface geologies at various points along their length.England contains numerous examples of this river type, located in and downstream of areas of outcropping chalk in the south, East Anglia and up into Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. Indeed, England has the major part of the chalk river resource of Europe. A number of chalk rivers have been designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) and English Nature and Environment Agency work drawing up joint conservation strategies.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Chalk River ; Nature conservation ; Management ; Wildlife communities ; Habitat requirements ; Human activities ; Impacts ; Mitigation ; Restoration ; English Nature ; Environment Agency
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 184
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    Environment Agency | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10984 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:51:12 | 10984 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the report on Habitats Directive, the Review of Consents Stage 1 and 2 by the Environment Agency of the Manchester Mosslands cSAC, Astley and Bedford Moss, Holcroft Moss and Risley Moss.The Habitats Directive has the main aim to promote the maintenance of biodiversity by defining a common framework for the conservation of wild plants and animals and habitats of community interest. The Directive establishes a European ecological network known as "Natura 2000". The network comprises Special Areas of Conservation (SAC) and Special Protection Areas (SPA). In the section on Stage 1 or Screening Process of the Habitat Directive, it is identified the likely impacts upon the Manchester Mosslands cSAC, Astley and Bedford Moss, Holcroft Moss and Risley Moss of a project, plan or activities, either alone or in combination with other projects, plans or activities, and considers whether these impacts are likely to be significant. In the section on Stage 2 or Appropiate Assessment of the Habitat Directive, it is considered the impact on the integrity of the Manchester Mosslands cSAC, Astley and Bedford Moss, Holcroft Moss and Risley Moss of the projects, plans or activities, either alone or in combination with other projects, plans or activities, with respect to the site’s structure and function and its conservation objectives. Additionally, where these are adverse impacts, an assessment of the potential mitigation of those impacts. The criteria used in this report to identify relevant projects, plans or activities and their impacts are water quality discharge consents, waste management licences, abstraction licences, Integration Pollution Control (IPC) and Integrated Pollution Prevention Control (IPPC) permits. Proformas, hydrogeological and GIS maps are included in the review.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Manchester Mosslands cSAC ; Astley Moss ; Bedford Moss ; Holcroft Moss ; Risley Moss ; Habitats Directive ; SAC ; SPA ; Screening ; Assessment ; Impacts ; Waste management ; Discharge licences ; Abstraction licences ; Pollution prevention ; Pollution control
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    Environment Agency | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10989 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:49:41 | 10989 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the report on Habitats Directive, the Review of Consents Stage 1 and 2 by the Environment Agency of the Oak Mere cSAC.The Habitats Directive has the main aim to promote the maintenance of biodiversity by defining a common framework for the conservation of wild plants and animals and habitats of community interest. The Directive establishes a European ecological network known as "Natura 2000". The network comprises Special Areas of Conservation (SAC) and Special Protection Areas (SPA). In the section on Stage 1 or Screening Process of the Habitat Directive, it is identified the likely impacts upon the Oak Mere cSAC of a project, plan or activities, either alone or in combination with other projects, plans or activities, and considers whether these impacts are likely to be significant. In the section on Stage 2 or Appropiate Assessment of the Habitat Directive, it is considered the impact on the integrity of the Oak Mere cSAC of the projects, plans or activities, either alone or in combination with other projects, plans or activities, with respect to the site’s structure and function and its conservation objectives. Additionally, where these are adverse impacts, an assessment of the potential mitigation of those impacts. The criteria used in this report to identify relevant projects, plans or activities and their impacts are water quality discharge consents, waste management licences, abstraction licences, Integration Pollution Control (IPC) and Integrated Pollution Prevention Control (IPPC) permits. Proformas, hydrogeological and GIS maps are included in the review.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Oak Mere ; Habitats Directive ; SAC ; SPA ; Screening ; Assessment ; Impacts ; Waste management ; Discharge licences ; Abstraction licences ; Pollution prevention ; Pollution control
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    Environment Agency | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10992 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:49:31 | 10992 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is a technical report of a hydrogeological assessment by the Environment Agency, an assessment to inform the Stage 3 review of Consents under the Habitats Directive for Wybunbury Moss, a National Nature Reserve and Special Area of Conservation in Cheshire. In the Stage 2 Review of Consents, one groundwater licence could not be clearly assessed as having no significant impact and so was taken forward to Stage 3. Further work has been carried out to refine the understanding of groundwater flow and the extent of the actual groundwater catchment of Wybunbury Moss, including three drilled boreholes, the monitoring of groundwater levels in the boreholes by data-loggers for more than 18 months and the sampling and analysis of the groundwater from the boreholes. Results of this further work are shown in Appendixes. From this work, a geological cross-section and Conceptual Model has been produced, and a map showing the revised understanding of the groundwater catchment of Wybunbury Moss. It also includes in Appendix I, the Stage 2 Review of Consents previously made.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: +4appendices
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wybunbury Moss ; Habitats Directive ; Environmental assessment ; Impacts ; Groundwater abstraction ; Groundwater quality ; Groundwater management
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    University of Liverpool | Liverpool, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11002 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:47:03 | 11002 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the Limnological survey of the Cheshire, Shropshire, and Staffordshire Meres: Interim data report produced by the University of Liverpool in 1992. This report looks at the Limnological survey data from Cheshire, Shropshire and Staffordshire Meres. Limnological data of the report covers: changes in water conductivity, Phenolphthalein Alkalinity, Total Alkalinity, pH, Chloride concentrations, Soluble reactive Phosphorus, Total Phosphorus, Nitrate Nitrogen, Ammonium Nitrogen, Silicate, Chlorophyll, Carotenoids, Secci disk depth, changes in Trophic Score, changes in DAFOR scores for submerged and floating plants and Oxygen saturation during summer. This report also contains Seasonal maps of different Meres. The more important limnological data are plotted as seasonal means in relation to the sampling sites. Conductivity is shown as μSiemens per cm, alkalinity as milliequivalents per litre. Total and soluble reactive (available inorganic) phosphorus are shown in terms of P in μg per litre. Nitrate and ammonium are shown in terms of N in mg per litre. Chlorophyll a is given as μg per litre. A profile of oxygen saturation is shown. These profiles were obtained towards the middle of the day in August and September.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Cheshire Mere ; Shropshire Mere ; Staffordshire Mere ; Inland waters ; Limnology ; Limnological survey ; DAFOR scores ; Trophic scores ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    Environment Agency North West | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11003 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:45:42 | 11003 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the history of contamination in sediments from the Mersey Estuary: Development of a chronology for the contamination of the Mersey Estuary by heavy metals and organochlorines Report produced by the Environment Agency in 1998. This report looks at the history of industrial contamination of the Mersey and Ribble Estuaries back to the early part of the last century, many decades before the start of monitoring programmes providing a remarkably detailed picture of very complex changes. There is a clear record in the sediment of the contamination by each heavy metal (including: Cu, Cr, Hg, Pb, Zn) and organochlorine chemical (including DDT isomers and PCB congeners) studied. The results of the study clearly show the increases in levels of contamination as industry expanded early last century followed by various improvements as this century progressed. Each pollutant has its own idiosyncratic pattern of change with some improvements predating modern environmental concerns whilst other changes seem to relate directly to recent improvements in legislative control. Overall, for the pollutants studied, the results clearly demonstrate the magnitude of improvement that has been achieved in what was a very polluted area. The only major reservation to this story is that despite the wide range of substances covered, many other potentially important pollutants remain to be studied in a similar manner.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Mersey ; Ribble ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Estuaries ; Heavy metals ; Lead ; Arsenic ; Chromium ; Copper ; Mercury ; Zinc ; Organochlorines ; HCB ; PCBs ; DDT ; Environmental Assessment ; Freshwater pollution ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 104
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    Environment Agency North West | Warrington, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11005 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:45:23 | 11005 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the Mersey Estuary baseline survey: Analysis of macroinfaunal samples, literature review and database production report produced by the Environment Agency North West in 2002. This report presents an ecological review of the Mersey estuary along with an extensive bibliography of the available environmental literature for this system. The central objective of this programme has been to provide the information necessary to support the Environment Agency's review of existing and future consents (for discharges, abstractions etc) in the Mersey estuary. This review of consents was required because the Mersey had been designated as a Special Protection Area (SPA) under the EC Birds Directive. Therefore under Regulation 50 of the Conservation, the Environment Agency was responsible for reviewing any extant consent, or future applications, which may directly or indirectly, affected this SPA.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + appendices
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Mersey ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Estuaries ; Survey ; Habitat Directive ; Birds Directive ; SPA ; Invertebrates ; Birds ; Sediment quality ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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    North West Water Authority | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11026 | 1256 | 2013-03-27 12:50:06 | 11026 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the Intensive biological survey of the Glaze Brook catchment May 1981 report produced by the North West Water Authority in 1981. The aim of this report is to identify those pollution problems not identified during the routine biological water quality surveys, and to check the suitability of the routine biological sampling point. This report looks at an intensive biological water quality survey of the Glaze Brook catchment which was carried out by Biol. (S) on 13th-15th May, 1981. Kick samples of invertebrates were taken at 5 sites and all invertebrates were identified and counted in the field. The most significant water quality observations in the report were from: Borsdane brook, Pennington brook, Glaze brook, Amberswood brook, Cunningham brook, Old Mill brook, Shakerley brook, Astley brook and Shaw brook.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + figures and maps
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Glaze brook catchment ; Inland waters ; Biological survey ; Invertebrates ; Freshwater pollution ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 2
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    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11042 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:23:21 | 11042 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: Five fishermen pulling net in Black Moss Tarn. This photo is part of a photo album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Cumbria ; Inland waters ; Tarns ; Fisheries ; Freshwater fish
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11036 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:41:04 | 11036 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the Wetland resource evaluation and the NRA's role in its conservation: Resource assessment report produced by the National Rivers Authority in 1995. This R&D document provides a strategy for the assessment of the wetland resource of England and Wales. As a first step the report defines wetlands in their UK context. The following working definition is suggested: Wetland is land that has (or had until modified) a water level predominantly at, near, or up to 1.5 m above the ground surface for sufficient time during the year to allow hydrological processes to be a major influence on the soils and biota. These processes may be expressed in certain features, such as characteristic soils and vegetation. The report also summarises a hydrotopographical classification of wetlands. The report then develops a strategy for the establishment of a wetland resource Inventory based on a geographical information system (GIS) as a means of storing and manipulating site data from across England and Wales.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; England ; Wales ; Inland waters ; Wetland ; GIS ; Resource ; Survey ; Classification ; Inventory ; Definition ; Hydrotopography
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 76
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    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11044 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:17:27 | 11044 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: Five men working in the reinforcement of the Sprint Mill weir in Cumbria, UK. This photo is part of a photo album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Cumbria ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Fisheries ; Fish passes
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11035 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:41:14 | 11035 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the Wetland resource evaluation and the NRA's role in its conservation: Classification of British wetlands report produced by the National Rivers Authority in 1995. This R&D document provides a clear classification for wetlands in England and Wales. The classification incorporates many of the existing ideas on the subject but avoids some of the problems associated with other classifications. A two-layered 'hydrotopographical' classification is proposed. The first layer identifies situation-types, i.e. the position the wetland occupies in the landscape, with special emphasis upon the principal sources of water. The second layer identifies hydrotopographical elements, i.e. units with distinctive water supply and, sometimes, distinctive topography in response to this. This system is seen as an independent, basic, classification upon which it is possible to superimpose additional, independent classifications based on other features (e.g. base-status, fertility, vegetation, management etc.). Some proposals for such additional classifications are provided.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Inland waters ; Wetlands ; Resource ; Classification ; Key ; Hydrotopography ; Survey
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 106
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  • 84
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11046 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:19:48 | 11046 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Two men with a 20 lb. pike from Lune being transferred to Roan Head, North West England, UK. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freshwater fish ; Fisheries ; Fish farm
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 85
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11051 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:21:01 | 11051 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Two fishermen pulling a net in a boat in Lune Estuary, North West England, UK. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Lune estuary ; Estuaries ; Marine fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
    Format: image/jpeg
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  • 86
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11059 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:22:06 | 11059 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Rooks fish pass at Garstang Weir in the River Wyre, North West England, UK. This photo shows pollution in River Lune in July 1949. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Lancashire ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freswater fish ; Migratory fish ; Fish passes
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 87
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11065 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:22:33 | 11065 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: An unidentified man on a Winter day with more than ten eels over snow. The photo was taken at an unidentified location in the North West of England. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Fisheries ; Fishing ; Eels
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 88
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11068 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:23:02 | 11068 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Cockersand Abbey Lighthouse, in River Lune the Baulk, River Lune estuary on the Lancashire Fylde peninsula in the North West of England, UK. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Lune estuary ; Estuaries ; Marine fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 89
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11069 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:23:13 | 11069 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: A fisherman with a hen pike caught on the 7.3.1950 at Baines Pool, North West of England, UK. This photo is part of a photo album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Lancashire ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freshwater fish
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 90
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11071 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:23:38 | 11071 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Photo of Hindburn Force Dam, North West of England, UK, including a fish pass. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Lancashire ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Fisheries ; River works ; Fish pass
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 91
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11078 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:24:07 | 11078 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: ChurchTown Weir in the River Wyre, North West of England, UK. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Lancashire ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freswater fish
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 92
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11079 | 1256 | 2013-03-30 13:24:15 | 11079 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Fish trap at Garstang weir in the River Wyre, North West of England, UK. This photo shows pollution in River Lune in July 1949. This photo is part of a Photo Album that includes pictures from 1935 to 1954.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: Image taken from Historic Photo Collection containing images on Fisheries and Fish pass construction from 1935 to 1954. The album, originally owned by the Environment Agency North West, is now held by the Freshwater Biological Association.
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Lancashire ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freswater fish ; Migratory fish ; Fish passes
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: image
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  • 93
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11083 | 1256 | 2013-03-27 12:47:07 | 11083 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: This report is the fourth collation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales produced by the Environment Agency. For the years 1989-94 these statistics were published by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) and for the years 1983-88 by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Directorate of Fisheries Research, in its Data Report series. This report is designed to be a reference document of declared salmonid catches in England and Wales. Salmon stock assessment data including provisional catches, counter run estimates and some juvenile data are now published in an annual assessment for the International Council for the Exploitation of the Seas (ICES). The second report in this series was published jointly by the Environment Agency and the Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquatic Science (CEFAS) in April 1998 (Anon 1999).
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + tables and figures
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; England ; Wales ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Migratory species ; Freshwater fish ; Fish counters ; Fish passes ; Fish catch statistics ; Fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 8
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  • 94
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    Unknown
    WorldFish | Penang, Malaysia
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11081 | 115 | 2015-09-04 07:14:55 | 11081 | WorldFish Center
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: This report is a literature review on Food and Nutrition Security in Solomon Islands, based on data from surveys conducted by Solomon Islands National Statistical Office, as well as from national and international organizations working in Solomon Islands. The purpose of the report is to present information outlining the current food and nutrition situation in Solomon Islands before implementation of the CGIAR Research Program on Aquatic Agricultural Systems (AAS), led by WorldFish. The aim of the AAS program is to enhance production in natural freshwater and/or coastal ecosystems to improve household livelihood, including income and food security. This report summarizes national statistics and also focuses in more detail on a subset of provinces: Guadalcanal, Malaita and Western. In 2012, the AAS program was rolled out in Guadalcanal, Central and Malaita Provinces, designated the Central Hub. In 2013, roll out is beginning in the Western Hub (Western and Isabel Provinces). The priority province for the Central Hub has been identified as Malaita.
    Description: Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research
    Description: CGIAR Research Program on Aquatic Agricultural Systems
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Nutrition ; Food security ; Fisheries ; Solomon Islands ; Pacific
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 15
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  • 95
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11088 | 1256 | 2013-03-29 14:15:54 | 11088
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: This is the report on the strategic fisheries stock assessment survey of the minor catchments in South West Cumbria 1996 with particular reference to salmonids, produced by North West Water in 1994. The 1996 Minor Catchment survey indicates variations in salmonid production within these catchments. Survey results indicate that production may be reaching its limit in certain areas whilst others are underachieving and others are unsuitable for salmonid production. Trout production within the catchments is higher and more widespread than that of salmon. Water quality levels vary considerably between catchments and intra-annually within individual catchments. The need for selective habitat surveys, with a view to habitat improvement schemes (H.I.S) is discussed. This report formed a basis for subsequent reports, thus, allowing data comparisons and analysis of production level fluctuations. It was the most extensive assessment of these catchments to date, taking into account comparisons with the new National Database on salmonid production in England and Wales.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + appendices
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; South West Cumbria ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Freshwater fish ; Fish populations ; Migratory species ; Freshwater fish ; Fish passes ; Fish catch statistics ; Fishery data ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 13
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  • 96
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West | UK
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11093 | 1256 | 2013-03-29 14:19:10 | 11093 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-24
    Description: Historic film on the River Lune, North England, UK. It shows the River Lune near its estuary at Lancaster. The film was made in the summer of 1972 over several weeks and is 14:25 minutes long. It combines aerial shots of the River, scientific and hydraulic work by the University of Salford which worked on a new weir of the Lune (Skerton Weir). Audio commentary explains the work. The film was produced by Cinephoto House, Manchester, on behalf of the predecessor orgenaisation of the Environment Agency, UK. The intended audience of the film is unknown.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: The film has been digitised from 16mm cine film. A higher resolution video of the film can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixyCQewKPDU
    Keywords: Engineering ; Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Skerton Weir ; Lancaster ; River flow ; Estuaries ; Fish passage ; Flooding ; Forge Weir ; Hydraulic models ; Engineering ; Tide ; fish migration
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: other
    Format: text/html
    Format: video/mp4
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  • 97
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency North West | UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11101 | 1256 | 2013-04-03 15:27:14 | 11101 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: This is the Report on fisheries invertebrate survey of the Groove Beck, Thornsgill Beck and Troutbeck system produced by the Environment Agency North West in 1997. In 1996 the National Rivers Authority (NRA) report on the 1992 strategic stock assessment for the Upper Derwent catchment Jane Atkins recommended that should subsequent electrofishing show continued low densities, a survey of the invertebrate fauna should be undertaken to assess the food availability for salmonids, in order that lack of food could be ruled out as a contributory factor in their poor breeding success. Additionally the survey looked at the substrate to try to determine whether the bed type might actually be unsuitable for spawning, especially in view of the previously mentioned silt inputs.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + tables
    Keywords: Ecology ; Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Groove Beck ; Thornsgill Beck ; Trout Beck ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Environmental survey ; Freshwater fishes ; Migratory species ; Invertebrate larvae
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 4
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  • 98
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency | Carlisle, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11100 | 1256 | 2013-04-03 15:27:32 | 11100 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: This is the Report of 1996 survey of Trout Beck with particular reference to spawning gravel quality and invertebrates as a food source for salmonids produced by the Environment Agency North West. Whilst the main River Derwent is quite a high profile salmon fishery, Trout Beck is not a significant fishery in its own right, but serves to maintain the genetic integrity of the wild populations of trout and salmon in the catchment by providing a unique habitat. This survey addressed the invertebrate food availability, and additionally looked at the substrate to try to determine whether the bed type might actually be unsuitable for spawning, especially in view of the previously mentioned silt inputs.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + 1 map and 1 figure
    Keywords: Ecology ; Fisheries ; Limnology ; England ; Trout Beck ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Environmental survey ; Freshwater fishes ; Migratory species ; Invertebrate larvae
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 8
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  • 99
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency | Cornwall, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11109 | 1256 | 2013-04-06 16:11:25 | 11109 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: This is the River Lynher Salmon Action Plan Final document produced by the Environment Agency in 1999. This final Salmon Action Plan (SAP) for the River Lynher catchment has been produced after consideration of feedback from external consultation. It provides a list of the agreed issues and actions for the next five years to maintain and improve the River Lynher salmon stock. The actions presented within this final Salmon Action Plan clarify the important issues and factors currently limiting the salmon stock on the river. The resolution of these issues should ensure that a sustainable salmon population will be maintained for future generations. The River Lynher salmon stock has suffered two periods of spawning target failure within the past ten years. This assessment can only be estimated and in this case is likely to be dependent on river flow and the availability of salmon to the rods as only rod catch is used in the compliance assessment.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives South West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Cornwall ; River Lynher ; Inland waters ; Freshwater fish ; Migratory species ; Salmon Action Plan ; Fishery data ; Fishery management ; Fishery regulations ; Nature conservation ; Water quality ; Spawning targets
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 12
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  • 100
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    Unknown
    Environment Agency | Cornwall, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11114 | 1256 | 2013-04-06 16:10:41 | 11114 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: This is the River Tavy Salmon Action Plan Final document produced by the Environment Agency in 2000. This final Salmon Action Plan (SAP) for the River Tavy catchment has been produced after consideration of feedback from external consultation. It provides a list of the agreed issues and actions for the next five years to maintain and improve the River Tavy salmon stock. The actions presented within this Salmon Action Plan clarify the important issues and factors currently limiting the salmon stock on the river. The resolution of these issues should ensure that a sustainable salmon population will be maintained for future generations. An attempt has been made to cost these actions, identify possible sources of funding and to provide a timescale for action. This Action Plan aims to promote long term collaboration and co-operation between the Agency and other interested parties to effectively and efficiently manage the stock of salmon on the River Tavy.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives South West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Cornwall ; River Tavy ; Inland waters ; Freshwater fish ; Migratory species ; Salmon Action Plan ; Fishery data ; Fishery management ; Fishery regulations ; Nature conservation ; Water quality ; Spawning targets
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 11
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