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Applications of social science theory to fisheries management: Three examples
In: Society and natural resources, Band 5, Heft 4, S. 391-407
ISSN: 1521-0723
A Fresh Defense: A Cultural Biography of Quality in Puerto Rican Fishing
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 115, Heft 1, S. 17-28
ISSN: 1548-1433
ABSTRACT Puerto Rican artisanal fishers, like artisanal food producers around the world, emphasize the quality of their products to compete with industrial food producer‐distributors. In this article, we trace the cultural biographies of three important fish species, focusing on their roles in creating social relationships and, through this process, creating value and political alliances to contest fisheries laws. We argue that fishers move strategically between moral and political economies to maintain fishing livelihoods and defend themselves against coastal developments that threaten those livelihoods.
Any way you cut it: meat processing and small-town America
In: Rural America
Introduction : making meat / David Griffith, Michael J. Broadway, and Donald D. Stull -- From city to countryside : recent changes in the structure and location of the meat- and fish-processing industries / Michael J. Broadway -- On the horns of a dilemma : the U.S. meat and poultry industry / Steve Bjerklie -- Killing them softly : work in meatpacking plants and what it does to workers / Donald D. Stull and Michael J. Broadway -- Dances with cows : beefpacking's impact on Garden City, Kansas, and Lexington, Nebraska / Lourdes Gouveia and Donald D. Stull -- Pork, poultry, and newcomers in Storm Lake, Iowa / Mark A. Grey -- Hay Trabajo : poultry processing, rural industrialization, and the Latinization of low-wage labor ; New immigrants in an old industry : blue crab processing in Pamlico County, North Carolina / David Griffith -- Industries, immigrants, and illness in the new Midwest / Robert A. Hackenberg and Gary Kukulka -- The kill line : facts of life, proposals for change / Bob Hall -- Conclusion : Joe Hill died for your sins, empowering minority workers in the new industrial labor force / Robert A. Hackenberg
Local Perspectives Matter: The Case of the Seasonal Fishery Closure in the Visayan Sea, Philippines
In: Society and natural resources, Band 36, Heft 6, S. 660-679
ISSN: 1521-0723
Migration and livelihood constellations: assessing common themes in the face of environmental change in Somalia and among Agro-Pastoral peoples
In: International migration: quarterly review, Band 61, Heft 5, S. 186-200
ISSN: 1468-2435
World Affairs Online
Enduring Whims and Public Anthropology
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 115, Heft 1, S. 125-126
ISSN: 1548-1433
Any Way You Cut It: Meat Processing and Small-Town America
In: The economic history review, Band 49, Heft 3, S. 628
ISSN: 1468-0289
Negotiating Political and Moral Economies in the U.S. Caribbean after Hurricanes Irma and María
In: Caribbean studies, Band 49, Heft 1, S. 3-27
ISSN: 1940-9095
Book reviews
In: Ethnos, Band 64, Heft 3-4, S. 421-434
ISSN: 1469-588X
Bushfire smoke plume composition and toxicological assessment from the 2019–2020 Australian Black Summer
In: Air quality, atmosphere and health: an international journal, Band 15, Heft 11, S. 2067-2089
ISSN: 1873-9326
Abstract Many of the population centres in southeast Australia were swathed in bushfire smoke during the 2019–2020 austral summer. Bushfires burning during what is now known as the Black Summer was historically large and severe, and the fire season historically long. The chemical composition in the gas and aerosol phase of aged plumes measured near Wollongong, NSW in early 2020 is reported in this work. Enhancement ratios to carbon monoxide are presented for thirteen species (acetaldehyde, acetone, acetonitrile, black carbon aerosol, benzene, methane, methacrolein + methyl vinyl ketone, methyl ethyl ketone, methanol, ammonium ion PM1 fraction, nitrate ion PM1 fraction, organic PM1 fraction and PM2.5). Observed plume composition is comparable to that measured in fresh smoke from Australian fires reported in the literature. Enhancements of biogenic volatile organic compounds such as isoprene (smoke-effected period mean 1 ppb, maximum 6 ppb) were observed along with elevated concentrations of particulate variables. Enhancement ratios reported here can be used in plume modelling of landscape-scale fires and assist in concentration estimates of infrequently measured atmospheric pollutants. The relative toxicological contribution of species present in the plumes was determined for plume exposure at the measurement site and for concentrated plumes at a population centre case study. Similar results were apparent at both locations. Contributions to the toxicological loading were dominated by respirable particles (~ 52–63% total contribution), formaldehyde (~ 30–39% total contribution) and acrolein. This is a reminder to consider the toxicological contributions in the gas phase when considering health impacts of population exposure to bushfire smoke.
Atmospheric Concentrations and Sources of Black Carbon Over Tropical Australian Waters
In: STOTEN-D-22-20082
SSRN
Laboratory Measurements of Trace Gas Emissions from Biomass Burning of Fuel Types from the Southeastern and Southwestern United States
Vegetation commonly managed by prescribed burning was collected from five southeastern and southwestern US military bases and burned under controlled conditions at the US Forest Service Fire Sciences Laboratory in Missoula, Montana. The smoke emissions were measured with a large suite of state-of-the-art instrumentation including an open-path Fourier transform infrared (OP-FTIR) spectrometer for measurement of gas-phase species. The OP-FTIR detected and quantified 19 gas-phase species in these fires: CO2, CO, CH4, C2H2, C2H4, C3H6, HCHO, HCOOH, CH3OH, CH3COOH, furan, H2O, NO, NO2, HONO, NH3, HCN, HCl, and SO2. Emission factors for these species are presented for each vegetation type burned. Gas-phase nitrous acid (HONO), an important OH precursor, was detected in the smoke from all fires. The HONO emission factors ranged from 0.15 to 0.60 g kg(-1) and were higher for the southeastern fuels. The fire-integrated molar emission ratios of HONO (relative to NOx) ranged from approximately 0.03 to 0.20, with higher values also observed for the southeastern fuels. The majority of non-methane organic compound (NMOC) emissions detected by OP-FTIR were oxygenated volatile organic compounds (OVOCs) with the total identified OVOC emissions constituting 61 +/- 12% of the total measured NMOC on a molar basis. These OVOC may undergo photolysis or further oxidation contributing to ozone formation. Elevated amounts of gas-phase HCl and SO2 were also detected during flaming combustion, with the amounts varying greatly depending on location and vegetation type. The fuels with the highest HCl emission factors were all located in the coastal regions, although HCl was also observed from fuels farther inland. Emission factors for HCl were generally higher for the southwestern fuels, particularly those found in the chaparral biome in the coastal regions of California.
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Emended description of Mycobacterium abscessus, Mycobacterium abscessus subsp abscessus and Mycobacterium abscessus subsp bolletii and designation of Mycobacterium abscessus subsp massiliense comb. nov
The taxonomic position of members of the Mycobacterium abscessus complex has been the subject of intensive investigation and, in some aspects confusion, in recent years as a result of varying approaches to genetic data interpretation. Currently, the former species Mycobacterium massiliense and Mycobacterium bolletii are grouped together as Mycobacterium abscessus subsp. bolletii. They differ greatly, however, as the former M. bolletii has a functional erm(41) gene that confers inducible resistance to macrolides, the primary therapeutic antimicrobials for M. abscessus, while in the former M. massiliense the erm(41) gene is non-functional. Furthermore, previous whole genome studies of the M. abscessus group support the separation of M. bolletii and M. massiliense. To shed further light on the population structure of Mycobacterium abscessus, 43 strains and three genomes retrieved from GenBank were subjected to pairwise comparisons using three computational approaches: verage ucleotide dentity, enome to enome istance and single nucleotide polymorphism analysis. The three methods produced overlapping results, each demonstrating three clusters of strains corresponding to the same number of taxonomic entities. The distances were insufficient to warrant distinction at the species level, but met the criteria for differentiation at the subspecies level. Based on prior erm(41)-related phenotypic data and current genomic data, we conclude that the species M. abscessus encompasses, in adjunct to the presently recognized subspecies M. abscessus subsp. abscessus and M. abscessus subsp. bolletii, a third subspecies for which we suggest the name M. abscessus subsp. massiliense comb. nov. (type strain CCUG 48898(T) =CIP 108297(T) =DSM 45103(T) = KCTC 19086(T)). ; research grants FFC from Fondazione Ricerca Fibrosi Cistica ; European Union PathoNgen-Trace project ; German Center for Infection Research (DZIF) ; Ist Sci San Raffaele, Emerging Bacterial Pathogens Unit, Milan, Italy ; Leibniz Zentrum Med & Biowissensch, Mol & Expt Mycobacteriol, Borstel, Germany ; Univ Texas Hlth Ctr Tyler, Dept Microbiol, Mycobact Nocardia Res Lab, Tyler, TX USA ; Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Escol Paulista Med, Dept Microbiol Imunol & Parasiotol, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil ; Univ Madrid, Dept Prevent Med Publ Hlth & Microbiol, Madrid, Spain ; Diagnost Serv Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada ; Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Tyler, Dept Pulm Med, Tyler, TX USA ; Meyer Univ Hosp, Reg Reference Ctr Cyst Fibrosis, Florence, Italy ; IRCCS Ca Granda, Cyst Fibrosis Microbiol Lab, Milan, Italy ; IRCCS Ca Granda, Cyst Fibrosis Ctr, Milan, Italy ; Departamento de Microbiologia, Imunologia e Parasitologia, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil ; research grants FFC from Fondazione Ricerca Fibrosi Cistica: 27/2014 ; European Union PathoNgen-Trace project: FP7-278864-2 ; Web of Science
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The recent increase of atmospheric methane from 10 years of ground-based NDACC FTIR observations since 2005
An increase of 0.31 ± 0.03 % year−1 of atmospheric methane is reported using 10 years of solar observations performed at 10 ground-based stations since 2005. These trend agree with a GEOS-Chem-tagged simulation that accounts for the contribution of each emission source and one sink in the total methane. The GEOS-Chem simulation shows that anthropogenic emissions from coal mining and gas and oil transport and exploration have played a major role in the increase methane since 2005. ; W. Bader has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement no. 704951, and from the University of Toronto through a Faculty of Arts & Science Postdoctoral Fellowship Award. E. Mahieu is a Research Associate with the F.R.S.–FNRS. The F.R.S.–FNRS further supported this work under Grant no. J.0093.15 and the Fédération Wallonie Bruxelles contributed to supporting observational activities. The Centre for Atmospheric Chemistry at the University of Wollongong involvement in this work is funded by Australian Research Council projects DP1601021598 and LE0668470.
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