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In: in Alam, Bhuiyan, Chowdhury and Techera eds., Routledge Handbook of International Environmental Law. Routledge, 2012
SSRN
In: Aquaculture, Resource Use, and the Environment, S. 235-259
In: Survey of current affairs, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 105-107
ISSN: 0039-6214
In: Sustainable Development Policy Directory, S. 12-47
In: OECD Environmental Outlook to 2030; OECD Environmental Outlook, S. 197-217
In: Sustainable Development and Biodiversity 24
In: Springer eBook Collection
In: Springer eBooks
In: Biomedical and Life Sciences
1. Introduction -- Part I: Biodiversity -- 2. Generation of Data on Reproductive Ecology is Important for Effective Conservation of Our Plant Diversity -- 3. Molecular Approaches to Explore Coastal Benthic Metazoan Diversity - Success and Constraints -- 4. Soft Corals Biodiversity in the Egyptian Red Sea -- 5. Assessment of Grasslands in Indian Desert - a Holistic Approach -- Part II: Chemotaxonomic Markers -- 6. Chemotaxonomy Significance of Alkaloids in Plants -- 7. Iridoids as Chemotaxonomic Marker -- 8. Chemosystematic Significance of Flavonoids -- 9. Isoquinoline Alkaloids as Chemotaxonomic Markers -- 10. Saponin Diversity in Plants -- 11. Chemotaxonomy and Chemodiversity of Fungal Polyketides -- 12. Chemotaxonomic Profiling for High-Value Caretonoids in Microalgae -- 13. Fungi -- Part III: Diversity and Phylogeny -- 14. Plant Barcoding and Phylogenetic Analysis: Advances, Challenges and Future Trends -- 15. Molecular Techniques to Assess Plant Diversity -- 16. Diversity of the Genus Ocimum -- 17. Phylogeny in Echinocereus (Cactaceae): Taxonomic Implications -- 18. Genetic Variation in Brassica and Allied Genera -- Part IV: Case Studies in Chemotaxonomy -- 19. Chemotaxonomic Survey on the Genus Sedum L. (Crassulaceae) Based on Distribution and Variability of the Epicuticular Wax Constituents -- 20. Chemotaxonomic Study of Volatile Oils from Rhizomes of Zingiber species (Zingigeraceae) -- 21. Chemical Variability in Essential Oils from Ruta Species and its Taxonomic and Ecological Significance -- 22. Conclusions
This work brings together the dimensions of biodiversity and examines both the services it provides and the measures to protect it. Major themes include the evolution of biodiversity, systems for classifying and defining biodiversity, ecological patterns and theories of biodiversity, and an assessment of contemporary patterns and trends in biodiversity
In: Earthscan from Routledge
Klappentext: "Biodiversity' at its simplest, refers to the variety of species inhabiting Planet Earth. It is essential to the well-being of the planet. There is now a scientific consensus around the current ongoing crisis in biodiversity arising from both climate change and human activities. Experts believe we are in the middle of a mass extinction of biodiversity with devastating consequences for our planet. Accounting for Biodiversity explores the need for companies to actively protect, conserve and improve biodiversity within their sphere of operation. The 14 chapters written by a selected team of experts investigate the ways in which companies are embracing their responsibility through a variety of biodiversity initiatives and innovative models designed to improve the recording, reporting and valuing of biodiversity. Global case studies look at biodiversity accounting in Africa, Asia, Australasia, Europe and South America. Overall, this book provides a comprehensive set of reflections on accounting for biodiversity and recommendations for the future. This book is essential reading for all those interested in the contribution that accounting can make to the preservation of accounting. As we see increasing awareness of the importance of sustainability and ecological responsibility in business activity it is relevant and should prove informative to students, managers, accountants and those in business more generally. It is also important for all those interested in conserving biodiversity. "--
Intro -- Title page -- Table of Contents -- Copyright -- Introduction -- Evolution and Biodiversity -- 1: From Richard Owen to Charles Darwin: Understanding the Origin of Life's Diversity -- Abstract -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Richard Owen, the archetype and the diversity of vertebrates -- 1.3 Conclusion -- 2: Life Engineering in an Evolutionary World -- Abstract -- 2.1 Why "Engineers"? -- 2.2 The animal-machine legacy -- 2.3 Genetic engineering: rational design or tinkering? -- 2.4 Synthetic biology as the paradigm of bioengineering -- 2.5 Transforming a transformation? -- 2.6 Our cousins, the engineers -- 2.7 Engineering and evolutionary dynamics -- 3: The View of Systematics on Biodiversity -- Abstract -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Species: all different -- 3.3 How about studying the other 90%? -- 3.4 Biodiversity changes -- 3.5 Challenging decades -- 4: Which Model(s) Explain Biodiversity? -- Abstract -- 4.1 Birth-death processes -- 4.2 Coalescent trees -- 4.3 Birth-death and/or coalescent model? -- 4.4 Acknowledgements -- 5: Analysis of Microbial Diversity: Regarding the (Paradoxical) Difficulty of Seeing Big in Metagenomics -- Abstract -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Comparing metagenomic data sets is difficult -- 5.3 Path dependency and knowledge production -- 5.4 Standardizing metagenomics -- 5.5 Unlocking metagenomics -- 5.6 Conclusion -- 5.7 Acknowledgements -- 5.8 Figure legends -- 6: Genetic Code Degeneracy and Amino Acid Frequency in Proteomes -- Abstract -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Frequency-mass correlation of encoded amino acids -- 6.3 Amino-acid volume correlation in the genetic code -- 6.4 Origin of genetic code degeneracy -- 6.5 Origin of the frequency-mass correlation -- 6.6 Summary and discussion -- 6.7 Conclusion -- 6.8 Acknowledgments -- 7: Telomeres and Telomerases: Structural Diversity for the Same Role -- Abstract
In: Sustainable development and biodiversity 4
Biodiversity has become an issue of global anxiety over the past decades due to its rapid decline worldwide. Bangladesh as one of the most densely populated countries in the world is no more exception. The country, although, was once very rich in biodiversity, during the last few decades as a consequence of the rapid reduction in forest area, urbanisation, habitat modification, unsustainable natural resources use and collection and overall climate change it has decreased alarmingly. Of late, the government, as a signatory of various regional and international conservation treaties, has taken various initiatives to improve country's dwindling biodiversity. This paper reviews the present situation of biodiversity in Bangladesh, management trends and major causes of biodiversity loss. A separate statutory body is fundamental to ensure conservation, sustainable use and equitable sharing of benefits arisen from biodiversity in the country.
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