CBL - File Not Found a research program organized by oceanographers and fisheries scientists to address the question of how global climate change may affect the abundance and production of animals in the sea. http://cbl.umces.edu/fogarty/usglobec/
OCEANS: Ocean Biogeochemistry And Ecosystems Analysis IGBP and SCOR are developing a new project focussed on ocean biogeochemistry and ecosystems and the impacts of global change. This Open Science Conference invites input into the development of the science focus of the project through plenary sessions, workshops and poster presentations. http://www.igbp.kva.se/obe/
Extractions: UPDATES Working Group Reports Full Programme Travel instructions This conference will focus on integrated studies of ocean biogeochemistry and ecosystem dynamics in the context of the Earth System and global change. It is designed to assist the development of a new international research project. Questions to seed discussion include: How does global change, represented by changes in natural climatic modalities and anthropogenic forcings, impact marine biogeochemical cycles and ecosystem dynamics?
Ecosystems Strategies An environmental consulting firm providing solutions to complex environmental problems. http://www.idsi.net/~ecosys/
Extractions: CONTACT US Corporate Statement Ecosystems Strategies, Inc. (ESI) is an environmental consulting firm providing solutions to complex environmental problems. Technical expertise and innovative thinking are combined to achieve successful results for both public and private clients in a timely and cost efficient manner. ESI recognizes the need to address a client's environmental concerns, both systematically and comprehensively. ESI will clearly characterize the scope of existing environmental conditions, formulate appropriate remedial objectives, assess the cost-effectiveness of various remedial options, secure necessary permits and approvals from regulatory agencies and implement required remedial actions. All services are undertaken in a professional and ethical manner, providing accurate, complete and unbiased consulting services in accordance with existing professional standards and guidelines.
Environmental Biology Sequence - Ecosystems Environmental Biology ecosystems. Overview. Rolesof Organisms. Energy Flow Through ecosystems. http://www.marietta.edu/~biol/102/ecosystem.html
Extractions: Environmental Biology - Ecosystems Overview Roles of Organisms Energy Flow Through Ecosystems Food Chains and Webs ... Phosphorous Cycle The main concepts we are trying to get across in this section concern how energy moves through an ecosystem. If you can understand this, you are in good shape, because then you have an idea of how ecosystems are balanced, how they may be affected by human activities, and how pollutants will move through an ecosystem. If you had Biology 101, this should be review; if you had Geology 101, this is new stuff. Either way, it is pretty basic and you shouldn't have much trouble reading this material or the associated material in the text. Organisms can be either producers or consumers in terms of energy flow through an ecosystem. Producers convert energy from the environment into carbon bonds, such as those found in the sugar glucose. Plants are the most obvious examples of producers; plants take energy from sunlight and use it to convert carbon dioxide into glucose (or other sugars). Algae and cyanobacteria are also photosynthetic producers, like plants. Other producers include bacteria living around deep-sea vents. These bacteria take energy from chemicals coming from the Earth's interior and use it to make sugars. Other bacteria living deep underground can also produce sugars from such inorganic sources. Another word for producers is
Nofretete - Welcome A Project funded by the European Commission DG Research V th Framework programme Programme in the thematic programme Energy, Environment and Sustainable Development, Key Action 2 Global change, climate and biodiversity http://project.ifu.fhg.de/nofretete/index.html
Extractions: Contract N° Official commencement date Duration 3 years Coordinator Klaus Butterbach-Bahl The source strength of EU forests for the primarily and secondarily active N-oxides N O and NO is highly uncertain. However, recent investigations have shown that EU forests, due to high rates of atmospheric N-deposition in the last decades, are significant sources for N-oxides. Based on results obtained from field and laboratory experiments on the characterisation of N-oxide fluxes in different forests (e.g. climate, soil, forest type) we will further improve and validate a) a mechanistic model and b) a canopy exchange model for predicting N-trace gas emissions at the soil-atmosphere and canopy-atmosphere interfaces. After combination of both models, we will calculate EU wide inventories of N-oxide emissions from forests with hitherto unknown precision and, using scenarios for future changes in climate and N-deposition, predict future changes in N-oxide emissions.
Australia's Major Ecosystems Australia ecosystems,desert, arid inland, mangroves, rainforest, rivers, reef, GreatBarrier Reef, Islands,remnant,riparian fringe, urban,environmental video http://www.gullivermedia.com.au/eco.html
Ecosystems Ltd. Home Page Ccological consulting services in East and SouthEast Asia. Based in Hong Kong. http://www.ecosystems-ltd.com/
Greening Australia - Struan Diverse information about sustainable agriculture, native ecosystems, and issues in the South East of South Australia and Western Victoria. Sample topics are bush regeneration, farm forestry, coastal ecosystems. http://www.rbm.com.au/greening_aust/index.html
Australia Reef Ecosystems This page is an extract of a script that is part of the video series TheLiving Landscapean Australian ecosystems Series . REEF ecosystems. http://www.gullivermedia.com.au/reef.html
Extractions: Visit all ecosystems. REEF ECOSYSTEMS A coral reef is composed of calcium carbonate, or limestone, derived from the water by the reef organisms: colonies of coral polyps and coralline algae. Most of this structure, the underlying foundation of the reef, is dead, made up of layer upon layer of coral skeletons. The living reef is just a veneer, but it's this living part that continually adds new limestone to the massive base structure. Coral is the building block for this reef construction. Though coral looks like a plant, it's really an animal: or rather, a colony of animals that belong to the cnideria (the same group as jellyfish and sea anemones). There are a multitude of different kinds of coral, about 350 species including both hard and soft varieties, on the Great Barrier Reef. Their shapes are very different, and their colours come in the hundreds. SOFT CORAL HARD CORAL
USGS Forest And Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center Provides scientific understanding and technology to support sound management and conservation of forest and rangeland ecosystems in the Pacific Northwest and Intermountain West. FRESC employs research scientists, technical professionals, and administrative staff with expertise in a wide range of program areas. http://fresc.fsl.orst.edu/
The Southern Appalachian Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit Loosely knit framework of federal agency resource managers, university faculty, and specialists linked together to address regional ecological issues. Organization and project information. http://cesu.ra.utk.edu/
Extractions: T he Southern Appalachian Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit (SA-CESU) is a network of federal agency resource managers, university faculty, and specialists from a variety of organizations linked by special agreements and a CESU office. The purpose of this framework is to better address local and regional ecological issues the federal agency resource managers face by accessing the latest expertise at local universities and organizations. The CESU framework is designed to foster partnering among individuals from a wide array of agencies, organizations, and disciplines to address agency resource manager needs. The University of Tennessee is the host institution for the SA-CESU office. Activities involve training, workshops, studies, and work in the field.
People And Ecosystems: The Fraying Web Of Life People and ecosystems The fraying web of life. Taking stock of the conditionof ecosystems and their capacity to continue to provide what we need. http://www.wri.org/wr2000/ecosystems.html
Biodiversity And Protected Areas ecosystems and Habitats. First, regardless of how static they may appear, themix of species makingup communities and ecosystems changes continually. http://www.wri.org/wri/biodiv/ecosys.html
Extractions: Source Genes, species, and the other components of the world's biodiversity are inseparable from the processes of life that the components give rise toamong them, production, consumption, and evolution. Together biodiversity (that is, the elements of life), and ecological processes (the interactions among species and between species and their environment) define Earth's living mantlethe biosphere. For individuals and populations, these interactions include such mechanisms as: predation, competition, parasitism, and mutualism while communities change through the process of succession. In yet another type of interaction, species influence their physical environmentwhether through primary production (the transformation of solar energy to biomass through photosynthesis), decomposition (the breakdown of organic materials by organisms in the environment), or participation in biogeochemical cycles (the movement of nutrients, water, and other chemical elements through living organisms and the physical environment).
Riparian Ecosystem Creation And Restoration An overview of the status of riparian ecosystems in the U.S. and guidelines for restoring and creating them. http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/literatr/ripareco/ripareco.htm
Extractions: Karen A. Schneller-McDonald, Project Officer September 1989 This resource is based on the following source: Manci, Karen M. 1989. Riparian ecosystem creation and restoration: A literature summary. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report 89(20):1-59. This resource should be cited as: Manci, Karen M. 1989. Riparian ecosystem creation and restoration: A literature summary. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report 89(20):1-59. Jamestown, ND: Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center Home Page. http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/literatr/ripareco/ripareco.htm (Version 16JUL97). Discussion ... References Karen M. Manci
Extractions: SUMMARY Due to conflicts in many areas such as old growth forests in the Northwest, the Everglades in south Florida, Chesapeake Bay, and the Rio Grande watershed, many people are advocating a broader approach to management of land and water resources and biological diversity. They argue that existing laws run at cross purposes, or that the plethora of requirements under many laws and regulations means that no land use decision is ever final. As a result, and from a surprising range of philosophical platforms, many in Congress are advocating "ecosystem management" in various land use and conservation issues. Yet, there is little agreement, even in the scientific community, on the meaning of the term ecosystem. This paper describes the meaning and applications of ecosystem and of the related terms watershed and biome.
CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems Describes information, research, and biology of Australia's vertebrates, in regard to agriculture, management, and pest control. http://www.cse.csiro.au/index.htm
PBS - Bill Moyers Reports: Earth On Edge - Ecosystems ecosystems, What Are ecosystems? Get Involved. of ecosystems ecosystems are communitiesof interacting organisms and the physical environment in which they live. http://www.pbs.org/earthonedge/ecosystems/
Extractions: Ecosystems are communities of interacting organisms and the physical environment in which they live. They are the combination and interaction of the plants, animals, minerals, and people in any given area of the Earth. A small bog, a single sand dune, or a tiny patch of forest is an ecosystem. But ecosystems are also forests covering thousands of kilometers, a major river system, a desert. Every centimeter of the planet is part of an ecosystem. Maybe the most familiar natural ecosystems are our backyards or parks near our home. Below are the six ecosystems on which life on Earth most heavily depends: Agroecosystems - the farms where we grow our food and the livestock production systems-ranches and hog farms, for example-where we produce meat products. Forest ecosystems - the woodlands where we hike, cut timber, and hunt. Freshwater ecosystems - the lakes, streams, and rivers we fish in, boat on, transport our goods over, and rely on for drinking water. Grassland ecosystems - meadows, prairies, pampas, savannas, and steppes where we graze our cattle.
Extractions: Developping a new methodology for modeling and simulation of natural complex systems using Neural networks and discrete event simulation linked with a GIS for data handeling. "Développement d'une technique hybride de modélisation de systémes naturels complexes utilisant les modèles connexionnistes et orientés objets couplées à un système d'information géographique"
Index Translate this page ecosystems. ecosystems es una empresa con un enfoque ecológico y desalud que ofrece alternativas de solución a los actuales problemas http://www.geocities.com/cesarggomez/