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Issuesland managementLandLibrary Resource
There are 8, 235 content items of different types and languages related to land management on the Land Portal.
Displaying 3361 - 3372 of 6712

Abomasal parasites in wild sympatric cervids, red deer, Cervus elaphus and fallow deer, Dama dama, from three localities across central and western Spain: relationship to host density and park management

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2004
Spain

A survey of abomasal parasites in cervids from Central Spain was conducted at 3 sites, Quintos de Mora (Toledo), Maluéñez de Arriba (Cáceres), and La Herguijuela (Cáceres). Commonly occurring helminths belonged to 3 polymorphic species of the Ostertagiinae: Spiculopteragia asymmetrica/S. quadrispiculata, Ostertagia leptospicularis/O. kolchida, and O. drozdzi/O. ryjikovi. Trichostrongylus axei was found in very few cases. Ostertagia drozdzi/O. ryjikovi and the minor male morphotype, S. quadrispiculata, are reported for the first time in red deer from Spain.

reptile, bird and small mammal fauna of Dune Mallee Woodlands in south-western New South Wales

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2012

Baseline surveys of reptiles, birds and small mammals that occur in Dune Mallee woodlands in the Lower Murray Darling catchment of south-western New South Wales were conducted at 60 sites between October 2007 and March 2008. These surveys comprise the first round of a catchmentwide monitoring programme to obtain a measure of the distribution and abundance of 21 priority threatened fauna species that inhabit Dune Mallee Woodlands. A total of 127 fauna species were recorded, which included 19 of the possible 21 threatened fauna species.

Relating soil carbon fractions to land use in sloping uplands in northern Thailand

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2009
Thailand

In this study from Khun Samun Watershed in northern Thailand we investigate land use and soil carbon relationships in 99 sloping upland soils that pertain to soil degradation/conservation and carbon storage/loss. Approximately 35% of the variability in total soil carbon could be explained by the available quantitative and semi-quantitative information, primarily clay content and CEC, and to a lesser degree by factors concerning land management.

contribution of crop-rotation organization in farms to crop-mosaic patterning at local landscape scales

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2009

Farming activities are major drivers of the landscape-related ecological patterning because of their multiple influences on both non-arable and arable landscape elements and mosaics. Uncertainties still remain about the way individual farmer decisions and the aggregation of their activities in space contribute to these mosaics at local landscape scales, therefore about possible levers of action in farms for ensuring sustainable landscapes. The general objective of the present study was to give an assessment of the way farms contribute to crop-mosaic patterning at local landscape scales.

Hen harriers and red grouse: moving towards consensus

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2009

1. The presence of predators may lead to conflict between different stakeholders. Finding ways to resolve such conflicts is a challenge to all involved. 2. Within the UK a long and, at times, acrimonious conflict has developed around the conservation of hen harriers Circus cyaneus on moorland managed for red grouse Lagopus lagopus scoticus. This paper follows our original forum article and the replies from colleagues in the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT). 3.

Importance of edaphic, spatial and management factors for plant communities of field boundaries

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2009
Finland

Plant communities of 57 field boundaries, in four regions of Finland, were sampled for this study focusing on factors affecting species diversity and community composition. All the boundaries were buffer strips established following the guidance of an Agri-Environmental Support Scheme. Data on edaphic factors, boundary management practices and spatial coordinates were used as explanatory variables in the data analyses using variation partitioning by Redundancy Analysis and univariate statistics.

THE TASK OF FOREST RECLAMATION LAND MANAGEMENT – TO CREATE OPTIMAL CONDITIONS FOR SUSTAINABLE FUNCTIONING OF AGRICULTUR

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2015

The article deals with the theoretical aspects and the results of practical experiments Agroforestal of arrangement steppesites and had a positive impact on the preservation of fertility of chernozem soils and termination of erosion processes onplowed lands southeast CCZ

В статье рассмотрены теоретические аспекты и результаты практических экспериментовагролесомелиоративного обустройства степных участков, оказавших положительное влияние на сохранениеплодородия черноземных почв и прекращение эрозионных процессов на распаханных землях юго-востока ЦЧЗ.

Testing Focus Groups as a Tool for Connecting Indigenous and Local Knowledge on Abundance of Natural resources with Science‐Based Land Management Systems

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2014
Nicaragua

One of the clearly stated intentions of the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) is to bring both “western scientific” and “indigenous and local” knowledge systems within synthetic global, regional, and thematic assessments. A major challenge will be how to use, and quality‐assure, information derived from different knowledge systems.

Veterinary antibiotic sorption to agroforestry buffer, grass buffer and cropland soils

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2010

The potential of veterinary antibiotics (VAs) to impact human and environmental health requires the development and evaluation of land management practices that mitigate VA loss from manure-treated agroecosystems. Vegetative buffer strips (VBS) are postulated to be one management tool that can reduce VA transport to surface water resources.

Can family farms be considered as institutions?

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2006
Senegal
Africa

Faced with a changing economic environment (poor functioning of the groundnut sector, economic liberalization, etc.), rural households seek first and foremost to secure food for their families by diversifying their production and their economic activities in the village and in urban centres through temporary migration. In this context, the farm seen as an institution cannot be considered as a company in the sense of the classical economic theory. It corresponds more to a system of activities whose operation takes into account both market and family objectives.