Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Conserv Biol ; 35(6): 1903-1912, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34057238

ABSTRACT

Most countries have many pieces of legislation that govern biodiversity, including a range of criminal, administrative, and civil law provisions that state how wildlife must be legally used, managed, and protected. However, related debates in conservation, such as about enforcement, often overlook the details within national legislation that define which specific acts are illegal, the conditions under which laws apply, and how they are sanctioned. Based on a review of 90 wildlife laws in 8 high-biodiversity countries with different legal systems, we developed a taxonomy that describes all types of wildlife offenses in those countries. The 511 offenses are organized into a hierarchical taxonomy that scholars and practitioners can use to help conduct legal analyses. This is significant amidst competing calls to strengthen, deregulate, and reform wildlife legislation, particularly in response to fears over zoonotic threats and large-scale biodiversity loss. It can be used to provide more nuance legal analyses and facilitate like-for-like comparisons across countries, informing processes to redraft conservation laws, review deregulation efforts, close loopholes, and harmonize legislation across jurisdictions. We applied the taxonomy in a comparison of sanctions in 8 countries for hunting a protected species. We found not only huge ranges in fines (US$0 to $200,000) and imprisonment terms (1.5 years to life imprisonment), but also fundamentally different approaches to designing sanctions for wildlife offenses. The taxonomy also illustrates how future legal taxonomies can be developed for other environmental issues (e.g., invasive species, protected areas).


Creación de una Taxonomía Mundial de Ofensas a la Fauna Resumen La mayoría de los países tienen muchos instrumentos de legislación que gobiernan la biodiversidad, incluyendo una gama de disposiciones de leyes criminales, administrativas y civiles que declaran cómo se debe usar, manejar y proteger legalmente a la fauna. Sin embargo, los debates relacionados a la conservación, como el cumplimiento de las leyes, generalmente ignoran los detalles dentro de la legislación nacional que definen cuáles actos específicos son ilegales, las condiciones bajo las cuales aplican las leyes y cómo son sancionadas. Con base en una revisión de 90 leyes relacionadas con la fauna en ocho países con una gran biodiversidad y diferentes sistemas legales, desarrollamos una taxonomía que describe todos los tipos de ofensas a la fauna en aquellos países. Las 511 ofensas están organizadas en una taxonomía jerárquica que los académicos y los practicantes pueden usar para ayudar a realizar análisis legales. Lo anterior es significativo en medio de las peticiones competitivas por fortalecer, desregular y reformar la legislación de la fauna, particularmente como respuesta al miedo por las amenazas zoonóticas y la pérdida a gran escala de la biodiversidad. La taxonomía puede usarse para proporcionar análisis legales más matizados y para facilitar las comparaciones igual-por-igual entre los países, informar los procesos para reformular las leyes de conservación, revisar los esfuerzos por desregular, cerrar los vacíos legales y armonizar la legislación entre las jurisdicciones. Aplicamos la taxonomía en una comparación de las sanciones aplicadas en ocho países a la caza de especies protegidas. Encontramos no sólo una gama enorme de multas (de US$0 a $200,000) y términos de encarcelamiento (de 1.5 años a sentencias de por vida), sino también estrategias fundamentalmente diferentes para el diseño de las sanciones para las ofensas a la fauna. La taxonomía también ilustra cómo pueden desarrollarse las siguientes taxonomías legales para otros temas ambientales (p. ej.: especies invasoras, áreas protegidas).


Subject(s)
Animals, Wild , Conservation of Natural Resources , Animals , Biodiversity , Hunting , Introduced Species
2.
Forensic Sci Int Genet ; 4(3): 206-12, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20215033

ABSTRACT

Microdevices are often designed to process sample volumes on the order of tens of microliters and cannot typically accommodate larger volume samples without adversely affecting efficiency and greatly increasing analysis time. However, dilute, large-volume biological samples are frequently encountered, especially in forensic or clinical laboratories. A microdevice, capable of efficiently processing 0.5-1 mL samples has been developed for solid phase extraction (SPE) of DNA. SPE was carried out on a microdevice utilizing magnetic silica particles and an optimized volumetric flow rate and elution buffer, resulting in a 50-fold decrease in volume and a 15-fold increase in DNA concentration. Device characterization studies showed DNA extraction efficiencies comparable with previously reported silica-based purification methods, with robust performance demonstrated by the successful amplification of a fragment from the gelsolin gene extracted from dilute whole blood. In addition, the microchip-based method for SPE of large volume, dilute samples was also used to demonstrate the first successful on-chip purification of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from both dilute whole blood and a degraded blood stain.


Subject(s)
DNA/analysis , Solid Phase Extraction , Binding Sites , Blood , Blood Stains , DNA, Mitochondrial/analysis , Fluorescence , Humans , Indicators and Reagents , Microfluidic Analytical Techniques , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Silicon Dioxide
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...