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1.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 370(1681)2015 Nov 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26460125

RESUMO

Protected areas are a popular policy instrument in the global fight against loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services. However, the effectiveness of protected areas in preventing deforestation, and their impacts on poverty, are not well understood. Recent studies have found that Bolivia's protected-area system, on average, reduced deforestation and poverty. We implement several non-parametric and semi-parametric econometric estimators to characterize the heterogeneity in Bolivia's protected-area impacts on joint deforestation and poverty outcomes across a number of socioeconomic and biophysical moderators. Like previous studies from Costa Rica and Thailand, we find that Bolivia's protected areas are not associated with poverty traps. Our results also indicate that protection did not have a differential impact on indigenous populations. However, results from new multidimensional non-parametric estimators provide evidence that the biophysical characteristics associated with the greatest avoided deforestation are the characteristics associated with the potential for poverty exacerbation from protection. We demonstrate that these results would not be identified using the methods implemented in previous studies. Thus, this study provides valuable practical information on the impacts of Bolivia's protected areas for conservation practitioners and demonstrates methods that are likely to be valuable to researchers interested in better understanding the heterogeneity in conservation impacts.


Assuntos
Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/economia , Pobreza , Animais , Biodiversidade , Bolívia , Cidades , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/métodos , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/estatística & dados numéricos , Ecossistema , Humanos , Modelos Lineares , Modelos Econômicos , Grupos Populacionais , Pobreza/estatística & dados numéricos , Mudança Social , Fatores Socioeconômicos
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(24): 7420-5, 2015 Jun 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26082549

RESUMO

Scholars have made great advances in modeling and mapping ecosystem services, and in assigning economic values to these services. This modeling and valuation scholarship is often disconnected from evidence about how actual conservation programs have affected ecosystem services, however. Without a stronger evidence base, decision makers find it difficult to use the insights from modeling and valuation to design effective policies and programs. To strengthen the evidence base, scholars have advanced our understanding of the causal pathways between conservation actions and environmental outcomes, but their studies measure impacts on imperfect proxies for ecosystem services (e.g., avoidance of deforestation). To be useful to decision makers, these impacts must be translated into changes in ecosystem services and values. To illustrate how this translation can be done, we estimated the impacts of protected areas in Brazil, Costa Rica, Indonesia, and Thailand on carbon storage in forests. We found that protected areas in these conservation hotspots have stored at least an additional 1,000 Mt of CO2 in forests and have delivered ecosystem services worth at least $5 billion. This aggregate impact masks important spatial heterogeneity, however. Moreover, the spatial variability of impacts on carbon storage is the not the same as the spatial variability of impacts on avoided deforestation. These findings lead us to describe a research program that extends our framework to study other ecosystem services, to uncover the mechanisms by which ecosystem protection benefits humans, and to tie cost-benefit analyses to conservation planning so that we can obtain the greatest return on scarce conservation funds.


Assuntos
Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/economia , Ecossistema , Pobreza/economia , Brasil , Sequestro de Carbono , Análise Custo-Benefício , Costa Rica , Meio Ambiente , Política Ambiental/economia , Florestas , Humanos , Indonésia , Modelos Econômicos , Tailândia
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(11): 4332-7, 2014 Mar 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24567397

RESUMO

To develop effective environmental policies, we must understand the mechanisms through which the policies affect social and environmental outcomes. Unfortunately, empirical evidence about these mechanisms is limited, and little guidance for quantifying them exists. We develop an approach to quantifying the mechanisms through which protected areas affect poverty. We focus on three mechanisms: changes in tourism and recreational services; changes in infrastructure in the form of road networks, health clinics, and schools; and changes in regulating and provisioning ecosystem services and foregone production activities that arise from land-use restrictions. The contributions of ecotourism and other ecosystem services to poverty alleviation in the context of a real environmental program have not yet been empirically estimated. Nearly two-thirds of the poverty reduction associated with the establishment of Costa Rican protected areas is causally attributable to opportunities afforded by tourism. Although protected areas reduced deforestation and increased regrowth, these land cover changes neither reduced nor exacerbated poverty, on average. Protected areas did not, on average, affect our measures of infrastructure and thus did not contribute to poverty reduction through this mechanism. We attribute the remaining poverty reduction to unobserved dimensions of our mechanisms or to other mechanisms. Our study empirically estimates previously unidentified contributions of ecotourism and other ecosystem services to poverty alleviation in the context of a real environmental program. We demonstrate that, with existing data and appropriate empirical methods, conservation scientists and policymakers can begin to elucidate the mechanisms through which ecosystem conservation programs affect human welfare.


Assuntos
Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/economia , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/métodos , Ecossistema , Pobreza/prevenção & controle , Avaliação de Programas e Projetos de Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Costa Rica , Humanos , Pobreza/estatística & dados numéricos , Análise de Regressão , Fatores Socioeconômicos
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(34): 13913-8, 2011 Aug 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21873177

RESUMO

Protected areas are the dominant approach to protecting biodiversity and the supply of ecosystem services. Because these protected areas are often placed in regions with widespread poverty and because they can limit agricultural development and exploitation of natural resources, concerns have been raised about their potential to create or reinforce poverty traps. Previous studies suggest that the protected area systems in Costa Rica and Thailand, on average, reduced deforestation and alleviated poverty. We examine these results in more detail by characterizing the heterogeneity of responses to protection conditional on observable characteristics. We find no evidence that protected areas trap historically poorer areas in poverty. In fact, we find that poorer areas at baseline seem to have the greatest levels of poverty reduction as a result of protection. However, we do find that the spatial characteristics associated with the most poverty alleviation are not necessarily the characteristics associated with the most avoided deforestation. We show how an understanding of these spatially heterogeneous responses to protection can be used to generate suitability maps that identify locations in which both environmental and poverty alleviation goals are most likely to be achieved.


Assuntos
Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Pobreza/prevenção & controle , Costa Rica , Geografia , Tailândia
5.
Mycologia ; 103(3): 656-73, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21186326

RESUMO

We report on the species of Harpellales found in dipteran hosts during two surveys (32 field d) in the state of Veracruz, Mexico. One new morphospecies, Genistellospora dorsicaudata, is described with particular attention to the position of the terminal cell associated with fully developed fertile thalli bearing sexual spores. We emend the description of G. guanacastensis to include morphometrics on the zygospores, based on discovery of the sexual spores for that species in our collections. Thirteen other previously described species, which are new for Mexico, include G. homothallica, Pennella montana, Simuliomyces microsporus, Smittium aciculare, S. brasiliense (in a new host type), S. culisetae, S. dipterorum, S. microsporum, S. simulii and the unbranched species Harpella melusinae, H. tica, Stachylina grandispora and S. paucispora. Some species have been described but not named, specifically one each of Harpella, Pennella and Smittium. All taxa are identified morphologically, illustrated and additional details on their ecology are provided.


Assuntos
Dípteros/microbiologia , Fungos/classificação , Animais , Fungos/citologia , Fungos/fisiologia , Larva/microbiologia , México , Esporos Fúngicos/classificação , Esporos Fúngicos/citologia , Árvores , Clima Tropical
6.
Mycologia ; 100(1): 149-62, 2008.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18488361

RESUMO

This is the first report of Harpellales (Zygomycota) from Mexico, including herein only the endosymbiotic species of gut fungi in the digestive tracts or shed exuviae of Plecopteran and Ephemeropteran nymphs. Four new species are described: Allantomyces zopilotei, Bojamyces olmecensis, Gauthier-omyces viviparus and Graminella ophiuroidea. Among previously known Harpellales, Lancisporomyces nemouridarum and Zygopolaris ephemeridarum are southern range extremes and new records for Mexico. All species are illustrated and discussed relating to biogeographic implications of the new reports from Mexico, as well as the particular environmental circumstances of the Harpellales in the tropics.


Assuntos
Dípteros/microbiologia , Fungos/isolamento & purificação , Animais , Dípteros/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Fungos/citologia , Trato Gastrointestinal/microbiologia , Larva/microbiologia , México
7.
Acta Gastroenterol Latinoam ; 26(1): 15-22, 1996.
Artigo em Espanhol | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9137652

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Assessment of the rate of Diarrhoea in an infected HIV population of our medium. Assessment of its etiology, risk factors and response to treatment in both presentation of disease (Acute and chronic). DESIGN: This is a retrospective analysis of HIV and/or AIDS patients and diarrhea. The analytic points were: the clinical pattern of diarrhea (acute or chronic), risk factors, age, sex, etiology, stage of the disease, and response rate to treatment. PLACE: Hospital Prof. A. Posadas, that is situated in the greater Buenos Aires, and that functions as a referral centre for AIDS patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: 435 case records that were followed up through June 1987/ March 1994 were reviewed; 109 of the total number suffered from diarrhea. RESULTS: The rate of diarrhoea in the studied population was 25% (109/435). This represented the first symptom of HIV infection in 18.3% of the patients (20/109), 49% had acute diarrhea and 51% had chronic diarrhea. An etiologic agent was established in 52.3% of the chronic diarrhoeas and in the 17.7% of the acute ones, with a 35.4% of a global isolation when basic stool test were made. Sixty three percent of the patients with chronic diarrhoea were in stage IV of HIV infection. The 78.3% of the acute diarrhoeas and 46% of the chronic ones were responsive to specific or symptomatic treatment. CONCLUSIONS: HIV antibodies determinations should be included in the study protocol of diarrhea, especially in young patients. Chronic diarrhea could be related to final stages of the disease, with lower response to treatment. Endoscopy studies should be useful when the stool tests are negative, specially in the Cytomegalovirus (CMV) and Mycobacterium complex avium intracellulare (MAI) search.


Assuntos
Diarreia/epidemiologia , Diarreia/etiologia , Enteropatia por HIV/complicações , Doença Aguda , Adulto , Argentina/epidemiologia , Doença Crônica , Diarreia/microbiologia , Diarreia/parasitologia , Feminino , Seguimentos , Enteropatia por HIV/microbiologia , Enteropatia por HIV/parasitologia , Humanos , Masculino , Estudos Retrospectivos , Fatores de Risco
8.
Cell Biochem Funct ; 12(1): 21-8, 1994 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8168227

RESUMO

Enalapril maleate (EM) is the salt of N-[(S)-1-ethoxycarbonyl)-3-phenylpropyl]-L-alanyl-L-proline, used therapeutically as an anti-hypertensive agent. The effects of EM on some aspects of the energy metabolism and membrane properties of mitochondria from rat liver and kidney cortex were studied, but only the latter were significantly affected. With 0.8 mM of EM and 2-oxoglutarate as oxidizable substrate for isolated mitochondria from rat kidney cortex, the findings were: (a) inhibition of the respiratory rate in state III (37 per cent) and decrease (45 per cent) in respiratory control ratio (RCR), with only one addition of ADP; (b) reinforcement of the inhibition when a second addition of ADP was made; (c) no significant effect either on the rate of respiration in state IV or on the ADP/O ratio; (d) no effect on the ATPase activity of mitochondria from liver or kidney cortex; (e) inhibition of the transmembrane potential (delta psi) after a second addition of ADP; (f) inhibition of the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex. It is suggested that in kidney mitochondria, EM interferes in the gluconeogenesis dependence of at least five substrates: 2-oxoglutarate, glutamine, glutamate, lactate, and pyruvate. Also, EM may inhibit Na+/H+ exchange causing natriuresis.


Assuntos
Enalapril/farmacologia , Ácidos Cetoglutáricos/metabolismo , Córtex Renal/efeitos dos fármacos , Mitocôndrias Hepáticas/efeitos dos fármacos , Mitocôndrias/efeitos dos fármacos , Pró-Fármacos/farmacologia , Animais , Córtex Renal/metabolismo , Córtex Renal/ultraestrutura , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Mitocôndrias Hepáticas/metabolismo , Ratos
9.
Bull Soc Pathol Exot ; 86(1): 52-5, 1993.
Artigo em Francês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8504264

RESUMO

In countries where chemoresistance of Plasmodium falciparum is high (group III), mefloquine must be advocated for malaria prophylaxis for a stay less than 3 months. If it is more and particularly in Indo-china peninsular countries (Thailand, Birmania, Kamputchéa, Laos, Vietnam) and in Amazonia, advocated chemoprophylaxis is doxycycline 100 mg per day. Authors remind action mechanism, contraindication and side effects of this drug. Others publications underline the good tolerance of doxycycline now used by 1,400 french soldiers staying for 6 months with United Nations Organisation in Kamputchéa. An evaluation of tolerance and efficiency of this chemoprophylaxis is now in progress.


Assuntos
Doxiciclina/uso terapêutico , Malária Falciparum/prevenção & controle , Sudeste Asiático , Doxiciclina/administração & dosagem , Doxiciclina/efeitos adversos , Humanos , Mefloquina/uso terapêutico , América do Sul
10.
s.l; s.n; Sep.-Oct. 1976. 12 p. tab, graf.
Não convencional em Francês | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, HANSEN, Hanseníase, SESSP-ILSLACERVO, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: biblio-1240580

RESUMO

In French Polynesia the cases of leprosy are individually severe but the endemy itself always stood in low limits. The intensive use of modern treatments since 1950 have been making the eredication reasonably possible in the future. However the brutal demographic increase, the deep upsetting of the society and the important migrations made propitious conditions in the urbanized area for the advent of a new centre of infection. The result seems to be an increase of leprosy in the territory.


Assuntos
Humanos , Densidade Demográfica , Emigração e Imigração , Hanseníase/epidemiologia , Hanseníase/prevenção & controle , Polinésia , População Urbana , Renda
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