annual summer
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

171
(FIVE YEARS 7)

H-INDEX

9
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2022 ◽  
pp. 51-56
Author(s):  
Lenneke Vaandrager ◽  
Anna Bonmatí-Tomàs ◽  
Arnd Hofmeister ◽  
Carlos Alvarez-Dardet ◽  
Paolo Contu ◽  
...  

AbstractIn this chapter, the authors, representing The Netherlands, Spain, Germany, Italy, Norway, the United Kingdom and Poland, trace the development of higher education in salutogenesis in Europe, spanning 30 years. At this time, the annual summer schools of the European Training Consortium in Public Health and Health Promotion (ETC-PHHP) have trained more than 700 participants from 60 countries. Perhaps the most distinguished member of the summer school’s faculty – at least from the perspective of advancing salutogenesis as a theory for health promotion – is Aaron Antonovsky, who participated in the 1992 edition of the course in Gothenburg, Sweden.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. e0260299
Author(s):  
Tuvshinzaya Zorigt ◽  
Satoshi Ito ◽  
Norikazu Isoda ◽  
Yoshikazu Furuta ◽  
Misheck Shawa ◽  
...  

Anthrax is a worldwide zoonotic disease. Anthrax has long been a public health and socio-economic issue in Mongolia. Presently, there is no spatial information on carcass burial sites as a potential hazard of future anthrax outbreaks and possible risk factors associated with anthrax occurrences in Mongolia. Here, we analyze retrospective data (1986–2015) on the disposal sites of livestock carcasses to describe historical spatio-temporal patterns of livestock anthrax in Khuvsgul Province, which showed the highest anthrax incidence rate in Mongolia. From the results of spatial mean and standard deviational ellipse analyses, we found that the anthrax spatial distribution in livestock did not change over the study period, indicating a localized source of exposure. The multi-distance spatial cluster analysis showed that carcass sites distributed in the study area are clustered. Using kernel density estimation analysis on carcass sites, we identified two anthrax hotspots in low-lying areas around the south and north regions. Notably, this study disclosed a new hotspot in the northern part that emerged in the last decade of the 30-year study period. The highest proportion of cases was recorded in cattle, whose prevalence per area was highest in six districts (i.e., Murun, Chandmani-Undur, Khatgal, Ikh-Uul, Tosontsengel, and Tsagaan-Uul), suggesting that vaccination should prioritize cattle in these districts. Furthermore, size of outbreaks was influenced by the annual summer mean air temperature of Khuvsgul Province, probably by affecting the permafrost freeze-thawing activity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
José J. Jiménez-Albarral ◽  
Fermín Urra ◽  
Fernando Jubete ◽  
Jacinto Román ◽  
Eloy Revilla ◽  
...  

AbstractThe wildcat is typically found in low densities. Here, we estimated wildcat abundance in cattle pastures interspersed between forests in northern Iberian Peninsula, and their patterns of intra-annual and daily use. We censused wildcats three times daily (morning, afternoon, and night) from a car during 4 years in summer season. We also carried out four monthly tracks (two in the morning and two in the afternoon) for a complete year. Overall, we recorded 191 wildcats in pastures and 5 on the road in forest zones. Thirteen different individual wildcats were identified during the summer censuses, but only 29.9% of the wildcats observed (n = 196) could be assigned to an individual wildcat. The number of wildcats sighted decreased especially during the last year, when sightings were 52–67% lower than in previous years. Wildcats were seen significantly more during the morning and night censuses than during the afternoon ones. Estimated annual summer densities in pasture areas ranged between 0.11 and 0.46 sightings/km2. Throughout the year, wildcats were observed 5.9 times more during summer-autumn than during winter-spring, and they could be observed in any time of the day, but more often close to dusk. It is noteworthy that the ancient human-transformed landscapes for cattle pastures could be an important habitat for wildcats in northern Iberian Peninsula, and conserving these areas should be important to maintaining wildcat populations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Biegalski ◽  
Pavel Tsvetkov ◽  
Yuguo Tao ◽  
Vladimir Sobes ◽  
Karl Pazdernik ◽  
...  

Forests ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 799
Author(s):  
Ingars Siliņš ◽  
Annija Kārkliņa ◽  
Olga Miezīte ◽  
Āris Jansons

To identify general patterns in the effect of climate-driven changes in the outbreak frequency of forest defoliating species, we examined 60 years of records (1950–2010) of outbreaks of five defoliating species. Data on Lymantria dispar, Lymantria monacha, Bupalus piniarius, Panolis flammea, and Operophtera brumata from five Central European countries (Slovakia, Czech Republic, Austria, Hungary, and Germany), where the current climate is comparable with the projections of climate for the Eastern Baltic region by the end of the 21st century, were analyzed. Time series approach was applied to estimate the linkage between outbreaks and climate warming. Mean annual, summer, and winter deviations for the period of 1850 to 1900 were assessed as proxies of warming. To estimate the legacy effect, warming proxies were lagged by one year. Among those tested, warming proxies showed a linkage with outbreaks. Three significant outbreaks occurred in the analyzed period (at the beginning and end of the period). During the middle part of the analyzed period, the frequency and magnitude of outbreaks were low, implicating a higher insect outbreak risk with warming in Central Europe. In the latter part of the analyzed period, more frequent yet smaller outbreaks occurred, which supports the outbreak linkage with one-year lag, summer, and annual temperatures.


Author(s):  
Professor John Swarbrooke

For centuries now, the sea has been at the very heart of tourism. For hundreds of millions of people worldwide, going on vacation still means going to the coast, particularly for their annual summer break. This magnetic pull of the sea motivates millions of people every week, from Stockholm to Sydney, New York to New Delhi, to head to their favourite beaches and seaside resorts. The lure of the sea makes them willing to put up with the hassles of modern airline travel and being stuck for hours in huge traffic jams so they can spend a few days each year by the ocean. What they do when they arrive at the coast, however, varies dramatically from tourist to tourist. For some they are content just to drink in the views, take photos and sit in their car viewing the sea through their windscreens. For others it means lying on the beach soaking up the sun, people-watching or playing ball games. Some tourists come to enjoy the man-made attractions that develop wherever tourists make their annual seasonal migration to the ocean. This can mean everything from casinos to theme parks, gift shops to theatres. In these cases, the sea is simply a backdrop to the vacation, with little real interaction with it on the part of the visitor.


2018 ◽  
pp. 117-143
Author(s):  
David Leheny

In 2009, the Tokyo-based theater group Caramel Box staged an adaptation of a science-fiction story by the popular author Onda Riku as one of its annual summer performances. This chapter traces the fraught history of Caramel Box within a larger trajectory of Japan’s postwar and recession-era theater companies, looking particularly at the group’s emphasis on non-political, partly comic melodramas as the most reliable way to please their devoted and almost entirely female audience. In doing so, it calls special attention to narrative rules and logics that forced a rethinking of the structure of Onda’s story in order to hit certain emotional beats at times and in ways their audience would expect and appreciate. By addressing the politics disclosed in ostensibly non-political theater, the chapter argues that Caramel Box offers an opportunity to consider how sentimental portrayals of virtuous innocence lay the foundation for climaxes that emphasize rediscovery and reintegration.


Science ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 362 (6410) ◽  
pp. 53-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristen L. Cook ◽  
Christoff Andermann ◽  
Florent Gimbert ◽  
Basanta Raj Adhikari ◽  
Niels Hovius

Himalayan rivers are frequently hit by catastrophic floods that are caused by the failure of glacial lake and landslide dams; however, the dynamics and long-term impacts of such floods remain poorly understood. We present a comprehensive set of observations that capture the July 2016 glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) in the Bhotekoshi/Sunkoshi River of Nepal. Seismic records of the flood provide new insights into GLOF mechanics and their ability to mobilize large boulders that otherwise prevent channel erosion. Because of this boulder mobilization, GLOF impacts far exceed those of the annual summer monsoon, and GLOFs may dominate fluvial erosion and channel-hillslope coupling many tens of kilometers downstream of glaciated areas. Long-term valley evolution in these regions may therefore be driven by GLOF frequency and magnitude, rather than by precipitation.


Subject Intra-regional tensions Significance Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has quietly cancelled his annual summer holiday in Morocco. Last year, Salman reportedly spent 100 million dollars on the visit, with an entourage of nearly 1,000 people. The move is an economic blow to Morocco, which relies on the revenue and jobs generated by the visit. It signals growing Saudi-Moroccan tensions that have escalated as Morocco maintained a neutral stance vis-a-vis the Saudi-led boycott of Qatar. Impacts Saudi Arabia and the UAE may condition financial aid to the Maghreb on support for their diplomatic and security priorities. Maghreb states are unlikely to join a conflict with Iran, should Saudi Arabia and the UAE pursue a more confrontational approach. Cooperation and investment between the Maghreb and the GCC will continue, but ties will be complicated by many policy differences. Different Gulf states’ support of rival militias will worsen chances for a political compromise in Libya.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document