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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Studie obchodního efektu čínských přímých investic v zemích střední a východní Evropy / A Study of the Trade Effects of China's Direct Investment in Central and Eastern European Countries

Wang, Yuehan January 2020 (has links)
This paper aims to explore the relationship between China's investment in Central and Eastern European countries (CEECs) and China-CEECs trade. Since the 1950s, the research on the relationship between foreign direct investment (FDI) and foreign trade has become one of the topics of theoretical and empirical analysis. Many scholars have conducted extensive studies on the relationship between FDI and trade from different perspectives and theoretical and empirical perspectives. Under the background of "the Belt and Road", the CEECs, as important trading partners in this strategy, have gradually expanded their trade with China. This paper explores the current situation and characteristics of China's direct investment and trade with the CEECs from the perspective of the relationship between FDI and foreign trade. The development of China's direct investment and trade with the CEECs is explored from the perspectives of total volume, country, and products by qualitative analysis. Meanwhile, the trade gravity model is established to empirically analyze the influence of China's direct investment in the CEECs on China-CEECs trade scale from the three aspects of total trade volume, export, and import. The results show that China's direct investment in the CEECs has a long-term positive effect on the scale of...
2

Consequências da perda e fragmentação de habitat em morcegos

Mendes, Poliana 08 June 2015 (has links)
Submitted by Cláudia Bueno (claudiamoura18@gmail.com) on 2016-06-08T18:27:22Z No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Poliana Mendes - 2015.pdf: 2524794 bytes, checksum: eb8b9fab8d3f5746e746f1dbc2f546ab (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Luciana Ferreira (lucgeral@gmail.com) on 2016-06-09T11:32:11Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Poliana Mendes - 2015.pdf: 2524794 bytes, checksum: eb8b9fab8d3f5746e746f1dbc2f546ab (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2016-06-09T11:32:11Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Poliana Mendes - 2015.pdf: 2524794 bytes, checksum: eb8b9fab8d3f5746e746f1dbc2f546ab (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-06-08 / Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico - CNPq / Our aim was to explore some components of bat responses to land-use changes. Bats were sampled in 18 forest patches during four nights. Landscapes were delimited with 500 meter to 10km radius from sample site. We took metrics of two different landscape components: natural vegetation amount and fragmentation (measured as number of patches). In the first chapter we tested the effect of such components in total abundance, species richness and variance in biological traits of bats. In the second chapter we verified if those variables were more important than local ones to determine occupancy probability of eight bat species. Local variables were tree density, understory height, liana quantity, and canopy cover. In the third chapter we counterposed species climatic suitable areas with spatial data about habitat loss and fragmentation in Cerrado. We predicted species vulnerability creating scenarios in which they were sensitive to habitat loss and/or fragmentation, furthermore we showed an overview of species suitable areas exposure to land-use changes to eight bat species. We observed idiosyncratic patterns of responses to habitat loss and fragmentation in bats. Abundance is positively related to habitat amount, whereas species richness, variance in body mass and number of guilds is negatively related to fragmentation. Occupancy probability of Sturnira lilium is positively related to habitat amount, whereas occupancy probability of Myotis nigricans is negatively related to fragmentation. Six other species did not show any clear relationship between occupancy and landscape structure. South areas of Cerrado are locales with higher climatic suitability, while still having higher exposure level to land-use changes. Our results strengthen the view that species response patterns to habitat loss and fragmentation are species-specific and also diversity metric specific. Such assertion reinforces that it is necessary an improvement in knowledge about factors that determine those responses, however it does not mean that the development of regional conservation strategies is unfeasible when using the current available knowledge in literature. / Esse trabalho teve como objetivo explorar alguns componentes das respostas dos morcegos a mudanças na estrutura da paisagem. Morcegos foram amostrados em 18 fragmentos florestais durante quatro noites. Foram delimitadas paisagens com entre 500 metros e 10 km de raio a partir do local de amostragem. Métricas de dois componentes da paisagem foram medidas nestas paisagens: a quantidade de vegetação natural e a fragmentação dessa vegetação (medido como o número de manchas). No primeiro capítulo testamos o efeito desses dois componentes na abundância total, riqueza de espécies e variância em traços biológicos de morcegos. No segundo capítulo verificamos se essas variáveis eram mais importantes do que variáveis locais para determinar a probabilidade de ocupação de oito espécies de morcegos. As variáveis locais foram obtidas em três quadrantes no local de amostragem de morcegos, onde se obteve a densidade de árvores, altura do sub-bosque, quantidade de lianas e, cobertura do dossel. No terceiro capítulo, a adequabilidade climática das espécies no Cerrado foi contraposta com dados espacializados da quantidade de vegetação natural e fragmentação. Essa contraposição teve como o objetivo predizer a vulnerabilidade de espécies se elas fossem sensíveis a um limiar de perda de habitat ou fragmentação na paisagem, além de mostrar de forma geral a exposição às mudanças na paisagem das áreas climaticamente adequadas para oito espécies de morcegos. Observa-se, de uma forma geral, padrões idiossincráticos de respostas a perda de habitat e fragmentação em morcegos. A abundância total é positivamente relacionada com a quantidade de habitat, enquanto que a riqueza de espécies, a variância na massa corporal e o número de guildas são negativamente relacionados com a fragmentação. A probabilidade de ocupação de Sturnira lilium é positivamente relacionada com a quantidade de habitat, enquanto que a probabilidade de ocupação de Myotis nigricans é negativamente relacionada com a fragmentação. Outras seis espécies não mostraram uma clara relação da probabilidade de ocupação com a estrutura da paisagem. Áreas do sul do Cerrado são locais com maiores valores de adequabilidade e, ao mesmo tempo, maiores exposições às mudanças na paisagem. Os resultados dos três capítulos fortalecem uma visão na literatura de que o padrão de respostas das espécies de morcegos à perda de habitat e fragmentação é específico para a espécie e para o componente de diversidade medido. Esta afirmação reforça o argumento de que um maior conhecimento sobre os fatores que determinam essas respostas é necessário, porém não inviabiliza o desenvolvimento de estratégias regionais de conservação utilizando o conhecimento já disponível na literatura.
3

Landscape-level heterogeneity of agri-environment measures improves habitat suitability for farmland birds

Roilo, Stephanie, Engler, Jan O., Václavík, Tomáš, Cord, Anna F. 21 May 2024 (has links)
Agri-environment schemes (AESs), ecological focus areas (EFAs), and organic farming are the main tools of the common agricultural policy (CAP) to counteract the dramatic decline of farmland biodiversity in Europe. However, their effectiveness is repeatedly doubted because it seems to vary when measured at the field-versus-landscape level and to depend on the regional environmental and land-use context. Understanding the heterogeneity of their effectiveness is thus crucial to developing management recommendations that maximize their efficacy. Using ensemble species distribution models and spatially explicit field-level information on crops grown, farming practice (organic/conventional), and applied AES/EFA from the Integrated Administration and Control System, we investigated the contributions of five groups of measures (buffer areas, cover crops, extensive grassland management, fallow land, and organic farming) to habitat suitability for 15 farmland bird species in the Mulde River Basin, Germany. We used a multiscale approach to identify the scale of effect of the selected measures. Using simulated land-use scenarios, we further examined how breeding habitat suitability would change if the measures were completely removed and if their adoption by farmers increased to meet conservation-informed targets. Buffer areas, fallow land, and extensive grassland were beneficial measures for most species, but cover crops and organic farming had contrasting effects across species. While different measures acted at different spatial scales, our results highlight the importance of land-use management at the landscape level—at which most measures had the strongest effect. We found that the current level of adoption of the measures delivers only modest gains in breeding habitat suitability. However, habitat suitability improved for the majority of species when the implementation of the measures was increased, suggesting that they could be effective conservation tools if higher adoption levels were reached. The heterogeneity of responses across species and spatial scales indicated that a mix of different measures, applied widely across the agricultural landscape, would likely maximize the benefits for biodiversity. This can only be achieved if the measures in the future CAP will be cooperatively designed in a regionally targeted way to improve their attractiveness for farmers and widen their uptake.

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