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Disentangling the relative effects of bushmeat availability on human nutrition in central Africa
(2015)
We studied links between human malnutrition and wild meat availability within the Rainforest Biotic Zone in central Africa. We distinguished two distinct hunted mammalian diversity distributions, one in the rainforest areas (Deep Rainforest Diversity, DRD) containing taxa of lower hunting sustainability, the other in the northern rainforest-savanna mosaic, with species of greater hunting potential (Marginal Rainforest Diversity, MRD). Wild meat availability, assessed by standing crop mammalian biomass, was greater in MRD than in DRD areas. Predicted bushmeat extraction was also higher in MRD areas. Despite this, stunting of children, a measure of human malnutrition, was greater in MRD areas. Structural equation modeling identified that, in MRD areas, mammal diversity fell away from urban areas, but proximity to these positively influenced higher stunting incidence. In DRD areas, remoteness and distance from dense human settlements and infrastructures explained lower stunting levels. Moreover, stunting was higher away from protected areas. Our results suggest that in MRD areas, forest wildlife rational use for better human nutrition is possible. By contrast, the relatively low human populations in DRD areas currently offer abundant opportunities for the continued protection of more vulnerable mammals and allow dietary needs of local populations to be met.
Der Einzelhandel in Ostmitteleuropa entwickelt sich seit dem Zusammenbruch des Sozialismus außerordentlich dynamisch. Er ist zugleich durch extreme Gegensätze gekennzeichnet: Das Spektrum der Betriebsformen reicht vom ambulanten Handel „aus der Hand“, der für viele Menschen existentielle Bedeutung einnimmt, bis zu Luxusgeschäften und SB-Warenhäusern westeuropäischer Ketten. Die Einzelhandelsstruktur wird so zum Spiegelbild der zunehmenden gesellschaftlichen Polarisierung in den Transformationsstaaten. Der Strukturwandel im Einzelhandel vollzieht sich dabei zwischen unternehmerischer Anpassung sowie administrativer Regulierung auf der lokalen Ebene und wachsender Internationalisierung. Dieses Spannungsfeld kann als maßgeblicher Erklärungsrahmen für die Transformation in Ostmitteleuropa gelten.
The Urban Heat Island (UHI) is the phenomenon of altered increased temperatures in urban areas compared to their rural surroundings. UHIs grow and intensify under extreme hot periods, such as during heat waves, which can affect human health and also increase the demand for energy for cooling. This study applies remote sensing and land use/land cover (LULC) data to assess the cooling effect of varying urban vegetation cover, especially during extreme warm periods, in the city of Munich, Germany. To compute the relationship between Land Surface Temperature (LST) and Land Use Land Cover (LULC), MODIS eight-day interval LST data for the months of June, July and August from 2002 to 2012 and the Corine Land Cover (CLC) database were used. Due to similarities in the behavior of surface temperature of different CLCs, some classes were reclassified and combined to form two major, rather simplified, homogenized classes: one of built-up area and one of urban vegetation. The homogenized map was merged with the MODIS eight-day interval LST data to compute the relationship between them. The results revealed that (i) the cooling effect accrued from urban vegetation tended to be non-linear; and (ii) a remarkable and stronger cooling effect in terms of LST was identified in regions where the proportion of vegetation cover was between seventy and almost eighty percent per square kilometer. The results also demonstrated that LST within urban vegetation was affected by the temperature of the surrounding built-up and that during the well-known European 2003 heat wave, suburb areas were cooler from the core of the urbanized region. This study concluded that the optimum green space for obtaining the lowest temperature is a non-linear trend. This could support urban planning strategies to facilitate appropriate applications to mitigate heat-stress in urban area.
BACKGROUND: Climate change will probably alter the spread and transmission intensity of malaria in Africa. OBJECTIVES: In this study, we assessed potential changes in the malaria transmission via an integrated weather disease model.
METHODS: We simulated mosquito biting rates using the Liverpool Malaria Model (LMM). The input data for the LMM were bias-corrected temperature and precipitation data from the regional model (REMO) on a 0.5 degrees latitude longitude grid. A Plasmodium falciparum infection model expands the LMM simulations to incorporate information on the infection rate among children. Malaria projections were carried out with this integrated weather disease model for 2001 to 2050 according to two climate scenarios that include the effect of anthropogenic land-use and land-cover changes on climate.
RESULTS: Model-based estimates for the present climate (1960 to 2000) are consistent with observed data for the spread of malaria in Africa. In the model domain, the regions where malaria is epidemic are located in the Sahel as well as in various highland territories. A decreased spread of malaria over most parts of tropical Africa is projected because of simulated increased surface temperatures and a significant reduction in annual rainfall. However, the likelihood of malaria epidemics is projected to increase in the southern part of the Sahel. In most of East Africa, the intensity of malaria transmission is expected to increase. Projections indicate that highland areas that were formerly unsuitable for malaria will become epidemic, whereas in the lower-altitude regions of the East African highlands, epidemic risk will decrease.
CONCLUSIONS: We project that climate changes driven by greenhouse-gas and land-use changes will significantly affect the spread of malaria in tropical Africa well before 2050. The geographic distribution of areas where malaria is epidemic might have to be significantly altered in the coming decades.
The focus of this analysis is on the early detection of forest health changes, specifically that of Norway spruce (Picea abies L. Karst.). In this analysis, we planned to examine the time (degree of early detection), spectral wavelengths and appropriate method for detecting vitality changes. To accomplish this, a ring-barking experiment with seven subsequent laboratory needle measurements was carried out in 2013 and 2014 in an area in southeastern Germany near Altötting. The experiment was also accompanied by visual crown condition assessment. In total, 140 spruce trees in groups of five were ring-barked with the same number of control trees in groups of five that were selected as reference trees in order to compare their development. The laboratory measurements were analysed regarding the separability of ring-barked and control samples using spectral reflectance, vegetation indices and derivative analysis. Subsequently, a random forest classifier for determining important spectral wavelength regions was applied. Results from the methods are consistent and showed a high importance of the visible (VIS) spectral region, very low importance of the near-infrared (NIR) and minor importance of the shortwave infrared (SWIR) spectral region. Using spectral reflectance data as well as indices, the earliest separation time was found to be 292 days after ring-barking. The derivative analysis showed that a significant separation was observed 152 days after ring-barking for six spectral features spread through VIS and SWIR. A significant separation was detected using a random forest classifier 292 days after ring-barking with 58% separability. The visual crown condition assessment was analysed regarding obvious changes of vitality and the first indication was observed 302 days after ring-barking as bark beetle infestation and yellowing of foliage in the ring-barked trees only. This experiment shows that an early detection, compared with visual crown assessment, is possible using the proposed methods for this specific data set. This study will contribute to ongoing research for early detection of vitality changes that will support foresters and decision makers.
In this study, polarimetric Synthetic Aperture Radar (PolSAR) data at X-, C- and L-Bands, acquired by the satellites: TerraSAR-X (2011), Radarsat-2 (2011), ALOS (2010) and ALOS-2 (2016), were used to characterize the tundra land cover of a test site located close to the town of Tuktoyaktuk, NWT, Canada. Using available in situ ground data collected in 2010 and 2012, we investigate PolSAR scattering characteristics of common tundra land cover classes at X-, C- and L-Bands. Several decomposition features of quad-, co-, and cross-polarized data were compared, the correlation between them was investigated, and the class separability offered by their different feature spaces was analyzed. Certain PolSAR features at each wavelength were sensitive to the land cover and exhibited distinct scattering characteristics. Use of shorter wavelength imagery (X and C) was beneficial for the characterization of wetland and tundra vegetation, while L-Band data highlighted differences of the bare ground classes better. The Kennaugh Matrix decomposition applied in this study provided a unified framework to store, process, and analyze all data consistently, and the matrix offered a favorable feature space for class separation. Of all elements of the quad-polarized Kennaugh Matrix, the intensity based elements K0, K1, K2, K3 and K4 were found to be most valuable for class discrimination. These elements contributed to better class separation as indicated by an increase of the separability metrics squared Jefferys Matusita Distance and Transformed Divergence. The increase in separability was up to 57% for Radarsat-2 and up to 18% for ALOS-2 data.
Interactions between different formative processes are reflected in the internal structure of rock glaciers. Therefore, the detection of subsurface conditions can help to enhance our understanding of landform development. For an assessment of subsurface conditions, we present an analysis of the spatial variability of active layer thickness, ground ice content and frost table topography for two different rock glaciers in the Eastern Swiss Alps by means of quasi-3-D electrical resistivity imaging (ERI). This approach enables an extensive mapping of subsurface structures and a spatial overlay between site-specific surface and subsurface characteristics. At Nair rock glacier, we discovered a gradual descent of the frost table in a downslope direction and a constant decrease of ice content which follows the observed surface topography. This is attributed to ice formation by refreezing meltwater from an embedded snow bank or from a subsurface ice patch which reshapes the permafrost layer. The heterogeneous ground ice distribution at Uertsch rock glacier indicates that multiple processes on different time domains were involved in the development. Resistivity values which represent frozen conditions vary within a wide range and indicate a successive formation which includes several advances, past glacial overrides and creep processes on the rock glacier surface. In combination with the observed topography, quasi-3-D ERI enables us to delimit areas of extensive and compressive flow in close proximity. Excellent data quality was provided by a good coupling of electrodes to the ground in the pebbly material of the investigated rock glaciers. Results show the value of the quasi-3-D ERI approach but advise the application of complementary geophysical methods for interpreting the results.
Der anthropogene Klimawandel ist eine der größten Herausforderungen des 21. Jahrhunderts. Eine Hauptschwierigkeit liegt dabei in der Unsicherheit bezüglich der regionalen Änderung von Niederschlag und Temperatur. Hierdurch wird die Entwicklung geeigneter Anpassungsstrategien deutlich erschwert.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden vier Evaluationsansätze mit insgesamt 13 Metriken für aktuelle globale (zwei Generationen) und regionale Klimamodelle entwickelt und verglichen, um anschließend eine Analyse der Projektionsunsicherheit vorzunehmen. Basierend auf den erstellten Modellbewertungen werden durch Gewichtung Aussagen über den Unsicherheitsbereich des zukünftigen Klimas getroffen. Die Evaluation der Modelle wird im Mittelmeerraum sowie in acht Unterregionen durchgeführt. Dabei wird der saisonale Trend von Temperatur und Niederschlag im Evaluationszeitraum 1960–2009 ausgewertet. Zusätzlich wird für bestimmte Metriken jeweils das klimatologische Mittel oder die harmonischen Zeitreiheneigenschaften evaluiert. Abschließend werden zum Test der Übertragbarkeit der Ergebnisse neben den Hauptuntersuchungsgebieten sechs global verteilte Regionen untersucht. Außerdem wird die zeitliche Konsistenz durch Analyse eines zweiten, leicht versetzten Evaluationszeitraums behandelt, sowie die Abhängigkeit der Modellbewertungen von verschiedenen Referenzdaten mit Hilfe von insgesamt drei Referenzdatensätzen untersucht.
Die Ergebnisse legen nahe, dass nahezu alle Metriken zur Modellevaluierung geeignet sind. Die Auswertung unterschiedlicher Variablen und Regionen erzeugt Modellbewertungen, die sich in den Kontext aktueller Forschungsergebnisse einfügen. So wurde die Leistung der globalen Klimamodelle der neusten Generation (2013) im Vergleich zur Vorgängergeneration (2007) im Schnitt ähnlich hoch bzw. in vielen Situationen auch stärker eingeordnet. Ein durchweg bestes Modell konnte nicht festgestellt werden. Der Großteil der entwickelten Metriken zeigt für ähnliche Situationen übereinstimmende Modellbewertungen. Bei der Gewichtung hat sich der Niederschlag als besonders geeignet herausgestellt. Grund hierfür sind die im Schnitt deutlichen Unterschiede der Modellleistungen in Zusammenhang mit einer geringeren Simulationsgüte. Umgekehrt zeigen die Metriken für die Modelle der Temperatur allgemein überwiegend hohe Evaluationsergebnisse, wodurch nur wenig Informationsgewinn durch Gewichtung erreicht werden kann. Während die Metriken gut für unterschiedliche Regionen und Skalenniveaus verwendet werden Evaluationszeiträume nicht grundsätzlich gegeben. Zusätzlich zeigen die Modellranglisten unterschiedlicher Regionen und Jahreszeiten häufig nur geringe Korrelationen. Dies gilt besonders für den Niederschlag. Bei der Temperatur sind hingegen leichte Übereinstimmungen auszumachen. Beim Vergleich der mittleren Ranglisten über alle Modellbewertungen und Situationen der Hauptregionen des Mittelmeerraums mit den Globalregionen besteht eine signifikante Korrelation von 0,39 für Temperatur, während sie für Niederschlag um null liegt. Dieses Ergebnis ist für alle drei verwendeten Referenzdatensätze im Mittelmeerraum gültig. So schwankt die Korrelation der Modellbewertungen des Niederschlags für unterschiedliche Referenzdatensätze immer um Null und die der Temperaturranglisten zwischen 0,36 und 0,44. Generell werden die Metriken als geeignete Evaluationswerkzeuge für Klimamodelle eingestuft. Daher können sie einen Beitrag zur Änderung des Unsicherheitsbereichs und damit zur Stärkung des Vertrauens in Klimaprojektionen leisten.
Die Abhängigkeit der Modellbewertungen von Region und Untersuchungszeitraum muss dabei jedoch berücksichtigt werden. So besitzt die Analyse der Konsistenz von Modellbewertungen sowie der Stärken und Schwächen der Klimamodelle großes Potential für folgende Studien, um das Vertrauen in Modellprojektionen weiter zu steigern.
Eine lange Tradition im japanischen Einzelhandel besitzen die oftmals schmalen und überdachten Einkaufspassagen (Shoutengai). Charakteristisch ist die Aneinanderreihung von kleinflächigen, unabhängigen und oftmals familiengeführten Fachgeschäften. Diese sind sowohl im Einzelhandel, Dienstleistungsgewerbe als auch in der Gastronomie angesiedelt und dienen nicht nur als zentrales Versorgungszentrum in Fußnähe, sondern sind auch Kommunikationsmittelpunkt einer Nachbarschaft oder eines Stadtbezirks. Das Ziel der Arbeit ist die Darstellung der momentanen Situation traditioneller Einkaufspassagen in Japan und welchen Herausforderungen diese aktuell und zukünftig gegenüberstehen. Mangelnde Kundennachfrage, erhöhte Konkurrenzsituation, steigende Steuerabgaben oder fehlende Nachfolger stehen beispielhaft für die Probleme, mit denen sich viele Inhaber konfrontiert sehen. Durch die empirische Untersuchung sollen Determinanten des Erfolgs bzw. Misserfolgs erarbeitet werden. Hierbei wurden von Juni 2015 bis Juli 2016 in Kyoto und Osaka 21 Einkaufspassagen mit insgesamt 3.469 Geschäftsflächen kartiert, von denen wiederum acht Einkaufspassagen näher untersucht wurden. Dabei haben 513 Betriebe an einer standardisierten Befragung teilgenommen und es wurden mehrere Leitfadeninterviews mit Shoutengai-Vereinen sowie Stadtverwaltungen und Wirtschaftsförderern geführt. Als theoretische Grundlagen der vorliegenden Arbeit dient insbesondere die Akteurs- und Handlungstheorie und wie die Aktivitäten der Geschäftsbetreiber die Passagen positiv bzw. negativ beeinflussen. Flankierenden Charakter besitzen zudem die Institutionentheorie, anhand derer der Einfluss politischer Entscheidungen erörtert wird sowie zyklische Theorieansätze, um eine Einordnung der traditionellen Einkaufspassagen in Japans Einzelhandelslandschaft durchzuführen.
Seit über drei Jahrzehnten sinkt landesweit die Zahl der Einzelhändler, die Gründe für den Niedergang sind vielfältig. Insbesondere Einzelgeschäfte mit einer niedrigen einstelligen Zahl an Mitarbeitern waren und sind auch weiterhin im Rückgang inbegriffen. Über ein Drittel der befragten Geschäftsinhaber planen in den nächsten fünf Jahren die Geschäftsführung aufzugeben, zwei Drittel von ihnen haben keinen Nachfolger für ihr Geschäft. Zunehmende Schließungen tragen zu Trading-Down Prozessen der gesamten Passage bei. Hohe Leerstandsquoten von bis zu über 50 %, verbunden mit ungepflegten Gebäudefassaden, einem schlechten Beleuchtungskonzept und begrenzter Produktauswahl führen zu einer unattraktiven Einkaufsatmosphäre, resultierend in einem Kundenmangel. Die Diversifizierung der Betriebsformen ab den 1960er Jahren und Deregulierungsprozesse der Binnenhandelspolitik beförderten die Konkurrenzsituation der Einkaufspassagen und bildeten die Grundlage dieser Abwärtsentwicklung.
Einige Immobiliengesellschaften nutzen dies für ihre Zwecke und erwerben einige Ladenzeilen, um diese großflächigen zu Wohnhäusern umzubauen. Die Einkaufspassagen erfahren dadurch einen Funktionswandel und verlieren zunehmend ihren ursprünglichen Charakter. Die Ergebnisse tragen dazu bei, die aktuelle Einzelhandelslandschaft Japans zu erfassen und stadtplanerischen Instrumenten bei der künftigen Planung zu unterstützen.
Home on the Range: Factors Explaining Partial Migration of African Buffalo in a Tropical Environment
(2012)
Partial migration (when only some individuals in a population undertake seasonal migrations) is common in many species and geographical contexts. Despite the development of modern statistical methods for analyzing partial migration, there have been no studies on what influences partial migration in tropical environments. We present research on factors affecting partial migration in African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) in northeastern Namibia. Our dataset is derived from 32 satellite tracking collars, spans 4 years and contains over 35,000 locations. We used remotely sensed data to quantify various factors that buffalo experience in the dry season when making decisions on whether and how far to migrate, including potential man-made and natural barriers, as well as spatial and temporal heterogeneity in environmental conditions. Using an information-theoretic, non-linear regression approach, our analyses showed that buffalo in this area can be divided into 4 migratory classes: migrants, non-migrants, dispersers, and a new class that we call "expanders". Multimodel inference from least-squares regressions of wet season movements showed that environmental conditions (rainfall, fires, woodland cover, vegetation biomass), distance to the nearest barrier (river, fence, cultivated area) and social factors (age, size of herd at capture) were all important in explaining variation in migratory behaviour. The relative contributions of these variables to partial migration have not previously been assessed for ungulates in the tropics. Understanding the factors driving migratory decisions of wildlife will lead to better-informed conservation and land-use decisions in this area.
The contact of hot melt with liquid water - called Molten Fuel Coolant Interaction (MFCI) - can result in vivid explosions. Such explosions can occur in different scenarios: in steel or powerplants but also in volcanoes. Because of the possible dramatic consequences of such explosions an investigation of the explosion process is necessary.
Fundamental basics of this process are already discovered and explained, such as the frame conditions for these explosions. It has been shown that energy transfer during an MFCI-process can be very high because of the transfer of thermal energy caused by positive feedback mechanisms.
Up to now the influence of several varying parameters on the energy transfer and the explosions is not yet investigated sufficiently. An important parameter is the melt temperature, because the amount of possibly transferable energy depends on it. The investigation of this influence is the main aim of this work. Therefor metallic tin melt was used, because of its nearly constant thermal material properties in a wide temperature range. With tin melt research in the temperature range from 400 °C up to 1000 °C are
possible.
One important result is the lower temperature limit for vapor film stability in the experiments. For low melt temperatures up to about 600 °C the vapor film is so unstable that it already can collapse before the mechanical trigger. As expected the transferred thermal energy all in all increases with higher temperatures. Although this effect sometimes is superposed by other influences such as the premix of melt and water, the result is confirmed after a consequent filtering of the remaining influences. This trend is not only recognizable in the amount of transferred energy, but also in the fragmentation of melt or the vaporizing water. But also the other influences on MFCI-explosions showed interesting results in the frame of this work. To perform the experiments the installation and preparation of the experimental Setup in the laboratory were necessary.
In order to compare the results to volcanism and to get a better investigation of the brittle fragmentation
of melt additional runs with magmatic melt were made. In the results the thermal power during energy transfer could be estimated. Furthermore the model of “cooling fragments “ could be usefully applied.
In the 1960s, when most African nations gained their independence after the age of colonialism, several theories and strategies emerged with the goal of "developing" these apparently "underdeveloped" territories. One of the most influential approaches for this task was represented in Julius K. Nyerere´s idea of Ujamaa, the Tanzanian version of African socialism.
Even before the Arusha Declaration established Ujamaa as a national development strategy in 1967, several groups of politicized young farmers took to the empty countryside of Tanzania to implement their own version of cooperative development. From one of these attempts emerged the Ruvuma Development Association (RDA), which organized up to 18 villages in southwestern Tanzania. The RDA became the inspiration for Nyerere´s concretization of Ujamaa and its implementation on national level. Yet, the central state could not replicate the success of the peasants, which was based on voluntariness and intrinsic motivation.
In 2015, this exploratory study has revisited the Region of Ruvuma. Through a case study approach, relying mostly on qualitative methods, new insights into the local history of Ujamaa and its perception have been gathered. In particular, narrative interviews with contemporary witnesses and group interviews with the present-day farmers’ groups have been conducted. Furthermore, NGOs active within the region, as well as regional and local government institutions were among the key stakeholders identified to concretize the local narrative of Ujamaa development. All interviews were analyzed according to the principles of qualitative content analysis. Additionally, individual villager questionnaires were used to achieve a more holistic picture of the local perception of development, challenges and the Ujamaa era.
None of the original Ujamaa groups of the times of the RDA was still operational at the time of research and no case of village-wide organization of collective agriculture could be observed. Nevertheless, in all of the three case study villages, several farmers’ groups (vikundi) were active in organizing development activities for their members. Furthermore, the perception of the Ujamaa era was generally positive throughout all of the case study sites. Yet, there have been significant differences in this perception, based on the village, age, gender and field size of the recipients. Overall, the period of Ujamaa was seen as an inspiration for present-day group activities, and the idea of such activities as a remedy for the developmental challenges of these villages was common among all stakeholders.
This thesis concludes that the positive perception of group activities as a vehicle for village development and the perception of Ujamaa history as a positive asset for the inception and organization of farmers’ groups would be highly beneficial to further attempts to support such development activities. However, the limitations in market access and capital availability for these highly-motivated group members have to be addressed by public and private development institutions. Otherwise, "the smell of Ujamaa" will be of little use for the progress of these villages.
The Kaapvaal Craton hosts a number of large gold deposits (e.g. Witwatersrand Supergroup) which mining companies have exploited at certain stratigraphic positions. It also hosts the largest platinum group element (PGE) deposits (e.g. Bushveld Igneous Complex) which mining companies have exploited in different mineralised layered magmatic zones. In spite of the extensive exploration history in the Kaapvaal Craton, the origin of the Witwatersrand gold deposits and Bushveld Igneous Complex PGE deposits has remained one of the most debated topics in economic geology. The goal of this study was to identify the geochemical characteristics of marine shales in the Barberton, Witwatersrand, and Transvaal supergroups in South Africa in order to make inferences on their sediment provenance and siderophile element endowments. Understanding why some of the Archaean and Proterozoic hinterlands are heavily mineralised, compared to others with similar geological characteristics, will aid in the development of more efficient exploration models. Fresh, unmineralised marine shales from the Barberton (Fig Tree and Moodies groups), Witwatersrand (West Rand and Central Rand groups), and Transvaal (Black Reef Formation and Pretoria Group) supergroups were sampled from drill core and underground mining exposures. Analytical methods, such as X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), optical microscopy, X-ray fluorescence (XRF), inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES), inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), and electron microprobe analysis (EMPA) were applied to comprehensively characterise the shales. All of the Au and PGE assays examined the newly collected shale samples.
The Barberton Supergroup shales consist mainly of quartz, illite, chlorite, and albite, with diverse heavy minerals, including sulfides and oxides, representing the minor constituents. The regionally persistent Witwatersrand Supergroup shales consist mainly of quartz, muscovite, and chlorite, and also contain minor constituents of sulfides and oxides. The Transvaal Supergroup shales comprise quartz, chlorite, and carbonaceous material. Major, trace (including rare-earth element) concentrations were determined for shales from the above supergroups to constrain their source and post-depositional evolution. Chemical variations were observed in all the studied marine shales. Results obtained from this study revealed that post-depositional modification of shale chemistry was significant only near contacts with over- and underlying coarser-grained siliciclastic rocks and along cross-cutting faults, veins, and dykes. Away from such zones, the shale composition remained largely unaltered and can be used to draw inferences concerning sediment provenance and palaeoweathering in the source region and/or on intrabasinal erosion surfaces. Evaluation of weathering profiles through sections of the studied supergroups revealed that the shales therein are characterised by high chemical index of alteration (CIA), chemical index of weathering (CIW), and index of compositional variability (ICV), suggesting that the source area was lithologically complex and subject to intense chemical weathering.
A progressive change in the chemical composition was identified, from a dominant ultramafic–mafic source for the Fig Tree Group to a progressively felsic–plutonic provenance for the Moodies Group. The West Rand Group of the Witwatersrand Supergroup shows a dominance of tonalite–trondhjemite–granodiorite and calcalkaline granite sources. Compositional profiles through the only major marine shale unit within the Central Rand Group indicate the progressive unroofing of a granitic source in an otherwise greenstone-dominated hinterland during the course of sedimentation. No plausible likely tectonic setting was obtained through geochemical modelling. However, the combination of the systematic shale chemistry, geochronology, and sedimentology in the Witwatersrand Supergroup supports the hypothesised passive margin setting for the >2.98 to 2.91 Ga West Rand Group, and an active continental margin source for the overlying >2.90 to 2.78 Ga Central Rand Group, along with a foreland basin setting for the latter.
Ultra-low detection limit analyses of gold and PGE concentrations revealed a variable degree of gold accumulation within pristine unmineralised shales. All the studied shales contain elevated gold and PGE contents relative to the upper continental crust, with marine shales from the Central Rand Group showing the highest Au (±9.85 ppb) enrichment. Based on this variation in the provenance of contemporaneous sediments in different parts of the Kaapvaal Craton, one can infer that the siderophile elements were sourced from a fertile hinterland, but concentrated into the marine shales by a combination of different processes. It is proposed that accumulation of siderophile elements in the studied marine shales was mainly controlled by mechanical coagulation and aggregation. These processes involved suspended sediments, fine gold particles, and other trace elements being trapped in marine environments. Mechanical coagulation and aggregation resulted in gold enrichments by 2–3 orders of magnitude, whereas some of the gold in these marine shales can be reconciled by seawater adsorption into sedimentary pyrite.
For the source of gold and PGEs in the studied marine shales in the Kaapvaal Craton, a genetic model is proposed that involves the following:
(1) A highly siderophile elements enriched upper mantle domain, herein referred to as “geochemically anomalous mantle domain”, from which the Kaapvaal crust was sourced. This mantle domain enriched in highly siderophile elements was formed either by inhomogeneous mixing with cosmic material that was added during intense meteorite bombardment of the Hadaean to Palaeoarchaean Earth or by plume-like ascent of relics from the core–mantle boundary. In both cases, elevated siderophile elements concentrations would be expected. The geochemically anomalous mantle domain is likely the ultimate source of the Witwatersrand modified palaeoplacer gold deposits and was tapped again ca. 2.054 Ga during the emplacement of the Bushveld Igneous Complex. Therefore, I propose that there is a genetic link (i.e. common geochemically anomalous mantle source) between the Witwatersrand gold deposits and the younger Bushveld Igneous Complex PGE deposits.
(2) Scavenging of crustal gold by various surface processes such as trapping of gold from Archaean/Palaeoproterozoic river water on the surface of local photosynthesizing cyanobacterial or microbial mats, and reworking of these mats into erosion channels during flooding events.
The above two models complement each other, with model (1) providing a common geological source for the Witwatersrand gold and Bushveld Igneous Complex PGE deposits, and model (2) explaining the processes responsible for Witwatersrand-type gold pre-concentration processes. In sequences such as the Transvaal Supergroup, a less fertile hinterland and/or less reworking of older sediments led to a correspondingly lower gold endowment. These findings indicate temporal distribution of siderophile elements in the upper crust (e.g. marine shales). The overall implications of these findings are that background concentrations of gold and PGEs can be used to target potential exploration areas in other cratons of similar age. This increases the likelihood of finding other Witwatersrand-type gold or Bushveld Igneous Complex-type PGE deposits in other cratons.
Robust risk assessment requires accurate flood intensity area mapping to allow for the identification of populations and elements at risk. However, available flood maps in West Africa lack spatial variability while global datasets have resolutions too coarse to be relevant for local scale risk assessment. Consequently, local disaster managers are forced to use traditional methods such as watermarks on buildings and media reports to identify flood hazard areas. In this study, remote sensing and Geographic Information System (GIS) techniques were combined with hydrological and statistical models to delineate the spatial limits of flood hazard zones in selected communities in Ghana, Burkina Faso and Benin. The approach involves estimating peak runoff concentrations at different elevations and then applying statistical methods to develop a Flood Hazard Index (FHI). Results show that about half of the study areas fall into high intensity flood zones. Empirical validation using statistical confusion matrix and the principles of Participatory GIS show that flood hazard areas could be mapped at an accuracy ranging from 77% to 81%. This was supported with local expert knowledge which accurately classified 79% of communities deemed to be highly susceptible to flood hazard. The results will assist disaster managers to reduce the risk to flood disasters at the community level where risk outcomes are first materialized.
River deltas belong to the most densely settled places on earth. Although they only account for 5% of the global land surface, over 550 million people live in deltas. These preferred livelihood locations, which feature flat terrain, fertile alluvial soils, access to fluvial and marine resources, a rich wetland biodiversity and other advantages are, however, threatened by numerous internal and external processes. Socio-economic development, urbanization, climate change induced sea level rise, as well as flood pulse changes due to upstream water diversion all lead to changes in these highly dynamic systems. A thorough understanding of a river delta's general setting and intra-annual as well as long-term dynamic is therefore crucial for an informed management of natural resources. Here, remote sensing can play a key role in analyzing and monitoring these vast areas at a global scale. The goal of this study is to demonstrate the potential of intra-annual time series analyses at dense temporal, but coarse spatial resolution for inundation characterization in five river deltas located in four different countries. Based on 250 m MODIS reflectance data we analyze inundation dynamics in four densely populated Asian river deltas-namely the Yellow River Delta (China), the Mekong Delta (Vietnam), the Irrawaddy Delta (Myanmar), and the Ganges-Brahmaputra (Bangladesh, India)-as well as one very contrasting delta: the nearly uninhabited polar Mackenzie Delta Region in northwestern Canada for the complete time span of one year (2013). A complex processing chain of water surface derivation on a daily basis allows the generation of intra-annual time series, which indicate inundation duration in each of the deltas. Our analyses depict distinct inundation patterns within each of the deltas, which can be attributed to processes such as overland flooding, irrigation agriculture, aquaculture, or snowmelt and thermokarst processes. Clear differences between mid-latitude, subtropical, and polar deltas are illustrated, and the advantages and limitations of the approach for inundation derivation are discussed.
Der Anteil älterer und alter Menschen an der Gesamtbevölkerung steigt kontinuierlich an. Diese Entwicklung wird sich auch in den kommenden Jahren fortsetzen. So werden 2050 rund 40 % der deutschen Bevölkerung 60 Jahre oder älter sein. Die Alterung der Bevölkerung wirkt sich auf nahezu alle Lebensbereiche aus und stellt damit Planer und Entscheider auf staatlicher wie auf privater Seite vor neue Herausforderungen. Dies betrifft auch die Frage, wie innerstädtische Einkaufsstandorte, und zwar traditionelle innerstädtische Einkaufsstraßen und innerstädtische Shopping Center, gestaltet werden müssen, um den Anforderungen und Bedürfnissen möglichst aller Altersgruppen und damit auch denjenigen der älteren und alten Konsumenten zu entsprechen.
Am Beispiel der Städte Erlangen, Koblenz und Zwickau wird in vorliegender Untersuchung der Frage nachgegangen, wie ältere und alte Menschen die verschiedenen innerstädtischen Einkaufsstandorte wahrnehmen und nutzen, welche Unterschiede diesbezüglich zu jüngeren Kundengruppen bestehen und welche Schlussfolgerungen sich daraus für eine zukunftsgerichtete Gestaltung der traditionellen Einkaufsstraßen und der innerstädtischen Shopping Center ableiten lassen. Für die Untersuchung kam ein breites methodisches Instrumentarium aus Zeitungsrecherchen, Kartierungen, qualitativen Beobachtungen, qualitativen Haushaltsbefragungen sowie quantitativen Passantenbefragungen zur Anwendung.
Die 15 deutschen UNESCO-Biosphärenreservate sollen als Modellregionen eine nachhaltige Entwicklung verwirklichen, wozu neben dem Schutz des Naturhaushaltes und der genetischen Ressourcen auch die sozio-ökonomische Entwicklung der Region zu gewährleisten ist. Als Zielgebiete touristischer Nachfrage stellt der Tourismus potentiell eine Entwicklungschance, und laut den deutschen MAB-Kriterien, ein relevantes Handlungsfeld für die Biosphärenreservats-Verwaltungen dar. Die vorliegende Arbeit behandelt aus zwei unterschiedlichen Perspektiven die Frage, inwieweit Tourismus zur nachhaltigen Regionalentwicklung in den deutschen Biosphärenreservaten beiträgt.
Zum einen wird mittels einer Wertschöpfungsanalyse die touristische Nachfrage und dadurch ausgelöste regionalökonomische Effekte untersucht, was eine Erfassung der Besucher hinsichtlich Anzahl, Strukturen, Ausgabenniveaus, Aufenthaltsmerkmalen sowie Einstellungen umfasst. Zum anderen wird ermittelt, inwieweit die Biosphärenreservats-Verwaltungen die touristische Entwicklung auf regionaler Ebene im Sinne der nachhaltigen Regionalentwicklung mitgestalten. Basierend auf einer touristischen Typisierung der deutschen Biosphärenreservate werden hierzu sechs ausgewählte Biosphärenreservate (Pfälzerwald, Rhön, Schaalsee, Spreewald, Südost-Rügen, Vessertal-Thüringer Wald) eingehend untersucht.
Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Besucherzahlen zwischen 487.000 im Vessertal-Thüringer Wald und 6,4 Mio. in der Rhön schwanken. Insgesamt wird in den sechs Gebieten ein Bruttoumsatz von 908 Mio. € generiert, was einer Wertschöpfung von 474 Mio. € und 28.000 Einkommensäquivalenten entspricht. Der Wert relativiert sich, betrachtet man die Biosphärenreservatsbesucher im engeren Sinn, die für rund 7 % des Bruttoumsatzes bzw. 1.917 Einkommensäquivalente verantwortlich sind. Das Segment ist tendenziell schwach vertreten, jedoch empfänglich für die Ansätze der nachhaltigen Ausrichtung des Tourismus seitens der Biosphärenreservats-Verwaltung. Es präferiert z.B. traditionelle Kulturlandschaftsbilder, Bio-Labels und Regionalität bei Produkten und ist offen gegenüber Schutzbemühungen, was sich jedoch noch nicht im Ausgabeverhalten widerspiegelt.
Hier setzen die Verwaltungen der Biosphärenreservate im Tourismus an und werden auf Destinationsebene im Bereich der strategischen Planung, der Fördermittelakquise, der Generierung touristischer Angebote und Dienstleistungen, der Entwicklung von Regionalvermarktungs- und Partner-Initiativen sowie der Positionierung des Biosphärenreservates als Destination und Marke aktiv. Dennoch wird in allen Gebieten nahezu ausnahmslos die Integration des Biosphärenreservates als Akteur, Attraktion und Angebotsfamilie und verbindende Thematik auf Destinationsebene als verbesserungswürdig eingestuft. Im Rahmen der Arbeit können dafür relevante Faktoren abgeleitet werden, die somit Ansatzpunkte darstellen, den noch ausbaufähigen Beitrag des Tourismus zur nachhaltigen Regionalentwicklung in Biosphärenreservaten im Sinne tangibler und intangibler Effekte zu steigern.
Due to their negative water budget most recent semi-/arid regions are characterized by vast evaporates (salt lakes and salty soils). We recently identified those hyper-saline environments as additional sources for a multitude of volatile halogenated organohalogens (VOX). These compounds can affect the ozone layer of the stratosphere and play a key role in the production of aerosols. A remote sensing based analysis was performed in the Southern Aral Sea basin, providing information of major soil types as well as their extent and spatial and temporal evolution. VOX production has been determined in dry and moist soil samples after 24 h. Several C1- and C2 organohalogens have been found in hyper-saline topsoil profiles, including CH3Cl, CH3Br, CHBr3 and CHCl3. The range of organohalogens also includes trans-1,2-dichloroethene (DCE), which is reported here to be produced naturally for the first time. Using MODIS time series and supervised image classification a daily production rate for DCE has been calculated for the 15 000 km\(^2\) ranging research area in the southern Aralkum. The applied laboratory setup simulates a short-term change in climatic conditions, starting from dried-out saline soil that is instantly humidified during rain events or flooding. It describes the general VOX production potential, but allows only for a rough estimation of resulting emission loads. VOX emissions are expected to increase in the future since the area of salt affected soils is expanding due to the regressing Aral Sea. Opportunities, limits and requirements of satellite based rapid change detection and salt classification are discussed.
This study investigates a two component decomposition technique for HH/VV-polarized PolSAR (Polarimetric Synthetic Aperture Radar) data. The approach is a straight forward adaption of the Yamaguchi decomposition and decomposes the data into two scattering contributions: surface and double bounce under the assumption of a negligible vegetation scattering component in Tundra environments. The dependencies between the features of this two and the classical three component Yamaguchi decomposition were investigated for Radarsat-2 (quad) and TerraSAR-X (HH/VV) data for the Mackenzie Delta Region, Canada. In situ data on land cover were used to derive the scattering characteristics and to analyze the correlation among the PolSAR features. The double bounce and surface scattering features of the two and three component scattering model (derived from pseudo-HH/VV- and quad-polarized data) showed similar scattering characteristics and positively correlated-R2 values of 0.60 (double bounce) and 0.88 (surface scattering) were observed. The presence of volume scattering led to differences between the features and these were minimized for land cover classes of low vegetation height that showed little volume scattering contribution. In terms of separability, the quad-polarized Radarsat-2 data offered the best separation of the examined tundra land cover types and will be best suited for the classification. This is anticipated as it represents the largest feature space of all tested ones. However; the classes “wetland” and “bare ground” showed clear positions in the feature spaces of the C- and X-Band HH/VV-polarized data and an accurate classification of these land cover types is promising. Among the possible dual-polarization modes of Radarsat-2 the HH/VV was found to be the favorable mode for the characterization of the aforementioned tundra land cover classes due to the coherent acquisition and the preserved co-pol. phase. Contrary, HH/HV-polarized and VV/VH-polarized data were found to be best suited for the characterization of mixed and shrub dominated tundra.