With about half the world's human population and booming economies, Asia faces numerous challenges to its biodiversity. The Asia Section of the Society for Conservation Biology has identified some key policy issues in which significant progress can be made. These include developing new sources of funding for forest conservation; identifying potential impacts of energy alternatives on the conservation of biodiversity; curbing the trade in endangered species of plants and animals; a special focus on the conservation of mountain biodiversity; enhancing relevant research; ensuring that conservation biology contributes to major international conventions and funding mechanisms; using conservation biology to build a better understanding of zoonotic diseases; more effectively addressing human-animal conflicts; enhancing community-based conservation; and using conservation biology to help address the pervasive water-deficit problems in much of Asia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllozymic variation in proteins encoded by 25 loci was analyzed electrophoretically in 1982 and 1983 in 356 individual plants from a dense population of wild barley, Hordeum spontaneum, the progenitor of cultivated barley. The test involved six microniches organized in a mosaic pattern in the open Tabor oak forest at Neve Ya'ar, Israel. The microniches were i) sun-soil, ii) sun-rock, iii) shade-soil, iv) shade-rock, and the contact zones: v) soil periphery of the sun-rock microniche, and vi) soil periphery of the shade-rock microniche.
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