Traditional agrarian landscapes have been managed over centuries to provide complementary ecosystem services (provision and regulation) in a sustainable manner. The spatial arrangement of patches in these landscapes seems to connect ecosystems of different maturity that complement each other functionally, through exchanges of matter and energy, optimizing provisioning services supply while minimizing management effort (e.g., water and fertilizers supply). In this study we explored the implications that the spatial pattern of patches with different degrees of maturity (grasslands, scrublands, and oak groves) may have on service provision within an agrarian multifunctional landscape. To assess the ecological maturity of the evaluated patches, we sampled biotic and abiotic variables related to compositional and structural complexity of the plant community, as well as soil characteristics. Our results show that less mature ecosystems (grasslands) adjacent to the most mature ones (oak groves) had a higher structural complexity of the plant community than those adjacent to ecosystems with intermediate maturity (scrublands), which could be associated to a higher resource flow from oak groves. Furthermore, the relative topographic position of oak groves and scrublands influenced the ecological maturity of grasslands. Grasslands topographically located below oak groves and scrublands had more herbaceous biomass and fertile soils than grasslands located above them, which suggests that resource flow is accelerated by gravitational forces. This indicates that grassland patches can have higher human exploitation rates when located below the more mature patches, which can increase agricultural provisioning services (e.g., biomass extraction). Overall, our findings suggest that agrarian provisioning services can be improved by spatially arranging the patches that provide such services (e.g., grasslands) in the landscape, as well as those patches responsible for ecosystem regulating services, such as water flow regulation and material accumulation (e.g., forests).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118094 | DOI Listing |
Sci Data
January 2025
University of Southern California, Viterbi School of Engineering, 3737 Watt Way, Powell Hall of Engineering, Los Angeles, CA, 90089, USA.
Soil erosion in North Africa modulates agricultural and urban developments as well as the impacts of flash floods. Existing investigations and associated datasets are mainly performed in localized urban areas, often representing a limited part of a watershed. The above compromises the implementation of mitigation measures for this vast area under accentuating extremes and continuous hydroclimatic fluctuations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGait Posture
December 2024
Marquette University, 1250 W. Wisconsin Ave, Milwaukee, WI 53233, United States; Shriners Children's Chicago, 2211 N. Oak Park Ave, Chicago, IL 60707, United States.
Background: Understanding midfoot joint kinetics is valuable for improved treatment of foot pathologies. Segmental foot kinetics cannot currently be obtained in a standard gait lab without the use of multiple force plates or a pedobarographic plate overlaid with a force plate due to the single ground reaction force (GRF) vector.
Research Question: Can an algorithm be created to distribute the GRF into multiple segmental vectors that will allow for calculation of accurate midfoot and ankle moments?
Methods: 20 pediatric subjects (10 typically developing, 10 with foot pathology) underwent multi-segment foot gait analysis using the Milwaukee Foot Model.
J Pathol Inform
January 2025
U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Office of Science and Engineering Laboratories, Division of Imaging, Diagnostics, and Software Reliability, Silver Spring, MD, United States of America.
Objective: With the increasing energy surrounding the development of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) models, the use of the same external validation dataset by various developers allows for a direct comparison of model performance. Through our High Throughput Truthing project, we are creating a validation dataset for AI/ML models trained in the assessment of stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC).
Materials And Methods: We obtained clinical metadata for hematoxylin and eosin-stained glass slides and corresponding scanned whole slide images (WSIs) of TNBC core biopsies from two US academic medical centers.
Anal Chem
December 2024
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, California 91109, United States.
We report on a fused deposition modeling 3D-printable rotary valve fabricated from high-grade plastics such as polyether ether ketone or lower-grade plastics like polylactic acid. The valve weighs less than 90 g and has the potential to be integrated into portable and autonomous chemical analysis systems. It has been demonstrated to be leak-proof up to 2.
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