scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Cranfield University

EducationCranfield, United Kingdom
About: Cranfield University is a education organization based out in Cranfield, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Supply chain. The organization has 10025 authors who have published 21130 publications receiving 678277 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Too little is known about the effects of these compounds, their metabolites, and degradation products on human health and the environment.
Abstract: Too little is known about the effects of these compounds, their metabolites, and degradation products.

776 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that conventional organisational structures and forecast-driven supply chains are not adequate to meet the challenges of volatile and turbulent demand which typify fashion markets and the requirement is for the creation of an agile organisation embedded within an agile supply chain.
Abstract: Fashion markets are synonymous with rapid change and, as a result, commercial success or failure is largely determined by the organisation's flexibility and responsiveness. Responsiveness is characterised by short time‐to‐market, the ability to scale up (or down) quickly and the rapid incorporation of consumer preferences into the design process. In this paper it is argued that conventional organisational structures and forecast‐driven supply chains are not adequate to meet the challenges of volatile and turbulent demand which typify fashion markets. Instead, the requirement is for the creation of an agile organisation embedded within an agile supply chain.

771 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
06 Jan 2006-Science
TL;DR: Increase in density of large parrotfishes caused a fourfold reduction in the cover of macroalgae, which highlights the potential importance of reserves for coral reef resilience.
Abstract: Since the mass mortality of the urchin Diadema antillarum in 1983, parrotfishes have become the dominant grazer on Caribbean reefs. The grazing capacity of these fishes could be impaired if marine reserves achieve their long-term goal of restoring large consumers, several of which prey on parrotfishes. Here we compare the negative impacts of enhanced predation with the positive impacts of reduced fishing mortality on parrotfishes inside reserves. Because large-bodied parrotfishes escape the risk of predation from a large piscivore (the Nassau grouper), the predation effect reduced grazing by only 4 to 8%. This impact was overwhelmed by the increase in density of large parrotfishes, resulting in a net doubling of grazing. Increased grazing caused a fourfold reduction in the cover of macroalgae, which, because they are the principal competitors of corals, highlights the potential importance of reserves for coral reef resilience.

765 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that soil health is dependent on the maintenance of four major functions: carbon transformations; nutrient cycles; soil structure maintenance; and the regulation of pests and diseases and concluded that quantifying the flow of energy and carbon between functions is an essential but non-trivial task.
Abstract: Soil health is presented as an integrative property that reflects the capacity of soil to respond to agricultural intervention, so that it continues to support both the agricultural production and the provision of other ecosystem services. The major challenge within sustainable soil management is to conserve ecosystem service delivery while optimizing agricultural yields. It is proposed that soil health is dependent on the maintenance of four major functions: carbon transformations; nutrient cycles; soil structure maintenance; and the regulation of pests and diseases. Each of these functions is manifested as an aggregate of a variety of biological processes provided by a diversity of interacting soil organisms under the influence of the abiotic soil environment. Analysis of current models of the soil community under the impact of agricultural interventions (particularly those entailing substitution of biological processes with fossil fuel-derived energy or inputs) confirms the highly integrative pattern of interactions within each of these functions and leads to the conclusion that measurement of individual groups of organisms, processes or soil properties does not suffice to indicate the state of the soil health. A further conclusion is that quantifying the flow of energy and carbon between functions is an essential but non-trivial task for the assessment and management of soil health.

761 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review manuscript discusses sample pre-treatment methods such as liquid-liquid extraction, supercritical fluid extraction, solid phase extraction, and others such as ELISA and further currents trends, advantages and disadvantages and future prospects of these methods have been discussed.

761 citations


Authors

Showing all 10090 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Xiang Zhang1541733117576
Richard J.H. Smith118130861779
Lin Li104202761709
James F. Scott9971458515
Timothy J. Foster9842032338
John M. Ward8338826819
Qiming Zhang8046626046
Anthony Turner7948924734
Neville A. Stanton7776522819
Vinod Kumar7781526882
Stuart L. Cooper7541619414
Vijay Kumar Thakur7437517719
Ruikang K. Wang7376420026
Naresh Magan7240017511
Mark Rounsevell6925320296
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Technical University of Denmark
66.3K papers, 2.4M citations

89% related

Delft University of Technology
94.4K papers, 2.7M citations

89% related

Virginia Tech
95.2K papers, 2.9M citations

88% related

University of Nottingham
119.6K papers, 4.2M citations

88% related

University of Warwick
77.1K papers, 2.6M citations

88% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202345
2022123
20211,053
20201,082
2019987
2018989