Institution
Indian Ministry of Environment and Forests
Government•New Delhi, India•
About: Indian Ministry of Environment and Forests is a government organization based out in New Delhi, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Climate change. The organization has 3731 authors who have published 3782 publications receiving 85717 citations.
Topics: Population, Climate change, Biodiversity, Species richness, Adsorption
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A search conducted to determine the plants yielding vegetable oils resulted in 78 plant species with potential use in cosmetics and skin care products, which belonged to 74 genera and 45 plant families and yielded 79 vegetable oils.
Abstract: A search conducted to determine the plants yielding vegetable oils resulted in 78 plant species with potential use in cosmetics and skin care products. The taxonomic position of these plant species is described with a description of vegetable oils from these plants and their use in cosmetic and skin care products. These species belonged to 74 genera and 45 plant families and yielded 79 vegetable oils. Family Rosaceae had highest number of vegetable oil yielding species (five species). Most of the species were distributed in two families (Anacardiaceae and Asteraceae) containing four species each, followed by seven families (Boraginaceae, Brassicaceae, Clausiaceae, Cucubitaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Fabaceae and Lamaceae) containing three species each of oil yielding plants. Five families (Apiaceae, Dipterocarpaceae, Malvaceae, Rubiaceae and Sapotaceae) have two species each of vegetable oil yielding plants. Two monocotyledonous families Arecaceae and Poaceae contained three species each of oil yielding plants. Remaining 28 vegetable oil yielding species were distributed in 28 plant families, which included two species of gymnosperms distributed in family Cupressaceae and Pinaceae. These vegetable oils are natural and can be used as the base for mixing ones own aromatherapy massage or bath oil, or if preferred can be used as ready blended massage oils or bath oils. Apart from their medicinal value, vegetable oils have heat contents approximately 90% that of diesel fuel and are potential alternate fuel candidates. By combining the skills and efforts of biologists, food scientists, plant breeders and oil companies it may be possible to develop reasonably priced vegetable oils with enhanced levels of functional ingredients. With growing trend of using vegetable oils in food preparation and body and skin care, the health benefits in reducing heart disease and body and skin ailments could be substantial. Key Words: Taxonomy, vegetable oils, uses, cosmetics, skin care products. African Journal of Biotechnology Vol.4(1) 2005: 36-44
78 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used an extensive set of caribou locations (5 subpopulations, 102 animals, 270,808 GPS-collar locations) collected over 11 years within the Central Mountain Designatable Unit (CMDU) to develop species distribution models that quantified avoidance of anthropogenic and natural disturbance features.
78 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, MODFLOW was used to simulate the groundwater flow and assess the seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifer of Wadi Ham in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Abstract: Groundwater pumping from Kalbha and Fujairah coastal aquifer of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has increased significantly during the last two decades to meet the agriculture water demands. Due to the lack of natural replenishment from rainfall and the excessive pumping, groundwater levels have declined significantly causing an intrusion of seawater in the coastal aquifer of Wadi Ham. As a result, many pumping wells in the coastal zone have been terminated and a number of farms have been abandoned. In this paper, MODFLOW was used to simulate the groundwater flow and assess the seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifer of Wadi Ham. The model was calibrated against a five-year dataset of historical groundwater levels and validated against another eleven-year dataset. The effects of pumping on groundwater levels and seawater intrusion were investigated. Results showed that reducing the pumping from Khalbha well field will help to reduce the seawater intrusion into the southeastern part of the aquifer. Under the current groundwater pumping rates, the seawater will continue to migrate inland.
78 citations
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TL;DR: A comparison of Tl concentration and fraction distribution in different samples clearly demonstrated the significant role of the ore roasting in Tl transformation and mobilization, probably as a result of alteration/decomposition of related minerals followed by Tl release and subsequent deposition/co-precipitation on fine surface particles of the electrostatic dust and acidic waste.
78 citations
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TL;DR: Research on factors affecting partial migration in African buffalo in northeastern Namibia is presented, showing that buffalo in this area can be divided into 4 migratory classes: migrants, non-migrants, dispersers, and a new class that is called “expanders”.
Abstract: 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.
78 citations
Authors
Showing all 3731 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Feng Zhang | 172 | 1278 | 181865 |
Rajesh Kumar | 149 | 4439 | 140830 |
Kaj Sand-Jensen | 71 | 240 | 16051 |
Peter J. Dillon | 69 | 263 | 15787 |
Norman D. Yan | 56 | 164 | 8366 |
Qianlai Zhuang | 53 | 227 | 9699 |
Ole Hertel | 50 | 229 | 7394 |
Martyn N. Futter | 48 | 176 | 7227 |
Paul A. Helm | 46 | 120 | 6723 |
Roland I. Hall | 45 | 137 | 6854 |
Ruwim Berkowicz | 44 | 116 | 5458 |
Martin Diekmann | 44 | 142 | 6410 |
Bin Xu | 43 | 456 | 7440 |
Ole Pedersen | 42 | 112 | 7737 |
Jun Tao | 41 | 147 | 5893 |