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Institution

Institute of Rural Management Anand

EducationAnand, Gujarat, India
About: Institute of Rural Management Anand is a education organization based out in Anand, Gujarat, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Population. The organization has 832 authors who have published 1154 publications receiving 14975 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the available literature on one type of indirect interaction in benthic marine ecosystems, which involve three or more trophic levels connected by predation, and infer how likely they are to affect the properties of communities following the implementation of marine protected areas (MPAs) or intensive resource exploitation.
Abstract: An important principle of environmental science is that changes in single components of systems are likely to have consequences elsewhere in the same systems. In the sea, food web data are one of the few foundations for predicting such indirect effects, whether of fishery exploitation or following recovery in marine protected areas (MPAs). We review the available literature on one type of indirect interaction in benthic marine ecosystems, namely trophic cascades, which involve three or more trophic levels connected by predation. Because many indirect effects have been revealed through fishery exploitation, in some cases we include humans as trophic levels. Our purpose is to establish how widespread cascades might be, and infer how likely they are to affect the properties of communities following the implementation of MPAs or intensive resource exploitation. We review 39 documented cascades (eight of which include humans as a trophic level) from 21 locations around the world; all but two of the cascades are from shallow systems underlain by hard substrata (kelp forests, rocky subtidal, coral reefs and rocky intertidal). We argue that these systems are well represented because they are accessible and also amenable to the type of work that is necessary. Nineteen examples come from the central-eastern and north-eastern Pacific, while no well-substantiated benthic cascades have been reported from the NE, CE or SW Atlantic, the Southern Oceans, E Indian Ocean or NW Pacific. The absence of examples from those zones is probably due to lack of study. Sea urchins are very prominent in the subtidal examples, and gastropods, especially limpets, in the intertidal examples; we suggest that this may reflect their predation by fewer specialist predators than is the case with fishes, but also their conspicuousness to investigators. The variation in ecological resolution amongst studies, and in intensity of study amongst systems and regions, indicates that more cascades will likely be identified in due course. Broadening the concept of cascades to include pathogenic interactions would immediately increase the number of examples. The existing evidence is that cascade effects are to be expected when hard-substratum systems are subject to artisanal resource exploitation, but that the particular problems of macroalgal overgrowth on Caribbean reefs and the expansion of coralline barrens in the Mediterranean rocky-sublittoral will not be readily reversed in MPAs, probably because factors other than predation-based cascades have contributed to them in the first place. More cascade effects are likely to be found in the soft-substratum systems that are crucial to so many large-scale fisheries, when opportunities such as those of MPAs and fishing gradients become available for study of such systems, and the search is widened to less conspicuous focal organisms such as polychaetes and crustaceans.

499 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the rationale, practice, and problems of contract farming in vegetable crops in the agriculturally developed Indian Punjab which has faced the problem of sustainability of growth since the early 1980s and found that agribusiness firms deal with relatively large producers and their contracts, which are biased against the farmer, perpetuate the existing problems of the farm sector such as high chemical input intensity and social differentiation.

406 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a new scheme for solving the Vlasov equation using a phase space grid is proposed, based on the conservation of the flux of particles, and the distribution function is reconstructed using various techniques that allow control of spurious oscillations or preservation of the positivity.

390 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare different types of methods for solving the Vlasov equation on a grid in phase space: the semi-Lagrangian method, the finite volume method, and a method based on a finite difference scheme.

278 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the existing data on MPAs in Spain, France, Italy, and Greece and found that a general increase in tourist activities in Mediterranean MPAs is evident, as are increases in the abundances of larger fish species.
Abstract: Summary Marine protected areas (MPAs) may be important for protecting the marine environment, but they may also have substantial socio-cultural impacts about which very little is currently known, or acknowledged. In the Mediterranean, few data are available on the socioeconomic consequences of MPAs. The present study reviews the existing data on MPAs in Spain, France, Italy and Greece. A general increase in tourist activities in Mediterranean MPAs is evident, as are increases in the abundances of larger fish species, although there are no data indicating yields for fisheries increase adjacent to MPAs. A large increase in the number of divers and vessels using MPAs has already had impacts on natural benthic communities as a result of diver damage, mooring and the feeding of large fish by divers. Emphasis has been given in only a few MPAs to promoting public awareness of these impacts. Although the conservation of nature should be considered the fundamental objective of MPAs, neglecting their social, cultural and economic impacts has at times led to poor local consensus, if not hostility. We believe that planning and managing MPAs should be conducted on a multidisciplinary basis. Nonetheless, no single model can be considered valid for the whole Mediterranean. The very variable characteristics of coastal areas, from those of small uninhabited islands to those of cities, require different weightings to be assigned for each factor in order to achieve a durable equilibrium and realize the original objectives of each MPA. Only with such flexibility of management will it be possible to reach a greater understanding of the MPA system and create a lasting consensus in favour of conservation, a consensus which would mean an overwhelming majority of people actively avoiding damaging nature and preventing others from doing so.

209 citations


Authors

Showing all 836 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Irma Thesleff10127130793
Martin E. Fermann6431413557
Naranjan S. Dhalla6359618748
Raymund E. Horch5155511387
Almantas Galvanauskas493067817
Andreas M. Läuchli481576713
Thierry Gallouët4417310255
Anton Glieder441816542
Ira M. Goldstein41758209
Herfried Griengl412615360
Tushaar Shah412417297
Vladimir Turaev3915010573
Ibrahim Hoteit393165869
Yaozhong Hu372186356
Yann Bugeaud372925448
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20223
202173
202069
201941
201861