Results 311 to 320 of about 90,411 (360)

Wildfire, water, and society: Toward integrative research in the “Anthropocene”

open access: bronze, 2016
A. M. Kinoshita   +7 more
openalex   +2 more sources

From leprosy to ground zero: Imagining futures in a world of elimination

open access: yesMedical Anthropology Quarterly, EarlyView.
Abstract Achieving a target of zero—zero disease, zero disability, and zero discrimination—has become the dominant focus of campaigns to control or eliminate diseases, from HIV/AIDS to malaria to leprosy. Given the historical failure of most eradication programs over the last century, such teleological imaginings of disease‐free futures might seem ...
James Staples
wiley   +1 more source

Gene Expression Shifts in Emperor Penguin Adaptation to the Extreme Antarctic Environment

open access: yesMolecular Ecology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Gene expression can accelerate ecological divergence by rapidly tweaking the response of an organism to novel environments, with more divergent environments exerting stronger selection and supposedly, requiring faster adaptive responses. Organisms adapted to extreme environments provide ideal systems to test this hypothesis, particularly when ...
Josephine R. Paris   +11 more
wiley   +1 more source

An Evolutionary Mosaic Challenges Traditional Monitoring of a Foundation Species in a Coastal Environment—The Baltic Fucus vesiculosus

open access: yesMolecular Ecology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT During periods of environmental change, genetic diversity in foundation species is critical for ecosystem function and resilience, but it remains overlooked in environmental monitoring. In the Baltic Sea, a key species for monitoring is the brown seaweed Fucus vesiculosus, which forms sublittoral 3D habitats providing shelter and food for fish
Ricardo T. Pereyra   +11 more
wiley   +1 more source

Gilroy's Black Atlantic diaspora: climate displacement and rights‐bearing beyond the nation

open access: yesNations and Nationalism, EarlyView.
Abstract Nationalism studies have only recently started to grapple with the Anthropocene as a foundational shift for the discipline. One of the effects of climate change is the forced displacement of large populations, and if access to rights cannot be ensured outside the structures of territorial sovereignty, this migration could easily translate into
Nanna Lilletvedt Sæten
wiley   +1 more source

The planetary commons: A new paradigm for safeguarding Earth-regulating systems in the Anthropocene. [PDF]

open access: yesProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
Rockström J   +21 more
europepmc   +1 more source

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