De todo un poco

Estimado usuario, el contenido aquí expuesto está a tus órdenes sin fines de lucro y con fines académicos. Todo el software y los libros son para evaluación, una vez evaluados por favor elimínalos de tu sistema y paga por el contenido, así apoyamos a los autores y protegemos su derecho de autor.

sábado, 26 de marzo de 2011

Sustainablity indicators

Sustainablity indicators

Degradation and extreme alterations to the natural environment pose some of the deepest challenges to modern society (Vitousek et al. 1997). The effects of humans on the planet can be found everywhere, from the interstices of the polar ice caps to the depths of the oceans. Although many governments and institutions have accepted that action must be taken to tackle the most urgent problems, increasing levels of consumerism and the inexorable drive to improve the living conditions of people in the developing world mean that society is being pushed up against a wide range of environmental
limits. This is the challenge facing sustainable development...

Descarga!!!! 
Gisymas en 6:40 No hay comentarios:
Compartir

jueves, 24 de marzo de 2011

Octocorales del pacífico oriental tropical








 Buenos días, para salir de lo habitual y conocer más sobre los sistemas arrecifales en el pacífico mexicano, les recomiendo la siguiente pagina hermana
octocorales del pacífico




Visitala aqui!!!!
Gisymas en 21:29 1 comentario:
Compartir

miércoles, 9 de marzo de 2011

Agave: Not Just for Tequila Anymore







Agave: Not Just for Tequila Anymore
450px-Margarita
Agave, the plant used to make tequila, could someday be filling gas tanks, instead of just getting party-goers tanked on margaritas.
Instead of using the plant to produce firewater, the same fermentation and distillation process could be used to produce ethanol for firing the engines of automobiles, according to research published in a special agave edition of the journal Global Change Biology Bioenergy.
Agave_tequilana_(Jay8085) Fans of tequila and mescal could still have their drink of choice, while the leftover plant material could be used to create earth-friendly energy, according to Ana Valenzuela of the University of Guadalajara. The leftovers from the tequila making process could be burned to produce energy or used to make cellulosic ethanol. Other varieties of agave, grown for fiber, could be even better sources of biomass.
BLOG: Whiskey Biofuel? Only in Scotland
What's more, agave might even benefit from higher atmospheric carbon dioxide levels and increasing temperatures, according to researchers at the Colegio de Postgraduados en Ciencias Agricolas (Postgraduate College of Agricultural Science) in Texcoco, Mexico and the University of California. Agave can use higher levels of carbon dioxide in the air than many other plants, and it has adaptation to living in the desert.
Agave uses a metabolic technique that greatly reduces water loss. The plant uses a process called crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). In CAM, a plant stores carbon dioxide absorbed at night, then uses it during photosynthesis in the daytime.
By inhaling carbon dioxide only at night, agave can keep the opening on their leaves, called stomata, closed during the heat of the day. That saves a tremendous amount of water compared to crops like corn, a C4 plant.
The CAM process is also what allows agave to use higher levels of CO2 than crops like wheat, barley, and potatoes, which are known as C3 plants.
Agave could reduce the food vs. fuel debate as well. Agave grows in areas where corn would wither and sugar cane would shrivel. It's adapted to nutrient-poor, arid lands, so growing agave doesn't compete with food and fiber crops. Though the price of agave ethanol fuel will probably never compete with tequila, there is currently an excess of agave production in Mexico that could be used as energy crops, according to Hector Nunez and his colleagues at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
BLOG: Potential Biofuel Cropland Plentiful
Growing perennial grasses, like switchgrass, on marginal land has received attention lately, but even grasses require lots of water compared to agave, according to research cited by Global Change Biology Bioenergy editors.
BLOG: Biofuel Grasslands For the Birds
The researchers note that there are still not many studies on the use of agave as a biofuel source, and that more economic and agricultural analysis is needed. But it sounds like people in the drier regions of the world may someday be raising a toast to the agave for more than its tequila.
Gisymas en 10:52 No hay comentarios:
Compartir

miércoles, 2 de marzo de 2011

Google earth pro 5






Google earth pro 5



Only click here!!!
Gisymas en 21:14 No hay comentarios:
Compartir
‹
›
Inicio
Ver versión web

Datos personales

Gisymas
Ver todo mi perfil
Con la tecnología de Blogger.