Tropical forest structural variation across heterogeneous landscapes may control above‐ground carbon dynamics. We tested the hypothesis that canopy structure (leaf area and light availability) – ...remotely estimated from LiDAR – control variation in above‐ground coarse wood production (biomass growth). Using a statistical model, these factors predicted biomass growth across tree size classes in forest near Manaus, Brazil. The same statistical model, with no parameterisation change but driven by different observed canopy structure, predicted the higher productivity of a site 500 km east. Gap fraction and a metric of vegetation vertical extent and evenness also predicted biomass gains and losses for one‐hectare plots. Despite significant site differences in canopy structure and carbon dynamics, the relation between biomass growth and light fell on a unifying curve. This supported our hypothesis, suggesting that knowledge of canopy structure can explain variation in biomass growth over tropical landscapes and improve understanding of ecosystem function.
Seasonal dynamics in the vertical distribution of leaf area index (LAI) may impact the seasonality of forest productivity in Amazonian forests. However, until recently, fine-scale observations ...critical to revealing ecological mechanisms underlying these changes have been lacking.
To investigate fine-scale variation in leaf area with seasonality and drought we conducted monthly ground-based LiDAR surveys over 4 yr at an Amazon forest site. We analysed temporal changes in vertically structured LAI along axes of both canopy height and light environments.
Upper canopy LAI increased during the dry season, whereas lower canopy LAI decreased. The low canopy decrease was driven by highly illuminated leaves of smaller trees in gaps. By contrast, understory LAI increased concurrently with the upper canopy. Hence, tree phenological strategies were stratified by height and light environments. Trends were amplified during a 2015–2016 severe El Niño drought.
Leaf area low in the canopy exhibited behaviour consistent with water limitation. Leaf loss from short trees in high light during drought may be associated with strategies to tolerate limited access to deep soil water and stressful leaf environments. Vertically and environmentally structured phenological processes suggest a critical role of canopy structural heterogeneity in seasonal changes in Amazon ecosystem function.
The NIH-led research response to COVID-19 Collins, Francis; Adam, Stacey; Colvis, Christine ...
Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science),
02/2023, Letnik:
379, Številka:
6631
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Investment, collaboration, and coordination have been key.
Modeling suggests that climate change mitigation actions can have substantial human health benefits that accrue quickly and locally. Documenting the benefits can help drive more ambitious and ...health-protective climate change mitigation actions; however, documenting the adverse health effects can help to avoid them. Estimating the health effects of mitigation (HEM) actions can help policy makers prioritize investments based not only on mitigation potential but also on expected health benefits. To date, however, the wide range of incompatible approaches taken to developing and reporting HEM estimates has limited their comparability and usefulness to policymakers.
The objective of this effort was to generate guidance for modeling studies on scoping, estimating, and reporting population health effects from climate change mitigation actions.
An expert panel of HEM researchers was recruited to participate in developing guidance for conducting HEM studies. The primary literature and a synthesis of HEM studies were provided to the panel. Panel members then participated in a modified Delphi exercise to identify areas of consensus regarding HEM estimation. Finally, the panel met to review and discuss consensus findings, resolve remaining differences, and generate guidance regarding conducting HEM studies.
The panel generated a checklist of recommendations regarding stakeholder engagement: HEM modeling, including model structure, scope and scale, demographics, time horizons, counterfactuals, health response functions, and metrics; parameterization and reporting; approaches to uncertainty and sensitivity analysis; accounting for policy uptake; and discounting.
This checklist provides guidance for conducting and reporting HEM estimates to make them more comparable and useful for policymakers. Harmonization of HEM estimates has the potential to lead to advances in and improved synthesis of policy-relevant research that can inform evidence-based decision making and practice. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP6745.
Aim: The promotion of wellbeing in schools using evidence-based interventions from the field of positive psychology is a growing area of interest. These interventions are based on the principle that ...sustainable changes in wellbeing can be achieved through regularly engaging in simple and intentional activities. This study examines the effectiveness of a school-based gratitude diary intervention to promote school belonging for primary school aged pupils (age range 7 to 11 years). Method: The intervention took place in a one-form entry primary school for four weeks and involved participants writing a diary about things that they were either grateful for in school that day or about neutral school events. Findings: Participants who completed the gratitude intervention demonstrated enhanced school belonging and gratitude relative to the control group, although this was moderated by gender with the gratitude diary showing clearer benefits for males. Increases in gratitude were positively correlated with increases in school belonging. Limitations: The lack of a follow-up measure meant that it was not determined whether positive outcomes were maintained. Participants’ diary entries were not analysed for content. Conclusions: The findings extend the evidence base concerning the use of gratitude diaries with children and indicate that this intervention can be beneficial for children younger than research has previously demonstrated. This study also illustrates how a gratitude diary intervention can be used to build social resources and makes a novel connection between gratitude and sense of belonging. Implications for how this simple intervention has the potential to have a systemic impact on the wellbeing of pupils and staff are discussed.
We employ a single-country dynamically-recursive Computable General Equilibrium model to make health-focussed macroeconomic assessments of three contingent UK Greenhouse Gas (GHG) mitigation ...strategies, designed to achieve 2030 emission targets as suggested by the UK Committee on Climate Change. In contrast to previous assessment studies, our main focus is on health co-benefits additional to those from reduced local air pollution. We employ a conservative cost-effectiveness methodology with a zero net cost threshold. Our urban transport strategy (with cleaner vehicles and increased active travel) brings important health co-benefits and is likely to be strongly cost-effective; our food and agriculture strategy (based on abatement technologies and reduction in livestock production) brings worthwhile health co-benefits, but is unlikely to eliminate net costs unless new technological measures are included; our household energy efficiency strategy is likely to breakeven only over the long term after the investment programme has ceased (beyond our 20 year time horizon). We conclude that UK policy makers will, most likely, have to adopt elements which involve initial net societal costs in order to achieve future emission targets and longer-term benefits from GHG reduction. Cost-effectiveness of GHG strategies is likely to require technological mitigation interventions and/or demand-constraining interventions with important health co-benefits and other efficiency-enhancing policies that promote internalization of externalities. Health co-benefits can play a crucial role in bringing down net costs, but our results also suggest the need for adopting holistic assessment methodologies which give proper consideration to welfare-improving health co-benefits with potentially negative economic repercussions (such as increased longevity).
Abstract Purpose To assess the outcomes of small optical zone (OZ) ablations used in conjunction with large transition zones (TZ) and a highly aspheric treatment profile. Methods Interventional case ...series of 39 consecutive patients with myopia or myopic astigmatism. Patient data included pre and postoperative refraction and visual acuities, laser treatment settings and pre and postoperative corneal topography as well as questionnaire responses about the use of glasses and the quality of vision postoperatively. Results The mean preoperative spherical equivalent was −4.50 ± 2.11 dioptres (D) and the mean OZ and TZ diameters were 4.5 ± 0.5 mm and 8.1 ± 0.4 mm, respectively. The mean patient age was 40.7 ± 10.4 years. Manifest spherical refraction was within ±0.5 D in 87% of patients (±1.0 D in 99%) and cylindrical refraction within 0.5 D in 79% (≤1.0 D in 95%). The need to wear distance glasses postoperatively was associated with dissatisfaction with the quality of daytime vision ( p = 0.05) and unhappiness with night vision was associated with symptoms of halos ( p = 0.03) and starbursts ( p = 0.02). The proportion of patients reporting symptoms of dysphotopsias included: ghosting 0%; glare 2%; halos 10%; and starbursts 15%. There was a significant difference in the measured mean effective OZ diameter (4.8 ± 0.3 mm) compared to the mean programmed OZ (4.5 ± 0.5 mm, p = 0.00). Conclusions Small ablation zones, when used in conjunction with a large diameter TZ, do not lead to a greater incidence of unwanted visual phenomena over that reported by many studies with larger OZs.
Abstract Background The UK Government has set specific targets for greenhouse gas emissions to lower the risk of dangerous climate change. Previous research has shown that important health ...co-benefits could result from strategies targeting the domains of transport, built environment, and agriculture. This study assesses the full general equilibrium economy-wide macroeconomic effects of health co-benefits from three similar UK strategies to meet locally specific 2030 greenhouse gas emission targets. Methods Economy-wide effects of health co-benefits were modelled with a dynamic extension of the widely used International Food Policy Research Institute standard computable general equilibrium model for 2011–30. Four forms of economic agents are modelled: firms (who combine resource inputs to maximise profits), consumers (who consume and save to maximise their welfare), government, and foreign agents. The method consists of simulation of three greenhouse gas policy scenarios and a counterfactual do-nothing scenario. Basic health co-benefits (years lived with disability YLD and years of life lost YLL) were measured for a range of illnesses, on the basis of the comparative risk assessment approach. Combined with incidence numbers and prevalence trends, these basic YLD (morbidity) and YLL (mortality) co-benefits were used to calculate dynamic sequences of demographic and labour market effects on population and productive labour supply, and public budget implications for averted health-care costs and increased social security transfers (including benefit payments for working-age individuals and pension payments for old-age individuals). These economic shocks were subsequently imposed on the computable general equilibrium model and used to measure the combined macroeconomic effect of health co-benefits. The method for measuring averted health-care costs was published in The Lancet in 2012. Three scenarios were modelled: active travel (transport sector; health co-benefits of an assumed transformation of urban transport behaviour to reduce motorised transportation and increase walking 2·5-times and cycling 8·0-times in urban England and Wales); healthy diet (food and agriculture sector; health co-benefits of an assumed UK-wide 30% reduction in consumption of dietary saturated fat); and household energy (household energy sector; health co-benefits of an assumed UK-wide improvement in home insulation and ventilation, including reduced household energy use, improved indoor temperature, and associated changes in indoor pollutants). Findings For all scenarios, the macroeconomic effects of health co-benefits are positive. Overall, substantial savings on health-care costs represent the main contributing factor. Increased labour supplies also contribute positively, whereas increased social security transfers (due to larger working-age and old-age population segments) detract. The largest potential cumulative gross domestic product gains from health co-benefits are associated with the active travel scenario (around £19 billion), in which increased physical activity averts large-scale and long-term chronic disease burdens and health-system costs. The healthy diet scenario also leads to important potential gains (around £5 billion), whereas the full potential health co-benefits from the household energy scenario will not be realised until beyond 2030. Three economic sensitivity analyses were undertaken to test the sensitivity of results to variations in assumptions concerning: the substitutability of labour for other factors of production; the effectiveness of the interventions; and changes in the discount rate (the present value of the economic effects). Overall, the core results can be considered relatively robust to changes in these three factors. Interpretation Strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve health are likely to result in substantial and increasing positive contributions to the economy. This effect might offset some economic costs and thereby allow such strategies to be seen more favourably, especially in times of economic austerity. Funding Department of Health Policy Research Programme.