A currency for offsetting energy development impacts: horse-trading sage-grouse on the open market. (17/69)

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Network diversity and economic development. (18/69)

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Highways and outposts: economic development and health threats in the central Brazilian Amazon region. (19/69)

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Temperatures and cyclones strongly associated with economic production in the Caribbean and Central America. (20/69)

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Why lowering health costs should be a key adjunct to slowing health spending growth. (21/69)

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Current nitrogen management status and measures to improve the intensive wheat-maize system in China. (22/69)

During the first 35 years of the Green Revolution, Chinese grain production doubled, greatly reducing food shortage, but at a high environmental cost. In 2005, China alone accounted for around 38% of the global N fertilizer consumption, but the average on-farm N recovery efficiency for the intensive wheat-maize system was only 16-18%. Current on-farm N use efficiency (NUE) is much lower than in research trials or on-farm in other parts of the world, which is attributed to the overuse of chemical N fertilizer, ignorance of the contribution of N from the environment and the soil, poor synchrony between crop N demand and N supply, failure to bring crop yield potential into full play, and an inability to effectively inhibit N losses. Based on such analyses, some measures to drastically improve NUE in China are suggested, such as managing various N sources to limit the total applied N, spatially and temporally matching rhizospheric N supply with N demand in high-yielding crops, reducing N losses, and simultaneously achieving high-yield and high NUE. Maximizing crop yields using a minimum of N inputs requires an integrated, interdisciplinary cooperation and major scientific and practical breakthroughs involving plant nutrition, soil science, agronomy, and breeding.  (+info)

Exploring community health through the Sustainable Livelihoods framework. (23/69)

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Primary syphilis cases in Guangdong Province 1995-2008: opportunities for linking syphilis control and regional development. (24/69)

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