
State University of Campinas (UNICAMP)
State University of Campinas (UNICAMP)
25 Projects, page 1 of 5
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2022Partners:Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Missouri Botanical Garden, University of the State of Mato Grosso, University of the State of Mato Grosso +42 partnersUniversidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina,Naturalis Biodiversity Center,Missouri Botanical Garden,University of the State of Mato Grosso,University of the State of Mato Grosso,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,Austral University of Chile,Universidade de Sao Paulo,Southern University of Chile,University of Sao Paulo,University of Birmingham,University of Birmingham,Missouri Botanical Garden,UA,Naturalis Biodiversity Center,National University of Cordoba Argentina,The University of Arizona,CNRS,Forest Institute of Chile,INPE,State University of Campinas (UNICAMP),Socio-environmental Institute (ISA),Federal University of Sao Carlos,Universidade Estadual Santa Cruz (UESC),National Open & Distance University UNAD,Research Inst for Forestry Development,University Gabriel Rene Moreno,University Gabriel Rene Moreno,University of Leeds,National Open & Distance University UNAD,Federal University of Sao Carlos,Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation,Austral University of Chile,INPE,Instituto Investig. Amazonia Peruana,Research Inst of the Peruvian Amazon,Forest Institute of Chile,University of Sao Paolo,CNRS,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,University of Leeds,State University of Santa Cruz,University of Aysen,Research Inst for Forestry Development,Socio-environmental Institute (ISA),University of Aysen,State University of Campinas (unicamp)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/S011811/1Funder Contribution: 1,107,050 GBPLatin American forests cover a very large latitudinal and climate gradient extending from the tropics to Southern hemisphere high latitudes. The continent therefore hosts a large variety of forest types including the Amazon - the world's largest tropical forest - as well as the diverse Atlantic forests concentrated along the coast, temperate forests in Chile and Argentina as well as the cold rainforests of Valdivia and the Nothofagus forests of Patagonia. These forests are global epicentres of biological diversity and include several tropical and extra-tropical biodiversity hotspots. For example, the Amazon rainforest is home to ~10% of terrestrial plant and animal species and store a large fraction of global organic carbon. hotspots. Some of these Latin American forests still cover a large fraction of their original (pre-colombian) extent: the Amazon still covers approximately 5 Million km2, which is 80% of its original area. However, others, such as the Atlantic forest, have nearly disappeared and are now heavily fragmented. Temperate forests have also shrunk, despite efforts to halt further reduction. However, economic development, population rises and the growth in global drivers of environmental change mean that all forests now face strong anthropogenic pressures. Locally stressors generally result from ongoing development, selective logging, the hunting of larger birds and mammals, over-exploitation of key forest resources such as valuable palm fruits, mining, and/or forest conversion for agricultural use. Global environmental drivers stem from the world's warming climate. Yet it is not clear how these local pressures and changing environmental conditions will alter the composition of Latin American forests, and whether there are thresholds between human impacts - such as the lack of dispersers in heavily fragmented forest landscapes or climate conditions exceeding limits of species tolerance - and the community level responses of forest plants. We aim to investigate this, supporting the development of strategies that can preserve the diversity of these forests and their functioning. We achieve this by investigating the relationships between diversity and functioning of these forests; exploring whether there are thresholds in functioning resulting both from pressures of forest use and changing climate; by experimentally testing responses; and by generalizing predictive capability to large scales. ARBOLES aims to achieve these goals by integrating established forest inventory approaches with cutting-edge functional trait, genomics, experimental and remote sensing approaches. Our approach involves combining forest plots with plant traits, which will enable us to characterize state and shifts over time in the face of local human disturbance and changing climate and atmospheric composition. We will focus on traits along the following axes: (i) life-history strategies measuring investment in structure (like wood density, leaf mass per area, maximum height), (ii) investment in productive organs (like leaf nutrients), (iii) investment in reproductive organs, (iv) tolerance to water stress and heat stress. The work is being conducted in collaboration with research groups in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru - and will provide a first cross-continent assessment of how humans are influencing Latin American forests.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2024Partners:McMaster University, Innospec Environmental Ltd, E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd, Innospec Environmental Ltd, Innospec (United Kingdom) +92 partnersMcMaster University,Innospec Environmental Ltd,E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd,Innospec Environmental Ltd,Innospec (United Kingdom),ZJOU,C-Capture Limited,ETI,Process Systems Enterprises Ltd,E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),NPL,Cochin University,University of the Witwatersrand,Air Products and Chemicals plc,RWE npower,Chinese Academy of Science,SMRE,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,British Energy Generation Ltd,ANSYS UK LIMITED,E-ON UK plc,Alstom Ltd (UK),State University of Campinas (unicamp),National Carbon Institute (CSIC),EDF Energy Plc (UK),Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,National Physical Laboratory NPL,Southeast University,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Alstom (United Kingdom),Doosan (United Kingdom),Electric Power Research Institute EPRI,Advanced Power Generation Tech. Forum,2COenergy Limited,University of North Dakota,SIEMENS PLC,Air Products and Chemicals plc,Clean Coal Limited,2COenergy Limited,Biomass and Fossil Fuel Res Alliance,University of the Witwatersrand,Cochin University of Science and Technol,PNU,National Carbon Institute (CSIC),SEU,BF2RA,Doosan Power Systems,Johnson Matthey Plc,Advanced Power Generation Tech. Forum,University of Nottingham,PAU,Clean Coal Limited,Caterpillar Inc (Global),Huazhong University of Sci and Tech,University of Queensland,Johnson Matthey plc,UiS,NTU,XJTLU,Scottish and Southern Energy,Doosan Babcock Power Systems,ANSYS UK LIMITED,Energy Technologies Institute (ETI),CAS,Electric Power Research Institute EPRI,The University of Queensland,C-Capture Limited,Islamic University of Technology,UK High Temperature Power Plant Forum,Caterpillar UK Ltd,UK High Temperature Power Plant Forum,Health and Safety Executive (HSE),CMCL Innovations (United Kingdom),Polish Academy of Sciences,Health and Safety Executive,Xi'an Jiatong University,Coal Products Limited CPL,Tsinghua University,Process Systems Enterprises Ltd,University of North Dakota,CMCL Innovations,ISLAMIC UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY,Johnson Matthey,Alstom Ltd (UK),RWE Generation,Fluent Europe Ltd,State University of Campinas (UNICAMP),Siemens plc (UK),Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati,University of Queensland,Zhejiang University,Air Products (United Kingdom),Xi'an Jiaotong University,Tsinghua University,Coal Products Limited CPLFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L016362/1Funder Contribution: 3,527,890 GBPThe motivation for this proposal is that the global reliance on fossil fuels is set to increase with the rapid growth of Asian economies and major discoveries of shale gas in developed nations. The strategic vision of the IDC is to develop a world-leading Centre for Industrial Doctoral Training focussed on delivering research leaders and next-generation innovators with broad economic, societal and contextual awareness, having strong technical skills and capable of operating in multi-disciplinary teams covering a range of knowledge transfer, deployment and policy roles. They will be able to analyse the overall economic context of projects and be aware of their social and ethical implications. These skills will enable them to contribute to stimulating UK-based industry to develop next-generation technologies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels and ultimately improve the UK's position globally through increased jobs and exports. The Centre will involve over 50 recognised academics in carbon capture & storage (CCS) and cleaner fossil energy to provide comprehensive supervisory capacity across the theme for 70 doctoral students. It will provide an innovative training programme co-created in collaboration with our industrial partners to meet their advanced skills needs. The industrial letters of support demonstrate a strong need for the proposed Centre in terms of research to be conducted and PhDs that will be produced, with 10 new companies willing to join the proposed Centre including EDF Energy, Siemens, BOC Linde and Caterpillar, together with software companies, such as ANSYS, involved with power plant and CCS simulation. We maintain strong support from our current partners that include Doosan Babcock, Alstom Power, Air Products, the Energy Technologies Institute (ETI), Tata Steel, SSE, RWE npower, Johnson Matthey, E.ON, CPL Industries, Clean Coal Ltd and Innospec, together with the Biomass & Fossil Fuels Research Alliance (BF2RA), a grouping of companies across the power sector. Further, we have engaged SMEs, including CMCL Innovation, 2Co Energy, PSE and C-Capture, that have recently received Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC)/Technology Strategy Board (TSB)/ETI/EC support for CCS projects. The active involvement companies have in the research projects, make an IDC the most effective form of CDT to directly contribute to the UK maintaining a strong R&D base across the fossil energy power and allied sectors and to meet the aims of the DECC CCS Roadmap in enabling industry to define projects fitting their R&D priorities. The major technical challenges over the next 10-20 years identified by our industrial partners are: (i) implementing new, more flexible and efficient fossil fuel power plant to meet peak demand as recognised by electricity market reform incentives in the Energy Bill, with efficiency improvements involving materials challenges and maximising biomass use in coal-fired plant; (ii) deploying CCS at commercial scale for near-zero emission power plant and developing cost reduction technologies which involves improving first-generation solvent-based capture processes, developing next-generation capture processes, and understanding the impact of impurities on CO2 transport and storage; (iimaximising the potential of unconventional gas, including shale gas, 'tight' gas and syngas produced from underground coal gasification; and (iii) developing technologies for vastly reduced CO2 emissions in other industrial sectors: iron and steel making, cement, refineries, domestic fuels and small-scale diesel power generatort and These challenges match closely those defined in EPSRC's Priority Area of 'CCS and cleaner fossil energy'. Further, they cover biomass firing in conventional plant defined in the Bioenergy Priority Area, where specific issues concern erosion, corrosion, slagging, fouling and overall supply chain economics.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2021Partners:Schumacher Institute, CICERO, CSEF, East Rand Water Care Company (ERWAT), Bristol Food Network C.I.C. +23 partnersSchumacher Institute,CICERO,CSEF,East Rand Water Care Company (ERWAT),Bristol Food Network C.I.C.,GENeco,DRIFT,Coventry University,Centre for Sustainable Energy (CSE),UCT,GENeco,DRIFT,SU,State University of Campinas (UNICAMP),Bristol Food Network C.I.C.,Stellenbosch University,Schumacher Institute,University of California at Santa Cruz,Isidima Design & Development (Pty) Ltd.,State University of Campinas (unicamp),UCSC,Coventry University,BlueCity,BlueCity,East Rand Water Care Company (ERWAT),Wessex Water Services Ltd,WESSEX WATER,CICERO Ctr fr Intnatnl Climate & Env ResFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: ES/S002243/1Funder Contribution: 204,933 GBPThe aim of the WASTE FEW ULL project is to develop and test internationally applicable methods of identifying inefficiencies in a city-region's food-energy-water nexus. We will undertake this through an international network of industry/civic society-led Urban Living Labs (ULL) in four urban regions - UK (Bristol), Netherlands (Rotterdam), South Africa (Western Cape) and Brazil (Campinas). Partners in Norway and the USA will provide economic valuations of potential impact, and impact-led public education, outreach and dissemination. Waste occurs across food, energy and water systems; at the interface of these systems, waste increases significantly the over-consumption of our limited resources (FAO, 2017): food (e.g. energy lost in food storage), energy (e.g. used to clean water) and water (e.g. nutrients lost in sewage). Resource scarcity is not only a matter of efficiency, but of access, distribution and equality (Exner et al, 2013). Each urban context has different pressures and opportunities (Ravetz, 2000). The focus of the WASTE FEW ULL project is therefore not so much on the specific downstream challenges, but on upstream processes by which cities can identify, test and scale viable and feasible solutions that reduce the most pressing inefficiencies in each context.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2023Partners:University of Bristol, State University of Campinas (unicamp), State University of Campinas (UNICAMP), University of BristolUniversity of Bristol,State University of Campinas (unicamp),State University of Campinas (UNICAMP),University of BristolFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: BB/N022556/1Funder Contribution: 50,816 GBPAbstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2026Partners:ICREA, Stanford Synchroton Radiation Laboratory, Federal University of Para, State University of Campinas (unicamp), Federal University of Para +10 partnersICREA,Stanford Synchroton Radiation Laboratory,Federal University of Para,State University of Campinas (unicamp),Federal University of Para,Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats,University of California Los Angeles,Stanford University,University of California Los Angeles,University of Edinburgh,Federal University of Para,ICREA,SU,UCL,State University of Campinas (UNICAMP)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/W006308/1Funder Contribution: 372,610 GBPThis project addresses a key gap in understanding how tropical forests respond to drought across scales, from organ to tree and forest ecosystem. It will drive extended impact in new monitoring capability using satellite data, in advanced land surface modelling, and in drought risk mitigation planning, by engaging related stakeholders through 'Science & Impact' workshops. We propose the powerful combination of a unique large-scale field experiment in Amazônia together with detailed ecophysiological and new tower-based radar measurements to deliver new insights into drought responses across scales, both during drought, and importantly, during post-drought recovery. Water availability plays a dominant role in the global carbon cycle, with a large influence from Amazônia. However, our ability to predict the effects of changing water availability is substantially constrained by limited understanding of the ecological processes occurring in response to drought, particularly in tropical forests. These responses occur across different scales, from leaf to tree to forest ecosystem, with very large impacts on the carbon cycle observed regionally and globally. Understanding drought responses of tropical forests has proved challenging for several reasons: a lack of ecophysiological analysis at the right scales; limited capacity to deliver continuous monitoring of mechanistically-informed water stress responses at large scale, eg using satellites; and limited understanding of the ecological processes comprising drought stress and its consequences. We ask: How does drought stress affect whole-tree function, and can critical processes such as transpiration and growth recover after drought in tropical forests? Does drought stress leave a long-term legacy by limiting growth potential and by increasing the risk of possible tree mortality from future drought? And critically, how do the effects of drought on tree function affect performance at the scale of many trees, ie, that of a tropical forest? Multi-scale measurements are needed to address these questions. A combination of focused ecophysiological measurement with new tower-based radar (microwave) observations has the potential to enable large advances in understanding, scaling from tree to forest and region. This project will combine the world's only long-term drought experiment at hectare scale in tropical forest, which we have run for the past twenty years, with new radar sensors. We will use tower-based radar measurements to detect changes in vegetation water content at the scale of the experiment. This will provide higher resolution detection and mechanistic insight than was previously possible using satellite radars, and allow us to connect radar and plant ecophysiological data. Our specific hypotheses address: the links between organ-, tree- and ecosystem-scale responses to drought, and after drought; how these data advance our understanding of forest function and the risk to function and survival; and how this understanding can be used to advance satellite monitoring of drought impacts, and its wider use. In summary, we have three main goals: i) To use our ecosystem-scale drought experiment in Amazônian forest to quantify and understand the effects of drought at multiple scales, using plant physiology and tower-based radar (microwave) measurements. ii) To understand post-drought legacy effects on forest resilience by using the control enabled by our experiment to halt the drought and monitor recovery processes, and the outcomes for growth and survival. iii) To use (i) and (ii) to advance large-scale satellite detection capability in tropical forests for improved biomass and drought-response monitoring. We will lead two 'Science and Impact' workshops to rapidly multiply outcomes of the work by helping to improve prediction of land-atmosphere interactions using vegetation models, and better early-warning capability for land-use planning.
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