Detalhes

TÓPICOS ESPECIAIS III - CLIMATE CHANGE AND MICROPLASTIC: OPPORTUNITIES, CHALLENGES, TRENDS, AND ISSUES IN THE ATMOSPHERE, THE BIOSPHERE, AND THE OCEAN

Nome da Disciplina: TÓPICOS ESPECIAIS III - CLIMATE CHANGE AND MICROPLASTIC: OPPORTUNITIES, CHALLENGES, TRENDS, AND ISSUES IN THE ATMOSPHERE, THE BIOSPHERE, AND THE OCEAN
Carga Horária: 60
Créditos: 3
Obrigatória: Não
EMENTA
Notions about climate change and microplastic; Studies on specific sectors related to climate change and microplastic in the Atmosphere, the Biosphere, and the Ocean; Basic service management and supply chain management concepts of climate change and microplastic; Service management and supply chain management analysis of climate change in the World; Analysis of microplastic dimensions: concepts and criteria; Sustainable consumption and production: opportunities challenges, trends, and issues in the Atmosphere, the Biosphere, and the Ocean; The relationship between the sustainable development and climate change; Responsible consumption and sustainable consumption: understanding the key differences in the Atmosphere, the Biosphere, and the Ocean; Production of Scientific Knowledge and Research Methodology; The production in English of five top journal papers, one conference paper, and ten essays.
BIBLIOGRAFIA
Aparício, B.A. et al. (2022) “Unravelling the effect of climate change on fire danger and fire behaviour in the Transboundary Biosphere Reserve of Meseta Ibérica (Portugal-Spain),” Climatic change, 173(1-2), pp. Climatic change, 2022, Vol.173 Aragaw, T.A. (2021) “Microplastic pollution in African countries’ water systems: a review on findings, applied methods, characteristics, impacts, and managements,” SN applied sciences, 3(6), p. 629. da Silva, J.R.M.C. et al. (2023) “Occurrence and distribution of legacy and emerging pollutants including plastic debris in Antarctica: Sources, distribution and impact on marine biodiversity,” Marine pollution bulletin, 186, p. 114353. Daú, G. et al. (2023) “An analysis of the Brazilian higher educational opportunity and challenge processes to achieve the 2030 Agenda for the sustainable development,” International journal of sustainability in higher education, 24(6), pp. 1197–1219. Dutkiewicz, S. et al. (2019) “Ocean colour signature of climate change,” Nature communications, 10(1), p. 578. Edo, C. et al. (2020) “Microplastics in sediments of artificially recharged lagoons: Case study in a Biosphere Reserve,” The Science of the total environment, 729, p. 13 Evangelista, H. et al. (2023) “Intake of trace contaminants by corals in Abrolhos reef bank (western South Atlantic) during two decades of coastal impacts,” Continental shelf research, 255, p. 104946. Godde, C.M. et al. (2021) “Impacts of climate change on the livestock food supply chain; a review of the evidence,” Global food security, 28, p. 100488. Justino, A.K.S. et al. (2023) “From prey to predators: Evidence of microplastic trophic transfer in tuna and large pelagic species in the southwestern Tropical Atlantic,” Environmental pollution (1987), 327, p. 121532. Long, Z. et al. (2022) “Anthropocene microplastic stratigraphy of Xiamen Bay, China: A history of plastic production and waste management,” Water research (Oxford), 226, p. 119215. Malliaroudaki, M.I. et al. (2022) “Energy management for a net zero dairy supply chain under climate change,” Trends in food science & technology, 126, pp. 153–167. Sanfiel-Fumero, M.Ángeles, Armas-Cruz, Y. and González-Morales, O. (2017) “Sustainability of the tourist supply chain and governance in an insular biosphere reserve destination: the perspective of tourist accommodation,” European planning studies, 25(7), pp. 1256–1274. Silva, L.C.R. and Lambers, H. (2021) “Soil-plant-atmosphere interactions: structure, function, and predictive scaling for climate change mitigation,” Plant and soil, 461(1-2), pp. 5–27. Zhang, L., Dong, Y. and Xu, J. (2020) “Potential Evaluation of Ocean Transportation Supply Chain Based on CBR,” Journal of coastal research, 105(sp1), pp. 104–109. Scavarda, A. et al. (2023) “A conceptual framework for the corporate sustainability higher education in Latin America,” International journal of sustainability in higher education, 24(2), pp. 481–501.


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