Academic literature on the topic 'European harvestmen'

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Journal articles on the topic "European harvestmen"

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NOVAK, TONE, SAŠA LIPOVŠEK DELAKORDA, and LJUBA SLANA NOVAK. "A review of harvestmen (Arachnida: Opiliones) in Slovenia*." Zootaxa 1325, no. 1 (September 28, 2006): 267. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1325.1.17.

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The authors present a short historical faunistic, zoogeographical and ecological review of research on harvestmen (Opiliones) of the territory of presentday Slovenia, and discuss some actual ecological and nature conservational questions. Till recent, 64 species plus two subspecies of Opiliones inhabiting Slovenia are recorded, most of these are Alpine, European, Central- and Western European elements. Taxonomically, there are some open questions, especially in the genus Trogulus. A small number of further species can be expected in Slovenia, raising the potential final number to 69-71. Some harvestmen are locally and regionally endangered, especially by anthropogenous habitat and ecosystem changes.
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JINDROVA, Hana, Matyas HIRMAN, David SADILEK, Pavel BEZDECKA, and Frantisek STAHLAVSKY. "Distribution of 18S rDNA clusters in Central European harvestmen of the suborder Eupnoi (Arachnida: Opiliones)." European Journal of Entomology 117 (June 11, 2020): 282–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.14411/eje.2020.032.

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Raspotnig, Günther, Miriam Schaider, Petra Föttinger, Christian Komposch, and Ivo Karaman. "Nitrogen-Containing Compounds in the Scent Gland Secretions of European Cladonychiid Harvestmen (Opiliones, Laniatores, Travunioidea)." Journal of Chemical Ecology 37, no. 8 (July 16, 2011): 912–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10886-011-9996-2.

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Heneberg, Petr, and Milan Řezáč. "Dry sandpits and gravel–sandpits serve as key refuges for endangered epigeic spiders (Araneae) and harvestmen (Opiliones) of Central European steppes aeolian sands." Ecological Engineering 73 (December 2014): 659–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.09.101.

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Schönhofer, Axel L., and Jochen Martens. "Revision of the genus Trogulus Latreille: the Trogulus coriziformis species-group of the western Mediterranean (Opiliones:Trogulidae)." Invertebrate Systematics 22, no. 5 (2008): 523. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/is08013.

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Within the well researched European fauna of harvestmen, the genus Trogulus Latreille exhibits unexpectedly high cryptic diversity. The species’ uniform morphology hinders an exclusively morphological approach to their systematics and taxonomy, and a preliminary molecular study estimated the number of species to be three times higher than currently known. The current study focuses on a clearly defined species-group within Trogulus, combining molecular (~1700 bp 28S rRNA and the cytochrome b gene), distributional, morphometric and morphological data. Relationships are reconstructed using Bayesian inference, maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood and this information is subsequently used to evaluate morphological characters for systematic usability and to identify biogeographical processes leading to speciation events. The Trogulus coriziformis species-group is defined and diagnosed and includes eight species. Three species are redefined: T. coriziformis C. L. Koch, 1839, for which a neotype is designated, and T. aquaticus Simon, 1879 and T. cristatus Simon, 1879 for which lectotypes are designated. Four species are described as new: T. balearicus, sp. nov. from the Balearic Islands, T. huberi, sp. nov. from southern Portugal, T. prietoi, sp. nov. from Andalusia, Spain, and T. pyrenaicus, sp. nov. from the central Pyrenees. Trogulus lusitanicus Giltay, 1931 is used as collective name and probably refers to a composite of species presently difficult to tell apart. Trogulus salfii De Lerma, 1948 is proposed as a synonym for T. coriziformis. Within Trogulus, the molecular genetic data support monophyly and basal placement of the Trogulus coriziformis species-group. The species to differ in external morphology (size, papillation of palps, apophyses of legs, pattern of body papillation, morphometric data), 28S and cytochrome b autapomorphies and to a lesser degree by male genital morphology. The species-group is confined to the western Mediterranean area and its species are allopatrically distributed. Their present distribution corresponds to geological processes in the Miocene and Pliocene indicating that this group of organisms may be of considerable value for further biogeographic studies.
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Castro-Garcia, Sergio, Uriel A. Rosa, Christopher J. Gliever, David Smith, Jacqueline K. Burns, William H. Krueger, Louise Ferguson, and Kitren Glozer. "Video Evaluation of Table Olive Damage during Harvest with a Canopy Shaker." HortTechnology 19, no. 2 (January 2009): 260–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.19.2.260.

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Table olives (Olea europaea) traditionally are hand harvested when green in color and before physiological maturity is attained. Hand harvesting accounts for the grower's main production costs. Several mechanical harvesting methods have been previously tested. However, tree configuration and fruit injury are major constraints to the adoption of mechanical harvesting. In prior work with a canopy shaker, promising results were attained after critical machine components were reconfigured. In this study, stereo video analysis based on two high-speed cameras operating during the harvesting process were used to identify the sources of fruit damage due to canopy-harvester interaction. Damage was subjectively evaluated after harvest. Fruit mechanically harvested had 35% more bruising and three times as many fruit with broken skin as that of hand-harvested fruit. The main source of fruit damaged in the canopy was the strike-impact of fruit by harvester rods. Implementation of softer padding materials were effective in mitigating fruit injury caused by the impact of rods and hard surfaces. Canopy acceleration was correlated with fruit damage, thus restricting improvements needed for fruit removal efficiency through increased tine frequency.
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Dunlop, Jason A., Ulrich Kotthoff, Jörg U. Hammel, Jennifer Ahrens, and Danilo Harms. "Arachnids in Bitterfeld amber: A unique fauna of fossils from the heart of Europe or simply old friends?" Evolutionary Systematics 2, no. 1 (February 22, 2018): 31–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.2.22581.

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Bitterfeld amber, sometimes referred to as Saxon or Saxonian amber, is a potentially significant but poorly known source of arthropod data for the Palaeogene of northern Europe. An important aspect is a long-standing controversy about the age of this amber: namely whether it is equivalent to, and perhaps merely a southerly extension of, the better-known Baltic amber, or whether it is a unique and geological younger deposit sampling a different fauna. Here, we briefly review the Bitterfeld arachnids with particular emphasis on how these data could be used to elucidate the age of this deposit. Five arachnid orders have been recorded from Bitterfeld amber: spiders (Araneae), acariform mites (Acariformes), parasitiform mites (Parasitiformes), harvestmen (Opiliones) and pseudoscorpions (Pseudoscorpiones). This is a lower diversity than Baltic amber, where scorpions (Scorpiones) and camel spiders (Solifugae) have also been recorded. Spiders are the most comprehensively studied group, with more than 75 described species. Other groups such as pseudoscorpions and mites appear to be very diverse, but are virtually undescribed. Morphological overlap is apparent in the arachnid fauna and 40 species are currently shared between Baltic and Bitterfeld amber whilst 50 species are unique to the Bitterfeld deposit. At the family level overlap is even higher, but in all groups Baltic amber appears more diverse than Bitterfeld. This overlap may be interpreted as evidence for temporal conspecifity of the Baltic and Bitterfeld ambers, albeit with the Bitterfeld and Baltic ambers possibly representing independent localities within a larger Eocene European amber area which also included the Rovno amber from the Ukraine. However, caution should be exercised because the taxonomic foundation for such assumptions is far from comprehensive, most of the material remains to be studied in detail using modern techniques of morphological reconstruction. There are further issues with date estimates because some arachnid groups show extraordinary morphological stasis over time, even at species level, which may bias the analyses available. Here, we review the available knowledge on Bitterfeld arachnids and discuss how a detailed assessment of this fauna, and other arthropod taxa, could be generated. Several natural history museums – including Hamburg and Berlin – as well as private collectors host major assemblages of Bitterfeld fossils which may help to clarify the debate about the age and provenance of the material, and the extent to which (morpho)-species were maintained both over geographical distances and potentially geological time.
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Schlick-Steiner, B. C., F. M. Steiner, C. Stauffer, and A. Buschinger. "Life history traits of a European Messor harvester ant." Insectes Sociaux 52, no. 4 (November 2005): 360–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00040-005-0819-8.

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Ferguson, Louise, and Sergio Castro Garcia. "Transformation of an Ancient Crop: Preparing California ‘Manzanillo’ Table Olives for Mechanical Harvesting." HortTechnology 24, no. 3 (June 2014): 274–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/horttech.24.3.274.

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As one of the oldest continuously produced tree crops in the world, it is ironic that table olive (Olea europaea) production has benefitted from few technological innovations, including harvesting. Two harvesting technologies, trunk shaking and canopy contact, have been identified. In a 2013 trial, a prototype canopy contact harvester successfully harvested 92% of a 5.3-ton/acre mechanically pruned crop, vs. 81% for a 12.8-ton/acre hand-pruned control crop in a 19-year-old, 13 × 26-ft grove, spaced at 139 trees/acre and adapted for mechanical harvesting with 6 years of mechanical topping and hedging. About 85% of the hand-pruned olives were cannable vs. 86% of the mechanically pruned olives. Over the 6 years of mechanical pruning, the mechanically pruned trees averaged an annual 4.2 tons/acre vs. 5.3 tons/acre with hand-pruned trees. Again in 2013, this same canopy contact harvester achieved 81% final harvester efficiency with a 5.8-ton/acre crop in a 12-year-old, 12 × 18-ft, 202-tree/acre, mechanically pruned hedgerow grove vs. 80% efficiency for a 5.17-ton/acre crop with hand-pruned hedgerow trees. Similarly, no significant differences in the percentage of cannable olives, fruit size distribution, or value per ton was produced by the pruning treatments. In this trial in which both hand and mechanical pruning were used to produce a hedgerow, the hand-pruned trees averaged 3.7 tons/acre vs. 4.3 tons/acre for mechanically pruned trees. In a commercial trial in 2012, the trunk-shaking harvester achieved 77% average harvester efficiency in a 40-acre, 180-tree/acre grove, with a 4-ton/acre crop prepared with both hand and mechanical pruning. These ongoing trials indicate that adapting groves with mechanical pruning does not decrease average annual yields and can produce table olive groves that can be mechanically harvested at a cost and speed that is competitive with hand harvesting.
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Meyer, F. V. "Book Review: The European Challenge: Industry’s Response to the 1992 Programme." Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics 4, no. 3 (April 1992): 295. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02601079x9200400308.

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The European Challenge: Industry’s Response to the 1992 Programme: Edited by G. Mayes, Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991, 433pp., Index, £45.00, ISBN 0-7450-1034-2. The New Europe: Changing Economic Relations between East and West: Susan Senior Nello, Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991, 282pp., Index, £40.00, ISBN 0-7450-1050-4.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "European harvestmen"

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Merfield, Charles Norman. "Predator interactions within a trophic level : Phalangium opilio L. (Arachnida: Opiliones) and mites (Arachnida: Acari)." Master's thesis, Lincoln University. Bio-Protection and Ecology Division, 2000. http://theses.lincoln.ac.nz/public/adt-NZLIU20060908.204153.

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This study investigated commensal feeding interactions between the European harvestman (P. opilio L.) and the predatory mites Balaustium spp. and Anystis baccarum L. It also investigated the feeding behaviour of P. opilio. Experiments were conducted in the laboratory using standardised temperature, humidity, photoperiod and experimental arenas, with eggs of the brown blowfly (Calliphora stygia F.) as prey facsimiles. Due to initial difficulties in obtaining enough predatory mites, mite feeding was manually simulated piercing blowfly eggs with a minuten pin. P. opilio consumed significantly more freeze-killed than live blowfly eggs, indicating that freezing induced chemical and/or physical changes to blowfly eggs that are detected by P. opilio. Significantly more manually pierced eggs were consumed by P. opilio compared with unpierced ones, demonstrating that piercing caused a chemical and/or physical to the egg and increased the feeding rates of P. opilio. Different densities of eggs had no effect on the numbers eaten by P. opilio and placing single pierced eggs next to groups of unpierced eggs also had no effect on the numbers of unpierced eggs eaten. These results suggest that P. opilio does not exhibit klinokinesis or orthokinesis to intensify its search for prey around the area where previous prey were located. P. opilio ate significantly more brown blowfly eggs that had previously been fed on by mites, demonstrating that a short term commensal interaction existed. However, further work is required to demonstrate if the relationship is commensal in the longer term. A comparison between hand-pierced and mite-pierced eggs showed that P. opilio ate significantly more of the former indicating that mite and hand piercing were quantitatively different. The potential for, and importance of, other commensal or mutual relationships between predators in agroecosystems is discussed. The lack of klinokinesis and orthokinesis in P. opilio is compared with other predators and parasitoids that do exhibit these behaviours. The means by which prey are detected by P. opilio are discussed in relation to interpreting behaviours such as prey inspection. Concerns about the effect of pre-treatment and handling of sentinel prey and the problems of using prey facsimiles are raised.
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Merfield, C. N. "Predator interactions within a trophic level : Phalangium opilio L. (Arachnida: Opiliones) and mites (Arachnida: Acari)." Diss., Lincoln University, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10182/21.

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This study investigated commensal feeding interactions between the European harvestman (P. opilio L.) and the predatory mites Balaustium spp. and Anystis baccarum L. It also investigated the feeding behaviour of P. opilio. Experiments were conducted in the laboratory using standardised temperature, humidity, photoperiod and experimental arenas, with eggs of the brown blowfly (Calliphora stygia F.) as prey facsimiles. Due to initial difficulties in obtaining enough predatory mites, mite feeding was manually simulated piercing blowfly eggs with a minuten pin. P. opilio consumed significantly more freeze-killed than live blowfly eggs, indicating that freezing induced chemical and/or physical changes to blowfly eggs that are detected by P. opilio. Significantly more manually pierced eggs were consumed by P. opilio compared with unpierced ones, demonstrating that piercing caused a chemical and/or physical to the egg and increased the feeding rates of P. opilio. Different densities of eggs had no effect on the numbers eaten by P. opilio and placing single pierced eggs next to groups of unpierced eggs also had no effect on the numbers of unpierced eggs eaten. These results suggest that P. opilio does not exhibit klinokinesis or orthokinesis to intensify its search for prey around the area where previous prey were located. P. opilio ate significantly more brown blowfly eggs that had previously been fed on by mites, demonstrating that a short term commensal interaction existed. However, further work is required to demonstrate if the relationship is commensal in the longer term. A comparison between hand-pierced and mite-pierced eggs showed that P. opilio ate significantly more of the former indicating that mite and hand piercing were quantitatively different. The potential for, and importance of, other commensal or mutual relationships between predators in agroecosystems is discussed. The lack of klinokinesis and orthokinesis in P. opilio is compared with other predators and parasitoids that do exhibit these behaviours. The means by which prey are detected by P. opilio are discussed in relation to interpreting behaviours such as prey inspection. Concerns about the effect of pre-treatment and handling of sentinel prey and the problems of using prey facsimiles are raised.
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Books on the topic "European harvestmen"

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Doise, Willem, Alain Clemence, and Fabio Lorenzi-Cioldi. The Quantitative Analysis of Social Representations (Harvester Wheatsheaf European Monographs in Social Psychology Series). Prentice Hall Europe (a Pearson Education company), 1993.

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Smith, Ian W. G. Regional and chronological variations in energy harvests from prehistoric fauna in New Zealand. Edited by Umberto Albarella, Mauro Rizzetto, Hannah Russ, Kim Vickers, and Sarah Viner-Daniels. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199686476.013.50.

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Regional variations in the subsistence practices of New Zealand’s indigenous Maori were recognized by the first Europeans who studied them closely in the late eighteenth century. There is now a critical need to reassess the evidence for both regional and chronological variations in evidence for the types and relative importance of the foods that prehistoric Maori ate to establish when, where, and how changes took place. Reliably dated archaeological assemblages from two New Zealand study areas are examined to generate estimates of the dietary energy harvested from major classes of fauna. These reveal changes over time which are attributable to human predation, and regional differences that reflect differing trajectories of human population growth.
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Book chapters on the topic "European harvestmen"

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Maneein, Supattra, John J. Milledge, and Birthe V. Nielsen. "Enhancing Methane Production from Spring-Harvested Sargassum muticum." In Springer Proceedings in Energy, 117–23. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-63916-7_15.

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AbstractSargassum muticum is a brown seaweed which is invasive to Europe and currently treated as waste. The use of S. muticum for biofuel production by anaerobic digestion (AD) is limited by low methane (CH4) yields. This study compares the biochemical methane potential (BMP) of S. muticum treated in three different approaches: aqueous methanol (70% MeOH) treated, washed, and untreated. Aqueous MeOH treatment of spring-harvested S. muticum was found to increase CH4 production potential by almost 50% relative to the untreated biomass. The MeOH treatment possibly extracts AD inhibitors which could be high-value compounds for use in the pharmaceutical industry, showing potential for the development of a biorefinery approach; ultimately exploiting this invasive seaweed species.
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Würtenberger, Gert, Paul van der Kooij, Bart Kiewiet, and Martin Ekvad. "Rights Granted." In European Union Plant Variety Protection, 133–88. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192898234.003.0006.

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This chapter deals with the scope of protection once the material and formal conditions for the granting of Community plant variety rights have been granted. It discusses the scope of rights, the limitation of rights, and the duration and termination of rights. It also highlights the acts to which only the holder of the Community plant variety right is entitled, and the products obtained directly from harvested material. This chapter highlights essentially derived varieties and explains the use of variety denominations, as the holder of the plant variety right is entitled to take action in court against persons who omit the correct usage of such denominations. It talks about the Community plant variety rights that are granted after accession of new Member States to the European Union, which are applied throughout the territories of both the new and old Member States.
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Soriano, Almudena, and Carlos Sánchez-García. "Nutritional Composition of Game Meat from Wild Species Harvested in Europe." In Meat and Nutrition. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.97763.

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A discussion about the nutritional composition of game meat, with specific focus on wild species harvested in Central and Mediterranean European countries has been conducted. Given the wide range of species, and the climate and vegetation differences among the harvesting areas, game meat shows heterogeneous characteristics and chemical composition, the latter being also affected by sex, age, body condition, physiological and sexual status, and hunting period. However, there are similarities which make it clearly distinguishable from livestock meat. When considering the most consumed species (red and fallow deer, wild boar, hare and wild rabbit), their meat has low fat content (<3 g/100 g for large and <4 g/100 g for small wild game species), high protein content (20–26 g/100 g) and low energy content (90–113 kcal/100 g). Wild game meat has a healthier fatty-acids profile compared to other meats, showing a higher proportion of PUFA, especially n-3, and consequently more favorable PUFA/SAF ratio. Wild ruminants’ meat shows a favorable n-6/n-3 ratio (lower or close to 4). It has a high content of K, followed by P and micro-minerals such as Zn and Fe, together with B-group vitamins and vitamin E. Game meat from wild species harvested in Europe can diversify the market being an alternative to others red meats owing to its nutritional quality and organoleptic characteristics.
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Raitz, Karl. "Kentucky’s Distilling Heritage." In Bourbon's Backroads, 5–20. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178424.003.0002.

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American spirits distilling was based on European and colonial traditions and the age-old knowledge that by milling grain into a fine meal and mixing it with malted barley, yeast, and water, one could convert starches into sugars, which could be fermented and distilled into alcohol spirits. Migrants from Europe and the coastal colonies established distilleries in Kentucky before statehood in 1792, and an estimated 2,200 distilleries were in operation by 1810. The vocation evolved from subsistence-scale farmers and millers who made corn whiskey into twenty-first-century commercial businesses that produce bourbon on an industrial scale. The change from craft to industrial distilling was accompanied by distinctive changes in the landscape as distillers adopted steam engines and abandoned water-power sites; farmers expanded grain production; timber was harvested to make barrel staves; and manufactures built steam engines, boats, and railroads. Whiskey production increasingly focused on the Bluegrass and Pennyroyal regions and Ohio Valley cities. The changeover was enabled by transportation improvements such as turnpikes, railroads, and steamboats. Production was increasingly controlled by internal revenue personnel, and distillers were harried by temperance advocates. By the eve of Prohibition in 1919, only 182 distilleries remained in operation.
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Lieber, Sven, Dylan Van Assche, Sally Chambers, Fien Messens, Friedel Geeraert, Julie M. Birkholz, and Anastasia Dimou. "BESOCIAL: A Sustainable Knowledge Graph-Based Workflow for Social Media Archiving." In Studies on the Semantic Web. IOS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/ssw210045.

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Social media as infrastructure for public discourse provide valuable information that needs to be preserved. Several tools for social media harvesting exist, but still only fragmented workflows may be formed with different combinations of such tools. On top of that, social media data but also preservation-related metadata standards are heterogeneous, resulting in a costly manual process. In the framework of BESOCIAL at the Royal Library of Belgium (KBR), we develop a sustainable social media archiving workflow that integrates heterogeneous data sources in a Europeana and PREMIS-based data model to describe data preserved by open source tools. This allows data stewardship on a uniform representation and we generate metadata records automatically via queries. In this paper, we present a comparison of social media harvesting tools and our Knowledge Graph-based solution which reuses off-the-shelf open source tools to harvest social media and automatically generate preservation-related metadata records. We validate our solution by generating Encoded Archival Description (EAD) and bibliographic MARC records for preservation of harvested social media collections from Twitter collected at KBR. Other archiving institutions can build upon our solution and customize it to their own social media archiving policies.
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Conference papers on the topic "European harvestmen"

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Coronado, Daniel Augusto Castellanos, Emanuele Romano, and Enrico Dallago. "Wind energy electret-based electrostatic harvester." In 2019 21st European Conference on Power Electronics and Applications (EPE '19 ECCE Europe). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/epe.2019.8915476.

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Suominen, Mai, Kaisa Junninen, Osmo Heikkala, and Jari Kouki. "Burning harvested sites enhances polypore diversity." In 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. Jyväskylä: Jyvaskyla University Open Science Centre, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107596.

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Berges, Romain, Ludivine Fadel, Laurent Oyhenart, Valerie Vigneras, and Thierry Taris. "A dual band 915MHz/2.44GHz RF energy harvester." In 2015 European Microwave Conference (EuMC 2015). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/eumc.2015.7345761.

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Aksoyak, Ibrahim Kagan, Adamantia Chletsou, John Papapolymerou, and Ahmet Cagri Ulusoy. "A High Sensitivity RF Energy Harvester for Diverse Environments." In 2020 50th European Microwave Conference (EuMC). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/eumc48046.2021.9338197.

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El Badawe, M., A. Albishi, and O. M. Ramahi. "Polarization Independent Dual-Band RF Energy Harvester." In 12th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EuCAP 2018). Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp.2018.0695.

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Vasic, Dejan, and Yunxia Yao. "Piezoelectric energy harvester with PWM electric interface." In 2013 15th European Conference on Power Electronics and Applications (EPE). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/epe.2013.6631804.

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Suutarinen, Johanna, and Ilpo Kojola. "Predictors of wolf poaching in a legally harvested wolf population." In 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. Jyväskylä: Jyvaskyla University Open Science Centre, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107829.

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Tawfiq, Shadi, and Mahmoud Al Ahmad. "Electromechanical analogy for d33 piezoelectric harvester power calculations." In 2015 European Conference on Circuit Theory and Design (ECCTD). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ecctd.2015.7300109.

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Hadas, Z., C. Ondrusek, and V. Singule. "Increasing sensitivity of vibration energy harvester." In SPIE Europe Microtechnologies for the New Millennium, edited by Ulrich Schmid. SPIE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.820919.

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Kim, Young-Cheol, Jongmin Jo, and Hanju Cha. "A Novel Intermittent Energy Capturing Method and Performance Analysis of Electromagnetic Energy Harvester for a Tire Application." In 2019 21st European Conference on Power Electronics and Applications (EPE '19 ECCE Europe). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/epe.2019.8914964.

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Reports on the topic "European harvestmen"

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Custodio, Maareen G., Wendy J. Powers, Elisabeth J. Huff-Lonergan, and Marjorie A. Faust. Growth and Carcass Characteristics of Pigs Fed Bt and Non-Bt Corn and Harvested at US and European Market Weights. Ames (Iowa): Iowa State University, January 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/ans_air-180814-1376.

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