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1 resulting in a huge waste of this excellent natural resource.
2 in carbon dynamics and a key commercialized natural resource.
3 nefit of taking advantage of a non-exploited natural resource.
4 rocarbon fuels from a renewable and abundant natural resource.
5 Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.
6 s of biomedicine, environmental science, and natural resources.
7 hnologies that reverse rising consumption of natural resources.
8 tainability of the current and future use of natural resources.
9 groups will and will not sustainably govern natural resources.
10 ing unprecedented demands on agriculture and natural resources.
11 rived from nonrenewable resources or limited natural resources.
12 ation by exhausting, rather than conserving, natural resources.
13 s can help alleviate the demands for limited natural resources.
14 o plan better policies for the management of natural resources.
15 services and the economic potential of these natural resources.
16 ems and for promoting the sustainable use of natural resources.
17 optimize crop productivity while conserving natural resources.
18 gricultural production and the extraction of natural resources.
19 ecosystems and support the resilience of our natural resources.
20 ncreasing crop yield without causing harm to natural resources.
21 h and higher yield without deteriorating the natural resources.
22 ulating waste and driving the consumption of natural resources.
23 requires revolutionizing the way we harness natural resources.
24 availability of these is widely dependent on natural resources.
25 ential, ecosystem quality, human health, and natural resources.
26 s (PES) programs to sustain the use of their natural resources.
27 or predicting predator dynamics and managing natural resources.
28 f assessing how prehistoric peoples utilised natural resources.
29 tional solvents for extracting pigments from natural resources.
30 by the local Indigenous community to exploit natural resources.
31 can be readily obtained from biomass derived natural resources.
32 ed startups, emphasizing the conservation of natural resources.
33 le solutions for sustainable exploitation of natural resources.
34 ing investigations and identify contaminated natural resources.
35 lid-state lithium batteries from sustainable natural resources.
36 y large for poor communities closely tied to natural resources.
37 conomic stability and the sustainable use of natural resources.
38 ve livelihoods and, thereby, their impact on natural resources.
39 ies of policies and programs to conserve its natural resources.
40 on as an effective tool in the governance of natural resources.
41 sustainability and efficient utilization of natural resources.
42 high consumption of fossil and nuclear-based natural resources.
43 ntal to humans for habitation, commerce, and natural resources.
44 his paper proposes an elaboration of the AoP Natural Resources.
45 oPs): Natural Environment, Human Health, and Natural Resources.
46 e altered for other applications to preserve natural resources, a facile template-free process is sug
47 nates pathways that may broadly link reduced natural resource access to declines in childhood health.
49 of other outcomes including economic growth, natural resource and environmental resiliency, and socio
53 more sustainable because they use many fewer natural resources and are less taxing on the environment
54 s for understanding intergroup conflict over natural resources and are relevant to efforts to improve
55 against snake venoms have been explored from natural resources and are synthesized in the laboratory;
57 and severity threaten local populations and natural resources and contribute carbon emissions into t
58 n of microbiota-based strategies to preserve natural resources and develop more environmentally frien
60 al instability due to their intensive use of natural resources and energy resources linked to the tra
61 This would reduce the stress on depleting natural resources and foster a sustainable construction
65 al distributions and quantities of renewable natural resources and net primary productivity (NPP) in
66 d characterization of these cultural-genetic-natural resources and raising public awareness of their
67 changing climate extremes with human use of natural resources and suggest that appropriately managed
68 ed-from selection of precursors derived from natural resources and their conversion into functional b
70 change could stabilize economies reliant on natural resources and their markets, both of which are p
72 ximize the efficacy of natural products from natural resources, and among these tools formulation of
73 es, such as animal production, extraction of natural resources, and antimicrobial application change
74 ystem services, achieving sustainable use of natural resources, and conserving biodiversity, at both
75 disasters, greater disease prevalence, fewer natural resources, and greater degree of external threat
76 h private interests: pollution, depletion of natural resources, and intergroup conflicts, are at thei
77 es can be more abundant and predictable than natural resources, and subsequent changes in wildlife ec
78 ocultural assets, document residents' use of natural resources, and tailor the findings to the needs
79 ems, like chemical pollution or depletion of natural resources, and the focus on CFP brings the risk
80 shifted their effort, their engagement with natural resources, and the sustainability of their actio
81 utrition Board, the Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources, and the U.S. Department of Agricultur
82 that were forged in the context of managing natural resources are associated with positive outcomes
84 ion, restoration, and improved management of natural resources articulated in the targets of the Glob
85 rts with analyzing different perspectives on Natural Resources as they are somehow sandwiched in betw
86 ting and enhancing the RTP properties of the natural resources as well as the potential applications
87 nd no evidence of a similar interaction with natural resources (as measured by oil exports) or risk f
89 pogenic processes reduce the availability of natural resources at the tree canopies, An. cruzii prima
90 known whether varying habitat structures and natural resource availability associated with racial seg
91 this shortcoming and introduce the types of natural resource available for the preparation of RTP ma
92 oor are generally reliant on their immediate natural resource base for subsistence and suffer high ra
94 nd highlight the importance of understanding natural resource-based livelihoods in the context of the
97 tigation is commonly used to replace aquatic natural resources being lost or degraded but little is k
99 ieve a blue economy are not due to available natural resources, but include factors such as national
100 t, and its end, can have powerful effects on natural resources, but the influence of war and peace on
102 from sewage sludge has the potential to save natural resources, but the potential risks connected to
103 es to maximise the potential substitution of natural resources by waste or by-products, while guarant
104 which is shrinking as a result of declining natural resources, climate change, and the growing world
107 agricultural development and exploitation of natural resources, concerns have been raised about their
110 ffective management is necessary to overcome natural resource constraints and encourage a shift towar
112 (i.e., disequilibria between regions in the natural resources consumed, the environmental impacts pr
116 obal environmental change, the governance of natural resources depends on sustained collective action
117 ignificantly impacts the environment through natural resource depletion and energy consumption, leadi
118 onomic development away from a dependence on natural resource depletion toward recognition of the dep
119 ess on water and energy utilities, including natural resource depletion, infrastructure deterioration
123 ombining methods from development economics, natural resource economics, and marine ecology, we use a
124 ndertaken in the fields of environmental and natural resource economics, but studies have not typical
126 ontrary, being open to the outside world and natural resource endowment did not significantly impact
127 ese concerns depend on robust information on natural resource endowments, and on suitable methods to
128 n, and purification require large amounts of natural resources, energy, chemicals, and highly special
131 growth, land use change, climate change, and natural resource extraction are driving the salinization
133 tial to affect ecosystem services related to natural resources, food production, climate regulation,
139 ct has been identified: recognizing the role Natural Resources for human welfare, either specifically
140 f sources, and are one of the highest valued natural resources for protection in Net Environmental Be
141 e mainly focus on the inherent advantages of natural resources for RTP materials, strategies for acti
143 ularly important that individuals relying on natural resources for their livelihood have effective st
145 unity with which to more sustainably exploit natural resources, from environmental, economic and soci
149 The urban and industrial growth stressing natural resources has led to severe degradation of the r
150 ; fire and ambulance; parks, recreation, and natural resources; housing and community development; pu
151 d projected environmental, human health, and natural resource implications of electricity generated f
153 tential health benefits make them invaluable natural resources in agri-food and health promotion thro
156 plications for the sustainable management of natural resources in the face of an increasingly interco
157 oil spills occur in fish spawning habitats, natural resource injury assessments often rely on conven
158 he human-designed economic system depends on natural resource inputs, and in turn its metabolic waste
159 al. show that the power available from this natural resource is comparable to wind and solar power,
160 tious political issue, the valuation of this natural resource is sometime viewed as a strategy to avo
162 envisions that the sustainable management of natural resources is a lifelong learning environment whe
163 incorporating social dynamics into models of natural resources is critical for understanding how reso
164 istoric trade and long-distance transport of natural resources is essential for determining the impac
167 lead to improvements in or deterioration of natural resources is limited, because scientific discipl
168 nal Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN); they are native to the Indian
169 ditions and simultaneously provide access to natural resources, land parcels for development, and rec
170 anism's fitness on such complex and variable natural resource landscapes remains poorly understood.
171 stal displays (LCDs) and the efforts to save natural resources, LCDs are even replacing paper to disp
172 ind's destructive tendencies when exploiting natural resources leads to irreparable harm to the envir
174 ing changes will seriously challenge current natural resource management and conservation efforts.
177 nce, and is thus directly applicable to most natural resource management decision-making situations.
180 osystems worldwide may require rethinking of natural resource management outside protected areas.
181 d out a multicountry comparative analysis of natural resource management programs conducted under the
184 nt four studies of air pollution regulation, natural resource management, and the spread of COVID-19.
186 r-reaching implications for conservation and natural resource management, little is known about the c
192 discuss the implications of our findings for natural resources management with respect to context-spe
194 ed ecological change in which ecologists and natural resource managers are increasingly challenged to
195 ocation of the invasion front is valuable to natural resource managers because future ecological and
197 effects appear unlikely before mid-century, natural resource managers have time to implement conserv
199 ospital Association, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, Minneapolis Police Department, and Am
200 ersity as a result of human appropriation of natural resources, modification of habitats and climate,
202 e future, the impacts of human activities on natural resources need to be understood and quantified.
203 y, as well as the growing concern related to natural resource needs for Li-ion have accelerated the i
204 obal warming, water scarcity and diminishing natural resources negatively impacts food security.
205 on-biodegradable and contaminate most of the natural resources occurring in the environment including
206 rves as a model for efficient utilization of natural resources of sulfur feedstock in oil and technol
207 atial distributions of the flow of renewable natural resources of the Hokkaido region are presented i
208 ion and Dietetics Foundation, the College of Natural Resources of UCB, and the Pershing Square Founda
209 sunlight and water, two of the most abundant natural resources on Earth, offers one of the most promi
211 lable in a great variety from commercial and natural resources or synthesis, the strategies enabling
214 o the environment and unnecessarily consumes natural resources, potentially affecting future food sec
217 To accompany the evolution of measures for natural resources protection, sensing methods enabling s
222 munity-based participatory health-related or natural-resource-related research with American Indian n
225 or the Amazon has focused on exploitation of natural resources, resulting in environmental degradatio
226 strating in particular the health effects of natural resource shortages, infectious disease outbreaks
227 colonization time, other islands with fewer natural resources show the effects of insularity and iso
228 census size, sedentism, exploitation of the natural resources, social stratification or connectivity
230 ls to include benefits of avoided damages to natural resources, specifically, poisoned fish and wildl
231 hanging climatic conditions and disappearing natural resources such as fertile soil and water, explor
236 emicelluloses stands out as a very promising natural resource that can be utilized as a biobased mate
240 lt in three safeguard subjects: the Asset of Natural Resources, their Provisioning Capacity, and thei
241 ock, the source of P fertilizer, is a finite natural resource, there is a need to enhance P fertilize
242 n help humankind mitigate adverse impacts on natural resources through improved management, especiall
244 untries that will be constrained by domestic natural resources to achieve electrolytic hydrogen self-
245 isms provides opportunities to use renewable natural resources to develop better materials and design
246 d include the effective and efficient use of natural resources to promote the overall health of popul
249 Bay, a highly productive ecosystem providing natural resources, transportation, and recreation for ne
250 , cultural practices, and the utilization of natural resources, ultimately enhancing our knowledge of
251 societies face pollution, overconsumption of natural resources, urbanization, demographic shifts, soc
257 nments and civil society groups are engaging natural resource users in collaborative management arran
258 te map of the flow of all types of renewable natural resources was also generated by map layer overla
259 the critical needs and challenges of LTCM in natural resource water, drinking water, and wastewater s
260 distribution maps for each type of renewable natural resource were generated by kriging interpolation
261 ings and support for lighting that protected natural resources were not contingent upon age or gender
263 intensive use of renewable and nonrenewable natural resources, which has brought significant basin-w
264 global "anthropause," yet such evidence for natural resources with extraction or production value (e
265 e of addressing the rampant contamination of natural resources with per- and polyfluoroalkyl substanc
266 strategies applied to terrestrial and marine natural resources, with crop rotations dating back to th
267 d census-tract measures (population density, natural resource workforce, walkability index, household
268 is widely promoted to improve management of natural resources, yet its implementation is challenging