Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (263)
- Conference Proceeding (222)
- Moving Images (73)
- Part of a Book (53)
- Book (19)
- Working Paper (19)
- Report (10)
- Other (9)
- Doctoral Thesis (3)
- Lecture (1)
Language
- German (420)
- English (250)
- French (1)
- Multiple languages (1)
- Russian (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (673) (remove)
Keywords
- Nachhaltigkeit (16)
- Electroporation (5)
- Nutritional footprint (5)
- Dendrologie (4)
- Kommunikation (4)
- Lemnaceae (4)
- Nachhaltigkeitsmanagement (4)
- Osnabrück (4)
- Public Health (4)
- Sustainability (4)
Institute
- Fakultät AuL (673) (remove)
Die Innenentwicklung ist ein wichtiger Baustein für eine nachhaltige Stadtentwicklung. Jedoch entstehen in der praktischen Umsetzung häufig Zielkonflikte zwischen verschiedenen Themen der nachhaltigen Stadtentwicklung. Die in § 1 BauGB aufgeführten Ziele und Belange müssen in der Bauleitplanung auf kommunaler Ebene im Rahmen der Abwägung berücksichtigt und gewichtet werden. Dies kann für kommunale Akteur*innen eine große Herausforderung darstellen.
Im Rahmen des Forschungsprojekts „Rechtsanwendung in der Bauleitplanung – Umgang mit Zielkonflikten im Bereich der Innenentwicklung“ (gefördert aus Mitteln des Niedersächsischen Vorab) wurde untersucht, welche Zielkonflikte in der verbindlichen Bauleitplanung benannt werden und welche Lösungsansätze dazu von Kommunen und in der Forschung entwickelt wurden. Die Erkenntnisse basieren unter anderem auf einer umfangreichen Dokumentenanalyse von über 80 Bebauungsplänen deutscher wachsender Großstädte.
Die vorliegende Arbeitshilfe zeigt im Sinne eines Baukastensystems 49 ausgewählte Bausteine aus sechs Handlungsfeldern der Innenentwicklung. Damit sollen Kommunen Hinweise an die Hand gegeben werden, wie in der verbindlichen Bauleitplanung Zielkonflikte zwischen verschiedenen Handlungsfeldern bewältigt und Lösungsansätze anhand der Festsetzungen nach § 9 BauGB planungsrechtlich im Bebauungsplan verankert werden können.
The production of food-grade substances and complex biocatalysts used as additives or active ingredients – mainly for food applications – can be achieved in the eukaryotic expression system of Aspergillus niger. Food proteins or food enzymes e.g., casein, ovalbumin, phytase or glucoamylase are highly complex polymers. Most of them could be used as nitrogen or energy source for animals and humans, while others are industrial relevant biomass-degrading enzymes used for biological waste processing and food production.
However, the successful production of novel recombinant proteins can be challenging, resource- and time consuming. Therefore, A. niger mutant libraries are needed to understand the “adjusting screws” to produce high yields of recombinant proteins, preferably even in a kind of generic, transferable system. In order to establish a universal and multipurpose expression platform, there is the need to overcome the lack of high throughput assays first.
To tackle this problem, we designed a modular, quantitative and feasible high-throughput screening system to express and screen recombinant proteins regarding their stability and functionality in A. niger. For this purpose a dual-luciferase reporter gene system, which is applicable in small scale will be established for A. niger. After the generation of an A. niger secretion mutant library, the system will be transferred and tested to other proteins of interest. The technology can be integrated into bio-regenerative life support systems for the autonomous production of e.g., food, food additives and food enzymes on earth as well as in deep-space.
Wieviel Wasser säuft die Sau
(2022)
A project was initiated to apply dietary CP reduction under commercial conditions. The main objective was to demonstrate and validate that dietary CP can be reduced without compromising broiler performance in a production system which is already rather efficient. In addition, we wanted to demonstrate the potential of dietary CP reduction on reducing N-excretions especially in the context of German revised regulations and monitoring attempts. Finally, as previous research suggested, few further aspects such as impact of dietary CP reduction on litter quality and quantity, footpad health, change of ingredient inclusion levels and related impact on sustainability impact factors were evaluated.
Flexibility in planning through frequent amendments. The practice of land use planning in Germany
(2022)
How can formal planning deal with uncertainty and rapid change while maintaining high standards of procedural certainty? This paper, using Germany as an example, examines how municipalities handle this dilemma within their existing planning systems. Municipalities use different approaches, ranging from regular redrafting to comprehensive changes or regular amendments. Amendments and complementary informal plans are important components of flexibility in planning. We argue that the choice to make frequent amendments instead of redrafting the preparatory land-use plan does not necessarily lead to a loss of a city-wide, long-term perspective, provided amendments are prepared and justified using informal concepts.
Shredlage für Masttiere?
(2022)
Mehr Tränken bei Hitze
(2022)
Weniger ist nicht immer mehr
(2022)
Braune Brühe, was tun?
(2022)
Kotwasser beim Pferd
(2022)
Wirkung eines Vitamin D3-Metaboliten (25-OH-D3) auf den Geburtsverlauf von hochleistenden Sauen
(2022)
Fütterung von Zuchtstuten
(2022)
Fütterung von Jungpferden
(2022)
Die bedarfsgerechte Versorgung von Legehennen mit Futterstruktur und Aminosäuren ist essentiell. Die Studie zeigte, dass auf Praxisbetrieben im ökologischen Landbau sowohl Abweichungen von den Bedarfswerten als auch Veränderungen der Futterzusammensetzungen im Verlauf von der Herstellung bis zum Trog vorlagen.
Perceptions of German consumers regarding methods for fortifying foods with iodine (Abstract)
(2022)
Aus dem Brutschrank ins Gewächshaus – Bewertung des Stickstoffhaushalts in Substraten (Abstract)
(2022)
Taking the transdisciplinary research study “Green fingers for a climate resilient city”, funded by the German Ministry of education and research (BMBF), as an example, this paper follows the hypothesis that processes of landscape planning and designing multifunctional green spaces and processes of co-creation need to be combined to stimulate climate resilient city transformation. The findings are that efforts to combine these processes benefit from making complex climate-resilient city planning accessible for people of different professional backgrounds. The paper showcases how storytelling (Schmidt 2019), mapping (Langner 2009) and guided walks (Schultz 2019) are means to mutually engage with, perceive and understand multifunctional green spaces, inspire ownership, and build capacity for the city’s climate-resilient transformation.
When the ECLAS Conference took place in 1972 western societies were undergoing profound change: They transformed from industrial to postindustrial societies – the so-called service societies. 50 years later, the knowledge society is emerging: Knowledge is considered the key resource of this era. Digitalization and widespread dissemination of ICT allow information to be obtained anywhere anytime. This has severe implications for individual lifestyles and everyday practices. Different aspects of living, learning and working are no longer bound to physical limitations but can be enhanced by or even transferred to the virtual space. So being on the move today means travelling in hybrid spaces. We call this the space and practice “en route”.
At the University of Applied Sciences Osnabrück we explore the following questions:
What does “en route” mean and look like in landscapes of higher education?
How is it perceived individually?
(How) can landscape architecture shape it?
Our transdisciplinary research project EN ROUTE aims to meet current challenges at universities (e.g. digitalisation, sustainable development) with a comprehensive understanding of space and practices “en route”. In a transdisciplinary process, researchers from various disciplines – landscape architecture, geography, urban planning, business administrations and marketing, energy technology and computer science – develop concepts and strategies for sustainable and digital mobility in the higher education sector. New “EN ROUTE” types provide insights into the individual production and utilization of spaces “en route”.
The campuses of the University of Applied Science Osnabrück as well as the virtual and physical space network of its members serve as research example. Initial findings will be presented at the conference. While the ECLAS conference in 1972 focused on physical scales, landscape architecture has to reflect them critically and ask: What could be an innovative understanding of spaces “en route”?