Article | 30-September-2021
Socio-Economic Impact Assessment (SEIA) represents the most widely used tool for determining the potential current and future social and economic impacts of proposed infrastructure and other development projects and for developing appropriate policies and measures by which the identified adverse effects can be mitigated or eliminated, and positive social and economic impacts can be effectively capitalized on for the benefit of communities in which the projects are spatially located. In Slovenia
Andrej GULIČ
Transport Problems, Volume 16 , ISSUE 3, 153–162
Research Article | 21-April-2017
Authorities in Slovenia and other EU member states are confronted with problems of city transportation. Fossil-fuel based transport poses two chief problems – local and global pollution, and dwindling supplies and ever increasing costs. An elegant solution is to gradually replace the present automobile fleet with low emission vehicles. This article first explores the economics and practical viability of the provision of solar electricity for the charging of electric vehicles by installation of
Matjaž KNEZ,
Marjan STERNAD
Transport Problems, Volume 10 , ISSUE 3, 17–28
original-paper | 12-March-2020
/14/RN). Authority permission ID numbers are as follows: P. Indykiewicz – 116/2017 and 120/2018; M. Ledwoń – 194/2017 and 201/2018; P. Minias – 228/2017 and 235/2018, and J. Nowakowski – 245/2017 and 252/2018.
Capture and sampling of birds in Slovenia. The ringing campaign in the framework of EURING took place in Maribor and surroundings between September 18 and December 10, 2013, as previously described (Škraban et al. 2017).
Isolation and identification of A. baumannii. Swab samples were taken
ANDŻELINA ŁOPIŃSKA,
PIOTR INDYKIEWICZ,
EVELYN SKIEBE,
YVONNE PFEIFER,
JANJA TRČEK,
LESZEK JERZAK,
PIOTR MINIAS,
JACEK NOWAKOWSKI,
MATEUSZ LEDWOŃ,
JACEK BETLEJA,
GOTTFRIED WILHARM
Polish Journal of Microbiology, Volume 69 , ISSUE 1, 85–90
Research Article | 26-September-2018
processed to glycerol and mounted on permanent slides and subsequently identified morphologically and molecularly. Nematode DNA was extracted from single individuals and PCR assays were conducted as previously described for D2–D3 expansion segments of 28S rRNA. Sequence alignments for D2–D3 from L. caespiticola showed 97%–99% similarity to other sequences of L. caespiticola deposited in GenBank from Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Russia, Slovenia, and Scotland. Similarly, D2–D3 sequence alignments
SOLOMIA SUSULOVSKA,
PABLO CASTILLO,
ANTONIO ARCHIDONA-YUSTE
Journal of Nematology, Volume 49 , ISSUE 4, 396–402