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Mitigating Hypothetical Bias: An Application to Willingness to Pay for Beach Conditions InformationQuainoo, Ruth 10 August 2018 (has links)
Hypothetical bias continues to be a challenge for practitioners of the contingent valuation method (CVM). This study compared the effect of three hypothetical bias mitigation techniques in a CVM survey focused on estimating maximum willingness to pay for a beach conditions monitoring service among U.S. Gulf Coast beachgoers. Beach conditions information is known to affect beach patronage but no valuation study has yet estimated its value. The two techniques tested are: budget and substitutes cheap talk treatments and certainty follow-up. We presented a theoretically consistent model of budget-constrained utility maximization which accounts for the respondents’ subjective probability of a good beach trip with and without the beach conditions information. Interval regression was used to estimate respondents WTP for beach conditions monitoring service. Both mitigation treatments were unable to mitigate HB. The mean WTP was $3.39 and the net benefit for the program was between $188,531,063 and $391,474,452.
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Effects Of A Shore Protection Project On Loggerhead And Green Turtle Nesting Activity And Reproduction In Brevard County, FloridaBrock, Kelly 01 January 2005 (has links)
Marine turtle reproductive success is strongly correlated with the stability and quality of the nesting environment. Because females show fidelity to key nesting beaches, the management and physical characteristics of these beaches directly affect future generations of marine turtles and may be essential for the recovery of these threatened and endangered species. The impacts of beach restoration on loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) and on green turtles (Chelonia mydas) were investigated. Previous studies concerning beach nourishment projects have focused on loggerhead turtles. I compared data between nourished and non-nourished areas and between loggerhead and green turtles. I found, at one season post-nourishment, negative effects on nesting success and no significant effect on reproductive success for both loggerheads and established the same relationships with green turtles. Physical attributes of the fill sand, which did not facilitate acute scarp formation or severe compaction, did not physically impede turtles in their attempts to nest. Instead, the decrease in nesting success was attributed to an absence of abiotic and or biotic factors that cue nesting behavior. The increase in loggerhead nesting success rates during the second season post-nourishment was attributed to the equilibration process of the seaward crest of the berm. After the beach was restored, both species of turtles placed nests significantly farther from the water in the nourished area than in the non-nourished area. Green turtles nested on or near the dune and loggerheads nested on the seaward crest of the berm. The tendency of loggerheads to nest closer to the water resulted in more loggerhead than green turtle nests being "washed out" by erosion during the equilibration process. There was a significant increase in hatching success only for loggerheads when wash outs were excluded, thus illustrating the importance of nest placement and the detrimental effects of the equilibration process to the reproductive success of loggerheads. A decrease in reproductive output occurred during the first season post-nourishment. The reduction in the estimated total number of hatchlings produced (reproductive output) was a consequence of decreased nesting success lowering nest numbers. This reduction demonstrates that, regardless of similar reproductive success rates, marine turtles incurred net losses during the first season following nourishment. These results further reveal the impacts of decreased nesting success and the importance of minimizing excessive non-nesting emergences associated with beach nourishment.
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Habitat Use By The Southeastern Beach Mouse (peromyscus Polionotus Niveiventris) At Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, FloridaSimmons, Kathryn 01 January 2009 (has links)
Successful recovery of the federally threatened southeastern beach mouse (Peromyscus polionotus niveiventris) depends in part on an understanding of their habitat requirements. I studied habitat use by beach mice at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida from March 2005 until March 2006. I livetrapped six grids, three on coastal dunes and three within scrub located inland from the coast. On each grid and trap station, I quantified the extent of bare ground, woody vegetation, non-woody vegetation, height of vegetation, and percentage of coarse sand in the surface soil. I assessed trap success relative to these habitat variables using linear and multiple regression, correlation, and ordination. Significantly higher numbers of mice were captured in the scrub habitat relative to the coastal habitat. Linear regression of trap success against the habitat variables did not reveal any significant relationships at the level of grids. A non-metric multidimensional scaling model was designed to capture the vegetation heterogeneity at the trapping sites and clarify the results. This methodology identified a predominantly dune and predominately scrub cluster of trap sites. A bubble plot showed higher densities of beach mice using the scrub habitat types. These results suggest beach mice are selecting for those habitat variables defined by the ordination: higher vegetation height, more woody vegetation types, less bare ground, and less heterogeneity.
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Biological aspects of speciation in three sympatric Euzonus species at Dillon Beach, California (Polychaeta: Opheliidae)Parke, Steven Rhoads 01 January 1973 (has links) (PDF)
In the present study, information concerning morphology, ecology, fertilization and larval development of three sympatric species of Eusonus is presented. Morphological similarities are reviewed in part I. These similarities correspond with significant lack of variation found in larval development (part IV). Despite these similarities, as well as the ability to cross fertilize their species, the ecological and reproductive isolating mechanisms presented in part II and II provide a positive indication of the existence of three biologically distinct species. A comparative discussion reviews the efficacy of morphological criteria in differentiating the three closely related Euzonus species.
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Talus, Solifluction And Raised Marine Deposits At Cape Ricketts, S.W. Devon Island, N.W.T.Cox, R. L. 20 April 1969 (has links)
No Abstract / Thesis / Bachelor of Arts (BA)
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The Origin Of The Lion's Head Peninsula BeachDavidson, Ian Ritchie 04 1900 (has links)
<p> The beach deposits at the head of the Lion's Head Peninsula are described and categorized according to the type, size and morphology of the rocks making up the deposit and their origins. This categorization emerges as a pattern of four zones along the l ength of the beach. </p>
<p> The points at each end of the beach, which used to be in a much more defined bay, have been glacially eroded by re-entrants and undercut by postglacial lakes. Shales and dolomite from the escarpment make up this zone's deposits. </p>
<p> Zone two is a dolomite cobble beach supplied by the escarpment's erosion from a blockaded late-glacial ice margin and the undercutting of postglacial lakes. </p>
<p> Zone three is a mixture of the dolomite from the escarpment, lacustrine sand deposits, and glacial erratics. </p>
<p> Zone four is made up of a distinct band of erratics deposited by the ice of the Georgian Bay lobe of the Late Wisconsin Glaciation. The Lion's Head promontory stood resistant to the flow of ice and caused it to deposit these large erratics which are still visible today. </p> / Thesis / Bachelor of Arts (BA)
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A Geographical Study of Bertie TownshipLewis, Malcom 09 1900 (has links)
No abstract provided. / Thesis / Bachelor of Arts (BA)
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Unsung Songs: Self-Borrowing in Amy Beach's Instrumental CompositionsALFELD, ANNA POULIN 24 September 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Sanctity of WaterDutton, Marshall H S 20 April 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Identifying Sources of <i>Escherichia coli</i> to Maumee Bay, Oregon, OhioStruffolino, Pamela S. January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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