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Altitudinal and seasonal variation in amethyst sunbird physiology.Lindsay, Claire Vicky. January 2007 (has links)
Southern Africa is characterised by an unpredictable environment with daily and seasonal temperature fluctuations. As a local or non-migratory endothermic species occurring over an altitudinal gradient from the Drakensberg to the coast of KwaZulu- Natal in southern Africa, Amethyst Sunbirds (Chalcomitra amethystina) experience challenging thermal conditions and increased energetic stress as a result of ambient temperature variation. Flexibility of metabolic rates within a species allows for the colonization of different habitats along an altitudinal and thus temperature gradient. It was predicted that over this altitudinal gradient Amethyst Sunbirds would exhibit variation in metabolic rates, particularly basal metabolic rates, pre- and postacclimation, as well as variation in hematocrit levels in winter and summer trials. It was also predicted that Amethyst Sunbirds would exhibit seasonal variation in metabolic parameters. Sunbirds were caught in a winter and summer season (2006-2007) using mist nets in three locations; Underberg (1553 m), Howick (1075 m) and Oribi Gorge (541 m). Upon capture, metabolic rate was measured indirectly by quantifying oxygen consumption (VO2) using flow through respirometry, at 5 and 25°C. Birds were then acclimated at 25°C for 6 weeks on a 12L:12D cycle. VO2 was measured postacclimation at 8 different temperatures (15, 5, 10, 20, 30, 28, 25 and 33°C). Hematocrit levels were taken pre-acclimation and pre-release. Winter and summer data were compared. In the winter trials it was found that there was little variation in VO2 between individuals from the same locality, whereas significant variation was observed at the same temperatures between localities and thus between altitudes. The subpopulation from the highest altitudinal site had the highest basal metabolic rate (BMR). Summer trials showed that metabolic rates did not differ significantly between altitudinal subpopulations of Amethyst Sunbirds, however, BMR was observed to decrease as altitude decreased. The comparison of seasonal data showed that Amethyst Sunbird subpopulations from Underberg and Howick showed higher post-acclimation VO2 values per temperature in winter than in summer trials. Post-acclimation resting metabolic rate (RMR) values for Howick subpopulations were generally higher in winter than in summer, Underberg Amethyst Sunbirds showed a significant difference between summer and winter RMR at 5 and 10°C and Howick sunbirds showed a significant difference in RMR between seasons at 5°C. The Oribi Gorge subpopulation, however, showed no significant differences in metabolic rate between any temperatures when comparing a summer and a winter season. Thermal neutral zones of all of the subpopulations of Amethyst Sunbirds shifted between the winter and summer trial period. This study thus emphasized the need to understand plasticity in metabolic rates and acknowledge altitudinal and seasonal differences within a species, in order to make accurate predictions about a species thermal physiology and responses to changes in ambient temperatures. In particular, the variation in BMR, which is usually used as a species specific value, should be acknowledged in comparative studies of avian metabolic rates or in climate change models. / Thesis (M.Sc.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2007.
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Comparative water relations of Protea nitida seedlings and sprouters after fire.Smith, Rosemary Elizabeth. January 1990 (has links)
This study was undertaken to determine the effect of vegetation structure (the ratio of
re-seeding to re-sprouting plants) on post-fire catchment water yield. Plant communities
are the only components of mountain catchments which can be manipulated to augment
water supplies on any practical scale. Burning, which is one of the options available to
catchment managers, reduces plant biomass and increases water yield by reducing
transpiration and interception losses.
Communities dominated by re-seeding species tend to recover more slowly after fires
than when sprouters predominate. The rate of vegetation recovery will determine the
rate at which streamflow returns to pre-fire levels. Sprouters may use more water than
seeders in the early post-fire period by virtue of their greater leaf area, which both
increases interception and transpiration losses. Leaf area development could be used as
a simple determinant of post-fire water yield if transpiration losses per unit leaf area are
similar in seedlings and sprouters.
In this study, a comparison was made of the transpiration rates of seedlings and sprouters
of Protea nitida after a fire in Swartboskloof (Cape Province) in 1987. Plant water
potentials were determined (index of the degree of stress) and leaf stomatal
conductances were measured.
Results indicate that transpiration rates are similar throughout the year except during the
short summer drought period when the seedlings have comparatively low transpiration
rates (< 1 mmo1 m-2 s-1 compared to 2-3 mmo1 m-2 s-1 of the sprouter), and
i
immediately after the first winter rains where the seedlings have comparatively high rates
(approxi.mately 4 mmol m-2 s-1 compared to 2 mmol m-2s-1.) The 1ow summer rates
are thought to be the result of drought stress induced by limited water supply and the
shallow root systems of the seedlings. The higher winter rates suggest that the shallow
surface roots of the seedlings respond quickly to increased surface moisture. Differences
in root structure (Le. shallow seedling roots and well-developed deep sprouter roots)
rather than regeneration mode appear to be responsible for the marginal differences
observed in transpiration rates. These differences are expected to disappear as seedling
roots develop and occupy the profile. Leaf area could therefore, be used as a
determinant of catchment water yield. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, 1990
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Conserving forests : a biophilosophical analysis of the Durban region.Mattson, M. C. January 1993 (has links)
Coastal forests are a significant component of the remaining natural vegetation in the greater Durban area. Being closely associated with an historical and rapidly developing urban environment, these forests are invariably small, isolated and variously disturbed. The nature of disturbance as an ecological phenomenon, coupled with unknowable disturbance histories and ongoing disturbance events poses particular challenges to traditional and tradition-bound attempts to understand and manage such forests. The intention of this study was to discuss as deeply as possible the nature of such challenges, while at the same time considering the broader relevance of practising ecology in the urban
environment. At a practical level the forests were sampled in an attempt to describe forest communities, to assess the effects of disturbance
on them, and to gain insight into the effects of different disturbance histories and regimes on forest physiognomy and floristics with a view to proposing management guidelines. Various descriptive approaches, as well as a multivariate analysis using Detrended Correspondence Analysis were used in an attempt to interpret the data collected. The unsatisfying nature of the data led the thesis to propose a review of the paradigm in which its methods were rooted. Both the data, and the broader issues on which the thesis touched were discussed in terms of biology's rootedness in philosophical assumptions. This led the thesis to a methodological position aligning it both epistemologically and ontologically with a philosophical method of investigation called phenomenology. While other philosophical contentions were touched upon, the main conclusion of the thesis was that phenomenological thinking, while challenging to apply, was relevant to philosophically mature and methodologically appropriate attempts to conserve the forests with which the thesis was concerned. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1993.
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A multi-instrument investigation of pigments, binders and varnishes from Egyptian paintings (AD 1300-1900) : molecular and elemental analysis using Raman, GC-MS and SEM-EDX techniquesAbdel-Ghani, Mona Hussien January 2009 (has links)
The focus of this study was analytical investigations of Egyptian paintings, mainly Coptic icons and Islamic wooden ceilings, dating from 1300-1900 using multi-instrumental techniques. Twenty three Coptic icons and three wooden ceilings dated from different periods and painted by different painters in case of icons were examined. The materials used including pigments, media, varnishes, ground layers and gold layers. The surface stratigraphy of paint samples, their layered structured and the composition of materials used in each layer were analysed. Variations in painting techniques, pigments palettes, paint media and varnishes applied in Egyptian paintings according to painters, time and type of paintings were revealed. A total of twenty-eight organic and inorganic pigments were identified in this study, of which nine have never been previously included as a part of the Egyptian pigment palettes, namely; smalt, lapis lazuli, indigo, pararealgar, Prussian blue, chrome yellow, barium yellow, barium white and hydromagnesite. The identification of hydromagnesite, which has never been to date considered as a pigment either in Egypt or elsewhere and the identification of smalt from the mid-14th century, whose reported earliest large scale use was in the 16th century. Two types of resins were identified as a constituent of the oil/resin varnish applied on Coptic icons of which Venice turpentine has been identified for the first time as an ingredient of Egyptian varnishes. The identification of mosaic gold in an 18th C. icon, a novel usage of dammar resin and the multilayered structure of the white ground layers were revealed.
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Initiatives citoyennes de conservation de la nature en milieu urbain : rôle des jardins partagés / Citizen initiatives for nature conservation in urban areas : the roles of community gardensTorres, Ana Cristina 14 December 2017 (has links)
Les cadres théoriques de la conservation de la nature n’ont pas un caractère figé, mais ont évolué au cours du temps en privilégiant telles ou telles valeurs, notamment intrinsèques ou instrumentales. Or, les limites de ces cadres d’analyse pour susciter des engagements pour la nature ont été montrées. En m’appuyant sur la notion de valeurs relationnelles ainsi que sur celle des transformations des expériences de nature, j’ai conduit un travail qui veut apporter une réflexion complémentaire aux manières de concevoir la conservation de la nature. Pour cela, à travers l’étude transdisciplinaire des initiatives citoyennes de jardins partagés, cette thèse cherche à comprendre les motivations des citoyens ordinaires à s’engager pour la nature. Ce travail a notamment permis de montrer que des expériences de nature se font aussi en ville, par exemple pour combler un vide personnel par des pratiques de jardinage et des mises en relations sociales et écologiques dans ces espaces. Ces expériences sont aussi vécues par les riverains des jardins, qui pour la plupart reconnaissent et valorisent les bienfaits de ces jardins pour eux, pour les jardiniers, pour le quartier et pour la ville. Au niveau de la biodiversité, j’ai montré que les jardins sont des endroits propices pour l’installation d’une flore spontanée, dont la richesse dépend de l’action des jardiniers et des décisions des propriétaires du terrain (notamment de laisser l’espace disponible sur un temps long). Enfin, j’ai montré comment les relations socio-écologiques créées et encouragées dans un jardin deviennent des moteurs pour l’action politique. Par tous ces angles d’approche, ce travail de thèse montre donc le rôle crucial des valeurs relationnelles dans la motivation à conserver la nature. Relations à reconnaitre et valoriser dans toutes leurs diversités. / Theoretical frameworks for nature conservation have evolved through time, with priority successively given to different values, instrumental or intrinsic. However, these frameworks have limits in motivating engagement towards nature. Building on the respective notions of relational values and transformation of nature experiences, my thesis work aims to fuel the reflection on new ways of considering nature conservation. I have used community gardens, a particular form of citizen initiative, as a study case to understand the motivations of ordinary citizens to engage towards nature. On the social side, I showed that experiences of nature can be gained in these gardens despite the urban environment, to fulfil personal needs through gardening and through the development of social and ecological relationships. These experiences of nature influence the neighbouring citizens of the gardens, who acknowledge their benefits for themselves, the gardeners, the neighbourhood, and the city in general.On the ecological side, I showed that community gardens host a rich community of spontaneous plants, which species richness depends upon gardeners’ management and garden age, which in turn depends on stakeholder decisions as to the durability of community gardens.Last, I showed how socio-ecological relationships created and promoted in a community garden can become drivers for political actions, through the particular case of one garden.Through this combination of social and ecological approaches, this thesis highlights the crucial role played by relational values in nature conservation motivation. These relations have to be acknowledged and promoted in all their diversity.
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A Multi-instrument Investigation of Pigments, Binders and Varnishes from Egyptian Paintings (AD 1300-1900): Molecular and Elemental Analysis Using Raman, GC-MS and SEM-EDX TechniquesAbdel-Ghani, Mona H. January 2009 (has links)
The focus of this study was analytical investigations of Egyptian paintings, mainly
Coptic icons and Islamic wooden ceilings, dating from 1300-1900 using multiinstrumental
techniques. Twenty three Coptic icons and three wooden ceilings dated
from different periods and painted by different painters in case of icons were examined.
The materials used including pigments, media, varnishes, ground layers and gold layers.
The surface stratigraphy of paint samples, their layered structured and the composition
of materials used in each layer were analysed. Variations in painting techniques,
pigments palettes, paint media and varnishes applied in Egyptian paintings according to
painters, time and type of paintings were revealed.
A total of twenty-eight organic and inorganic pigments were identified in this study, of
which nine have never been previously included as a part of the Egyptian pigment
palettes, namely; smalt, lapis lazuli, indigo, pararealgar, Prussian blue, chrome yellow,
barium yellow, barium white and hydromagnesite. The identification of
hydromagnesite, which has never been to date considered as a pigment either in Egypt
or elsewhere and the identification of smalt from the mid-14th century, whose reported
earliest large scale use was in the 16th century. Two types of resins were identified as a
constituent of the oil/resin varnish applied on Coptic icons of which Venice turpentine
has been identified for the first time as an ingredient of Egyptian varnishes. The
identification of mosaic gold in an 18th C. icon, a novel usage of dammar resin and the
multilayered structure of the white ground layers were revealed. / Egyptian Ministry of Higher Educations
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