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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
401

Oceanic-Atmospheric and Hydrologic Variability in Long Lead-Time Forecasting

Oubeidillah, Abdoul Aziz 01 August 2011 (has links)
Water managers throughout the world are challenged with managing scarce resources and therefore rely heavily on forecasts to allocate and meet various water demands. The need for improved streamflow and snowpack forecast models is of the utmost importance. In this research, the use of oceanic and atmospheric variables as predictors was investigated to improve the long lead-time (three to nine months) forecast of streamflow and snowpack. Singular Value Decomposition (SVD) analysis was used to identify a region of Pacific and Atlantic Ocean SSTs and a region of 500 mbar geopotential height (Z500mb) that were teleconnected with streamflow and snowpack. The resulting Pacific and Atlantic Ocean SSTs and Z500mb regions were used to create indices that were then used as predictors in a non-parametric forecasting model. The majority of forecasts resulted in positive statistical skill, which indicated an improvement of the forecast over the climatology or no-skill forecast. The results indicated that derived indices from SSTs were better suited for long lead-time (six to nine month) forecasts of streamflow and snowpack while the indices derived from Z500mb improved short lead-time (3 month) forecasts. In all, the results of the forecast model indicated that incorporating oceanic-atmospheric climatic variability in forecast models can lead to improved forecasts for both streamflow and snowpack.
402

The role of naturally occurring waterholes in determining the distribution of Florida Key Deer

Kim, Ji Yeon 15 May 2009 (has links)
The purpose of my research was to test the hypothesis that the availability of fresh, naturally occurring water may limit the distribution of Florida Key Deer (Odocoileus virginianus clavium). More specifically, I was trying to determine if there was enough fresh, drinkable water for the deer on each of the islands. To test the hypothesis, I developed a model that simulated likely seasonal fluctuations in fresh water availability in naturally occurring waterholes within the Key Deer range. I estimated 60 scenarios representing different weather (precipitation and evaporation) conditions, different literature estimates of the daily water requirement of Key Deer and also different upper salinity thresholds for drinkable water. Results showed that 1) even under the most favorable conditions in terms of fresh water availability, there was not enough fresh, drinkable water for the deer on any of the islands. Results also showed that 2) high salinity was important in determining the fresh water availability to the deer, in addition to the lack of water volume. Although these results suggest a prolonged seasonal shortage of fresh, naturally occurring water on each of the islands, deer were present on all of the islands during all seasons. One possible reason for the lack of correlation between Key Deer distribution and naturally occurring waterholes is the availability of man-made water sources (e.g. birdbaths, swimming pools).
403

Reverse evolution : driving forces behind the loss of acquired photosynthetic traits

de Castro, Francisco, Gaedke, Ursula, Boenigk, Jens January 2009 (has links)
Background: The loss of photosynthesis has occurred often in eukaryotic evolution, even more than its acquisition, which occurred at least nine times independently and which generated the evolution of the supergroups Archaeplastida, Rhizaria, Chromalveolata and Excavata. This secondary loss of autotrophic capability is essential to explain the evolution of eukaryotes and the high diversity of protists, which has been severely underestimated until recently. However, the ecological and evolutionary scenarios behind this evolutionary ‘‘step back’’ are still largely unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings: Using a dynamic model of heterotrophic and mixotrophic flagellates and two types of prey, large bacteria and ultramicrobacteria, we examine the influence of DOC concentration, mixotroph’s photosynthetic growth rate, and external limitations of photosynthesis on the coexistence of both types of flagellates. Our key premises are: large bacteria grow faster than small ones at high DOC concentrations, and vice versa; and heterotrophic flagellates are more efficient than the mixotrophs grazing small bacteria (both empirically supported). We show that differential efficiency in bacteria grazing, which strongly depends on cell size, is a key factor to explain the loss of photosynthesis in mixotrophs (which combine photosynthesis and bacterivory) leading to purely heterotrophic lineages. Further, we show in what conditions an heterotroph mutant can coexist, or even out-compete, its mixotrophic ancestor, suggesting that bacterivory and cell size reduction may have been major triggers for the diversification of eukaryotes. Conclusions/Significance: Our results suggest that, provided the mixotroph’s photosynthetic advantage is not too large, the (small) heterotroph will also dominate in nutrient-poor environments and will readily invade a community of mixotrophs and bacteria, due to its higher efficiency exploiting the ultramicrobacteria. As carbon-limited conditions were presumably widespread throughout Earth history, such a scenario may explain the numerous transitions from phototrophy to mixotrophy and further to heterotrophy within virtually all major algal lineages. We challenge prevailing concepts that affiliated the evolution of phagotrophy with eutrophic or strongly light-limited environments only.
404

Diversity and Ecosystem Functioning : Redundancy and Resilience in Freshwater Bacterial Communities

Peter, Hannes January 2011 (has links)
Bacteria are immensely diverse and hold key-positions in essentially all biogeochemical cycles. In freshwater ecosystems, bacteria degrade and mineralize organic compounds, linking the pool of dissolved organic matter to higher trophic levels. Aware of the global biodiversity loss, ecologists have started identifying the relationship of diversity and ecosystem functioning. Central to this is the question if species can functionally replace other species, hence being functionally redundant. Functional redundancy might allow communities to maintain functioning when diversity is lost. Due to their large numbers and great diversity, bacterial communities have been suspected to harbor large amounts of redundancy. The central aim of this thesis is to investigate the coupling of diversity and ecosystem functioning of bacterial communities and to understand how environmental perturbation affects this relationship. I manipulated the diversity of complex communities by a dilution technique, and measured the performance of bacterioplankton and biofilm-forming communities at different diversities. Reduction of bacterial diversity differently affected different functions, and that the presence or absence of certain species might be causing this pattern. However, for ecosystems to function, the interplay of multiple functions, i.e. multifunctionality, has to be sustained over long periods of time. In bacterial biofilm communities reduced diversity affected multifunctionality, as reflected by extracellular enzyme activities. A continuous cultivation system was used to address the importance of diversity for resistance and resilience upon environmental perturbation. The analysis of co-occurrence of bacterial taxa showed that the communities form a dense network before the perturbation and that these patterns are disturbed by the environmental perturbation. The final chapter of the thesis presents experimental evidence for the positive effects of temporal and spatial refuges for bacterial communities and the functions they provide. Overall, I found several indications for a lower amount of functional redundancy as previously assumed and it becomes apparent from this thesis that a multifunctional perspective and the consideration of environmental heterogeneity is pivotal.
405

Factors influencing the biogeography of bacteria in fresh waters - a metacommunity approach

Logue, Jürg Brendan January 2010 (has links)
One of ecology’s primary goals is to comprehend biodiversity and its patterns of distribution over space and time. Since microorganisms play a pivotal role in key ecological processes, the diversity of microbial communities may have important implications for the stability and functioning of Earth’s ecosystems. Thus, it is of utmost importance to develop a theoretical foundation but also a conceptual understanding for the mechanisms that generate and maintain microbial diversity. The aim of this thesis is to investigate to what extent local freshwater bacterioplankton diversity, i.e. richness and community composition, is structured by local environmental interactions and/or regional processes. The key objective is to identify ecological linkages between lake bacterioplankton and bacterial communities in connected streams and the surrounding terrestrial landscape, thereby applying a metacommunity approach. To do so, I studied several natural lake bacterioplankton assemblies within different regions of Sweden and assessed both local environmental properties and regional parameters (e.g. dispersal, landscape position). The genetic composition of freshwater bacterioplankton diversity was determined by means of terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism or 454 pyrosequencing. From the review on the biogeography of bacterioplankton in inland waters it became clear that microbial diversity and its spatial distribution are governed by a complex interplay of both local and regional drivers. In one case, freshwater bacterioplankton communities were structured by local environmental conditions rather than by regional dispersal processes. These local environmental conditions seemed to be equally important in controlling both the total bacterioplankton community and its active fraction. In a study of bacterioplankton communities from five different regions, locally abundant aquatic bacteria were shown to be also regionally widespread, a pattern predicted by neutral theory. Yet, this degree of similarity decreased with increasing environmental heterogeneity. In another study, bacterioplankton richness was controlled mostly by nutrient content, indicating that productivity exerted influence on bacterioplankton richness. However, landscape position and productivity covaried, suggesting that the landscape dictates environmental properties, which then directly structure local bacterioplankton richness. Finally, a review synthesising results from empirical metacommunity approaches and comparing these to theory showed that yet a gap between empirics and theory exists. To conclude, local bacterioplankton diversity appeared to be mainly structured by local environmental properties. However, signatures of neutral processes driving local bacterioplankton community assembly were also recorded.
406

The role of naturally occurring waterholes in determining the distribution of Florida Key Deer

Kim, Ji Yeon 15 May 2009 (has links)
The purpose of my research was to test the hypothesis that the availability of fresh, naturally occurring water may limit the distribution of Florida Key Deer (Odocoileus virginianus clavium). More specifically, I was trying to determine if there was enough fresh, drinkable water for the deer on each of the islands. To test the hypothesis, I developed a model that simulated likely seasonal fluctuations in fresh water availability in naturally occurring waterholes within the Key Deer range. I estimated 60 scenarios representing different weather (precipitation and evaporation) conditions, different literature estimates of the daily water requirement of Key Deer and also different upper salinity thresholds for drinkable water. Results showed that 1) even under the most favorable conditions in terms of fresh water availability, there was not enough fresh, drinkable water for the deer on any of the islands. Results also showed that 2) high salinity was important in determining the fresh water availability to the deer, in addition to the lack of water volume. Although these results suggest a prolonged seasonal shortage of fresh, naturally occurring water on each of the islands, deer were present on all of the islands during all seasons. One possible reason for the lack of correlation between Key Deer distribution and naturally occurring waterholes is the availability of man-made water sources (e.g. birdbaths, swimming pools).
407

Tracking deep-water flow on Eirik drift over the past 160 kyr linking deep-water changes to freshwater fluxes /

Henderson, Samuel Straker. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Rutgers University, 2009. / "Graduate Program in Geological Sciences." Includes bibliographical references.
408

Chemical and physical parameters of Millard's Quarry Pond and the Tulpehocken Creek and the effects on the aquatic organisms of Millard's Quarry Pond

Schneider, Christian M. January 1976 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Kutztown State College, 1976. / Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 45-06, page: 3054. Typescript. Abstract precedes thesis as preliminary leaves [1-2]. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 46-47).
409

Regional water planning and the National Estuary Program

Slovak, Sarah 05 December 2013 (has links)
Water availability, supply, accessibility, and quality issues are becoming urgent issues around the globe. Planning and management of water resources is both complicated and different in every state for every type of water resource. Estuaries are among the most important ecosystems in the world, in terms of their ecological and economic value. The many problems facing estuaries across the nation led to an effort by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to protect these valuable resources and to characterize their conditions. The National Estuary Program (NEP) was established in 1987, under an amendment to the Clean Water Act to address estuarine issues and planning. Three NEP case studies, Galveston Bay Estuary Program, San Francisco Bay Estuary Program, and Tampa Bay Estuary Program provide insight into the functions, capacities and potential of the NEP. Estuary Programs can be located in a variety of institutional settings, and these case studies evaluate the institutional structure of the individual estuary program in the context of their state political environments. These programs provide interesting management and planning challenges, as estuaries do not conform to exact political jurisdictions, so NEP’s define their management areas according to watershed boundaries and their ecosystems in an effort to provide comprehensive estuarine planning and management. This professional report will evaluate these three case studies to determine the role of the NEP in regional water planning and estuarine management. / text
410

Effekt av fin ved (Salix sp.) på drift i semi-naturliga bäckar / Effect of fine wood (Salix sp.) on drift in semi-natural streams

Rydin, Mikael January 2015 (has links)
In streams, wood provides protection, food and substrate for benthic macroinvertebrates, which leads a higher density and diversity of the benthic fauna compared to streams without wood. To examine wood and its effect on drift of macroinvertebrates an experiment was done in 18 sections of six semi-natural streams where fine woody debris (Salix sp.) was added to half of the sections (1-2 per stream). The purpose was to investigate possible differences in density and diversity of macroinvertebrates aswell as to investigate if there was any effect of location, upstream or downstream, in the streams. The results showed no significant effect of woody debris on total drift. The lack of an effect is probably related to the high abundance of predators (fish, brown trout) and the time of the day when the samples were taken. There was a significant effect of time on total drift; with more drift in September than in October. An effect of time was also found for the taxon Diptera (Chironomidae not included), with drift decreasing with temperature over the season. / Ved i ett vattendrag ger skydd, föda och substrat åt bentiska makroevertebrater, vilket leder till en högre täthet och diversitet av makroevertebrater än i vattendrag utan ved. För att undersöka vedens inverkan på makroevertebraternas drift utfördes ett experiment i sammanlagt 18 inhägnader i semi-naturliga bäckar där hälften av inhägnaderna behandlades med fin ved (Salix sp.). Syftet var att undersöka eventuella skillnader i täthet och diversitet av makroevertebrater samt om det fanns en skillnad i läge, uppströms och nedströms i bäckarna. Resultatet visade ingen signifikant effekt av ved med avseende på den totala driften. Det fanns heller ingen signifikant effekt av ved på tätheten i enskilda på ved än utan. De bakomliggande faktorerna till varför ingen signifikant effekt av ved visades är troligtvis den höga tätheten av predatorer (öring) och tidpunkten då proverna togs. Det fanns dock en signifikant effekt av tid gällande den totala driften, i september var det mer drift än i oktober. Det fanns även en signifikant effekt av tiden på Diptera (alla Diptera taxa förutom Chironomidae). Detta tros vara på grund av den sjunkande temperaturen mellan månaderna.

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