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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.
1

An Interdisciplinary Approach to Understanding Predator-Prey Relationships in a Changing Ocean: From System Design to Education

Freytes-Ortiz, Ileana M. 02 July 2018 (has links)
Climate change is ecologically and socially complex, deemed the most important issue of our generation. Through this dissertation I have approached climate change research through an interdisciplinary perspective, investigating how this phenomenon will affect marine ecological systems, how we can better develop experimental systems to answer ecological questions, and how we can effectively educate about this issue. In Chapter 2, I provided accessible alternatives for researching the effects of climate change (elevated temperatures and pCO2) on marine ecosystems. I designed, built, and troubleshooted two accurate and inexpensive climate-controlled experimental systems capable of maintaining target conditions: a temperature-controlled system and an ocean acidification system. The temperature-controlled system was designed to manipulate experimental tank temperatures indirectly by controlling the temperature in a surrounding water bath, which buffered fluctuations and resulted in a high level of control. The ocean acidification experimental system was designed to elevate normally fluctuating pCO2 levels by a constant factor, which allowed pCO2 to fluctuate as expected in natural environments and made it more ecologically relevant than active pCO2-controlled systems. In Chapter 3, I experimentally tested the morphological responses of southern ribbed mussels Geukensia granosissima to two simultaneous stressors (elevated temperatures and the presence of water-borne predation cues from blue crab Callinectes sapidus) and if any effects of these treatments led to differences in handling times by predatory crabs. Bivalves may become more susceptible to predation as increased temperatures decrease the protection afforded by their shells, but few studies have tested the effects of elevated temperatures on inducible defenses in bivalves. Results showed that chronic heat stress can have detrimental morphological effects on intertidal mussels. Mussels reared in elevated temperatures manifested elongated shell shapes, exhibited a disruption of the predator effect on inducible defenses, and experienced decreased predator handling times. The observed responses to elevated temperatures could make southern ribbed mussels more vulnerable to predation. In Chapter 4, I experimentally tested the morphological responses of southern ribbed mussels to elevated pCO2 levels and the presence of water-borne predation cues from blue crabs, and if these effects led to differences in handling times by predatory crabs. Elevated pCO2 can have negative effects on bivalves’ morphology and physiology, but the consequences of these effects on predator-prey interactions are still unclear. I found that adult southern ribbed mussels’ inducible defenses were not affected by a medium-term exposure to elevated pCO2. Mussels grew more in shell length and width as a response to predation cues, independent of pCO2 conditions. However, and unexpectedly, mussels reared under elevated pCO2 exhibited greater growth in shell width independent of predator treatment, driving mussels reared in the presence of a predator under elevated pCO2 conditions to develop rounder shapes. On average, these effects on mussel morphometrics did not affect crab handling times, but mussels reared in the presence of a predator under elevated pCO2 conditions had highly variable handling times. It is important to consider the complexity of animal physiology, morphology, and interspecies relationships when making deductions on predator-prey relationships in a changing ocean. In Chapter 5, I analyzed the effectiveness of using an interdisciplinary approach to climate change education. Literature suggests that an interdisciplinary instructional framework in an outdoor setting, using tools from the experiential, active, and inquiry- and place-based learning approaches, as well as the socioscientific issues pedagogical framework, would be an excellent approach for climate change education. I found that students: increased their content knowledge on climate change causes and consequences, exhibited a deeper understanding of climate change through the words they used to describe it, and corrected common climate change misconceptions. This work can serve as an example for the development of effective climate change programs that uses already available instructional materials with intentional interdisciplinary goals. Our search to understand how marine ecosystems will cope with a changing climate has emphasized emerging issues in the way we gather data, the questions we seek to answer through research, and how we translate science of social importance to the public. Through this dissertation I strove to seek the answers to some of these questions and provide feasible solutions to some of the problems in climate change research and education through an interdisciplinary approach. As science continues to move towards answering questions of concern for both science and society, science research is moving towards more interdisciplinary approaches. This dissertation is an example of how this can be an efficient and comprehensive approach.
2

Étude de la contamination de la côte libanaise par les hydrocarbures aromatiques polycycliques (HAPs) et les éléments traces métalliques (ETMs) : archives sédimentaires et biomonitoring suite à une marée noire / Study of the contamination of the Lebanese coast by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and trace metals (TM) : sedimentary archives and biomonitoring following oil spill

Azoury, Sabine 25 January 2013 (has links)
Ce projet de recherche porte sur l’étude de la contamination de la côte libanaise par les composés organiques (HAP, DDE) et par les éléments-trace métalliques (Hg, Pb principalement). Les travaux sur les compartiments sédimentaires et biologiques de la côte libanaise constituent deux parties aux problématiques et aux approches distinctes autour desquelles s’articule cette thèse. Dans la première partie, l’analyse d’une carotte sédimentaire datée prélevée sur le plateau continental du Sud du Liban a permis de reconstituer l’historique de contamination dans le bassin Levantin. Les analyses de contaminants dans les sédiments de la carotte C1 combinés à la datation aux 210Pb et 137Cs ont permis d’obtenir un enregistrement fiable des variations du dépôt de mercure, de plomb et de HAP sur le plateau continental libanais, dans le bassin Levantin. Bien que les concentrations et les flux soient relativement faibles, une augmentation en deux phases des concentrations est bien mise en évidence par le profil sédimentaire de C1. Le charbon est identifié comme source principale de Pb, de Hg et de HAP dans le bassin Levantin entre la moitié du 19ème siècle et la moitié du 20ème siècle. Les résultats des ratios isotopiques du Pb et des ratios diagnostiques de HAP appuient ce constat. Les archives sédimentaires dans la carotte C1 fournissent un signal du dépôt de contaminants à l’échelle globale probablement lié aux sources d’émissions atmosphériques en provenance d’Europe Centrale et de l’Est. Dans la seconde partie, une étude de la contamination par les HAP du littoral libanais est menée suite à la marée noire résultant du conflit armé israélo-libanais en 2006. Une approche de biomonitoring sur trois ans utilisant l’espèce de moules invasives Brachidontes variabilis a été développée. Les résultats indiquent une décroissance progressive des concentrations de HAP dans l’écosystème intertidal du littoral libanais. La contamination par les HAP du fioul en zone subtidale en 2007 est nettement plus faible. Cependant la signature des HAP dans les tissus de moules prélevées trois ans après la marée noire indique toujours la présence des composés du fioul de Jiyeh. La contamination est particulièrement persistante dans certaines zones fortement touchées par la nappe de fioul en 2006. Il apparaît que l’état initial pré-marée noire n’a pas été atteint, même trois ans après la marée noire de Jiyeh. L’examen détaillé de l’évolution spatiale et temporelle de la contamination par les HAP de l’environnement intertidal est présenté dans ce volet de notre étude. / This research project aims at the study of the contamination of the Lebanese coast by PAHs, DDE, Hg and Pb. The research work is divided into two distinct parts concerning two environmental compartments (sedimentary and biological) and it addresses different questions and approaches. In the first part, the study of a dated sediment core raised from the continental shelf in southern Lebanese coast allowed reconstructing the contamination history in the Levantine basin. The contaminants’ analysis as well as 210Pb and 137Cs datation allowed obtaining a reliable record of mercury, lead and PAHs sedimentary deposition in the Lebanese continental margin in the Levantine basin. Although concentrations and fluxes are relatively low, a two-phase increase of concentration is found using C1 core sedimentary profiles. Coal was identified as the main source of Pb, Hg and PAHs in the Levantine basin between the mid 19th and the mid 20th century. Ratios of Pb stable isotopes and PAH diagnostic ratios support this assumption. The studied sedimentary archives provide also information on the deposition of contaminants on a global scale possibly related to atmospheric emissions mainly from Central and Eastern Europe. In the second part of the thesis, the study of contamination by PAHs of the Lebanese coast was undertaken following an oil spill in the south of Lebanon, which occurred after the bombardment by the Israeli military of the electric power plant in Jiyeh in 2006. We have set-up a biomonitoring program with an invasive mussel specie Brachidontes variabilis over a three-year study. Results indicate a progressive decrease of PAH concentrations in the intertidal ecosystem of the Lebanese coast. Contamination of the subtidal zone in 2007 by Jiyeh fuel oil was significantly lower. However, Jiyeh fuel oil signature was still detectable in mussel tissues even three years after the oil spill. Contamination was found to be particularly persistent in some of the highly oiled sites. It appears that pre-spill state was still not reached even three years following the oil spill. Detailed investigation of spatio-temporal changes of intertidal mussels contamination by PAH is also presented in this part of the thesis.

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