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Japan's import demand for Pacific Northwest frozen corn and potatoesJacobsen, Twila M. 14 July 1988 (has links)
A net shift analysis was used to analyze growth in employment
and value added from 1954 to 1982 in SIC 2037, Frozen Fruits, Fruit
Juices, and Vegetables. This analysis indicated that the Pacific
Northwest dominated the growth experienced in this sector over this
time period. Oregon's share of total U.S. employment in SIC 2037
increased from 7.3 percent in 1954 to 16.1 percent in 1982. Value
added in Oregon was 16.1 percent of the U.S. total in 1982, and
growth in both employment and value added was at a greater rate than
the overall U.S. rate of growth in this sector. Washington's share
of employment increased from 10.3 percent to 13 percent, and the
share of U.S. total value added in this sector grew from 11 percent
to 14.2 percent. Value added by the freezing of fruits and
vegetables in Idaho increased to 10.3 percent of the U.S. total in
1982, and employment grew to a share of 10.5 percent, from 3.5
percent in 1954. An informal survey of executives in six food
processing plants in Oregon suggested that expanding international
export markets was essential to continued growth for this industry in
the Pacific Northwest.
A model of Japan's import demand of frozen vegetable products,
specifically corn and potatoes, is estimated using data from 1978
through 1986 of real own price at the export site, Japanese consumer
expenditures adjusted by Japan's CPI, and Japan's domestic production
of frozen corn and potatoes. Commerce Department data on exports by
Customs District was used to disaggregate import demand by region;
namely Oregon, Washington, the two together as Pacific Northwest, and
the total U.S.
It was found that the demand for frozen corn imports is more
responsive to changes in real own price than the import demand for
frozen potatoes. Income elasticities were positive and higher for
frozen potato import demand than for frozen corn demand, except for
Oregon originating exports. Production in Japan of frozen corn has a
higher negative impact on exports from Oregon ports than Washington
based exports. Production of frozen potatoes in Japan did not have a
negative impact on import demand from any of the four export sites. / Graduation date: 1989
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CLASSIFICATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF THE CENTRAL EASTERN PACIFIC ECHINODERMS.MALUF, LINDA YVONNE. January 1987 (has links)
A total of 627 echinoderm species (12 crinoids, 185 asteroids, 185 ophiuroids, 95 echinoids and 150 holothuroids) are known from the shallow and deep waters between southern California and southern Peru, and an up-to-date classification scheme is given for them. Distribution tables provide detailed presence-absence data for latitudinal increments, geographic range endpoints, depth ranges, and substrate associations of each species. Annotated lists of all species include relevant synonyms and mistaken records as well as literature citations used for both lists and distribution tables. A species-level biogeographic analysis shows that echinoderm provinces conform to those generally observed for other marine taxa, including mollusks, crustaceans and fishes. Based on cluster analysis and more traditional approaches (using species richness, faunal turnover and faunal composition), overall faunal similarity of the shelf echinoderms is very high between 23°N and 4°S, in the tropical Panamic province. There is a northern warm-temperate fauna (California province) between Pt. Conception, California and Pt. Eugenio, Baja California that also extends into lower Baja and the Gulf of California. Warm-temperate elements in the subtropical Gulf of California distinguish it from the tropics, and it is recognized as a faunal province in spite of its low endemism. Echinoderm endemism is unusually high in the Galapagos province and is attributed to the wide habitat diversity and isolation of the archipelago. There is no evidence for a Mexican province, but there is evidence for a distinction between the tropics to the north and south of Costa Rica/Panama. Transition zones (especially in Panama and southern California) often have high species richness, increased habitat diversity, and a number of endemic species. The warm-water eastern Pacific genera are most closely related to those of the west Atlantic tropics, but very few species are shared between the regions. Trans-Pacific species in the CEP are widespread throughout the region. A confinement of Indo-Pacific species to offshore CEP islands is only seen at Clipperton Island, the lone coral atoll of the eastern Pacific.
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Distribution of sand within selected littoral cells of the Pacific NorthwestPettit, Don Joseph 01 January 1990 (has links)
Beach sand acts as a buffer to wave energy, protecting the shoreline from erosion. Estimates of the quantity and distribution of beach sand in littoral cells of the PNW are critical to the understanding and prediction of shoreline erosion or accretion. This study was initiated in order to: 1) document the distribution of sand in littoral cells of the Pacific Northwest; 2) determine the factors which have brought about these present distributions; and 3) address the relationship of beach sand distribution to shoreline stability.
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Paleoceanography of the eastern equatorial Pacific during the Pliocene : a high resolution radiolarian studyHays, Patricia E. 06 February 1987 (has links)
Graduation date: 1987
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Characteristics and distribution of water masses off the Oregon coastRosenberg, Donald H. 03 August 1962 (has links)
Graduation date: 1963
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Finding techknowledgey : students' navigations of an institution's technological landscapeDean, Allyson S. 26 April 2012 (has links)
This study explored how students navigate the technological landscape of a public,
land-grant institution. Through online surveys and semi-structured, one-on-one
interviews, the study operated through an anticipatory/participatory lens to research
with the intent of understanding students' experiences with technology at a research
institution. Using this methodology and Triandis and Triandis' (1960) Theory of
Social Distance and Sanford's (1969) Theory of Challenge and Support as theoretical
support, the study identified five themes regarding students' experiences with
technology: (a) differences in students' perceived levels of technological fluency (b)
institutional expectations of students' technological fluency, (c) variance in
institutional training on educational technologies, (d) importance of personal computer
ownership and Internet access, and (e) understanding individual technological needs.
Coupled with the methodology, these findings serve to proffer institutional awareness
and understanding of students' experiences of an institution's technological landscape. / Graduation date: 2012
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Recruitment variability in black rockfish (Sebastes melanops): effects of maternal age on offspring qualityChapman, Colin G. 27 May 2003 (has links)
Black rockfish (Sebastes melanops) is an important marine recreational
species throughout the Pacific Northwest. Recent catch data indicate a
trend of age-truncation in the black rockfish population off the Oregon
coast, with older females rapidly disappearing from the population. In
populations with broad age distributions, older fish may contribute
disproportionately to larval production through a variety of mechanisms.
Thus, the removal of older age classes through fishing may impact the
population far beyond the simple loss of biomass. We tested the
hypothesis that older females produce higher quality offspring, or offspring
otherwise more capable of survival, than those from younger females.
Mature female black rockfish of various ages were captured live and held
until parturition. Larvae were then reared under identical conditions to
compare performance in terms of growth, starvation, and mortality. Results
indicate that older females produce offspring that grow faster in both length
and weight, survive longer in the absence of an exogenous food supply,
and exhibit lower mortality rates than offspring from younger mothers. This
difference in larval performance may be explained by the relatively greater
amount of endogenous energy reserves present in the oil globules of
offspring from older mothers. Larval oil globule volume at parturition was
significantly related to all larval performance factors and was strongly
correlated with maternal age. Given the difference in larval quality, it is
critical for the management of black rockfish, and possibly other species as
well, that these older individuals not be addressed solely in terms of
biomass, but their relative reproductive contribution and the repercussions
of their removal from the population be considered. / Graduation date: 2004
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Correlation between structural heterogeneity and arthropod biodiversity : implications for management of Pacific Northwest forestsMadson, Stephanie Lee 08 December 1997 (has links)
The "old-growth controversy" in the Pacific Northwest recognized thinning as the
primary silvicultural practice for land managers to produce wildlife habitat while
continuing to produce timber. For the foreseeable future, forest stands will be harvested to
produce forest gaps and a patchwork of trees of different ages. In order to evaluate the
effect of thinning on biodiversity, nine 15-year-old harvests of this type (age=70 years)
were paired with adjacent old-growth and even-aged, unthinned "pole" stands.
Since soil is the crucible of terrestrial biodiversity, it is critical to contrast the
effects upon the forest floor of this future practice with current management. Soil and
litter fauna were monitored along 250 meter transects (pitfall and Berlese sampling at ten-meter
intervals) to meet the following objectives: 1) to determine biological diversity on
public lands, per federal mandate, and use diversity as a management tool; 2) compare
levels of biodiversity between three management strategies; 3) determine best methods to
assay arthropod diversity; and 4) identify structural and environmental determinants of
arthropod diversity and abundance. The study's hypotheses were: 1) old-growth forests
will have greater arthropod diversity than thinned stands; 2) thinned stands will have
greater arthropod diversity than unthinned stands; and 3) species found within old-growth
stands, but not within unthinned pole stands, will also be found in thinned stands.
This study contrasted nine Western Hemlock/Douglas-fir sites each with
contrasting old-growth, thinned and unthinned pole management stands. Sites were
equally blocked in Southern Oregon, the Coast Range, and the Cascade Mountains. No
segment of the arthropod fauna. (i.e., pitfall-trapped epigeic macroarthropods, Berlese-extracted
litter-dwelling meso- and microarthropods, or soil-dwelling microarthropods)
exhibited a management (treatment) effect throughout the entire region. When the regional
blocking was removed, within-region analysis generally revealed that old-growth was most
distinct. Old-growth stands had the highest abundance of individuals, but were comprised
of the fewest species. Thinned stands were characterized by the highest species richness.
Within-region analysis revealed an interaction of management effects and specific locale
effects; locale effects dominated for soil microarthropods and epigeic macroarthropods,
while management options dominated for litter arthropods.
Within the Southern Oregon region, I attempted to correlate arthropod community
structure (canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) of within-stand samples) with a suite
of soil chemical and microbiological descriptors. Full analysis of twelve variables within
one exemplary stand revealed several potential trends (negative: dissolved organic carbon,
soil moisture, distance from the beginning of the transect; positive: total CO��� field
respiration, mineralizable nitrogen, water-induced respiration, substrate-induced
respiration). Relatively shallow slopes and very low r-value coefficients of correlation
characterized all statistical tests. Few of the trends apparent at one site were paralleled at
more than one other site; at all sites potential correlates had very low r-values. No
community revealed separate clouds in CCA analysis, indicating distinct "micro-communities"
of arthropods inhabiting distinct micro-habitats. Lack of distinctive species
assemblages and lack of correlation with microhabitat variables indicated that arthropods
respond on different temporal and/or spatial scales then the microbial-oriented variables,
and that each taxon is responding in an individual manner. / Graduation date: 1998
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Transhumance as an adaptive strategy of West Coast RV retireesWilliams, Diane 05 December 1995 (has links)
This ethnography describes RV [recreational vehicle]
seasonal migration as an adaptive, transhumant strategy. The
study population is retired, transhumant migrants, who are
members of a nation-wide, membership camping organization.
Fieldwork was conducted over a period of seven months at two
sites located on the West Coast. These sites reflect
northern and southern locations corresponding to seasonal
migration patterns.
Standard scholarly orientations to the study of retired
RV seasonal migrants manifest ethnocentrism and a tendency
to stereotype RVers as amenity-migrants. An original and
primary objective of the present study was to reach beyond
these conceptualizations and popularized images through
first-hand, descriptive accounts collected within the
context of the culture.
This research expands on two existing studies focusing
on social and cultural aspects of RV seasonal migration. In
contrast to these accounts, the present study provides
cultural description of the daily life of retired RVers
focusing on the distinctive ways that members of this
subculture express mainstream American cultural values
underlying their adaptive strategies.
This study proposes an alternative conceptualization of
RV seasonal migration, derived from the culture itself. The
conclusion is that these adaptive strategies reflect
patterns of social organization, patterns of resource
management, and patterns of social, familial, and
interpersonal relationships, that are congruent with
mainstream American cultural values of self-reliant
individualism, equality, and material comfort; values that
have historical, philosophical roots in the Protestant Work
Ethic.
The RVers' identity derives from maintaining membership
in a temporary, fluid, mobile community. They have cohesive
social networks with well-defined boundaries, which they
defend against threats to group identity. This study
contributes to an understanding of what RV seasonal
migration means to the participants themselves, and by
extension, to their families, to communities, and to our
aging society. / Graduation date: 1996
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Life history and evolutionary adaptation of Pacific salmon and its application in managementWevers, Mary Jo 11 June 1993 (has links)
An approach to understanding and managing anadromous salmon, steelhead,
and sea-run cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus spp.) based on life history and
evolutionary adaptive capacities of species and stocks is presented. Species, stocks,
and local populations are viewed as systems that are continuously adapting to
changing environmental conditions. They have the potential capacity to evolve in
different ways in different environments through both life history and evolutionary
adaptation. Habitat organization forms a template for genus, species, stock, and
local population life history organization. Harvesting, habitat alteration resulting
from land use practices and other human activities can alter the organization and
adaptive capacities of species and stocks, and thus their long term persistence.
The adaptive capacity of Oncorhynchus relative to its habitat and management
environment is examined at the species, stock, and local population levels. Life
history characteristics of representative stocks and local populations are analyzed
using Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DECORANA). Fresh water migration
distance and latitude are used to "explain" ordination patterns of Oncorhynchus
species in the North Pacific Basin. Fresh water migration difficulty and mean annual
runoff are used to interpret life history patterns of Columbia Basin chinook salmon
stocks. Upstream migration difficulty and fall water temperatures are used to explain
the ordination patterns of local populations of Willamette spring chinook salmon.
Fishery management practices are examined in terms of their impacts on the
organization and adaptive capacity of species, stocks, and local populations of
Oncorhynchus.
Management generalizations and guidelines derived from the life history
theory are applied to management of Willamette spring chinook salmon. Maintaining
habitat changes in the Willamette Basin within the historic range of fluctuations will
tend to maximize co-organization of local populations. Management activities should
provide relatively constant habitat and fishery conditions for natural selection
processes to "organize" life history traits over a period of at least a few generations.
Fisheries should selectively harvest local populations that show a high degree of
realization of their adaptive capacity. By focusing instead on maximizing the co-organization
of stocks, their habitat and fishery environments, and protecting the
adaptive capacities of stocks, we will go a long way toward providing long-term
sustainability for social communities dependent on fisheries. / Graduation date: 1994
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