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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.
371

Spatial and temporal effects on urban rainfall/runoff modelling.

Goyen, Allan January 2000 (has links)
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Engineering. / Although extensive worldwide literature on urban stormwater runoff exists, very few publications describe runoff development in terms of its basic building blocks or processes and their individual and accumulative significance in response to varying inputs and boundary conditions. Process algorithms should respond accurately to varying input magnitudes and characteristics as well as to changes in antecedent conditions. The present state of estimation errors involved in many current numerical simulation techniques has been reviewed in this thesis. A significant amount of errors that are presently encountered for have been explained in terms of undefined process response not explicitly included within many modelling methodologies. Extensive field monitoring of intra-catchment rainfall and runoff within an urban catchment at Giralang in Canberra, which is typical of Australian urban catchments, was carried out over a 3-year period to define and measure individual runoff processes. This monitoring work led to a greater understanding of the processes driving the aggregation of local runoff from many sub-areas into the runoff observed at full catchment scale. The results from the monitoring process prompted a number of approaches to potentially reduce standard errors of estimate from model-attributable errors based on improvements to definable catchment response mechanisms. The research isolated a number of basic building blocks associated with typical residential allotments, that can be grouped into roof drainage, yard drainage and adjacent road drainage. A proposed modelling approach was developed that allowed these building blocks at an allotment scale to be simply computed using storage routing techniques. This then aggregated via the total catchment’s public drainage system isochronal characteristics utilising a “process tree” approach to provide full catchment scale runoff response. The potential reduction in estimation errors utilising the developed procedure was assessed using a large number of recorded events from the Giralang catchment monitoring data. The proposed numerical modelling approach was found to provide significant improvements over current methods and offered a scale-independent and stormindependent methodology to model catchments of any size without the need for changes to any of the runoff routing parameters. Additionally the approach permits the flexible sequencing and inclusion of a wide range of different urban drainage structures within a catchment that are representative of the local characteristics. The developed procedure also includes a spatially varied water balance approach to infiltration estimation that is more suited to future continuous simulation models. The developed “flexible process tree” approach provides an important step forward in the numerical modelling of complex urban drainage systems. This can reduce errors of estimate by improving intra-catchment process representation.
372

The impact of fire on the honey possum Tarsipes rostratus in the Fitzgerald River National Park, Western Australia

aeveraardt@hotmail.com, Annika Everaardt January 2003 (has links)
The honey possum Tarsipes rostratus is a tiny (7 - 12 g) highly specialised flower-feeding marsupial endemic to the south-western corner of Australia. The impact of fire on this small mammal was studied, over a 19-year period, in the Fitzgerald River National Park, a large (330,000 ha) area of relatively undisturbed heathland/shrubland, rich in the proteaceous and myrtaceous plants upon which the honey possum appears to rely for food. The honey possum is the most abundant and widespread mammal in this Park. Capture rates of honey possums were significantly related to the years since the vegetation was last burnt, annual rainfall in the preceding (but not the current) year, the season when trapping occurred, and the trapping grid operated. Capture rates declined markedly after fire and remained low (less than one third of those in long unburnt vegetation) for about 4 - 5 years following a fire. Rates of capture then increased steadily over the next 20 - 25 years, with maximal abundance recorded about 30 years after fire. Thereafter, there appeared to be a slight decline in capture rates, but even in the vegetation unburnt for longest (> 50 years since fire), honey possum abundance was substantial and relatively stable. In contrast to these changes in abundance, the structure of the honey possum population, with 79 % adults and 57 % males, appeared little influenced by fire history, annual rainfall, season or grid. The increase in the rates of capture of honey possums following fire paralleled the pattern of availability of cover in the vertical and, to a lesser extent, horizontal plane. Indeed, projective foliage cover took around 20 years after fire to reach levels similar to those available in areas unburnt for even longer. The trend in capture rates was also congruent with the maturation of the most frequently visited foodplants of honey possums, particularly Banksia nutans (summer flowering) and B. baueri (winter flowering). Areas long unburnt still contained shelter and foodplants adequate for honey possums even 50 years or more after fire, with only slight evidence of senescence. Pollen loads indicated that honey possums caught in burnt areas, where their preferred foodplants were absent, continued to feed on these favoured foodplants (Banksia and Dryandra spp.) at nearby unburnt areas. In addition, they also fed, in both burnt and long unburnt areas, upon a suite of other plant species that regenerated more rapidly from lignotubers and epicormic buds, as well as from seeds (e.g. Eucalyptus and Calothamnus spp.). Thus, honey possums appeared to persist with their preferences for feeding from a limited number of flowering plants despite some of these species not being available in recently burnt areas for many years. Nearby patches of unburnt vegetation can clearly be important refuges, feeding grounds and shelter for the few honey possums that visit recently burnt areas, and appear to be the source of honey possum colonists in the years following a fire. Capture rates were also greater following years when rainfall was higher than average. Indeed, rainfall had as great an influence upon capture rates as time since fire. Capture rates were also consistently higher over winter, and to a lesser extent over summer, than in either autumn or spring. Individual grids, even those close together in apparently similar vegetation with a similar fire history, still differed significantly overall in their capture rates of honey possums. This last finding has implications for the use of chronosequences in the study of post-fire changes in biota. Although not the primary focus of the study, data on the limited suite of other, far less abundant, small mammals present indicated that house mouse Mus musculus domesticus numbers peak soon after fire (about two years after fire), grey-bellied dunnart Sminthopsis griseoventer numbers somewhat later (about eight years after fire) and that southern bush rats Rattus fuscipes fiuscipes, like honey possums, are later successional species. Most species were present in vegetation over a range of post-fire ages, with data consistent with models based on sequential changes in relative abundance. Like many Australian mammals, the range of the honey possum has contracted substantially over the last 200 years and the coastal heathlands of the south-west are its last stronghold. In terms of its conservation, this study indicates that, if possible, management burns in these heathlands should be separated by intervals of at least 20 years between successive burns, and preferably even longer. If burns are required more frequently to meet other management priorities, it is highly preferable that they are small and patchy, rather than large scale. Such practices may help ensure the long-term survival of this unique, highly specialised and endemic marsupial.
373

Rainfall runoff model improvements incorporating a dynamic wave model and synthetic stream networks

Cui, Gurong January 2000 (has links)
This thesis concerns general improvements to rainfall runoff models and focuses on two particular aspects, namely flood-wave routing in the main channel and consistent parameterisation of the rainfall-runoff process under different degrees of discretization of the catchment. The primary goal is to: 1) describe a general methodology for parameterisation of a rainfall runoff model so that the parameters are consistent across catchments modelled at different discretization scales and 2) develop an improved channel routing technique which takes proper account of the effects of all characteristics of wave motions in the channels. The first of these concerns methods for removing the inconsistency of parameterisation that results from different catchment discretizations in rainfall-runoff models. A stochastic Tokunaga network is developed for dealing with the scaling inconsistence. The problem of network embedding is also discussed. The second is a relatively simple method for the solution of the full dynamic wave equations for one-dimensional channel flow, which accurately simulates the effects of shocks. / PhD Doctorate
374

Spatial variability of precipitation in the San Dimas Experimental Forest and its effect on simulated streamflow

Phanartzis, Christos Apostolou, January 1972 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. - Hydrology and Water Resources)--University of Arizona. / Includes bibliographical references.
375

On the climate of the Drakensberg rainfall and surface-temperature attributes, and associated geomorphic effects /

Nel, Werner. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (D.Phil.(Geography))-University of Pretoria, 2007. / Includes summary. Includes bibliographic references (leaves 185-188).
376

Rainfall estimation from satellite infrared imagery using artificial neural networks

Hsu, Kuo-lin, January 1996 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D. - Hydrology and Water Resources)--University of Arizona. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 228-234).
377

An improved engineering design flood estimation technique: removing the need to estimate initial loss /

Heneker, Theresa M. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 2002. / "May 2002" Includes list of papers published during this study. Errata slip inserted inside back cover of v. 1. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 331-357).
378

An application of geoinformatics to study the effects of land use changes on stream flow : a case study in Mae Taeng watershed, Chiang Mai province, Thailand /

Thura, Win Htun, Piyakarn Teartisup, January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.Sc. (Natural Resources Management))--Mahidol University, 2006.
379

Precipitation in the Waikato River catchment : a thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Geophysics /

Dravitzki, Stacey Maree. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Victoria University of Wellington, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references.
380

Semi-permanent zones of radar radial shear within the planetary boundary layer : observations and effects on high intensity precipitation in the wider Auckland region, New Zealand : a thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Geophysics /

Russell, Frances Marion. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.)--Victoria University of Wellington, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references.

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