• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 495
  • 249
  • 72
  • 43
  • 42
  • 36
  • 32
  • 16
  • 14
  • 12
  • 12
  • 12
  • 12
  • 12
  • 12
  • Tagged with
  • 1203
  • 192
  • 136
  • 134
  • 113
  • 110
  • 107
  • 103
  • 98
  • 89
  • 87
  • 82
  • 73
  • 71
  • 67
  • 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.
511

Fire ant response to management of native grass field buffers

Hale, Sarah Lucinda 07 August 2010 (has links)
Imported fire ants are invasive and cause injury to people, crops, livestock and wildlife. Disturbance may increase abundance and activity of fire ants. However, native grass field buffers established for grassland birds require periodic disturbance. I experimentally tested if fire ant mound density and foraging activity changed after burning and disking in native grass buffers and examined relationships among fire ants, vegetation, and grassland bird and butterfly metrics in undisturbed buffers. In 2008, disking increased mound density and foraging activity, but burning did not. In 2009, disking had no effect, but effects of disking the previous season persisted. Fire ant metrics were not related generally to bird or butterfly metrics. Mound density and foraging activity were related negatively to grass cover and related positively to forbs. Burning had less influence on abundance and activity of fire ants, and may better conserve grassland habitats in areas with fire ants.
512

The dialectics of isolation : presentational encounters between Mistassini Cree Indians and French-Canadian middleman

Hoch-Smith, Judith. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
513

The Kahnawake Mohawks and the St. Lawrence Seaway /

Phillips, Stephanie K., 1977- January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
514

Assessing potability of drinking-water sources and quality of surface water on the Reserve of the Six Nations of the Grand River, Ontario (Canada)

Makhdoom, Sawsan January 2021 (has links)
Although water covers 70% of the earth's surface, less than 1% of it is freshwater that can be used for drinking. Even in Canada, where there is an abundance of freshwater in groundwater and in rivers and lakes, there are many indigenous communities that lack a sustainable source of drinking water. Such is the case for the Six Nations of the Grand River, the largest indigenous Reserve in Canada, located within an hour drive from major urban centers in southern Ontario and where less than 9% of the residents have access to safe, treated potable water. The major tributaries that drain the Six Nations reserve are part of the McKenzie Creek Watershed, which has been characterized as having the highest loading of sediments and nutrients to the lower Grand River, which eventually drains into the eastern basin of Lake Erie. This research project was initiated by the Six Nations community, who wanted an update on the prevalence of fecal contamination in their drinking water sources (wells, cisterns). Secondly, the community wanted to know the ecosystem health status of tributaries flowing through the Six Nations Reserve (McKenzie and Boston Creeks), and to determine if land uses in the watershed were negatively affecting the health of these streams. A study conducted in the summer of 2018 confirmed that 29% of the tap water tested in 75 households were contaminated with E. coli; 40% of the wells and 15% of the cisterns were contaminated and these were distributed throughout the Reserve with no apparent pattern. A study conducted in the summer of 2019 found that the McKenzie Creek was highly polluted with total phosphorus (P), total suspended solids, turbidity and total-ammonia nitrogen (N), while Boston Creek was highly polluted with soluble reactive P and E. coli as well as total-nitrate N. Nitrogen concentrations at 14 stations were highly and significantly related to percentage of agricultural land in catchments. Elevated levels of pollutants have been observed in the two creeks for three decades, indicating that conditions will not improve without remedial actions. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
515

Assessing the Applicability of a Three-Minute All-Out Swimming Test in Collegiate Swimmers

Rodriguez-Castellano, Luis 01 May 2023 (has links)
Performance tests are used to gauge swimmer fitness and guide training prescription. While some traditional protocols, such as, best average swimming (Bavg) lack scientific support, the three-minute all-out test (3MT) is validated to measure critical speed (CS) and distance capacity above CS (D’) from a single maximal swimming bout. In collegiate swimming, a 3MT could be convenient and time efficient. Yet, issues arise with calculating 3MT parameters. Moreover, anthropometry, resistance training, and stroke technique may influence swimming performance and physiological thresholds including 3MT parameters. Hence, this dissertation focused on evaluating the 3MT parameter calculation methods using the interval and lap split methods. Then, we assessed the influence of body anthropometrics, resistance training, and stroke techniques on 3MT parameters throughout a season. Bland-Altman plots showed that CS did not present remarkable behavior while D’ had systematic bias. Furthermore, there were no statistical differences between CS calculation methods (p = 0.83). However, D’ had moderate effect differences (p = 0.01, d = -0.70). Bavg showed very large correlations with maximum sprint speed (MSS) (r = 0.78) and CS (r = 0.81), but improvements after 6-weeks of concurrent training (p < 0.001, d = -0.85) seemed mainly driven by CS (p < 0.001, d = -1.68). Significant moderate to near perfect correlations were found between anthropometrics, 3MT parameters, and medicine ball pulldown throw (MBT) performance during pre- and post-season. Body composition changes may have influenced MBT performance changes (r = 0.46 – 0.55). CS increased at the expense of D’ while both reached stabilization point with no changes in MSS. There were moderate to large differences in 3MT parameters for the backstroke, but only MSS and CS differed in breaststroke, with no D’ differences in either group. Large to near perfect correlations were found between freestyle and secondary stroke 3MT parameter counterparts (r = 0.62 – 0.93), except for D’ in backstroke. Actual and predicted CS in both backstroke (p = 0.27) and breaststroke (p = 0.97) did not significantly differ. The lap split method during a 3MT seems like a practical and useful protocol to monitor CS and D’ in collegiate swimmers.
516

Unconventional Monetary Policy in the United States : An empirical study of the quantitative easing (QE) effects on households and firms

Robén, Axel, Ekberg, Hampus January 2023 (has links)
Quantitative Easing is an unconventional instrument when conducting monetary policy with the aim of stimulating the economy. The instrument is a complementary tool when changing the nominal interest rate is no longer effective. In the United States this unconventional instrument has been used through three different waves between December 2008 to October 2014. This research paper investigates two different regressions, one for the dependent variable consumption and one for the dependent variable investments to capture the effects on households and firms respectively. The results are used to study whether the unconventional monetary policy has had any effects on these variables and if the dependent variables are affected to different degrees. Data for this paper is collected between the first quarter of 2005 until the fourth quarter of 2019. The modelling used is the Auto Regressive Distributed Lag Model (ARDL) for the two different regressions. All variables in the regressions are critically tested for unit roots, autocorrelation, heteroscedasticity and misspecification to validate the analysis. The findings of our ARDL models indicate that investments are affected by quantitative easing to a larger degree than consumption by 3.8 times the change of the coefficients at its optimal lags.
517

Exkurzní činnost v Praze se zaměřením na oboru Hvězda a její využití ve výuce přírodopisu / Field Trip Activities in Prague Focusing on the Star Game Reserve and their Application and Use in the Teaching of Nature Science

Humlová, Markéta January 2022 (has links)
(Field Trip Activities in Prague Focusing on the Star Game Reserve and Their Application and Use in the Teaching of Biology) The subject of this diploma thesis are organizational forms of teaching with a focus on excursion activities in science classes at the 2nd level of primary school and in the corresponding years of lower grammar school. The work is clearly divided into several parts. The first part deals with general information about the excursion activity as a whole. It deals with the division of individual excursions, their preparation and course. Subsequently, the possibilities of educational programs in Prague and the surrounding area are characterized, which are prepared from various institutions. Furthermore, the work specifically focuses on the Prague forest in the field of the Star game reserve, because in the last part of the text is made an educational walk connecting the history and nature of this place. An integral part of the work is a questionnaire survey dealing with the use of excursions in science teaching.
518

Does Decertification Work? Outcome Analysis of the National Football Leagues Negotiated Order (1986-2008).

Bowers, Matthew 17 August 2011 (has links) (PDF)
For decades, union membership and activity has been declining in North America; employers have demanded greater flexibility and have successfully weakened workplace and worker protections. Modern workers increasingly use alternative strategies to negotiate conditions of employment with managers who have limited their discretionary power. Negotiated order theory provides a useful tool for analyzing the mesostructural arrangements of bargaining parties during labor disputes. This thesis applies negotiated order theory to explore how and why the National Football League (NFL) players have twice decertified their union and sought court intervention to challenge the legitimacy of the League's highly restrictive reserve system. An outcome-focused content analysis was designed as a preliminary investigation to ascertain why an alternative strategy was sought and if the strategy proved more effective in securing the players' preferred ends than conventional collective bargaining. The NFL case offers a fixed market from which to formulate a negotiation context of the interorganizational structures and bargaining interactions of its members.
519

Using precision agriculture technology to evaluate environmental and economic tradeoffs of alternative CP-33 enrollments

McConnell, Mark Dewitt 30 April 2011 (has links) (PDF)
United States Department of Agriculture’s Farm Bill conservation programs provide landowner incentives to remove less productive and environmentally sensitive lands from agricultural production and re-establish them in natural vegetation to achieve conservation objectives. However, removal of arable land from production imposes an opportunity cost associated with loss in revenue from commodities that otherwise would have been produced. The Habitat Buffers for Upland Birds practice (CP-33) under the Continuous Conservation Reserve Program is a targeted conservation practice designed to increase northern bobwhite populations in agricultural landscapes. However, establishing CP-33 buffers on profitable farmland may be incompatible with economic objectives of landowners. To determine how CP-33 enrollment influenced field profitability and bobwhite abundance; I simulated CP-33 buffers on crop fields across a range of commodity prices and modeled profitability and predicted bobwhite abundance. CP-33 increased field revenue on a percentage of fields at all commodity prices and increased bobwhite abundance up to 30%.
520

Effekten på artsammansättning i växtsamhällen vid betning av Rangifer tarandus / The effect of Rangifer tarandus grazing on species composition in plant communities

Voss-Schrader, Emilie January 2023 (has links)
The fact that large herbivores, such as Rangifer tarandus, play a part in shaping its environment through grazing and trampling of the ground is widely acknowledged today, as well as that these factors have the potential of affecting regional patterns and even global climate. This study investigated whether a considerable increase in grazing by R. tarandus for 25 years resulted in any measurable effects on the diversity of plant species in tundra vegetation. We evaluated if any differences in species composition could be found, based on differences in grazing pressure and productivity of the soil. The effect of difference in grazing pressure was studied through analysis of vegetation at 30 sites, each site comparing two different classes of grazing pressure separated by a fence, and pellets from R. tarandus were counted along transects. We did not find any evidence that the difference in grazing pressure affected the species composition on either side of the fence, depending on the site. The lack of difference in plant species composition may be explained by insufficient differences in abundance of R. tarandus, insufficient time passed since the change in grazing pressure, or varying grazing seasons at the sites on either side of the fence.

Page generated in 0.0254 seconds