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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.
11

Functioning of Mediterranean ecosystems in response to forest fires and post-fire management activities

Moghli, Aymen 15 July 2022 (has links)
In Valencia region (SE Spain), many post-fire communities are dominated by non-resprouting (seeder) species, because of the long history of land exploitation and subsequent abandonment during the last half of 20th century. These communities accumulate fine dry biomass and, therefore, can burn again easily. In fact, Mediterranean forests are suffering from an increase in wildfire frequency since the early 1970s. Wildfires shape the composition and functioning of Mediterranean ecosystems, but we do not know how these ecosystems respond to both the higher fire recurrence and shorter recovery times expected for future climatic scenarios. In this sense, Aleppo pine forest (Pinus halepensis) is one of the most fire affected vegetation of this type in the Mediterranean Basin and to know how it respond to fire is fundamental to design management plans. After fire, regeneration of this forest can be highly variable, and it can go from extremely dense tree stands (overstocked pine) to treeless shrublands dominated by seeder species. All these regenerated stands are fire prone with limited ability to deliver multiple ecosystem services. Although several management techniques are applied to redirect these post-fire ecosystems towards less vulnerable and more functional communities, we do not know yet which amongst them could serve to foster more diverse and multifunctional landscapes. Therefore, the general objective of this thesis is to investigate the functioning of these Mediterranean ecosystems as consequence of shifts in fire regime and forest management application, using different techniques, in different post-fire regenerated ecosystems (overstocked pine forests and dense shrublands). To do so, we calculate, within Mediterranean Pinus halepensis forests affected by wildfires, the supply of multiple ecosystem services (biodiversity conservation, carbon sequestration, disturbance regulation, food production, supporting services, and multifunctionality), through up to 25 aboveground and belowground attributes. Our main findings are (1) High fire recurrence and time since last fire interacted to determine ecosystem services but did not affect their synergies and trade-offs between them. Their combined effects reduced carbon sequestration and multifunctionality. Disturbance regulation diminished drastically with the first fire, with no effect of further fires. However, their effects dampened, and even became positive, for biodiversity conservation and food production services if provided enough time to recover. (2) Thinning in overstocked pine stands enhances ecosystem attributes associated with biodiversity conservation without compromising the provision of carbon sequestration. After 10 years, two levels of thinning, (600 and 1200 trees·ha-1), similarly affected ecosystem attributes, which suggest that 1200 trees·ha-1 suffice to enhance individual ecosystem attributes. (3) Clearing within dense shrubland dominated by seeder species enhances ecosystem attributes associated with biodiversity conservation without compromising the capacity of ecosystem to sequester carbon. (4) Plantation of resprouting species combined with thinning and clearing, in overstocked pine forests and dense shrublands respectively, can enhance the provision of ecosystem services of disturbance regulation, food production and ecosystem multifunctionality. (5) Prescribed burning reduces the amount of dead fuel, increases biodiversity conservation, and improves food production. However, these effects become negative, in addition to the decline in disturbance regulation and multifunctionality, if prescribed burning is applied frequently. (6) Combining different management activities can enhance the supply of multiple ecosystem services simultaneously by reducing the trade-offs in between them and therefore, establish multifunctional Mediterranean landscapes.
12

Vegetation dynamics and the efficacy of prescribed fires in restoring oak-dominated ecosystems in southern Ohio

Petersen, Sheryl M. 31 January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
13

Growing mallee eucalypts as short-rotation tree crops in the semi-arid wheatbelt of Western Australia

Wildy, Daniel Thomas January 2004 (has links)
[Truncated abstract] Insufficient water use by annual crop and pasture species leading to costly rises in saline watertables has prompted research into potentially profitable deep-rooted perennial species in the Western Australian wheatbelt. Native mallee eucalypts are currently being developed as a short-rotation coppice crop for production of leaf oils, activated carbon and bio-electricity for low rainfall areas (300—450 mm) too dry for many of the traditional timber and forage species. The research in this study was aimed at developing a knowledge base necessary to grow and manage coppiced mallee eucalypts for both high productivity and salinity control. This firstly necessitated identification of suitable species, climatic and site requirements favourable to rapid growth, and understanding of factors likely to affect yield of the desirable leaf oil constituent, 1,8-cineole. This was undertaken using nine mallee taxa at twelve sites with two harvest regimes. E. kochii subsp. plenissima emerged as showing promise in the central and northern wheatbelt, particularly at a deep acid sand site (Gn 2.61; Northcote, 1979), so further studies focussed on physiology of its resprouting, water use and water-use efficiency at a similar site near Kalannie. Young E. kochii trees were well equipped with large numbers of meristematic foci and adequate root starch reserves to endure repeated shoot removal. The cutting season and interval between cuts were then demonstrated to have a strong influence on productivity, since first-year coppice growth was slow and root systems appeared to cease in secondary growth during the first 1.5—2.5 years after cutting. After decapitation, trees altered their physiology to promote rapid replacement of shoots. Compared to uncut trees, leaves of coppices were formed with a low carbon content per unit area, and showed high stomatal conductance accompanied by high leaf photosynthetic rates. Whole-plant water use efficiency of coppiced trees was unusually high due to their fast relative growth rates associated with preferential investments of photosynthates into regenerating canopies rather than roots. Despite relatively small leaf areas on coppice shoots over the two years following decapitation, high leaf transpiration rates resulted in coppices using water at rates far in excess of that falling as rain on the tree belt area. Water budgets showed that 20 % of the study paddock would have been needed as 0—2 year coppices in 5 m wide twin-row belts in order to maintain hydrological balance over the study period. Maximum water use occurred where uncut trees were accessing a fresh perched aquifer, but where this was not present water budgets still showed transpiration of uncut trees occurring at rates equivalent to 3—4 times rainfall incident on the tree belt canopy. In this scenario, only 10 % of the paddock surface would have been required under 5 m wide tree belts to restore hydrological balance, but competition losses in adjacent pasture would have been greater

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