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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.
41

The Physiological Ecology of Dicranum fuscescens Turn in the Subarctic

Hicklenton, Peter R. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
42

Ecological significance of polyol concentrations in subarctic lichens

Dudley, Susan A. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
43

The role of snow cover in the nutrient regime of oligotrophic, subarctic soils /

Manuel, Patricia M. (Patricia Marie) January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
44

A geoecological investigation of palsas in the Schefferville area /

Cummings, Craig E. January 1993 (has links)
The term palsa is a Fennoscandian word for a peaty hillock or mound having a permafrost core composed of alternating layers of segregated ice lenses, and organic or mineral soil. This dissertation presents results of a study on the morphology, ecology, cryotic structure, and thermal regime of 6 palsas sites in the Schefferville area and offers a new categorization of these features based on their cryotic structure. Eighteen palsa sites were located within a 35 km radius of Schefferville and six of these sites were investigated in detail. Palsas ranged from 5.6-59.0 m in length and up to 1.1 m in height. Most were located in valleys formed by the strong ridge-valley topography of the Labrador trough. Analysis of plant macrofossils suggests a successional change from hydrophilic species 10-15 cm below the palsa surface to relatively xerophilic species on the palsa surface. The transition zone between these vegetation associations indicates when the peat surface was heaved above the water table and thus, the initiation of the palsa. Surface vegetation on the palsas is used to indicate stage or category of development. Lichens and shrubs combined with small amounts of bare peat suggest a stable palsa. Large areas of bare peat on the surface of palsas resulting from erosion indicates degradation. Healthy sedges on the palsa surface indicate aggrading conditions. Ground ice within palsas ranged from small discontinuous ice lenses within peat to large lenses at the peat mineral soil contact and within the mineral soil. The depth of snow on the palsa surface varied on both a temporal and spatial basis. Active layer depths were not greatly affected by the depth of winter snow. Climatic parameters, such as heating degree days and bright sunshine hours, were found to predict maximum active layer depths more accurately than Stefan's equation. This dissertation shows that palsas with both organic and mineral soil cores are common permafrost features in the Schefferville area
45

Methane flux and plant distribution in northern peatlands

Bubier, Jill L. January 1993 (has links)
Methane (CH$ sb4$) fluxes were measured in a range of peatland sites by a static chamber method in two regions of northern Canada, the Clay Belt of boreal Ontario and the Labrador Trough of subarctic Quebec. In both regions, seasonal mean water table position was the best predictor of mean CH$ sb4$ flux when microtopography was included in the analysis (r$ sp2$ = 0.73; p $<$ 0.01). The regression coefficients (slopes) were similar in both regions, suggesting a similar functional relationship between water table position and CH$ sb4$ flux; but the constants (intercepts) were different, implying a regional difference in climate or other biogeochemical factors. Broad-scale wetland classifications that do not account for microtopography and regional differences are inadequate for predicting CH$ sb4$ flux. / Vegetation and a suite of environmental variables in both regions were analyzed with multivariate statistics. Canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) showed that hydrology (water table position) explains most of the variability in bryophyte distribution, with chemistry (pore-water pH, Ca, Mg) as the second most important factor. The relative importance of the variables is reversed for vascular species in the Clay Belt; variables correlating with bryophyte and vascular species distribution are more similar in the Labrador Trough. Hydrology and chemistry are independent variables in both regions. CH$ sb4$ flux correlated strongly with hydrology in both regions, but not with chemistry. / Because of the strong correlation between bryophytes and CH$ sb4$ flux in the CCA analyses, a predictive model was developed using weighted averaging (WA) calibration. Optimum CH$ sb4$ flux values are highest for carpet/pool species and lowest for hummock species. No overlap in WA tolerances occurs between hummock and pool species, suggesting species at either end of the moisture gradient are the best predictors of CH$ sb4$ flux. Although the model works best within and not among regions, it has potential application in remote sensing of bryophytes for regional CH$ sb4$ budgets, paleoenvironmental reconstructions of CH$ sb4$ flux, and biological monitoring of future changes in CH$ sb4$ flux from climate-induced changes in peatland hydrology.
46

Photosynthetic recovery and patterns of carbon flux in subarctic lichens from contrasting wetting and drying regimes

Groulx, Michel. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
47

Schefferville : relations inter-ethniques et dynamique du developpement en milieu nordique /

Barbeau, Michel T. , January 1987 (has links)
Mémoire (M.E.S.R.) -- Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, 1987. / Feuillets de fig. plies dans une pochette. CaQCU Bibliogr. : p. 191-201. Document électronique également accessible en format PDF. CaQCU
48

Methane flux and plant distribution in northern peatlands

Bubier, Jill L. January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
49

A geoecological investigation of palsas in the Schefferville area /

Cummings, Craig E. January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
50

Photosynthetic recovery and patterns of carbon flux in subarctic lichens from contrasting wetting and drying regimes

Groulx, Michel. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.

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