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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.
21

Estudo comparativo do crescimento de plantulas e de atributos foliares em especies do cerrado e da mata atlantica / Comparative study of seedling growth and leaf traits in species from cerrado and atlantic rainforest

Scarpa, Fabiano Micheletto 31 January 2007 (has links)
Orientadores: Ivany Ferraz Marques Valio, Sandra Maria Carmello-Guerreiro / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Biologia / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-08T15:55:54Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Scarpa_FabianoMicheletto_D.pdf: 3535805 bytes, checksum: 848a8f1513a88f057d84df520b2f7e99 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2007 / Resumo: O Cerrado e a Mata Atlântica são ambientes contrastantes em relação aos fatores hídrico, nutricional e luminoso. Portanto, algumas características adaptativas são esperadas em termos do crescimento das plântulas e da morfologia e anatomia das folhas para cada ambiente. Neste trabalho, foi feito um estudo comparativo entre espécies do cerrado e da Mata Atlântica utilizando-se pares congenéricos, sendo cada par formado por uma espécie da Mata Atlântica e uma espécie do Cerrado. Estudou-se o crescimento de plântulas em 10 pares congenéricos pertencentes a 8 famílias, a morfologia funcional de folhas de indivíduos adultos em 14 pares pertencentes a 11 famílias e a anatomia foliar em 8 pares pertencentes a 7 famílias. Para os estudos de crescimento, foram avaliados os atributos: área foliar específica (AFE), razão de área foliar (RAF), razão de massa da raiz (RMR), razão de massa do caule (RMC), razão de massa das folhas (RMF), razão raiz/parte aérea (R/PA), taxa de crescimento relativo (TCR) e taxa de assimilação líquida (TAL). Para o estudo do efeito do estresse de luz no crescimento das plântulas, foi utilizado um par congenérico de espécies: Eriotheca candolleana (da mata atlântica) e Eriotheca gracilipes (do Cerrado). Foram utilizados dois níveis de irradiância: 50% e 2%. Para avaliação da morfologia funcional das folhas, folhas de indivíduos adultos das diferentes espécies estudadas os atributos suculência, AFE, espessura e largura foram avaliados. Nos estudos anatômicos, as imagens dos cortes transversais da lâmina foliar foram digitalizadas e analisadas através do programa ¿image pro-plus¿. Houve convergências de adaptações aos ambientes estudados para algumas características. Maiores valores de TCR foram em geral encontrados para espécies da Mata Atlântica, assim como maiores valores de AFE e RAF, que estão intimamente associados à interceptação de luz para o crescimento. Não houve relação entre investimento radicular e o ambiente de ocorrência das espécies. Verificou-se que as espécies do Cerrado apresentaram maior suculência e menor AFE. Os dados de AFE encontrados nas folhas adultas revelaram o mesmo padrão obtido para plântulas. Os cortes anatômicos evidenciaram uma espessura maior da lâmina foliar e do mesofilo e um parênquima mais compactado, de maneira geral, para as espécies do Cerrado. A porção laminar lignificada também apresenta uma área significativamente maior em folhas de plantas do Cerrado. Folhas mais espessas e lignificadas diminuem a interceptação de luz e reduzem assim as taxas de crescimento, o que é muito vantajoso em ambientes onde os recursos hídricos e os nutrientes são limitantes / Abstract: The Cerrado and the Atlantic Rainforest are contrasting environments in terms of water, light and nutrient availability. Thus some adaptive traits for seedling growth and leaf morphology and anatomy are expected for each habitat. In this work a comparative study was performed between the Cerrado and the Atlantic rainforest species using congeneric pairs .Each pair was composed by a species from the Cerrado and a species from the Atlantic Rainforest. Seedling growth was studied in 10 pairs from 8 families, mature leaf functional morphology was studied in 14 pairs from 11 families and leaf anatomy was studied in 8 pairs from 7 families. For seedling growth studies, specific leaf area (SLA), leaf area ratio (LAR), root mass ratio (RMR), stem mass ratio (SMR), leaf mass ratio (LMR), root/shoot ratio (R/S), relative growth rate (RGR) and net assimilation rate (NAR) were calculated. For the study of light stress effect on seedling growth it was used a congeneric pair of species: Eriotheca candolleana (from the Atlantic Rainforest) and Eriotheca gracilipes (from Cerrado). Two irradiance levels were performed (50% and 2%) For the evaluation of mature leaf functional morphology, succulence, SLA, leaf thickness and leaf width were measured. For the anatomy studies, images from leaf transversal cross section were digitalized and analised using the software image pro plus. There were adaptive convergences for some traits relative to the habitat. Higher RGR, SLA and LAR values were generally achieved for species from the Atlantic Rainforest. SLA and LAR are closely related to light interceptance for plant growth. It was not found an association between root investiment and species environment. It was observed that leaves of Cerrado species were more succulent and presented lower values of SLA. SLA data found in mature leaves showed the same pattern obtained for the seedlings. Cross sections of the leaves revealed higher lamina thickness and higher mesophyll thickness. A more condensed parenchyma was generally found for the Cerrado species. The lignified proportion of leaves was also higher in plants from the Cerrado. Thick and more lignified leaves decrease light interception and reduce growth rates. Such traits are of important adaptive value in environments where water and nutrients are limiting resources / Doutorado / Doutor em Biologia Vegetal
22

Aboveground Carbon Storage and Net Primary Production in Human Impacted Forests Under Current and Future Climate Scenarios

Chiang, Jyh-Min 13 April 2007 (has links)
No description available.
23

Linking plant population dynamics to the local environment and forest succession

Dahlgren, Johan Petter January 2008 (has links)
Linking environmental variation to population dynamics is necessary to understand and predict how the environment influences species abundances and distributions. I used demographic, environmental and trait data of forest herbs to study effects of spatial variation in environmental factors on populations as well as environmental change in terms of effects of forest succession on field layer plants. The results show that abundances of field layer species during forest succession are correlated with their functional traits; species with high specific leaf area increased more in abundance. I also found that soil nutrients affect vegetative and flowering phenology of the forest herb Actaea spicata. The effect of nutrients shows that a wider range of environmental factors than usually assumed can influence plant phenology. Moreover, local environmental factors affected also the demography of A. spicata through effects on vital rates. An abiotic factor, soil potassium affecting individual growth rate, was more important for population growth rate than seed predation, the most conspicuous biotic interaction in this system. Density independent changes in soil potassium during forest succession, and to a lesser extent plant population size dependent seed predation, were predicted to alter population growth rate, and thereby the abundance, of A. spicata over time. Because these environmental factors had effects on population projections, they can potentially influence the occupancy pattern of this species along successional gradients. I conclude that including deterministic, as opposed to stochastic, environmental change in demographic models enables assessments of the effects of processes such as succession, altered land-use, and climate change on population dynamics. Models explicitly incorporating environmental factors are useful for studying population dynamics in a realistic context, and to guide management of threatened species in changing environments.
24

From reclamation to restoration: native grass species for revegetation in northeast British Columbia

Huff, Valerie 04 January 2010 (has links)
Grasses are widely used in revegetation to control erosion, build soil and maintain habitat. In northeast British Columbia, non-native grass species are commonly seeded to reclaim industrially disturbed sites. Widespread concern about degradation of biodiversity and key ecological processes has led to increasing value placed on native species and management practices leading to a more resilient landscape. I undertook this study to fill the restoration knowledge gap relating to native grasses in northeast BC. I did an extensive inventory of grasses on 217 sites in 2007, 2008 and 2009. Functional traits were measured in the field and in a greenhouse growth experiment. I found ninety-nine grass species occuring in the region, 70% of which are native. The number, proportion and extent of non-native grasses are increasing and four of these – Poa pratensis, Festuca rubra, Bromus inermis, and Phleum pratense represented almost a quarter of all occurrences. Several native species were common throughout the region: Calamagrostis canadensis, Leymus innovatus, Elymus trachycaulus, Poa palustris and Agrostis scabra. Other native species, including Festuca altaica, Koeleria macrantha, Pascopyrum smithii, and Schizachne purpurascens, strongly favoured intact habitats. Elevation, soil moisture regime, proportion of bare ground, and land use were significant factors related to local grass species composition and abundance. Agrostis scabra, Alopecurus aequalis, Beckmannia syzigachne, Bromus ciliatus, Cinna latifolia, Deschampsia cespitosa, Elymus alaskanus, Elymus trachycaulus, Festuca saximontana and Hordeum jubatum grew commonly on severely damaged well sites. Field measurements for Specific Leaf Area (SLA) and Leaf Dry Matter Content (LDMC) of 11 species showed an inverse correlation. Bromus ciliatus, Bromus pumpellianus, and Elymus trachycaulus had high SLA/low LDMC linked to rapid growth, whereas Festuca altaica, Deschampsia cespitosa, and Calamagrostis stricta had low SLA/high LDMC linked to slow growth and persistence. In the greenhouse experiment, Poa palustris, Cinna latifolia and Bromus ciliatus produced the most overall biomass and Pascopyrum smithii and Poa palustris produced the greatest aboveground biomass. Calamagrostis stricta, Poa palustris, Elymus glaucus, Leymus innovatus and Pascopyrum smithii exhibited clonal growth. Beckmannia syzigachne, Bromus ciliatus Cinna latifolia produced viable seed during the 135-day experiment. Considering all attributes five native species, Calamagrostis canadensis, Elymus trachycaulus, Poa palustris, Leymus innovatus, and Agrostis scabra are recommended for general restoration use in northeast B.C. Other native species show promise when matched to particular site conditions, including Alopecurus aequalis, Arctagrostis latifolia, Beckmannia syzigachne, Bromus ciliatus, Calamagrostis stricta, Cinna latifolia, Deschampsia cespitosa, Elymus glaucus, Festuca saximontana, Glyceria striata, Hordeum jubatum, Koeleria macrantha, Pascopyrum smithii, Poa alpina, Schizachne purpurascens and Trisetum spicatum. This information will be valuable to land managers interested in moving beyond reclamation to ecological restoration of sites disturbed by oil and gas development. Developing practices that are environmentally sound and socially acceptable requires ongoing botanical inventory. Plant traits may be useful in matching species to site conditions and restoration goals. Policy recommendations include phasing in of requirements to use native seed while restricting the use of agronomic species, promoting natural colonization, and supporting a native seed industry.
25

Construção de uma tipologia funcional de gramíneas em pastagens naturais sob diferentes manejos / Building a grass functional tipology in natural grasslands under different managements

Garagorry, Fabio Cervo 29 February 2008 (has links)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / Plant functional types defined from morphological attributes are fundamental to understanding functioning of grasslands communities. Thus, to build a classification based solely on grasses (family of greater biomass contribution), it is necessary for increasing the knowledge about complex ecosystems. This work aims to characterize vegetation dynamics by species and by functional types of grasses of two RS physiographic regions (Depressão Central-Santa Maria and Campanha-Bagé) under different managements. The evaluated treatments were: natural pasture and natural pasture overseeded with cool season species (Bagé) and natural pasture submitted to burning and grazing treatments (Santa Maria). For this, permanent transects were used in order to represent the different communities at paddock level. Vegetation dynamics was evaluated using procedures of BOTANAL method. Tillers of grasses with contributions exceeding 3% of total aboveground biomass were collected for subsequent measurement of the attributes specific leaf area (AFE) and leaves dry matter content (TMS). Burned treatments presented greater contribution of Andropogon lateralis, while in grazed treatments there was a greater species diversity. Introduction of cool season species combined with fertilizer promotes an increase of species characterized by resources´ capture. TMS was more stable for species linked to capturing resources strategy and AFE was more robust for species characterized by resources conservation. Therefore, until a regional data basis were developed, it is recommended to use both attributes for future research. / Tipos funcionais de plantas definidos a partir de atributos morfológicos são fundamentais para o entendimento do funcionamento de comunidades campestres. Desta maneira, a construção de uma tipologia baseada apenas em gramíneas (família de maior contribuição), torna-se necessária para o avanço do conhecimento sobre ecossistemas complexos. Este trabalho tem por objetivo caracterizar duas regiões fisiográficas do RS (Depressão Central-Santa Maria e Campanha-Bagé) sob distintos manejos quanto à dinâmica vegetacional por espécies e por tipos funcionais de gramíneas. Os tratamentos avaliados foram: pastagem natural e pastagem natural com introdução de espécies hibernais (Bagé) e pastagem natural submetida a tratamentos de queima e pastejo (Santa Maria). Para isto, foram dispostas transectas fixas de modo a representar as diferentes comunidades em nível de potreiro. Foi avaliada a dinâmica vegetacional utilizando os procedimentos do método BOTANAL. Foram coletados afilhos das gramíneas com contribuição superior a 3% da biomassa aérea total para posterior medida dos atributos área foliar específica (AFE) e teor de matéria seca da folha (TMS). Os tratamentos queimados tiveram maior contribuição de Andropogon lateralis, enquanto nos tratamentos pastejados houve uma maior diversidade de espécies. A introdução de espécies de estação fria, aliada à adubação, promove um acréscimo das espécies caracterizadas por captura de recursos. O TMS se mostrou mais estável para espécies ligadas à estratégia de captura de recursos e a AFE mais robusta para as espécies caracterizadas pela conservação de recursos. Por tanto, até que se desenvolva uma base regional de dados, recomenda-se que futuras pesquisas continuem a utilizar os dois atributos.
26

Plasticita funkčních charakteristik (traits) lučních rostlin / Functional trait plasticity in grassland plant species

HAVLÍK, Tomáš January 2010 (has links)
Plant functional traits (plant height, aboveground biomass, R/S ratio, specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content, specific root length and arbuscular mycorrhizal infection) were measured for several grassland plant species growing under different soil fertility conditions in a greenhouse and a field experiments. Traits` response to nutrient addition and the differences in traits among species and between forbs and grasses were studied. Results from the greenhouse and the field experiment were compared.

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