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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.
91

Organ-specific control of glycolysis in two model systems of facultative hypometabolism: the diving turtle and the hibernating mouse.

Kelly, David A. (David Allan), Carleton University. Dissertation. Biology. January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--Carleton University, 1988. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
92

Anoxia induces changes in translatable mRNA populations in Trachemys scripta elegans: a possible adaptive strategy for anoxia tolerance.

Douglas, Donna Nabeha, Carleton University. Dissertation. Chemistry. January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--Carleton University, 1993. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
93

The timing of inhibition in reglarly spiking cells of turtle visual cortex /

Mancilla, Jaime Gonzalo. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Committee on Neurobiology, August 1999. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
94

Crescimento e digestibilidade de dietas com diferentes teores de fibra para a tartaruga-da-Amazônia - Podocnemis expansa

Almeida, Cauê Guion de [UNESP] 21 June 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:30:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2011-06-21Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T20:21:10Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 almeida_cg_dr_jabo.pdf: 914863 bytes, checksum: 06ae360f77e1992d58cf954b10d6535d (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP) / Com base no hábito alimentar da espécie, no potencial dos quelônios em utilizar matéria vegetal e na importância da fibra e de seus constituintes para alimentação animal, esta pesquisa estudou o crescimento da tartaruga-da-Amazônia (Podocnemis expansa), a disponibilidade de minerais e a digestibilidade dos nutrientes em dietas com diferentes teores de fibra bruta. Os estudos foram realizados na Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), entre maio e novembro de 2008, com duração de sete meses, utilizando 160 exemplares de tartaruga-da-Amazônia provenientes do município de Ribeirão Cascalheira, região do Rio das Mortes/MT, Brasil. O aumento nos teores de fibra na dieta até 16% melhorou o crescimento da tartaruga-da-Amazônia, onde as características de crescimento apresentaram os maiores valores. Entre 16 a 20% de fibra na dieta o crescimento das tartarugas diminuiu. O maior crescimento se deu com teores semelhantes aos encontrados na dieta natural da espécie, reforçando seu potencial para utilização de dieta herbívora. A disponibilidade de minerais e a digestibilidade dos nutrientes foram influenciadas pelos teores de fibra na dieta. A tartaruga-da-Amazônia apresenta elevado potencial de digestão da fibra dietética, comparável ao de ruminantes e outros répteis herbívoros, com sua digestibilidade aumentando com o aumento do teor de fibra na dieta / Taking in consideration the potential the chelonians have for using vegetal matter and based on the eating habit of the specie and on the importance of fiber and its constituents for animal feeding, the present study aimed at evaluating the growth of the Arrau sideneck turtle (Podocnemis expansa) fed with diets of different contents of crude fiber and the availability of minerals and the digestibility of nutrients. This study was carried out Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), between the months of May and November, 2008, and lasted seven months. The turtles used were 160 specimens of the Arrau sideneck turtle from Projeto Quelônios da Amazônia, State of Mato Grosso. The increase in the contents of fiber in the diet up to 16% improved the Arrau sideneck turtle’s growth, when the growth characteristics showed their best values. In diets including 20% of fiber, the turtle’s growth decreased. In diets including between 16 and 20% of fiber, the turtle’s growth decreased. The highest rate occurred when using contents similar to those found in the natural diet of the species, corroborating its potential to use herbivore diet. The availability of minerals and the digestibility of nutrients were influenced by the contents of fiber in the diet. The Arrau sideneck turtle presents a high potential for dietary fiber digestion, comparable to that of the ruminants and other herbivore reptiles, with its digestibility increasing as the contents of fiber increase
95

Como os cágados sobrevivem e se reproduzem na caatinga? Aspectos da história de vida de Phrynops tuberosus (Testudines: Chelidae) / How the freshwater turtles survive and reproduce in caatinga? - Life history traits of Phrynops tuberosus (Testudines: Chelidae)

Rodrigues, João Fabrício Mota January 2013 (has links)
RODRIGUES, João Fabrício Mota. Como os cágados sobrevivem e se reproduzem na caatinga? Aspectos da história de vida de Phrynops tuberosus (Testudines: Chelidae). 2013. 54 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em ecologia e recursos naturais)- Universidade Federal do Ceará, Fortaleza-CE, 2013. / Submitted by Elineudson Ribeiro (elineudsonr@gmail.com) on 2016-05-20T18:29:46Z No. of bitstreams: 1 2013_dis_jfmrodrigues.pdf: 1163460 bytes, checksum: 761d0697c32e92f333485e0489d72fe9 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by José Jairo Viana de Sousa (jairo@ufc.br) on 2016-05-27T20:34:43Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 2013_dis_jfmrodrigues.pdf: 1163460 bytes, checksum: 761d0697c32e92f333485e0489d72fe9 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2016-05-27T20:34:43Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 2013_dis_jfmrodrigues.pdf: 1163460 bytes, checksum: 761d0697c32e92f333485e0489d72fe9 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2013 / The life history theory studies the characteristics combinations that maximize the organisms reproduction and survival in the environment where they live. The species use the habitat in a diverse way and this use depends on the environmental conditions in the available habitats. Phrynops tuberosus, a freshwater turtle found in the north-northeastern regions of Brazil, is the animal-model chosen for the life history traits and habitat use studies. This work aims understand how this species reproduce, maintain and use the habitat in Caatinga. The study generated biological and ecological knowledge of the species and allowed the testing of hypotheses and predictions of life history traits, sexual dimorphism and habitat use. Selection of clutching sites, males smaller than females and preference of larger animals for environments most exposed were found in the populations studied. The results facilitate understanding of reproduction and survival of turtles in a semiarid environment. / A teoria de história de vida estuda as combinações de características que maximizam a reprodução e a sobrevivência dos organismos no ambiente onde vivem. As espécies utilizam o ambiente de modo diverso, e esse uso depende das condições existentes nos hábitats disponíveis. Phrynops tuberosus, cágado encontrado nas regiões norte-nordeste do Brasil, é o animal-modelo escolhido para o estudo dos traços de história de vida e de uso de hábitat. Esse trabalho objetiva entender como a espécie se reproduz, organiza-se e utiliza o hábitat na caatinga. O estudo gerou conhecimentos biológicos e ecológicos da espécie e permitiu o teste de hipóteses e previsões sobre traços de história de vida, dimorfismo sexual e uso de hábitat. Seleção de locais de desova, machos menores que fêmeas e preferência de animais maiores por ambientes mais expostos foram encontradas nas populações estudadas. Os resultados encontrados facilitam a compreensão da reprodução e da sobrevivência dos quelônios em um ambiente do semiárido.
96

Lagrangian analysis of sea turtle ecology

Scott, Rebecca January 2013 (has links)
Many marine organisms are highly mobile, which presents a variety of research and conservation management challenges. Sea turtles are a particularly paradigmatic group of long distant migrants whose movements as adults have been detailed by satellite tracking technology. However, small hatchlings are not amenable to this approach. This thesis used Lagrangian oceanography approaches to study the cryptic lives of juvenile turtles, since ocean currents drive their dispersion from natal beaches. Through increasingly sophisticated and novel uses of Lagrangian surface drifter buoys, state-of- the-art global ocean models and emerging animal life history datasets, my PhD thesis details significant findings of the key life history attributes of these enigmatic migrants. Initially, 1 modelled the dispersal of hatchlings from their nesting beaches to derive the first robust estimates of hatchling growth rates and by so doing, highlighted the long maturation times of turtle species. Then, I programmed hatchling swimming behaviour into ocean model simulations to reveal how these small drifters could improve their survival chances in strong current flows. More interdisciplinary research also highlighted aberrant routes of dispersal that can arise through storm displacements. Subsequent meta-analysis on the movements of flying, swimming and walking migrants highlighted key biological determinants of sea turtle migrations. Spatio-temporal analysis of sea turtle marine protected area (MPA) use highlighted minor (tractable) legislative revisions that would significantly improve MPA effectiveness. Finally, research culminated in a global synthesis of the movement patterns of adult and hatchling sea turtles which provided global support for a new migration paradigm, that whilst adult turtles travel independently of ocean currents, ocean currents still indirectly drive the ontogeny of adult sea turtle migrations and foraging habitat selections due to their past experiences as drifting hatchlings. This new understanding into the biological and physical determinants of sea turtle migration strategies is thus hoped to have broad conservation utility.
97

Ecological risk assessment of fisheries on sea turtles in the South Western Indian Ocean

Mellet, Bernice January 2015 (has links)
The SWIO is an area of great biodiversity and included in the diverse species that occupy the region are five species of sea turtles that include green turtles, hawksbills, leatherbacks, loggerheads and olive ridleys. Despite considerable conservation efforts at sea turtle rookeries in the South Western Indian Ocean, only green and loggerhead turtle populations have shown an increase in population size in recent years (<10 years), whereas leatherbacks remained stable and hawksbills and olive ridleys declined. This begs the question if fisheries (or other offshore pressures) are responsible for slowing the recovery of these populations in the region, and if so, which specific fisheries are responsible for this trend? Several offshore (mostly industrial) and coastal (mostly artisanal) fisheries overlap with sea turtle distribution at sea. Industrial fisheries that are globally known to have a demonstrable impact on sea turtle populations are longline and to a lesser extent purse seine fisheries, whilst prawn trawl, gillnet and beach seine fisheries are coastal fisheries with a known negative impact on sea turtle populations. Holistic conservation strategies should be developed that include both land and sea protection for sea turtle species. It is thus necessary to identify and manage offshore threats including fisheries activities, particularly those fisheries that are showing the highest risk to sea turtle populations. This prompted an investigation into the bycatch rates and mortality of all sea turtle species that occur in the SWIO region in several offshore and coastal fisheries including both industrial (longline, purse seine and prawn trawl) and artisanal (including gillnet and beach seine) fisheries. The specific aims were (i) to identify and quantify the interactions (and if possible mortality) of sea turtle species in fisheries and (ii) to identify vulnerable species/populations to fishing operations using a semi-quantitative Ecological Risk Assessment (ERA) in the form of a Productivity-Susceptibility Analysis (PSA). Published information, online databases and technical reports were used as data sources to establish a database containing essential information regarding fishing effort and sea turtle bycatch in the region. The existing information was used to map fisheries extent and effort within the region, and to perform bycatch calculations. Interactions and mortality rates for sea turtles in five fisheries were quantified using bycatch rates from regional studies. Between 2000 – 2011, industrial longline and purse seine fisheries captured sea turtles at a rate of 4 388 indiv.y-1, with the mortality rate being 189 indiv.y-1. The bulk of these interactions were in the longline industry that captured 4 129 ± 1 376 indiv.y-1, with a corresponding mortality rate of 167 ± 53 indiv.y-1. The most commonly caught species (in longlines) were loggerheads and leatherback turtles, but the greatest impact is expected to be on the leatherback population due to the high interaction rate relative to population size. The bycatch (259 ± 34 indiv.y-1) and mortality (20 ± 2 indiv.y-1) rates of sea turtles in the purse seine fishery was considerably lower than the longline fishery. The purse seine fishery thus does not seem to have a significant impact on sea turtle populations in the SWIO. The impact of all forms of fish aggregation devices were excluded from the analysis as the impacts of these are poorly documented. Coastal prawn trawl, gillnet and beach seine fisheries captured an estimate of between 50 164 - 52 370 indiv.y-1 from 2000-2011. The highest bycatch rate was estimated for gillnet fisheries (40 264 indiv.y-1) followed by beach seine fisheries (9 171 indiv.y-1) and prawn trawl fisheries (at 1089 – 2795 indiv.y-1). The gillnet fishery could be responsible for slowing the recovery rate of green turtle and leatherback populations in the SWIO due to the high capture rates in this fishery compared to the population sizes of the species. Beach seine and prawn trawl fisheries are not expected to be hamper the recovery rate of any of the populations in the SWIO due to the low levels of interactions and low mortality rates compared to the population sizes. There are however very few data available regarding the bycatch of sea turtle species within these fisheries, highlighting the need for further research regarding this. A productivity-Susceptibility Analysis (PSA) was used to evaluate the relative vulnerability of species to fisheries, and is frequently applied in data poor situations. Limited data on sea turtle life history characteristics and population dynamics of species in the SWIO prompted the use of a PSA to determine the species most vulnerable to fisheries in the region. Results of the PSA indicated that gillnet fisheries poses the largest fishery-related threat to sea turtle populations, specifically the green and leatherback populations. The longline fishery that poses a particular threat to the leatherback population in the SWIO is also a particular concern. A cumulative impact assessment (combining fisheries and other threats) indicated that the SWIO leatherback population is extremely vulnerable to the combination of threats that influence this population in the SWIO. Even though individual fisheries may pose a small threat, the cumulative impacts of the fisheries can lead to severe impacts on populations such as slowing the recovery rate of populations. There are however significant data gaps that require attention in order to fully assess the impact of these fisheries on sea turtle populations. Despite the fact that fisheries are not implicated as a mayor reason for the decline in the hawksbill and olive ridley populations in the region, these two species are in decline indicating that there are other factors responsible for the decline not yet identified. It however remains imperative to reduce the mortality from all sources to ensure the continued viability of sea turtle populations in the region.
98

The Compound

Jones, James N 01 January 2014 (has links)
A collection of poems.
99

Quantifying Pre-Industrial to Mid-Late 20th Century Anthropogenic Lead, Mercury and Cadmium Pollution in Caribbean Marine Environments Using Skeletonized Sea Turtle Remains

Pena, Felicia L 14 December 2018 (has links)
Various lines of evidence indicate that levels of anthropogenic pollutants, such as lead, mercury and cadmium, have increased in terrestrial and atmospheric environments since the early 19th century and the advent of industrialization. While the exposure to these three trace elements is a global concern, this study focused primarily on marine environments located throughout the Caribbean. Using ICP-MS, this study aimed to detect and quantify anthropogenic pollutants, specifically lead (Pb), mercury (Hg) and cadmium (Cd), using skeletonized remains of sea turtles as biological proxies for environmental quality. Archaeologically derived (n=5) and mid-late 20th century (n=6) Hawksbill and Green turtles were used to create a chronology of pollution exposure in Caribbean marine environments and establish a pre-industrial baseline for pollution exposure, useful for precisely gauging how human activities in the Caribbean, namely industrialization and tourism, have changed the concentration of these elements over time. Results from this study revealed that the industrial, modern sea turtle sample and the archaeological sample exhibit similar distributions of lead and cadmium ppm levels. Whereas, the mercury datasets revealed that the two samples share differing distributions of ppm levels, but that the archaeological sample yielded the higher mercury concentrations. Based on these results, this study was unable to verify whether skeletal sea turtle remains, specifically humeri, can be used as a biological proxy to reconstruct anthropogenic pollution in marine environments. Furthermore, it failed to quantify pre-industrial to mid-late 20th century anthropogenic lead, mercury, and cadmium pollution in Caribbean Marine Environments.
100

The Effects of Beach Restoration on Marine Turtles' Nesting in South Brevard County, Florida

Raymond, Paul W. 01 January 1984 (has links) (PDF)
The south Brevard coast of Florida is a major nesting ground for the Atlantic loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta). A beach restoration project was completed in the winter of 1980-81 at Indialantic and Melbourne Beach. A study was conducted to investigate the effects of beach restoration on marine turtle nesting during the summer months of 1981 and 1982. A 3.1 km restored beach study area and two control beach study areas, each 3.1 km in length and consisting of natural beach sands, were established. The entire study area (9.3 km) was monitored for nesting and non-nesting emergences (false crawls) and a tagging program was established. The objectives of the study were to determine the effects of the restoration project on the nesting behavior of adult female turtles, and to develop an understanding of the effects of restored beach sands on the survival of marine turtle eggs and hatchlings. During the 1981 nesting season 2,766 marine turtle emergences were recorded. The nesting success rates (nesting emergences/total emergences x 100) for 1981 on the north control beach and the south control beach were 54% and 51% respectively, whereas the restored beach had a statistically significant lower nesting success of 28%. This reduction of nesting success was attributed to a compact substrate that was markedly less friable than the sands of the control beaches. In 1981, the turtles emerging to nest in the restored area often displayed aberrant digging behavior when they encountered the compact sand. By the following summer of 1982, it was evident that the restored beach substrate was less compact. The nesting success for 1982 in the restored beach (46%) rose to a level equal to that of the control beaches (48% and 46%). A total of 3,144 marine turtle emergences were recorded in the 1982 nesting season. To study the effects of beach restoration on the eggs and hatchlings, nests were marked, left to incubate on the beach, and later excavated to determine hatch success. Hatch data and hatchling emergence data were collected on 30 clutches in each of the three beach sections for both the 1981 and 1982 seasons. No significant difference was found between the hatch percentage for the restored beach and the hatch percentages for the control beaches in either study year. The hatchling emergence data, which would indicate the hatchlings' ability to emerge from the sand, indicate no significant difference between the restored beach and control beaches for 1981 and 1982.

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