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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.
1

Characterization of Bacteria Community and Evaluation of Anthropogenic and Natural Disturbances in Surface Waters Quality of Sabana River in the Luquillo Experimental Forest in Puerto Rico

Salgado-Herrera, Miriam 23 August 2018 (has links)
<p> Characterization of bacteria community and evaluation of anthropogenic and natural disturbances in surface waters quality of Sabana River in the Luquillo Experimental Forest in Puerto Rico. This doctoral dissertation research focused on the bacterial characterization, and evaluation of anthropogenic, and natural disturbances in the surface waters quality of the Sabana River in the Luquillo Experimental Forest in Puerto Rico. Monthly samples were taken at seven stations along the river during one year, and physicochemical factors such as temperature, pH, conductivity, DO and salinity were measured to explore their effect in the bacterial community. The effect of recreation was evaluated at El Puente, and at La Paila in the Sabana River, and at Puente Roto in the Mameyes River, from August 4 to September 8, 2012. Samples were collected up-river (before), on-site, and down-river (after) primary contact recreation activity. The number of bathers, and the temperature of the water were recorded. Also, four monthly sampling events were conducted under low flow conditions between May 2015 and August 2015, at two sites in the Sabana River impacted by non-point sources. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP), pyrosequencing, and Colilert and Enterolert Test-System, were used for the bacterial community characterization. It was found that number of phylotypes of the bacterial community increases from upriver to downriver as anthropogenic disturbances proliferate along the river, and that bacteria are adapted or acclimated to in situ temperature, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, salinity and pH, therefore, show little variation in time and space. Pyrosequncing revealed that a total of 12 bacteria classes, 27 orders, 33 families, 82 genera and 186 species were found in the Sabana River. There is an increase in families and species through the three stations, with the largest amounts observed downriver at station # 7. <i>Vogesella</i> spp. was the most abundant specie at the three stations, with 59% at station # 1, 67% at station # 4, and 53% at station # 7. A significant positive and strong correlation was found between the amount of <i>E. coli</i> and the number of bathers at MPRS (R = 0.919; p-value = 0.027), which means that a high number of bathers coincides with a high concentration of <i> E.coli</i>. </p><p> Also, there is a significant positive and strong correlation between the concentration of <i>Enterococci</i> and the number of bathers at Pai.S (R is 0.908; p-value = 0.033). There were not significant differences between the bacterial community up-river, on site and down river of the two non-point sources.</p><p>
2

Co-production with Water Managers to Evaluate Multiobjective Evolutionary Algorithm (MOEA)-assisted Optimization for Long Term Water Utility Planning and Shape Future Research Agendas

Smith, Rebecca M. 06 January 2018 (has links)
<p> Many promising tools and methods developed in water resources systems analysis research have seen little uptake outside of academia. This may be due to a lack of effective communication about the research to water managers, or it may be because the tools are not ultimately useful or usable in practice. Current predominant research frameworks do not provide insight into these issues or facilitate the incorporation of industry needs into research agendas.</p><p> This dissertation introduces a structured research approach called the Participatory Framework for Assessment and Improvement of Tools (ParFAIT) that formally connects researchers and water managers in purposeful, iterative exercises to educate about promising tools, evaluate their usefulness and usability, and draw practitioner feedback into academic agendas. The process is founded on co-production concepts and involves two workshops which are designed to ultimately result in: a broadly relatable vehicle to demonstrate the tool (a testbed), practitioner feedback about the tool resulting from hands-on workshop experience, tool-specific as well as more general industry context, and definitive suggestions for increasing the relevance of future research.</p><p> ParFAIT is demonstrated by testing Multiobjective Evolutionary Algorithm (MOEA)-assisted optimization for long term water utility planning with a group of Front Range, Colorado, water managers. The first workshop informed the creation of the Eldorado Utility Planning Model, a complex but hypothetical testbed designed to be widely relatable to participants. MOEA-assisted optimization was performed on the testbed using workshop-informed formulations of planning decisions, objectives, constraints, and planning scenarios. The optimization results formed the basis of a second workshop at which managers worked directly with testbed output in structured activities and discussions.</p><p> This ParFAIT study found that practitioners consider the information provided by MOEA-assisted optimization to be useful for several aspects of their long term planning processes, but that there are important considerations for ensuring usability of the tool itself and its output. One important consideration is the interpretation of complex MOEA results. Based on this feedback, this work presents a novel application of Multivariate Regression Tree analysis to extract system insights from MOEA-assisted optimization results.</p><p>
3

The effect of water temperature on in-stream sediment concentration and transport rate

Tyrrell, Jennie L. 02 February 2016 (has links)
<p> Global climate change may result in rising temperatures. As a result, ecological health and the human use of rivers may be impacted. The hydrologic cycle, watershed hydrology, and in-stream hydraulics are dynamic systems, influenced by human activities, natural events, and climate. Although known drivers like precipitation and stream velocity govern sediment processes, the effect of water temperature on sediment transport remains unclear. In-stream sediment movement could lead to blocked harbors, flooding, and degradation of vulnerable fish habitat. To better understand how fluctuations in water temperature affect sediment dynamics, six transport models were analyzed on the Niobrara River, with water temperatures ranging 1&deg; to 40&deg; C. The results indicate that as water warms sediment transport decreases, according to an inverse, non-linear law, with the highest reduction at colder water temperatures. The results given here can help predict changes in sediment transport for rivers with similar characteristics at various water temperatures. </p>
4

Environmental impact asssessment of wastewater management in the Republic of Yemen

Al-Gunied, Hussien Alawi January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
5

Energy generation with greywater reuse systems| The case of organ pipe cactus national monument

Corron, Ashley 15 February 2017 (has links)
<p> At the rate the population is growing it is important to find ways to be more efficient with the energy and water we use. The increase in population increases the need for electricity and water, but the way we are using our sources will not leave us with enough for future generations. The constant use of &ldquo;dirty energy&rdquo;, energy that emits CO2 and other chemicals into the atmosphere, will continue to harm our environment. A new system is needed to help preserve water and produce green energy that will not harm the only earth we have.</p>
6

Spatiotemporal variations of baseflow generation in the United States

Ng, Nicole 16 February 2017 (has links)
<p> The traditional paradigm of baseflow generation assumes a uniform water table contributes baseflow evenly across a watershed. This thesis considers an alternate paradigm in which baseflow originates from a mix of localized sources that drain at different rates. Four forested headwater catchments across the United States were examined for spatial variability in baseflow sources by analyzing fractional baseflow contribution from each subcatchment relative to the catchment outlet. This revealed that subcatchment flow contributions changed dynamically through time, supporting the idea of different drainage rates in different places. A parallel linear reservoir model, which is predicated on heterogeneity in flow sources and not groundwater hydraulics, was used to simulate results consistent with observations in some of the study catchments. These results support the idea that in some locations baseflow recession may be better explained by landscape spatial heterogeneity than by aquifer hydraulics. </p>
7

Characterization and Modeling of a Tropical Groundwater System| La Villa Watershed, Panama

Castrellon Romero, Maria Gabriela 16 March 2019 (has links)
<p> Groundwater plays an important role in runoff generation in the humid tropics, both as subsurface stormflow during rain events and sustaining baseflow during dry periods. Yet groundwater fluxes in tropical areas, particularly groundwater/surface-water (GW-SW) interactions, are not very well characterized at regional scales, thus preventing us from estimating how climate change and anthropogenic activities will affect future groundwater availability. In the case of Panama, abundance of water resources has caused its misuse and thus groundwater is exploited without previous knowledge of its distribution and availability. However, regions of the country such as the Central Pacific Region suffer from water scarcity during periods of extended drought, when streamflow reduces significantly and shallow wells get dry. Understanding groundwater dynamics, especially GW-SW interactions, is crucial for government authorities to make informed decisions in order to secure water availability for current and future generations. This thesis presents advances on the characterization of the La Villa groundwater basin, located in the Central Pacific Region of Panama. By building a groundwater conceptual and numerical model, and a surface water model, potential recharge areas and groundwater flow patterns were identified. Also, the model reveals that groundwater feeds the rivers, not only during dry periods, but throughout the year. Although this preliminary model is not yet capable of predicting the total amount of groundwater stored, and neither can be used to inform management decision, it can inform us of which features have the greatest influence on groundwater flow and it can tell us what types of data are necessary to improve the results of the simulation. The development of these models is the first step towards the development of an integrated hydrologic simulation that can be used to test different climate change and/or management scenarios.</p><p>
8

Derivation and Application of Idealized Flow Conditions in River Network Simulation

Afshari Tork, Shahabeddin 09 February 2019 (has links)
<p> Streamflow information is essential for many important uses across a broad range of scales, including global water balances, engineering design, flood forecasting, reservoir operations, navigation, water supply, recreation, and environmental management. </p><p> Natural streams are characterized by changes in cross-section geometry, slope, and geophysical properties (bed-roughness, channel slope, etc.) along their reaches. Variations in the shape and size of the channel bed geometry result from several interacting features of the river system including the effect of different flow regimes, slope, sediment load, etc. Simplifying the river bed geometries could reduce the burden of assembling the required data, so implementing less detailed routing procedures could lower the computational burden. &ldquo;At-a-station&rdquo; hydraulic geometry (AHG) relationships are power-law functions which relate river discharge to key the hydraulics (i.e., velocity, depth, width, and flow area). The AHG relations have been introduced and discussed among researchers, engineers, and geomorphologist since the '50s based upon a limited number of observations made over few flow monitoring stations across the United States. </p><p> This doctoral thesis starts with an introduction to statistical data filtering procedures that are being trained and tested over both synthetic and realistic data followed by being applied over ~4000 U.S. Geological Survey&rsquo;s river monitoring stations to compute AHG parameters based upon robust discharge-hydraulic measures. Given &ldquo;refined&rdquo; dataset, estimated AHG parameters are combined with morphological (channel pattern, channel slope, etc.) and geophysical features at a site. Doing so, potential interrelation among independent and dependent variables will be highlighted. Accordingly, given some assumptions, it is verified how well channel morphology and hydraulic components are intertwined and combined with AHG parameters and how categorizing river monitoring stations according to these characteristics will be practical and useful for further studies. For instance, the application of AHG parameters in modifying numerical hydraulic routing coefficients will result in an improvement in predictability of flood routing schemes (here, Muskingum-Cunge). The thesis will be concluded by the analysis of trade-off between computation time and accuracy or complexity vs. simplicity among advanced, hydrodynamic (HEC-RAS 2D) vs. low-complexity (AutoRoute and HAND) models that is also an alternative way to affirm the advantage of idealizing or simplifying a hydraulic system over-relying on time- and energy-costly approaches.</p><p>
9

A Unifying Platform for Water Resources Management Using Physically-Based Model and Remote Sensing Data

Shin, Yongchul 14 March 2013 (has links)
In recent years, physically-based hydrological models provided a robust approach to better understand the cause-effect relationships of effective hydraulic properties in soil hydrology. These have increased the flexibility of studying the behavior of a soil system under various environmental conditions. One disadvantage of physical models is their inability to model the vertical and horizontal heterogeneity of hydraulic properties in a soil system at the regional scale. In order to overcome this limitation, inverse modeling may be used. Near surface soil moisture, which has been collected routinely by remote sensing (RS) platforms, and evapotranspiration, that is also a pivotal key for water balance near the land surface can be used as alternatives for quantifying the effective soil hydraulic parameters through inverse modeling. However, the new approach suffers from not only the scale discrepancy between RS pixel resolution and model grid resolution, but also its application in complex terrains. Furthermore, hydrological models require a number of required input parameters. Hence, this dissertation focuses on developing a methodology for addressing these problems. The field-scale Soil-Water-Atmosphere-Plant model (SWAP) was extended to regional application, and then coupled with a Genetic Algorithm (GA), to operate as the core of the developed decision support system at the regional level. Also, various stochastic processes were developed and applied to the GA for improving the searching ability of optimization algorithms. The computational simulation-optimization approach was tested and evaluated under various synthetic and field validation experiments demonstrating that the methodology provided satisfactory results. In this dissertation, the proposed methodologies analyzed the spatio-temporal root zone soil moisture with RS and in-situ soil moisture data at the multiple scales. Also, these approaches could provide better input parameters for hydro-climatic models, resulting in better understanding of the hydrologic cycle. Thus, a better understanding of water cycle would help us to be better prepared for efficient water resources management, agriculture, and devastating natural disasters in the real world.
10

Water Stress And Water Use Of Almonds In California| Linking Plant Water Status And Canopy Transpiration

Spinelli, Gerardo 10 October 2015 (has links)
<p> Almond water use was investigated at the leaf, plant and canopy level under a range of irrigation conditions in commercial orchards in California. Understanding plant response to water stress, specifically the behavior of plant transpiration and water use during periods of water stress, has important implications for irrigation scheduling in agriculture but also for water resources management and policy making. </p><p> Leaf gas exchange measurements of stomatal conductance and photosynthetic rate were performed at midday on shaded and on sunlit leaves, with midday stem water potential used to assess plant water stress. An essentially linear decline in both photosynthetic rate (from 25 to 5 &mu;mol m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>) and stomatal conductance (from 400 to 50 mmol m<sup> -2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>) as stem water potential declined over the range of -0.5 to -3 MPa was observed in sunlit leaves. These data indicated a strong sensitivity of leaf-level physiological processes to water stress. However, evapotranspiration at the canopy level, measured using Eddy Covariance, did not show a reduction relative to atmospheric demand during periods of water stress. The apparent disconnect observed between leaf conductance, responsive to water stress and canopy evapotranspiration, insensitive to water stress, is the central problem investigated in this study.</p><p> When the transpiration data was analyzed in the framework of a "Big Leaf" model, decoupled conditions (i.e. a limited stomatal control of transpiration) were shown to prevail at the experimental site, contrary to previous findings reported in the literature for tall crops such as almond orchards. Low coupling implies only a moderate sensitivity of transpiration to stomatal closure. Measured coupling increased substantially with wind speed but showed a wide range of values at the low wind speeds (&lt;1m s<sup>-1</sup>) that were observed at the site. At any wind speed however, higher canopy resistance resulted in higher coupling. The high leaf area index observed in the orchard may have been responsible for causing decoupled conditions, because when leaf area decreased as a result of harvesting operations, canopy transpiration appeared to become more sensitive to water stress. </p><p> Cumulative daily sap velocity was used as an estimate of plant transpiration. At the plant level, contrasting behaviors were observed in plant transpiration in the presence of water stress, depending on the duration and intensity of the stress. During long soil dry-down periods encompassing several weeks, plant transpiration relative to the evaporative demand of the atmosphere showed a statistically significant decline associated with a decrease in stem water potential and in stomatal closure. However, when the cycle of water stress was short (days), reductions in stem water potential seemed to be associated with an increase in cumulative sapflow velocity. The analysis of these results led to the development of a simple model that describes the theoretical interactions between three dependent variables, namely stem water potential, stomatal conductance and transpiration. The model output suggested that in wet soil, an increase in transpiration may be caused by increasing evaporative demand even if stem water potential and stomatal conductance decrease.</p>

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