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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

Caracterização físico-hídrica do solo do perímetro irrigado pontal sul por funções de pedotransferência / Physic-hydrical characterization of soil of pontal sul irrigation scheme by pedotransfer functions

Lima, Géssica Silva [UNESP] 29 September 2016 (has links)
Submitted by GÉSSICA SILVA LIMA null (gessicaslima@hotmail.com) on 2016-11-24T20:13:59Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Tese_Géssica Silva Lima.pdf: 1381711 bytes, checksum: 9da4409253a7ea1d9b0f0f18bfdcb292 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Felipe Augusto Arakaki (arakaki@reitoria.unesp.br) on 2016-11-29T13:12:51Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 lima_gs_dr_bot.pdf: 1381711 bytes, checksum: 9da4409253a7ea1d9b0f0f18bfdcb292 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2016-11-29T13:12:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 lima_gs_dr_bot.pdf: 1381711 bytes, checksum: 9da4409253a7ea1d9b0f0f18bfdcb292 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-09-29 / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) / A busca por meios que auxiliem a eficiência no uso dos recursos hídricos e conservação do solo é indispensável para a sustentabilidade da atividade agrícola na região semiárida brasileira. Assim sendo, estudos capazes de indicar e orientar medidas que viabilizem a produção de alimentos com maior eficiência no uso da água e auxiliem as políticas de gestão e planejamento dos recursos hídricos, são de grande relevância. Entre as ferramentas existentes que podem auxiliar no planejamento e no manejo do uso da água na agricultura, podemos citar o uso da geoestatística, análise de agrupamento e funções de pedotransferência. Assim, o objetivo deste trabalho foi realizar a caracterização da área do Perímetro Irrigado Pontal Sul, em Petrolina – PE. As análises e resultados estão divididos em três capítulos. O primeiro apresenta as zonas homogêneas dos atributos físicos do solo e da velocidade de infiltração básica da água no solo, obtidas por meio de análise geoestatística e análise multivariada de agrupamento fuzzy c-means. No segundo capítulo, foram desenvolvidas funções de pedotransferência (FPT) para estimativa dos teores de água do solo na capacidade de campo (CC), ponto de murcha permanente (PMP) e água disponível no solo (AD), utilizando técnicas de regressão múltipla, a partir dos dados de granulometria e densidade do solo. No terceiro capítulo, realizou-se o estudo da variabilidade espacial da umidade do solo por meio da geoestatística, utilizando dados observados e estimados por FPT para as umidades na CC, PMP e AD. Concluiu-se que é possível um zoneamento com menor quantidade de variáveis para auxílio no planejamento do uso de água no perímetro irrigado. Houve diferença significativa para todos os atributos entre as 3 zonas homogêneas geradas. A maioria das FPT desenvolvidas não apresentaram boa acurácia para estimar o teor de água no solo. Entre elas, os melhores desempenhos foram observados para estimativa da CC e PMP no banco de dados geral na camada de 0,0-0,20 m. Na análise geoestatística os parâmetros dos semivariogramas ajustados para o banco de dados medidos e banco de dados estimados, quando comparados, apresentaram menor variação para a camada de solo de 0-0,2 m. / The search for tools to assist the efficient use and conservation of water and soilresources is essential for sustainability of agriculture in the Brazilian semiarid region. Thus, studies to indicate and guide procedures that enable the production of food with greater efficiency about water use and assist management policies and planning of water resources, have great importance. Among the existing tools that can assist in the planning and management of water use in agriculture, we have the geostatistics, multivariated analysis and pedotransfer functions. Hence, the objective of this study was to describe the area of the Pontal Sul Irrigation Scheme, in Petrolina, state of Pernambuco, Brazil. The analysis and results are divided into three chapters. The first chapter presents homogeneous zones obtained by using geostatistical analysis and multivariate analysis of fuzzy c-means clustering of soil physical attributes and soil water infiltration rate. In the second chapter pedotransfer functions were developed (PTF) to estimate soil water content at field capacity (FC), wilting point (WP) and available soil water (AW), using multiple regression techniques, based on data of soil particle size and soil density. The third chapter presents the study of the spatial variability of soil moisture by using geostatistics with observed and estimated by PTF data for soil water content at FC, WP and AW. It was concluded that it is possible a zoning with fewer variables to aid in the planning of water use in the irrigation scheme area. All attributes presented significant differences among the three homogeneous zones delimited. Most of the PTF developed did not show good accuracy to estimate the soil water content. Among them, the best performances were observed to estimate the FC and WP in the overall database in the soil layer of 0-0.2 m. In the geostatistical analysis the parameters of the semivariograms adjusted for the database measured and for the estimated database, when compared, presented smaller variation for the soil layer of 00,2 m. / CNPq: 142174/2013-0
2

Building the capacity for watershed governance

Edwards, Jamie Joyce 05 May 2020 (has links)
BC Hydro’s Water Use Planning (WUP) process is one of the world’s most comprehensive hydroelectric dam operational reviews and has served as a model to revise hydropower operating plans with the participation of an inclusive range of stakeholders, rights holders, and the use of up-to-date scientific information, that meets social and environmental goals alongside economic targets. In 2000, BC Hydro initiated a WUP process in the Jordan River watershed. This watershed hosts a wide diversity of water users, including active resource industry stakeholders (mining, forestry, and hydropower), Indigenous rights holders, and rural community citizens; which is representative of watersheds in British Columbia with established WUPs. BC Hydro finalized the Jordan River WUP in 2003, which focuses on establishing critical freshwater flows for fish habitat and achieving specific recreational values of the local community. However, numerous other issues still remain that were beyond the scope of the WUP process, including water quality concerns that were continually brought up by citizens during the consultative process of the WUP. In addition to these concerns, biological monitoring following the implementation of the WUP suggests that contamination from an inactive copper mine has affected and altered sensitive water quality parameters for a healthy Pacific salmon habitat in Jordan River. Yet, there has not been an extensive water quality study conducted that examines the spatial or seasonal water quality extents of the mining contamination in Jordan River, specifically copper. Consequently, fourteen years after the creation of the WUP, local advocates are still struggling to have their concerns heard by the entity responsible for freshwater flow, BC Hydro, alongside federal and provincial government agencies. Advocates are calling for the creation of a watershed-based group as a mechanism for having greater influence in water planning and governance processes. This study explores the research question: if and how has the WUP process contributed to creating watershed governance capacity? This social science thesis project employs a mixed-methods approach using both quantitative and qualitative data. The study includes a document review of relevant water governance literature and focuses on examining the freshwater quality of the Jordan River. Water quality samples were collected over a five-week period from five sites on the Jordan River beginning in September and concluding in October of 2015 during the most sensitive periods of salmon spawning activity in the lower reaches of the Jordan River. Spatial and seasonal water quality trends were identified, and analysis concluded that copper is the primary contaminate affecting the productivity of a healthy salmon habitat in the Jordan River. Acid mine drainage (AMD) processes were identified throughout the water quality data and are strongly influenced by the proximity of existing mine waste piles sourced from an abandoned copper mine, and unnatural anthropogenic flows from the three BC Hydro dams present in the Jordan River system. The final stage of the research project focuses on assessing the adaptive capacity in the watershed to address the issues of concern outlined in the WUP. There is a current movement to create watershed organizations that are formally supported through new legislation in British Columbia, but questions remain about the capacities of these watershed communities to sustain such a formal institution and if these watershed communities are ready to successfully implement a local watershed governance model. The Gupta et al. (2010) six adaptive capacity dimensions provide a logical framework to explore if these capacities are present such that it could be expected that local watershed organizations would be effective as society adapts to more watershed-based governance approaches. Thirteen semi-structured interviews were conducted from October 2016 to February 2017. Interviews and observational data focused on the WUP process and prospective and current members of the Jordan Watershed Round Table (JWRT). The research evaluated whether these six adaptive capacity dimensions are present in watershed communities that have been subjected to water management processes, specifically the WUP program. Overall, the research concluded that the WUP has contributed to some adaptive capacity for watershed governance in the Jordan River, specifically on building the adaptive capacity dimensions: variety, learning capacity, room for autonomous change, leadership, and resources within the JWRT. / Graduate

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