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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

A Medieval Oak Tree-Ring Chronology from Southwest England

Hillam, Jennifer January 1980 (has links)
Extensive rescue excavations in Exeter during 1972 produced large quantities of waterlogged oak timbers. These were used to construct a tree-ring chronology for the period A.D. 799-1216. The chronology crossmatches well with tree-ring sequences from other areas of the British Isles. It will thus form an important building block in the construction of a long English tree-ring curve which can be used to date archaeological timbers from most regions of Britain.
42

Spatio-temporal dynamics of woody vegetation structure in a human-modified South African savanna

Mograbi, Penelope Jane January 2016 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. 25 October 2016 in Johannesburg, South Africa. / Ecosystem services, nature’s benefit to people, contribute to human well-being. Extensive reliance on, and unsustainable use of, natural resources is typical of the rural poor in developing countries and can lead to ecosystem degradation, decreased ecosystem service provision, and increased vulnerabilities of rural populations. Most ecosystem services are intangible or difficult to quantify, but fuelwood provisioning can be measured directly and can serve as a proxy for the status of other ecosystem services (e.g. aesthetic and spiritual services, nutrient cycling, carbon sequestration). South African rural communities have a high reliance on fuelwood despite extensive access to electricity. Within this context, live wood harvesting occurring around rural settlements in increasing amounts has been deemed unsustainable. However, the ‘fuelwood crisis’ of the 1970s, and subsequent predictions of woodland collapse through fuelwood supply-demand models, has still not occurred despite substantial population growth in developing countries. Hypothesised reasons for modelled supply-demand mismatches are based on underestimation of fuelwood supply and woodland regeneration, as well as overestimation of fuelwood demand by discounting behavioural adaptability of users. It is likely that the spatial configuration of fuelwood use allows for the co-adaptability of both humans and ecosystems. A lack of understanding of the spatial configuration of these social-ecological dynamics limits our insights into current and future adaptive responses and thus, the degree of sustainability. This thesis aimed to assess woody biomass stocks and vertical structure changes, as a proxy for provisioning ecosystem services, in a spatially and temporally explicit manner, to describe the status and impact of wood extraction in semi-arid, savanna communal lands. Using repeat, airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) data from 2008 and 2012, we surveyed three-dimensional woodland structure in Bushbuckridge Municipality communal lands – the grazing and harvesting areas for densely populated rural settlements in former Apartheid ‘homelands’ in South Africa. Woody biomass in 2008 ranged from 9 Mg ha-1 on gabbro geology to 27 Mg ha-1 on granitic geology. Land-use pressure was associated with compensatory regrowth of savanna tree species through post-harvest coppice in the 1-3m height class. Woody biomass increased at all sites, contrary to previous fuelwood models of the area. Change detection in the vertical canopy structure revealed that biomass increases were almost solely attributable to the 1-3m and 3-5m height classes. These changes were exacerbated by wood extraction intensity in the communal lands – the communal land with the highest wood extraction pressure experienced the greatest biomass increases, likely a strong regrowth response to high harvesting levels. Within communal lands, areas closest to roads and settlements experienced substantial biomass increases as a result of shrub level gains. This relationship was mediated by the usage gradient – the greater the wood extraction pressure on the communal land, the larger and more spatially coalesced the ‘hotspots’ of shrub-level increases were in relation to ease of access to the communal land. However, biomass increases are not necessarily indicative of woodland recovery, as shrub-level increases were coupled with losses of trees >3m in height. To explore these tall tree dynamics further, we tracked >450 000 individual tree canopies over two years over contrasting landscapes – a private reserve containing elephants, two communal lands under different wood extraction pressures, and a nature reserve fenced off from both elephants and humans. Humans are considerable drivers of treefall (defined here as a ≥75% reduction in the maximum height of each tree canopy) in communal lands. Humanmediated biennial treefall rates were 2-3.5 fold higher than the background treefall rate of 1.5% treefall ha-1 (in the control site – the reserve containing neither elephants nor humans). Elephant-mediated treefall was five fold higher than the background rate. Rate and spatial patterns of treefall were mediated by geology and surface water provision in the elephantutilised site where relative treefall was higher on nutrient-rich geology, and intense treefall hotspots occurred around permanent water points. Human-mediated rates and spatial patterns of treefall were influenced by settlement and crop-land expansion, as well as ease of access to communal lands. Frequent fires facilitated the persistence of trees >3m in height, but was associated with height loss in trees <3m. The combined loss of large trees and gain in shrubs could result in a structurally simple landscape with reduced functional capacity. Shrub-level increases in the communal lands are likely an interactive combination of newly established woody encroachers and strong coppice regrowth in harvested species. The more intensely used the communal land, the greater the bush thickening and the stronger the relationship between biomass gains and structural changes in the lowest height classes. The exacerbation of bush thickening in natural resource-dependent communities has critical implications for ecosystem service provision. There is potential for coppice regrowth to provide fuelwood to communities using ‘tree thinning’ programmes, but there is a lack of data on the quantity and quality of the regrowth, as well as the sustainability of coppice, the impacts of different harvesting methods, and the potential feedbacks with changing climate and CO2 fertilisation. Woody resource spatial distribution in communal lands is centred around settlement-level wood extraction pressure, as well as natural resource accessibility in the woodlands. In highly utilised areas, woodland regenerative capacity has been underestimated. Additionally, natural resource extraction is still highly localised, even at the communal land scale, with major structural changes occurring around the periphery or close to existing infrastructure. However, it is these underrated coupled adaptive responses in social-ecological systems that explain the failure of fuelwood supply-demand models’ predictive abilities. Nevertheless, loss of large trees in the landscape and the persistence of ‘functionally juvenile’ coppice stands will have implications for seedling production and establishment in the landscape with repercussions for the future population structure and ecosystem service provision. I discuss the implications of increased natural resource reliance in an African development context and the positive feedback between rural poverty and environmental impoverishment. Potential constraints to the data are unpacked, together with opportunities for further research in this area. / LG2017
43

Recording Review of Woody Guthrie: Woody at 100, The Woody Guthrie Collection

Olson, Ted 01 October 2012 (has links)
Review of Woody Guthrie: Woody at 100, The Woody Guthrie Collection
44

Recording Review of Woody Guthrie, American Radical Patriot

Olson, Ted 01 January 2014 (has links)
Review of Woody Guthrie, American Radical Patriot
45

Structure of downed woody and vegetative debris in old-growth Sequoia sempervirens forests /

Graham, Bradley D. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Humboldt State University, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 71-82). Also available via Humboldt Digital Scholar.
46

Aquatic-terrestrial linkages in Appalachian streams influence of riparian inputs on stream habitat, brook trout populations, and trophic dynamics /

Sweka, John A. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--West Virginia University, 2003. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains viii, 198 p. : ill., maps. Vita. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references.
47

Spatial organization, position, and source characteristics of large woody debris in natural systems /

Fox, Martin J. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 70-77).
48

Factors effecting the rooting of native desert woody plants

Charles, Robert Frederick, 1937- January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
49

The use, abundance and conservation of woody species in the Batemi Valley, northwestern Tanzania /

Smith, Wynet January 1993 (has links)
The Batemi are an agropastoral group who inhabit a semi-arid area in Northwestern Tanzania. The group lives a traditional subsistence lifestyle and are therefore dependent on the resources that surround them. This study: (1) investigates their use of woody vegetation; (2) studies the abundance and distribution of woody vegetation in the area; and (3) experiments with assigning use values to species and with employing these use values to identify conservation priorities. The Batemi utilize over 100 woody species, in 37 families' and 58 genera, from the environment surrounding their villages for construction, fuel, implements, services, food and medicine. Random sampling and systematic inventories in the valley showed that the most abundant species are Croton dictygamous and Acacia tortilis. Land cover in the area can be classed into three main vegetation types using a polythetic divisive program, TWINSPAN and these types are linked to three habitat types: hillside, plain and riverine. A landcover map for the area was produced from Landsat TM digital data. Based on density of woody vegetation, four categories were chosen for the final map product: thicket, woodland, wooded grassland, and grassland. To establish conservation priorities, use values are assigned based on importance of a use, number of species that can fulfill that use, and the rate of consumption. These values, when compared to abundance, provide a framework for considering conservation priorities. Based on various methods, Acacia mellifera and Haplocoelum folioosum are identified as two species that may require special attention.
50

Species richness in riparian vegetation, a pilot study in Halmstad

Castellano Jorge, Aurora January 2014 (has links)
The riparian forests are hotspots of biodiversity and serve important roles in maintainingthe water quality. The study and understanding of this ecosystem is basic to know how theriparian zones respond to the threat and the changes produced by the urbanization. Theobjective of this pilot study was to know the species richness and check the status of theriparian vegetation along two different rivers in Halmstad, Nissan and Fylleån. The studywas focus on the status of trees at both rivers to see if the proximity of the city has anyimpact on the biodiversity. In total 9 different species were found, nevertheless only 3 ofthese species were founded on both localizations: Quercus robur, Betula pendula and Pinussylvestris. The Shannon Index showed a higher biodiversity on Nissan riparian zones, whichis the river that present the urban component. The urban area is the one that presentshigher level of biodiversity, tree species and number of individuals but there are notenough to be in a good standard. The result just show that the urban area is in a bettercondition that the natural one. The institutional efforts should be focusing on preserveboth environments with special attention to the natural environment.

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