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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.
151

Patas, garras e rastros: marcas de animais na poesia de Adília Lopes / Paws, claws and traces: the presence of animals in the poetry of Adília Lopes

Karina Uehara 01 March 2016 (has links)
Esta pesquisa tem como objetivo olhar para a poesia de Adília Lopes, poetisa portuguesa contemporânea, sob o prisma da zooliteratura, analisando as quatro principais imagens de animais de sua poética gatos, cães, peixes e serpentes. A investigação das várias significações que eles podem adquirir nos poemas adilianos também possibilitará compreender a proposta de desierarquizar a relação com e entre os animais (seja através da relação afetiva, da empatia ou da compaixão). A poetisa problematiza o lugar que os animais ocupam no mundo cotidiano e propõe uma revalorização desses seres. Ela não exclui o diferente, mas o reconhece. Pensar sobre o lugar de importância que os animais escritos têm na obra adiliana tece novos olhares não só sobre essa poética, mas também sobre a relação que se faz, ao longo desses anos, entre os animais e os seres humanos. / This research has with its aim to look at the poetry of Adilia Lopes, contemporary Portuguese poet, under the zoo literature perspective, analysing the four main images of animals in her poetry cats, dogs, fish and serpentes. The investigation of several meanings that they can acquire in the adilianos poems will also enable to understand the proposal of non-hierarchic relation with and among the animals (it can happen through the affective relationship, empathy or compassion). The poet discusses the place that the animals take in the everyday world and leads to a revaluation of them. She does not exclude the different, but recognizes it. When we think about the place of importance that the written animals have in the adiliana book, it creates new looks not only in this poetic, but also in the relation which has been made, throughout the years, between animals and human beings.
152

Mapping the Spatial Movements, Behaviors, and Interactions of Captive Orangutans using Terrestrial Laser Scanning and GIS

Smith, Zachary Joseph 22 April 2014 (has links)
Five captive Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) were observed in order to better understand their spatial selection, behavior, and interaction with their environment and each other. A newly introduced adult male's interactions with a female group containing two adults, one adolescent, and one juvenile, was documented. Visual observations were performed to document individual behaviors, along with any interactions with silvery langur monkeys, public crowd levels, temperature, and enrichment props. Methods included 15 observation periods, 0.5-3 hours in length each, during which behaviors were verbally and visually confirmed using a HD video camera. Spatial locations of each individual were recorded every three minutes during each observation period. The orangutan enclosure was measured and mapped using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), and observed behaviors and spatial locations were georeferenced to the resulting 3D model depicting the exhibit. Results were summarized as time-activity budgets and were geo-visualized using 3D plots and density maps. This research demonstrated how the application of spatiotemporal and behavioral analysis coupled with TLS and three-dimensional modelling can be used to better study captive primates. These types of studies are important as zoos increasingly become home to great ape species.
153

Knowledge and pleasure at Regent's Park : the gardens of the Zoological Society of London during the nineteenth century

Ņkerberg, Sofia January 2001 (has links)
The subject of this dissertation is the Zoological Gardens of the Zoological Society of London (f. 1826) in the nineteenth century. Located in Regent s Park, it was the express purpose of the Gardens (f. 1828) to function as a testing-ground for acclimatisation and to demonstrate the scientific impor­tance of various animal species. The aim is to analyse what the Gardens signified as a recreational, educational and scientific institution in nineteenth-century London by considering them from four different perspectives: as a pan of a newly-founded society, as a part of the leisure culture of mid-Victorian London, as a medi­ator of popular zoology and as a constituent of the Zoological Society's scientific ambitions. After an introduction which describes the devlopment of European zoos, Chapter two recapitu­lates the early years of the Society and the Gardens. The original aims of the Society—science and acclimatisation located in a museum and zoological garden—as stated in various prospectuses, are examined. The implications of acclimatisation, it being a problematic practice, are outlined and the connections between acclimatisation, the Society, the Gardens and the British Empire are also briefly considered. The founding of the Gardens is extensively described as well as how the animals were obtained and how exhibits were arranged. Chapter three is based primarily on the popular response to the Gardens in the 1850s when, after a period of decline, the institution once again became a common London visiting-place. The most important questions of this chapter concern the public and how it reacted to the Gardens of this period. The financial problems preceding the five years between 1850 and 1855 ^ described as well as how the Society managed to regain its popularity. This process was closely linked to the decision in 1847to let non-members of the Society enter the Gardens, and the implications of this resolution are discussed. As a background to the Gardens' popularity, two other London recreations are also described: the Colosseum Panorama and the Surrey Zoological Garden. The Surrey Zoological Gar­den especially is interesting, as it was a rival of the Society's Gardens, and the different attractions of these establishments are considered. Chapter four focuses on the official and non-official guidebooks to the Gardens and the implica­tions of these as mediators of popular zoology. The historical and cultural connection between the guidebooks and travel handbooks is oudined and also how the genre as a whole is constructed. The progress and development of the Society's guidebooks during the nineteenth century is described and the differences between these guidebooks and the non-official ones are examined. Finally, with the aid of Victorian children's books, I argue that the guidebooks can literally be considered as travel handbooks since a visit to the Gardens may be regarded as a journey of knowledge. Chapter five is an in-depth study of the zoological science of the Gardens. The scientific work of the Society is briefly described, starting with the Committee of Science and Correspondence, and the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. The Proceedings reports that base their findings on animals in the Gardens are then described together with minor detours into the history of taxonomy and morphology. / digitalisering@umu
154

Variation of Feeding Regimes: Effects on Giant Panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) Behavior

Sandhaus, Estelle Ann 03 December 2004 (has links)
Giant pandas in captivity are typically fed discrete amounts of highly concentrated food on a fixed time schedule, in addition to limited amounts of fresh bamboo throughout the day. In response to informal observations that these animals engage in a number of undesirable behaviors just prior to the predictable feeding of concentrated meals, we examined the existing feeding regime at the Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding in Chengdu, Peoples Republic of China. We sought to determine whether undesirable behaviors were occurring more frequently before the delivery of meals than at other times of day and whether modified feeding regimes would result in a more species-appropriate activity budget overall. As predicted, female giant pandas spent significantly more time engaged in door-directed/human-oriented behavior, stereotypic behavior, and non-stereotypic locomotion in the 30-minute periods prior to the feeding of concentrated meals. When placed on a modified feeding schedule in which frequency of bamboo provisioning was increased (total amount was held constant), significant differences were not found between study phases for the above-mentioned behaviors of interest, though a visual trend towards a decline in stereotypic behavior during the experimental phase was noted. Male pandas, when placed on a less predictable feeding schedule, did not exhibit significant behavioral differences in behaviors of interest between experimental phases or observation periods. These findings may be attributable in part to the low power inherent in the small sample size. However, visual trends that may be indicative of feeding anticipatory activity (FAA) were apparent. It appears that giant pandas, like many other animal species cited in the literature, are sensitive to periodic feeding regimes, though it is less clear as to which regime modifications will prove most beneficial.
155

A Comparison of Agonistic Behavior and Reconciliation in Free-ranging and Captive Formosan Macaques (Macaca cyclopis)

Wei, Shih-hui 12 September 2006 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to analyze and compare the agonistic behaviors and reconciliation in captive and free-ranging Formosan macaques (Macaca cyclopis). The dominance style of Formosan macaques was compared with long-tailed, rhesus and Japanese macaques. I have used scan, focal sampling and ad libitum on aggressions of adult macaques. I have recorded post-conflict (PC) focal samplings on victims and compared those with matched control (MC) focal samplings. Agonistic behaviors had significantly higher frequency in captive than in free-ranging Formosan macaques. The frequencies of hostile and submission were significantly higher in captive than in free-ranging Formosan macaques. The captive adult females of higher rank had higher frequency of threat and hostile, and lower frequency of submission. Threat was the most frequent aggression (52-72%) expressed by both the captive and free-ranging adult monkeys. The victims in captive and free-ranging Formosan macaques usually submitted immediately after aggression (82-89%). The proportion of counter aggression in captive and free-ranging Formosan macaques were relative low (9-16%). The aqerage conciliatory tendency for adult Formosan macaques was 14.3% to 19.6%. The affiliative contacts in PC and MC in captive and free-ranging Formosan macaques were striking that both preferred grooming. The Formosan macaques significantly reconciled more during PC than MC period both in captive and free-ranging conditions. In addition, both had significantly more attracted than dispersed PC-MC pairs. The conciliatory tendencies in captive and free-ranging Formosan macaques were similar regardless of kin and non-kin partners. This study indicated that Formosan macaques were close to the macaques of Fascicularis group. Therefore, Formosan macaques had a despotic dominance style as suggested by Phylogenetic hypotheses.
156

Využití exkurzí do ZOO Ohrada v prvouce a přírodovědě. / The usage of Ohrada ZOO excursions in the Homeland study and Biology lessons

KNÍŽOVÁ, Martina January 2010 (has links)
This dissertation describes various possibilities of utilization of Ohrada ZOO excursions in the primary school lessons of the Homeland study and Biology and reports a metodical instruction for their organization including potential aplication of acquired knowledges in intredisciplinary links. Excursion projects are designed according to obligatory standards of sheduled RVP documents and ivolve four ZOO excursions for primary school students (2., 3.and 4.year).
157

Příprava přírodovědné naučné stezky Hluboká nad Vltavou - Zoo Ohrada / The preparation of an educational pathway Hluboka upon Vltava - Zoo Ohrada

SOCHOROVÁ, Jana January 2009 (has links)
The diploma thesis The preparation of an educational pathway Hluboka upon Vltava - Zoo Ohrada deals with compiling of the terrain in the neighbourhood of the Zoo Ohrada, subsequent creating of designs and texts for individual information boards. The Educational pathway is called, "On the dam of the Municky pond". The first part of the diploma thesis describes physical-geographical characteristics of the defined area and the history of building educational pathways in the Czech Republic, their types and classification. One chapter is devoted to building educational pathways and possibilities of their financing. The content of the second part of the diploma thesis is a design of the educational pathway itself, texts about individual stages, suggestions for an arrangement of information on information boards including visual documentation, their marking and realization. Scope of the boards is varied, they provide a lot of information about flora and fauna that can be found in this area and also information about natural and environmental regularities and relationships between organisms. A part of the diploma thesis is also a methodical guide with plenty of games, suggestions and activities to make the course of the educational pathway more interesting. The appendix of the diploma thesis contains fotodocumentation, maps and a set of worksheets wit a key.
158

Ekonomické a kulturní aspekty provozu zoologických zahrad v ČR / Economic and cultural aspects of the operation of zoos in the Czech Republic

Čulíková, Alžběta January 2015 (has links)
This thesis deals with the economic and cultural aspects of zoos. The theoretical part describes the historical development of facilities engaged in animal husbandry. It also discusses the zoos of the Czech Republic and their specifics. It studies their current mission and approaches the service of zoos in terms of legislation. It compares their attractiveness to other tourist attractions. It analyses how the Czech zoos function among other international institutions and these institutions are also introduced in detail. It approximates the principles of the location selection for zoos and possible sources of their financing. The practical part of this thesis compares three important Czech zoos in detail. It analyses their functioning on the basis of selected sub-criteria.
159

Measuring the effect of facility relocation on the welfare of California sea lions (<i>Zalophus californianus</i>)

Winans, Madeline Marie January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
160

How Can Allegheny Mound Ants (Formica Exsectoides) Provide An Optimal Environment For Karner Blue Butterflies (Lycaeides Melissa Samuelis)?

Thompson, Preston Marshall 07 August 2019 (has links)
No description available.

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