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Woody debris and the effect on the predicted probability of lizard capture in Arcoona Creek, Gammon Ranges National Park, South Australia /Coventry, Ben January 1998 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Env. Mgt.(Hons.))--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Environmental Science and Management, 1998. / Bibliography: leaves 52-58.
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The ecological effects of sealed roads in arid ecosystemsLee, Enhua, School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Science, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
The effects of roads on landscapes and wildlife and their ecological processes are substantial and represent a major anthropogenic disruption to the natural environment. Current understanding of the impacts of roads for their strategic management is hampered by a lack of information on 1) the influence of the ecosystems on road effects, 2) the effects of roads on higher-order ecosystem responses (populations and communities), and 3) the overall impacts of roads on ecosystems and their wildlife (on both abiotic and biotic ecosystem components). This study used the Silver City Highway in arid New South Wales, Australia, as a model for a typical road in an arid ecosystem to investigate the ecological effects of arid-zone roads and their management. The study examined the spatial variation of soil, vegetation, kangaroo and small mammal variables in relation to the road, explored the factors contributing to these respective spatial variations, investigated the effects of arid-zone road management on vegetation, assessed the fragmentation effect of the arid-zone road on small mammals, and determined the patterns, causes and effects of kangaroo-vehicle collisions. The study revealed that the arid-zone road influenced most of the variables measured, skewed the population demographics of two kangaroo species, and altered the community composition of small mammals, with two small mammal species listed as threatened in NSW and of national significance (Sminthopsis macroura and Leggadina forresti) negatively impacted by the road. Increases in the amount of water along the road edge drove many of the subsequent effects of the arid-zone road as arid-zone flora and fauna are adapted to exploiting limited and patchily distributed resources. However, current arid-zone road management also influenced vegetation quality, microclimates around the road influenced kangaroo densities and small mammal communities, and kangaroo flight behaviour and temporal variations in traffic volume affected roadkill frequency. Together, these results suggest that roads have a high overall ecological impact in arid ecosystems. Conservation managers need to first rank the impacts of arid-zone roads in order of their conservation importance and need for mitigation, and from there, devise relevant informed management frameworks to target these impacts.
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The effects of weather variability on growth potential of Afrikaner cattle in a semi-arid region in ZimbabweChipfupa, Lukas 25 July 2013 (has links)
Only part of the abstract could be included due to the rest having renderable text / The abiotic environment plays an important role in cattle production. Key abiotic elements evaluated in this study are rainfall and temperature. This study was carried out to assess the effect and contribution of rainfall and temperature, amid other factors, on pre- and post-weaning growth traits of Afrikaner cattle at Matopos Research Institute from 1958 to 1997.
Historical data generated from a genotype x environment interaction study at Matopos Research Institute was used to identify factors associated with the average daily weight gain of calves of Afrikaner cattle breed. A total of 10 700 records were retrieved comprising of birth weight (BW), 90 day weight, 205 day weight and early post-weaning weight as well as additional corresponding rainfall and temperature data from 1958 to 1997. The rainfall and temperature data was computed asrainfall and temperature variability. The data was corrected for heteroscedasticity using the generalized least squares approach (GLS) before running an ordinary least square regression (OLS) analysis to determine the association between growth rate and potential explanatory factors for average daily weight gain, pre-weaning weight gain and early post-weaning weight gain. / Agriculture and Animal Health / M. Sc. (Agriculture)
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A comparison of the effects of grazing and mining on vegetation of selected parts of northern South AustraliaBadman, Francis John. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Accompanying CD-ROM inside back cover, includes Appendices. Bibliography: leaves 242-266. This thesis examines the effects on vegetation at selected sites in northern South Australia of excluding various herbivores over a four and a half year period and of two intense but controlled grazing pulses over a six month period followed by an 18 month recovery period in a dune-swale land system. These changes are compared with changes recorded over an 11-year period at the Olympic Dam mine site. It found that short-term changes in vegetation revealed by ordination of periodical cover, density and species richness, are attributable to the periodicity of rainfall and that, under present grazing regimes, rainfall effects override grazing effects. Differences between the effects of sheep and cattle hoof damage are worthy of further investigation, as is the impact of kangaroo grazing. These two factors may have important implications for the management of Australian rangelands. System requirements for accompanying CD-ROM: IBM compatible computer with Pentium processor or higher and Windows 95, 98 or NT ; 4 MB or RAM. Other software: Acrobat Adobe Reader.
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A comparison of the effects of grazing and mining on vegetation of selected parts of northern South Australia / Francis John Badman.Badman, Francis John January 2002 (has links)
Accompanying CD-ROM inside back cover, includes Appendices. / Bibliography: leaves 242-266. / System requirements for accompanying CD-ROM: IBM compatible computer with Pentium processor or higher and Windows 95, 98 or NT ; 4 MB or RAM. Other software: Acrobat Adobe Reader. / xv, 266 p. : maps, charts ; 30 cm. + 1 CD-ROM (4 3/4 in.) / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / This thesis examines the effects on vegetation at selected sites in northern South Australia of excluding various herbivores over a four and a half year period and of two intense but controlled grazing pulses over a six month period followed by an 18 month recovery period in a dune-swale land system. These changes are compared with changes recorded over an 11-year period at the Olympic Dam mine site. It found that short-term changes in vegetation revealed by ordination of periodical cover, density and species richness, are attributable to the periodicity of rainfall and that, under present grazing regimes, rainfall effects override grazing effects. Differences between the effects of sheep and cattle hoof damage are worthy of further investigation, as is the impact of kangaroo grazing. These two factors may have important implications for the management of Australian rangelands. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Environmental Biology, 2002
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Drought, dispersal, and community dynamics in arid-land streamsBogan, Michael T. 18 July 2013 (has links)
Understanding the mechanisms that regulate local species diversity and community structure is a
perennial goal of ecology. Local community structure can be viewed as the result of numerous
local and regional processes; these processes act as filters that reduce the regional species pool
down to the observed local community. In stream ecosystems, the natural flow regime (including
the timing, magnitude, and duration of high and low flow events) is widely recognized as a
primary regulator of local diversity and community composition. This is especially true in aridland
streams, where low- and zero-flow events can occur frequently and for extended periods of
time (months to years). Additionally, wetted habitat patches in arid-land stream networks are
often fragmented within and among stream networks. Thus dispersal between isolated aquatic
patches may also play a large role in regulating local communities. In my dissertation, I explored
the roles that drought, dispersal, and local habitat factors play in structuring arid-land stream
communities. I examined the impact of flow permanence and seasonal variation in flow and
other abiotic factors on aquatic communities at both fine spatial scales over a long time period (8
years; Chapter 2) and at a broad spatial scale over a shorter time period (1-2 years; Chapter 4).
Additionally, I quantified aquatic invertebrate aerial dispersal over moderate spatial scales (��� 0.5
km) by conducting a colonization experiment using artificial stream pools placed along and
inland from two arid-land streams (Chapter 4). Finally, I examined the roles of spatial isolation,
microhabitat type, and local abiotic and biotic factors in structuring aquatic communities in
freshwater oases scattered across one of the most arid regions of North America, the southern
Sonoran Desert (Chapter 5). In Chapter 2, I found that severe drought caused an unprecedented
drying event in isolated perennial stream pools, and that several additional drying events occurred
over the following four years. This transition to intermittent flow caused the extirpation of
several large, long-lived species with low dispersal abilities (including the top predator) and
drove the local community into an alternative state. In the colonization experiment described in
Chapter 3, I found that several arid-land stream invertebrate taxa disperse widely and frequently.
The widespread dispersers identified by this experiment included several of the earliest colonist
taxa observed following the severe drought described in Chapter 2. Other taxa, though, only
dispersed overland after receiving an environmental cue (rainfall) or preferentially dispersed
along stream corridors. In Chapter 4, where I examined invertebrate community structure across
a large network of well-connected intermittent and perennial reaches, I found low diversity in
intermittent reaches, regardless of their connectivity to diverse upstream perennial reaches. These
species-poor, intermittent communities were composed of a unique suite of species with lifehistory
adaptations that conferred desiccation resistance, including extended egg and larval
diapause stages. The short flow duration of intermittent reaches (<100 days) likely precluded
upstream perennial taxa from establishing populations in downstream intermittent reaches before
drying occurred, while the relative predictability of flow timing (Dec-Apr) likely allowed for a
small number of species to develop appropriate life-history traits (e.g., diapause stage, rapid
development time) to exploit these temporally-fleeting habitats. In Chapter 5, I found over 220
species of aquatic animals (including ��� 5 undescribed species) in the 19 desert oases that were
sampled across the southern Sonoran Desert. Local community composition in these oases was
strongly driven by microhabitat type. Additionally, native aquatic species richness and
abundance in these oases were significantly reduced by the introduction of tilapia, an exotic fish
species. The threats to arid-land streams presented by increased drought severity, anthropogenic
water withdrawals, and local habitat degradation (e.g., introduced species, unmanaged
recreational use) are grave across the southwestern US and northwestern Mexico. I hope that in
addition to furthering our understanding of ecological processes in arid-land streams, this
dissertation makes a small contribution towards the efforts to preserve these habitats. / Graduation date: 2013 / Access restricted to the OSU Community at author's request from July 18, 2012 - July 18, July 2013
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The effects of weather variability on growth potential of Afrikaner cattle in a semi-arid region in ZimbabweChipfupa, Lukas 11 1900 (has links)
Only part of the abstract could be included due to the rest having renderable text / The abiotic environment plays an important role in cattle production. Key abiotic elements evaluated in this study are rainfall and temperature. This study was carried out to assess the effect and contribution of rainfall and temperature, amid other factors, on pre- and post-weaning growth traits of Afrikaner cattle at Matopos Research Institute from 1958 to 1997.
Historical data generated from a genotype x environment interaction study at Matopos Research Institute was used to identify factors associated with the average daily weight gain of calves of Afrikaner cattle breed. A total of 10 700 records were retrieved comprising of birth weight (BW), 90 day weight, 205 day weight and early post-weaning weight as well as additional corresponding rainfall and temperature data from 1958 to 1997. The rainfall and temperature data was computed asrainfall and temperature variability. The data was corrected for heteroscedasticity using the generalized least squares approach (GLS) before running an ordinary least square regression (OLS) analysis to determine the association between growth rate and potential explanatory factors for average daily weight gain, pre-weaning weight gain and early post-weaning weight gain. / Agriculture and Animal Health / M. Sc. (Agriculture)
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The effects of soil type and management strategy on vegetation structure and function in a semi-arid savanna, South AfricaBritz, Mari-Louise January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--Stellenbosch University, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Bush encroachment in savannas leads to reduced diversity, productivity and profitability of
rangelands. This holds important implications for the livestock and eco-tourism industries, as
well as for subsistence ranchers in the South African semi-arid savannas, who depend on this
vegetation type for economic and livelihood purposes. Soil moisture, nutrients, rue and
herbivory are generally regarded as the principal factors determining vegetation structure and
function within savannas. The factors and processes involved in the determination of the
tree:grass ratio within savannas are, however, not clearly understood. We investigated the
role of soil type and management strategy (cattle, game and communal grazing) in the
determination of the presence and distribution of plant species in general, and on the presence
and distribution of the encroaching tree species, Acacia mellifera, specifically. Both shortand
long-term trends were investigated. The study area, the Kimberley Triangle, (Northern
Cape Province, South Africa), was ideal for this kind of study because it has different
management strategies practised on several soil types, and bush encroachment is a widespread
phenomenon.
Contrary to the belief that heavy livestock grazing is the main cause of increases in the
tree:grass ratio, we found that soil type, through its effects on plant growth and on the
presence and availability of soil moisture and nutrients, is more important in determining
vegetation composition than management strategy. It was found that the various types of
grazing management mainly influenced vegetation structure and function by affecting the
competitive interactions between Ns-fixing woody species and non-Ns-fixing grasses. Of the
soil factors affecting vegetation composition, soil texture was a good indicator of the physical
conditions for plant growth in an area, and also of the presence and availability of soil
moisture and nutrients. We found that sand and clay soils are relatively resistant to bush
encroachment as compared to loamy-sand and -clay mixes. This is because woody growth is
impaired in the first-mentioned habitats by soil texture, soil moisture regimes and heavy
utilisation. In soils with combinations of loam, sand and clay, soil texture and moisture are
not limiting to woody growth and if the repressive competitive effect of grasses on woody
vegetation is removed, opportunities are created for recruitment of woody species and
encroachment. Additionally, rockiness increases soil moisture infiltration. In the study area,
woody species, and specifically A. mellifera, are associated with these areas. We suggest that in the study area, rocky areas are naturally encroached. This is in agreement with the patchdynamic
approach to savanna vegetation dynamics. Because soil moisture is such an
important factor in the determination of the tree:grass ratio in the study area, we further
suggest that in above-average rainfall years, when soil moisture conditions are optimal for
woody seed germination, establishment and growth, heavy grazing should be avoided, as it
would provide the opportunity for encroachment.
Keywords: Bush encroachment; N2-fixing species; game, cattle, communal grazing; soil
texture; soil moisture; soil nutrients; Acacia mellifera; tree-grass competition. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Bosindringing in savanna gebiede het verlaagde diversiteit, produktiwiteit en winsgewendheid
van natuurlike weivelde tot gevolg. Behalwe dat dit die Suid-Afrikaanse vee- en ekotoerisme
bedrywe raak, is verskeie bestaansboerderye afhanklik van die plantegroei-tipe vir
oorlewing. Grondvog, grondvoedingstowwe, vuur en beweiding word algemeen aanvaar as
die belangrikste faktore wat die struktuur en funksie van savannas bepaal. Daar is egter nog
nie duidelikheid oor die prosesse wat betrokke is in die bepaling van die boom-gras
verhouding in savannas nie. In dié studie het ons ondersoek ingestel na die invloed van grond
tipe en beweidingstrategieë (beweiding deur beeste, wild, of kommunale beweiding) op die
algemene verspreiding van verskillende plant spesies, en ook op die van die indringer spesie,
Acacia mellifera. Beide kort- en lang-termyn patrone is ondersoek. Die studiegebied, die
Kimberley Driehoek in die Noord-Kaap, Suid-Afrika, was ideaal vir so 'n ondersoek omdat
verskillende beweiding strategieë op verskeie grond-tipes beoefen word maar bosindringing
steeds 'n algemene verskynsel in die gebied is.
Ons bevinding was dat, ten spyte van die feit dat daar oor die algemeen geglo word dat swaar
beweiding die hoof oorsaak van bosindringing is, grond-tipe belangriker is in die bepaling van
die spesie-samestelling van 'n gebied. Dit is as gevolg van die feit dat grond-tipe die groei
van plante beïnvloed deur die teenwoordigheid en beskikbaarheid van grondvog en -nutriënte
te bepaal. Die verskillende beweidingstrategieë beïnvloed meerendeels die kompetatiewe
interaksies tussen N2-bindende hout-agtige spesies teenoor nie-Nj-bindende gras-agtige
spesies. Grond-tekstuur was 'n goeie aanduiding van die algemene toestande vir plantegroei
en ook van die teenwoordigheid en beskikbaarheid van grondvog en -nutriënte. Ons het
bevind dat sand en klei grond, relatief tot leem, sand en klei kombinasies, weerstandbiedend
is teen bosindringing as gevolg van die tekstuur, water-regimes en swaar beweidings vlakke
wat op die grond-tipes voorkom. Omdat grond-tekstuur en grondvog nie beperkend is op die
leem-, sand- en klei-grond kombinasies nie, kan bosindringing maklik hier voorkom as die
onderdrukkende effek wat grasse op houtagtige plantegroei het, deur swaar beweiding
verwyder word. A. mellifera is ook oor die algemeen met klipperige gebiede geassosieer
omdat klipperigheid lei tot verhoogde infiltrasie van grondvog. In die studie-gebied is
klipperige areas dan ook van nature ingedring deur A. mellifera. Dit stem ooreen met die
siening dat savannas bestaan uit "laslappe" van verskillende plantegroei (patch-dynamic approach). Dit was duidelik dat grondvog 'n belangrike bepalende faktor is in die bepaling
van die boom-gras verhouding in die studiegebied. Ons stel dus voor dat in bo-gemiddelde
reënval jare, swaar beweiding vermy moet word, omdat houtagtige saailinge gedurende die
tydperke maklik kan ontkiem en vestig juis omdat grondvog dan nie beperkend is nie.
Sleutelwoorde: Bosindringing; N2-bindende spesies; bees, wild, kommunale beweiding;
grond tekstuur; grond-vog; grond-nutriënte; Acacia mellifera; boom-gras kompetisie.
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