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Intercultural adjustment problems of Costa Rican students in the United StatesGonzalez, Patricia 01 January 1989 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to determine the adjustment problems Costa Ricans face while living and studying in the United States. The main concern of this thesis is to identify the intercultural communication problems that arise fundamentally from differences in value systems.
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Demography, Ecology, And Behavior Of Chestnut-backed Antbird (myrmeciza Exsul) Populations In Fragmented Neotropical RainforestJanuary 2015 (has links)
The understory insectivore guild is disproportionately affected by deforestation, and knowing the underlying mechanisms is critical to effective conservation. I investigated demographic, ecological, and behavioral responses of Chestnut-backed Antbird (Myrmeciza exsul) populations (a persistent understory insectivore) to a fragmented Costa Rican rainforest landscape where many ecologically similar species have declined. I estimated demographic rates to parameterize population models in three habitats differentially affected by forest fragmentation: contiguous, peninsular, and fragment. Models indicated that M. exsul are declining in the peninsula (λ=0.83), but increasing in fragments (λ=1.41). Sensitivity analyses suggested that population growth was most sensitive to adult survival and nesting success, suggesting these two variables as potentially important explanatory demographic parameters in this landscape. I studied nest predation using digital video and quantified breeding success and population density in each site. Nest predation rate was so high in the peninsula that few nests fledged any young, much lower in the fragments, and intermediate in the contiguous forest, inversely tracking M. exsul population density and corroborating population growth rate findings. Using 22,000 hours of active nest video recordings, one primary predator emerged, the bird-eating snake (Pseustes poecilonotus), responsible for 80% of nest attacks. Pseustes’ prevalence in the peninsula where predation rates were highest implies possible predation-limitation. Populations both declining and growing locally provided unique insights into the mechanisms of change in a deforestation-impacted landscape, but represent only some fragmentation consequences. Therefore, I reviewed regional studies to assess other potential contributions to understory insectivorous bird decline in the Sarapiquí. Empirical studies supported effects of habitat area loss, dispersal limitation, reduced microhabitat availability, and low physiological tolerances to changing climates. / acase@tulane.edu
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Effects of habitat fragmentation on trap-nesting bees, wasps and their natural enemies in small secondary rainforest fragments in Costa Rica / Die Auswirkungen von Habitatfragmentierung auf nisthilfenbewohnende Bienen, Wespen und deren Gegenspieler in kleinen Sekundärwaldfragmenten in Costa RicaStangler, Eva January 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Summary (English)
I. Human induced global change threatens biodiversity and trophic interactions. Fragmentation is considered as one of the major threats to biodiversity and can cause reduced species richness, population declines, loss of genetic diversity and disruption of trophic interactions such as predation and parasitism. However forest fragmentation effects can be eclectic due to species specific traits. Specialist species with narrower niches or at higher trophic levels may be in danger of extinction whereas generalist species with less specific habitat requirements may even profit from fragmentation. In the tropics, known as “the” terrestrial biodiversity hotspots, even biodiversity inventories are often lacking, especially in forest canopies. Ongoing deforestation and resulting fragmentation in tropical regions are expected to heavily affect ecosystem functions by changes in biodiversity, community compositions and disruption of trophic interactions. It is even less unknown in what extent different global change drivers for example climate change and fragmentation interact. It is unlikely that deforestation will end, so that small secondary forest fragments will be important habitat elements that must be investigated to optimize their potential contribution to biodiversity conservation.
This dissertation aimed to disentangle the effects of forest fragmentation on trap-nesting bee and wasp communities in small secondary forest fragments addressing the following main questions:
1) Are there interactive effects between microclimate and fragmentation on the abundance of bees and wasps, their mortality - and parasitism rates (Chapter II)?
2) How does fragmentation affect bee biodiversity from canopy to the understory with considerations of single species patterns (Chapter III)?
3) How is fragmentation affecting diversity and community composition of different trophic levels between understory and canopy with emphasis on the host-antagonist relation? (Chapter IV).
II. A variety of global change drivers affect biodiversity and trophic interactions. The combined effects of habitat fragmentation and climate change are poorly understood and with ongoing deforestation and agricultural intensification secondary rainforest fragments might contribute to biodiversity conservation and mitigation of climate warming. This chapter investigated the interactive effects of habitat fragmentation and microclimate on the abundance and biotic interactions of trap-nesting bees and wasps in secondary forest fragments in the Northeastern lowlands of Costa Rica.
Habitat area did not affect hymenopteran abundance, parasitism and mortality rates, but tree location- from the forest border to the forest center- influenced all variables. Interactive effects were found such as in the higher mortality rates at interior locations in larger fragments. Mean temperature at edge and interior locations led to significant effects on all tested variables and interactive effects between temperature and tree locations were found. Abundances at interior locations were significantly higher with increasing temperatures. Mortality rates at interior location increased at lower mean temperatures, whereas higher temperatures at edges marginally increased mortality rates. Our results indicate, that edge effects, mediated by altered microclimatic conditions, significantly change biotic interactions of trap-nesting hymenopterans in small secondary fragments.
III. This chapter focusses on the vertical distribution of bees, their parasitism and mortality rates as well as single species patterns in relation to fragment size and edge effects in secondary rainforest remnants.
No size effects on bee abundance, bee diversity and on parasitism- and mortality rates were found. Bees were least abundant at the intermediate height and were most abundant in the understory; whereas the highest diversity was found in the canopy. Tree location had no effect on bee abundance, but on bee diversity since most species were found in the forest interior. The cuckoo bees Aglaomelissa duckei and Coelioxys sp. 1 only partly followed the patterns of their hosts, two Centris species.
Edge effects greatly influenced the bee community, so that the amount of edge habitat in secondary forest fragments will influence the conservation value for bees.
IV. In this section the effects of habitat fragmentation on biodiversity, on community structure of hosts and natural enemies as well as the relation of hosts and antagonists were investigated from the understory to the canopy. The results stress the importance to monitor biodiversity, community composition and trophic interactions from the understory to the canopy. The higher trophic level of the antagonists was found to be more sensitive to fragment size compared to their hosts. Again edge effects were found to be the dominant driver since both host and antagonist richness, as well as community compositions were strongly affected. Ongoing fragmentation and increased amount of edge habitat could favor few abundant disturbance-adapted species over the rare and more diverse forest-adapted species. A positive-density dependent parasitism rate was demonstrated, as well as an increase of the parasitism rate not only with antagonist abundance but also diversity.
Small secondary forest fragments surely can contribute to the conservation of biodiversity and trophic interactions, but increase of edge habitat will have negative consequences on above-ground nesting Hymenoptera, so that important interactions such as pollination, predation and parasitism could be disrupted. Therefore small forest fragments could contribute to biodiversity conservation but will not be able to compensate for the loss of large areas of primary forests.
V. This dissertation contributes to the understanding of habitat area - and edge effects as well as the interaction of those with microclimatic conditions in small secondary rainforest fragments. As study system trap nests inhabited by solitary above-ground nesting bees, wasps and their natural enemies were chosen because they allow to study trophic interactions along their whole vertical distribution from the understory to the canopy. The effect of fragment size was rather weak, however, larger sizes affected the diversity of natural enemies positively, proofing the hypothesis that higher trophic levels react more sensitive to habitat loss. Edge effects heavily affected the abundance, diversity and community composition of hosts and their natural enemies as well as parasitism and mortality rates. Increased edge conditions resulting from ongoing fragmentation and deforestation will therefore negatively affect bees, wasps and their trophic interactions with natural enemies. Those changes affect important processes such as pollination, predation and parasitism, which could result in changes of ecosystem functioning. This study showed the importance to include all strata in biodiversity monitoring since height did matter for the trap-nesting communities. Diversity was shown to be higher in the canopy and community composition did change significantly. To conclude we could show that secondary forest fragments can sustain a trap-nesting bee and wasp community, but the amount of interior habitat is highly important for the conservation of forest-adapted species. Probably the conservation of large primary forest in combination with a high habitat connectivity, for example with small secondary forest fragments, will help to sustain biodiversity and ecosystem functioning better than the mere presence of small forest fragments. / Zusammenfassung (German)
I. Die weltweite Umweltveränderung, die durch den Menschen verursacht wird, gefährdet die Artenvielfalt und die trophischen Wechselbeziehungen zwischen Organismen. Fragmentierung gilt als eine der Hauptbedrohungen für die Biodiversität und kann weitreichende Konsequenzen haben wie zum Beispiel verminderte Artenvielfalt, Rückgang von Populationen, Verlust von genetischer Diversität und auch die Unterbrechung von trophischen Interaktionen, z.B. Prädation und Parasitierung. In Waldökosystemen können Fragmentierungsauswirkungen vielfältig sein. Spezialisierte Arten mit engen natürlichen Nischen, die zum Beispiel in höheren trophischen Ebenen zu finden sind, könnten vom Aussterben bedroht sein, während generalisierte Arten mit weniger spezifischen Habitatansprüchen sogar profitieren könnten. In den Tropen, „den“ terrestrischen Biodiversitäts-Hotspots, fehlen oft sogar grundlegende Bestandsaufnahmen von Flora und Fauna, insbesondere für die Kronen der Regenwälder. Die fortschreitende Abholzung in tropischen Regionen und die dadurch verursachte Fragmentierung wird die Funktion des Ökosystems durch Veränderung der Artenvielfalt, der Zusammensetzung von Artengemeinschaften und der Unterbrechung von trophischen Interaktionen in hohem Maße beeinflussen. Besonders das Zusammenwirken von verschiedenen Facetten des globalen Umweltwandels, z. B. Klimawandel und Fragmentierung, ist nahezu unbekannt.
Da es unwahrscheinlich ist, dass die Abholzung von Regenwäldern eingestellt wird, ist es äußerst wichtig den Wert von kleinen Sekundärwaldfragmenten für den Schutz der Artenvielfalt zu untersuchen.
Diese Dissertation trägt dazu bei verschiedene Aspekte der Fragmentierung auf die Artengemeinschaft von nisthilfenbewohnenden Hymenopteren in kleinen Sekundärwaldfragmenten zu untersuchen und behandelt dabei die folgenden zentralen Fragen:
1) Wirken Fragmentierung und mikroklimatische Bedingungen interaktiv auf die Abundanz von Bienen und Wespen sowie deren Mortalitäts- und Parasitierungsraten (2. Kapitel)?
2) Wie beeinflusst Fragmentierung die Artenvielfalt von Bienen vom Unterholz bis zur Krone und wie reagieren einzelne Arten darauf (3. Kapitel)?
3) Wie beeinflusst Fragmentierung die Biodiversität und die Artengemeinschaften verschiedener trophischer Ebenen vom Unterholz bis zum Kronendach unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Wirts-Antagonist-Beziehung (4. Kapitel)?
II. Eine Reihe von Faktoren des weltweiten Umweltwandels beeinflusst die Artenvielfalt und trophische Interaktionen. Die Auswirkungen von Fragmentierung und Klimawandel, die sich gegenseitig beeinflussen könnten, sind nahezu unverstanden. Außerdem könnten Sekundärwaldfragmente zum Erhalt der Artenvielfalt und der Abschwächung der Auswirkungen des Klimawandels sowie der anhaltenden Abholzung und der Intensivierung der Landwirtschaft dienen. Dieser Abschnitt untersucht mögliche Wechselwirkungen zwischen Fragmentierung und Temperatur auf die Abundanz und trophische Interaktionen von nisthilfenbewohnenden Bienen und Wespen in kleinen Sekundärwaldfragmenten im Nordosten Costa Ricas.
Die Fragmentgröße hatte keinen Einfluss auf die Abundanz, die Parasitierungs- und Mortalitätsraten der Hymenopteren, während der Baumstandort- vom Waldrand zur Waldmitte immensen Einfluss auf alle untersuchten Variablen hatte. In größeren Fragmenten war die Mortalitätsrate innerhalb des Waldes verglichen mit kleineren Fragmenten höher. Die mittlere Temperatur beeinflusste alle untersuchten Variablen und hatte je nach Standort des Baumes unterschiedliche Auswirkungen. Die Abundanzen im Waldinneren stiegen signifikant mit höheren Temperaturen an. Die Mortalitätsraten im Waldinneren nahmen mit niedrigeren Temperaturen zu, während höhere Temperaturen am Waldrand zu höheren Mortalitätsraten führten. Unsere Ergebnisse zeigen, dass Randeffekte, die auch durch Temperaturunterschiede zustande kommen, biotische Interaktionen von nisthilfenbewohnenden Bienen und Wespen in kleinen Sekundärwaldfragmenten ändern.
III. Dieses Kapitel konzentriert sich auf den Einfluss der Fragmentgröße und der Randeffekte auf Bienen und deren Parasitierungs- und Mortalitätsraten vom Unterholz bis zu den Kronendächern in kleinen Sekundärwaldfragmenten. Dabei wurden auch die Muster von einzelnen Arten näher untersucht.
Die Fragmentgröße hatte keinen Einfluss auf die Bienenabundanz, die Artenvielfalt oder die Parasitierungs- und Mortalitätsraten. Die höchste Bienenabundanz wies das Unterholz auf, während die höchste Diversität im Kronendach gefunden wurde. Der Gradient vom Waldrand bis zur Waldmitte hatte keinen Einfluss auf die Bienenabundanz, wohingegen die Diversität zum Waldinnern hin anstieg. Die Kuckucksbienen Aglaomelissa duckei und Coelioxys sp. 1 folgten nur zum Teil den Mustern ihrer Wirte, zwei Centris Arten.
Randeffekte hatten großen Einfluss auf die Bienengemeinschaften, so dass der Anteil von Waldrändern bzw. die Form der Sekundärwaldfragmente über den Nutzen für die Erhaltung der Bienenvielfalt bestimmt.
IV. In diesem Kapitel wurden die Fragmentierungsauswirkungen auf die Biodiversität, die Gemeinschaftszusammensetzung von Wirten und ihrer natürlichen Feinde als auch die Beziehung zwischen den Wirten und ihren natürlichen Feinden vom Unterholz bis zum Kronendach untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass es äußerst wichtig ist die Biodiversität, die Zusammensetzung der Artengemeinschaft als auch die trophischen Interaktionen in den verschiedenen Straten des Regenwaldes zu untersuchen. Die natürlichen Feinde, die auf einer höheren trophischen Ebene stehen, reagierten empfindlicher auf die Größe der Fragmente. Randeffekte waren der einflussreichste Faktor, weil die Diversität der Wirte und der natürlichen Feinde, sowie deren Artengemeinschaften stark beeinflusst wurden. Fortschreitende Fragmentierung und der damit einhergehende erhöhte Flächenanteil des Randhabitats könnte daher wenige häufige Arten bevorzugen, die gestörtes Habitat tolerieren können, wohingegen die seltenere aber artenreichere Gemeinschaft, die das Waldinnere bevorzugt, benachteiligt wird. Es konnte außerdem eine positiv-dichteabhängige Parasitierungsrate sowie ein positiver Zusammenhang zwischen der Abundanz und Diversität von natürlichen Feinden und der Parasitierungsrate gezeigt werden. Kleine Sekundärwaldfragmente können sicherlich helfen die Artenvielfalt und die trophischen Interaktionen zu erhalten, aber die Erhöhung des Anteils von Randhabitat wird nachteilige Folgen für solitäre Hymenopteren haben. Dies kann zur Unterbrechung von wichtigen Interaktionen wie Bestäubung, Prädation und Parasitierung führen. Kleine Sekundärwaldfragmente können daher zwar hilfreich zur Erhaltung der Biodiversität sein, aber niemals große Primärwaldflächen, die von unschätzbarem Wert sind, ersetzen.
V. Die vorliegende Doktorarbeit trägt zum Verständnis der Auswirkungen der Habitatgröße und von Randeffekten als auch deren Wechselwirkungen mit mikroklimatischen Bedingungen in kleinen Sekundärwaldfragmenten bei. Benutzt wurden Nisthilfen, die von solitären Bienen, Wespen und ihren natürlichen Feinden besiedelt werden, da hierdurch auch trophische Interaktionen vom Unterholz bis zum Kronendach aufgenommen werden können. Die Fragmentgröße hatte keine weitreichenden Auswirkungen. Größere Fragmente wiesen allerdings eine höhere Vielfalt von natürlichen Feinden auf, was die Hypothese der höheren Empfindlichkeit von höheren trophischen Ebenen bestätigt. Randeffekte hingegen haben sowohl die Bienen und Wespen als Wirte als auch deren natürliche Feinde in ihrer Häufigkeit, Artenvielfalt und Artenzusammensetzung in hohem Maße beeinflusst. Eine Erhöhung des Anteils von Randhabitaten, die mit fortschreitender Abholzung und Fragmentierung einhergeht, wird daher einen negativen Einfluss auf diese Hymenopteren haben, was sogar die Funktion des Ökosystems beeinflussen könnte, da dadurch auch wichtige Interaktionen, zum Beispiel Bestäubung, Prädation und Parasitierung beeinträchtigt werden. Außerdem konnte diese Doktorarbeit zeigen, dass es unbedingt notwendig ist die Fauna des gesamten Regenwaldes unter Berücksichtigung aller Straten aufzunehmen. Die Artenvielfalt in der Kronenschicht war höher und auch die Zusammensetzung der Artengemeinschaften war signifikant verschieden zwischen dem Unterholz und den Kronendächern.
Diese Doktorarbeit zeigt, dass kleine Sekundärwaldfragmente zwar Lebensraum und Ressourcen für eine Gemeinschaft von solitären Bienen, Wespen und deren natürlichen Gegenspielern bieten kann, dass jedoch die Form und damit der Anteil von Innenhabitat ausschlaggebend für den Erhalt von spezialisierten Waldarten ist. Der Erhalt von großen Flächen von Primärwald ist daher unabdingbar, jedoch könnten Sekundärwaldfragmente zur Erhöhung der Vernetzung beitragen, um so ein stabiles, artenreiches und einzigartiges Waldökosystem zu erhalten, was allein durch kleine Sekundärwaldfragmente nicht möglich sein wird.
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Smile! you are in Spain : Turismmarknadsföringen av Spanien och Costa del Sol: utopi eller ironi?Uhrbom, Frida January 2009 (has links)
<p>Uppsatsen behandlar hur turismorganisationer på nationell och regional nivå arbetar med turismplanering och turismmarknadsföring för att skapa en bra och sanningsenlig image av Spanien och Costa del Sol i turismsammanhang. I uppsatsen tillämpas en kvalitativ metod. Analysen sker genom texttolkning efter hermeneutiska principer. Symboler tolkas även genom semiotik och metonymi. Uppsatsen beskriver hur turismplaneringen är organiserad i Spanien på nationell och regional nivå och hur dessa nivåers turismorganisationer arbetar med turismens utveckling. En överblick ges över Spaniens turismutveckling och turismmarknadsföring i historiskt och nutida perspektiv. Framtida turismutveckling analyseras med hjälp av främst olika planer – <em>Plan 2020</em> på nationell nivå och <em>Plan Qualifica</em> på regional nivå. Tidigare forskning inom destinationsmarknadsföring, image och varumärken behandlas. Destinationsmarknadsföringen går ut på att ge turisterna positiva känslor för destinationen. Spaniens symboler och kampanjer tolkas enligt semiotiska modeller. Slutligen behandlas de destinationsproblem som finns på Costa del Sol inom miljömässiga, ekonomiska och sociala områden. Utifrån detta analyseras hur Spanien och Costa del Sol kan föra ut sitt marknadsföringsbudskap på bästa sätt. De slutsatser som dras i uppsatsen är att turismmarknadsföringsbudskapet från nationell och regional nivå måste koordineras. Det behövs också skapas en koherens mellan budskapet som förs fram till kunden och det som kunden upplever på destinationen. Om dessa faktorer samverkar med varandra blir destinationens image bätttre. För att illustrera detta har en modell skapats. Marknadsföringen bör också kombinera välkända symboler med mer nyskapande kampanjer för att få mer uppmärksamhet i den globala konkurrensen mellan olika destinationer. Dessa slutsatser baseras på uppsatsens studie av spanska förhållanden men kan generaliseras till andra destinationer.</p>
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Barns olika sätt att lära sig skriftspråket : -en studie av några lärares uppfattningar och pedagogiska arbete, i Sverige och Costa RicaOskarsson, Charlotta, Andersson, Jasmine, Tilly, Christina January 2006 (has links)
<p>Det pedagogiska intresset för ”lärstilar” har under senaste åren ökat och barns individualitet i skriftspråkstillägnandet uttrycks även i andra sammanhang. Syftet med denna studie är att belysa och diskutera hur man kan se på och arbeta med barns olika sätt att lära i läs- och skrivundervisningen. Vidare är studien inriktad mot att belysa studieområdet ur en vidare kontext då den empiriska undersökningen genomförts både i Sverige och i Costa Rica med en kombination av intervjuer och observationer. Utifrån en kulturell och utbildningspolitisk kontext belyses variationer och likheter i lärarnas möjligheter och förutsättningar att beakta barns olika sätt att lära sig skriftspråket. Av resultatet framkommer att lärarna påvisar en viss form av beaktande av barns olika sätt att lära skriftspråket främst i form av en inriktning mot individualisering utifrån varje individs nivå och arbetstakt. De uppvisar en ambition att individanpassa undervisningen både i Sverige och i Costa Rica men undervisningen förefaller trots detta vara inriktad mot gemensamma moment. Genom att variera den gemensamma undervisningen, bland annat genom att blanda analytiska och syntetiska läs- och skrivmetoder, försöker lärarna tillgodose barns olika sätt att lära. De intervjuade lärarna framhåller dessutom motivationen hos eleverna som en avgörande faktor för ett framgångsrikt skriftspråkstillägnande och poängterar underhållande arbetssätt och skapandet av intresse hos eleverna som betydelsefulla inslag i undervisningen. Vidare tyder studiens resultat på att till skillnad mot i Sverige framhålls i Costa Rica verbala förmågor då observationer och styrdokument visar på en fokusering av muntliga undervisningsformer. Studiens resultat antyder dessutom att förutsättningar och möjligheter att beakta barns olika sätt att tillägna sig skriftspråket skiljer sig åt mellan de olika kontexterna, främst i form av att de ekonomiska resurserna i Costa Rica inte möjliggör förverkligande av lärarnas pedagogiska ambitioner.</p>
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Där regnskogen möter havet : en artikelserie om ett Costa Rica format av ekoturismHjalmarsson, Cecilia January 2006 (has links)
<p>Costa Rica är inte vad det en gång har varit. Jaguarjägaren har lagt ner vapnet. Idag försörjer han sig på turister som vill bli ett med naturen. Svenska skolbarn samlar in pengar för att skydda regnskogen i Costa Ricas mest besökta naturreservat. Traditioner som att jaga vilda djur och att skövla dyrbar regnskog är inte längre lagliga.</p><p>Vad händer när ett land satsar på en näring som innebär stora förändringar? Ekoturism är vad turisterna efterfrågar och vad costaricanerna erbjuder.</p>
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Slow Slip Beneath the Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica and Its Effect on the Interseismic CycleOuterbridge, Kimberly C. 04 January 2011 (has links)
The close proximity of the Nicoya Peninsula to the Cocos-Caribbean Subduction zone plate boundary makes it a prime location to use GPS to study episodic tremor and slip. Nicoya Peninsula currently has operating networks of both continuous GPS (CGPS) and seismic stations designed to identify and characterize the pattern of episodic tremor and slip (ETS) events along the seismogenic zone under Costa Rica's Pacific Margin. The occurrence of slow slip events has been previously postulated in this region based on correlated fluid flow and seismic tremor events recorded near the margin wedge in 2000 and from sparse GPS observations in 2003. Paucity of data prevented details of these events from being resolved. In May 2007 a slow slip event was recorded on our densified GPS network. This slow slip event was also accompanied by seismic tremor, worked up by colleagues at the University of California - San Diego. I will present the GPS time series, correlated with the seismic tremor for the event in May 2007. I will also present the inferred pattern of slip on the plate interface from elastic half space inversion modeling compared with the tremor and Low Frequency Earthquake (LFE) locations. The geodetic slip and seismic tremor co-locate temporally very well. Spatially the seismic tremor and LFE locations are offset but not independent of both the up dip and down dip patches of geodetic slip. The identification of these slow slip events enhances our understanding of the nuances of the interseismic period. Previous studies of the interseismic strain accumulation patterns in the region of the Nicoya Peninsula have not accounted for the occurrence of slow slip, thus underestimating the magnitude of locking on the fault plane. My study resolves this bias by using our CGPS network to estimate the interseismic surface velocity field, accounting for the May 2007 slow slip event. I will present the results of this velocity field estimation and the results of inversions for locking patterns on the fault plane. My study has also elucidated a potential temporal variability in the locking pattern on the fault plane beneath Nicoya.
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Spatial Variation in Organic Carbon and Stable Isotope Composition of Lake Sediments at Laguna Zoncho, Costa RicaTaylor, Zachary P 01 May 2011 (has links)
Lake sediments are valuable paleoenvironmental archives that provide information on past climate and land-use change. Most lake sediment studies rely on a single core, usually recovered from the center of a lake, and do not consider spatial variability in the lake basin. My dissertation presents a spatially-explicit record of prehistoric agriculture from Laguna Zoncho, Costa Rica and evaluates spatial variability in lake sediment proxies based on a network of five sediment cores. Results extend earlier proxy analyses of a single core collected near the center of the lake, which documented prehistoric agriculture and forest clearance from 3000 to about 500 years ago, followed by strong forest recovery at the time of the Spanish Conquest. Analyses of the new suite of cores show that agricultural activities increased erosion in the watershed, which lowered organic content from 16% to 5%, and resulted in a shift in bulk sediment stable carbon isotope values from –27 ‰ to –23 ‰ VPDB due to forest clearance. Agriculture made the lake slightly more productive, shown by a decrease in carbon/nitrogen ratios from 16 to 13 and an increase in stable nitrogen ratios from 1 to 3 ‰. Basinwide trends in organic matter and stable carbon isotopes ratios show two distinct periods of agricultural decline (1150–960 and 840–650 cal yr BP) that coincide with intervals of drought detected in regional paleoclimate records. This finding suggests that climate change, not the Spanish Conquest, was the driving force of site abandonment at Laguna Zoncho, and by extension throughout the region.
Inter-core variability in proxies for agricultural activity reveals that crop cultivation may have continued longer in some portions of the watershed, and highlights the influence of sediment-focusing processes on proxy signatures of agriculture in lake basins. Maize pollen concentrations in the sediment cores did not correspond to geochemical and isotopic agricultural indicators, suggesting a need for caution in using the abundance of maize pollen to infer the scale of agriculture in neotropical watersheds.
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Environmental effects of economywide policies : case studies of Costa Rica and Sri LankaHaksar, Annika January 1997 (has links)
Traditional approaches to modeling environmental resources withinsecure or illdefined property rights are based on partial equilibrium models. This dissertation takes the view that since insecure tenure arrangements may be difficult to remedy, effects of national and sectoral policies should be analyzed in a general equilibrium framework in order to take unintended side effects on the the utilization of environmental resources into account. Specifically, two case studies on deforestation in Costa Rica and land degradation in Sri Lanka are developed. The main conclusions of this exercise is that although partial models may be useful in analyzing policies aimed at the environmental resource in question or reforms in the property rights system, economywide policies and sectoral policies aimed at other sectors may have large effects on environmental resource utilization. When the environmental quality is a concern, a general equilibrium framework shoul be used. In the case of Costa Rica, the results indicate that policies such as minimum wage legislation and capital taxation have significant effects on deforestation. The deforestation effects should be taken into account in policy making, and mesaures to mitigate deforestation should accompany these policies. Similar results hold for the case study of land degradation in Sri Lanka. / Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögskolan 1997
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Essays on the Evaluation of Environmental ProgramsHanauer, Merlin M 07 May 2011 (has links)
This dissertation comprises four chapters. The unifying theme is the evaluation of environmental programs. Specifically, each chapter examines some facet of the impacts of protected areas.
The first chapter examines the heterogeneous environmental and economic impacts of protected areas in Costa Rica. Previous studies suggest that Costa Rica's protected area system induced both reduced deforestation and alleviated poverty. We demonstrate that these environmental and social impacts were spatially heterogeneous. Importantly, the characteristics associated with the most avoided deforestation are the characteristics associated with the least poverty alleviation.
In other words, the same characteristics that have limited the conservation effectiveness of protected areas may have improved the social welfare impacts of these areas. These results suggest that `win-win' efforts to protect ecosystems and alleviate poverty may be possible when policymakers are satisfied with low levels of each outcome, but tradeoffs exist when more of either outcome is desired.
The second chapter explores in more detail the heterogeneous impacts of protected areas in Costa Rica and Thailand. In particular we investigate the potential for protected areas to act as a mechanism for poverty traps and use semiparametric models to identify the spatial congruence of environmental and economic outcomes. We find no evidence that protected areas trap historically poorer areas in poverty. In fact, we find that poorer areas at baseline appear to have the greatest levels of poverty reduction as a result of protection. However, we do find that the spatial characteristics associated with the most poverty alleviation are not necessarily the characteristics associated with the most avoided deforestation. We demonstrate how an understanding of these spatially heterogeneous responses to protection can be used to generate suitability maps that identify locations in which both environmental and poverty alleviation goals are most likely to be achieved.
In the third chapter we address the mechanisms through which protected areas affect economic outcomes. Using recently developed quasi-experimental methods and rich biophysical and demographic data, we quantify the causal post-treatment mechanism impacts of tourism, infrastructure development and ecosystem services on poverty, due to the establishment of protected areas in Costa Rica prior to 1980. We find that nearly 50% of the poverty reduction estimated in a previous study can be attributed to tourism. In addition, although the mechanism estimates for the infrastructure and ecosystem services proxies are negligible, we argue that the results provide evidence that enhanced ecosystem services from the establishment of protected areas has likely helped to reduce poverty. The results provide additional information to policy makers that wish to enhance the future establishment of protected areas with complementary policy. The final chapter studies the economic impacts of protected areas in Bolivia. We find that municipalities with at least 10% of their area occupied by a protected area between 1992 and 2000 exhibited differentially greater levels of poverty reduction between 1992 and 2001 compared to similar municipalities unaffected by protected areas. We find that the results are robust to a number of econometric specifications, spillover analyses and a placebo study. Although the overarching results that Bolivia's protected areas were associated with poverty reduction are similar to previous studies , the underlying results are subtly, but significantly, different. In previous studies it was found that controlling for key observable covariates lead to fundamentally antithetical results compared to naive estimates. Conversely, these results indicate that naive estimates lead to an over-estimation of the poverty reducing impacts of protected areas. The results expose the heterogeneity of protected area impacts across countries and, therefore, underscore the importance of country-level impact evaluations in order to build the global knowledge base regarding the socioeconomic impacts of protected areas.
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