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Measurement and Modeling of Radiation and Water Fluxes in Plantation ForestsKim, Hyun-Seok January 2009 (has links)
<p>An increasing number of experimental studies attempt to maximize biomass production of trees in plantations by removing nutrient and water limitations. The results from these studies begin to inform operational managers. We investigated a Populus trichocarpa Torr. x P. deltoides Bartr. & Marsh plantation with a combined irrigation and nutrient supply system designed to optimize biomass production. Sap flux density was measured continuously over four of the six growing season months, supplemented with periodic measurements of leaf gas exchange and water potential. Measurements of tree diameter and height were used to estimate leaf area and biomass production using allometric relations. Sap flux was converted to canopy conductance, and analyzed based on an empirical model to isolate the effects of water limitation. Actual and soil water-unlimited potential CO2 uptakes were estimated using a Canopy Conductance Constrained Carbon Assimilation (4C-A) scheme, which couples actual or potential canopy conductance with vertical gradients of light distribution, leaf-level conductance, maximum Rubisco capacity (Vcmax) and maximum electron transport (Jmax). Net primary production (NPP) was ~0.43 of gross primary production (GPP); when estimated for individual trees, this ratio was independent of tree size. Based on the same ratio, we found that current irrigation reduced growth by ~18 % compare to growth with no water limitation. To achieve this maximum growth, however, would require 70% more water for transpiration, and would reduce water use efficiency by 27 %, from 1.57 to 1.15 g stem wood C kg-1 water. Given the economic and social values of water, plantation managers appear to have optimized water use.</p> / Dissertation
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Nutrient dynamics and fire history in mesquite (Prosopis spp.)-dominated desert grasslands of the southwestern United StatesWilson, Thomas Bachman January 2001 (has links)
In desert grasslands of the southwestern United States, Prosopis velutina (mesquite), an N-fixing legume, has proliferated from historic drainage locations into more xeric grassland plains. This expansion is forming a more heterogenous soil nutrient topography in grasslands, N-pools are becoming localized under mesquite canopies, yet the rate and extent of this sequestration remains relatively unknown. Repeated prescribed burning has been used to control Prosopis distribution, but effects of fires on grassland soil nutrient distribution and aboveground plant biomass are also largely unknown. I examined recent research concerning P. velutina natural history, emphasizing characteristics that contribute to range expansion. I also evaluated Prosopis management practices---which include herbicide treatment, prescribed burning, grazing reduction, and mechanical removal---and management goals---which involve complete removal, no removal, and limited removal. Of these, limited removal is the most beneficial, using an herbicide application followed by periodic prescribed burning. In 1997 I established a study area at Fort Huachuca Military Reservation in southeastern Arizona, selecting two adjacent sites with similar soil composition and topography but different fire histories. I examined spatial and seasonal changes in composition and distribution of available soil N and litterfall. My results indicated these were more spatially and temporally heterogenous on sites with low fire frequency and high P. velutina stand development. In 1998 I selected nine sites at Fort Huachuca on two upland surfaces located < 1 km apart, with similar soil physical characteristics and fire frequencies ranging from 0 to 5 fires/decade. I evaluated relationships between fire frequency, soil nutrient status (pH, available P, organic C, total N, and available N), and aboveground plant biomass, including that of the non-native Eragrostis lehmanniana (Lehmann lovegrass). Soil pH and ammonium significantly decreased with increased fire frequency on one surface, and available P significantly decreased with increased fire frequency on the other surface. Available P and pH were significantly different between the 2 surfaces, but aboveground biomass was similar. Soil nutrient status and biomass were not related, suggesting plant-available soil nutrients may not control plant distribution or recovery following fire. E. lehmanniana biomass was negatively correlated with native grass and forb biomass, and tended to increase with increasing fire frequency. Surface litter and E. lehmanniana biomass were correlated, and may increase fire frequency, an important consideration when implementing grassland fire management practices.
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Influence of land use and climate on soils and forest structure in mountains of the southwestern United States and northern MexicoVillanueva, Diaz Jose, 1958- January 1996 (has links)
The effects of land-use history in the Animas Mountains, New Mexico (AM) and the Sierra los Ajos, Sonora (SLA) were studied in relation to morphological and soil chemical characteristics, radial and basal area growth, and forest structure. Litter depth, organic matter, total nitrogen, CEC, and exchangeable cations were greater in the AM than in the SLA, apparently as a result of differences in fire frequency and other land uses. Seasonal precipitation (October-January) was reconstructed for the AM. Annual precipitation (July-July) was reconstructed for the SLA. July PDSI was reconstructed for both mountain ranges. Fires in the AM were preceded by relatively wet conditions two years before the fire year. No significant climate-fire relationship was found in the SLA. Tree radial and basal area increase differed between mountain ranges, suggesting that annual growth was influenced by differences in land-use history. Fire suppression activities and other land uses in the AM apparently have produced an increase in tree density and dominance of shade-tolerant but less-fire resistant species (i.e. Douglas-fir, southwestern white pine, pinyon pine). More frequent fires and logging activities in the SLA apparently have produced lower tree densities and dominance by shade-intolerant ponderosa pine.
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Deforestation in Rondonia, Brazil: Frontier urbanization and landscape changeHayes-Bohanan, James Kezar, 1963- January 1998 (has links)
Between 1960 and 1991, the population of Rondonia, Brazil increased from 70,000 to 1.3 million. This increase occurred during the thirty-year period bracketing the rise to statehood, during which a rural population also became largely urban. Simultaneously, the loss of tropical rain forest in the state progressed at unparalleled rates. This dissertation examines some of the ways in which these two rapidly changing aspects of Rondonia's landscape are related to each other. The research project employs a framework grounded in realist philosophy, a flexible approach that facilitates research into processes that are unfolding at a regional scale but which occur within the context of broader national and international structures. Several kinds of connections between urban population growth and deforestation are examined, including land conversion for urban use, food consumption in urban areas, wood consumption for housing in urban areas, and power consumption in urban areas. Urban sprawl is found to be significantly and positively correlated with deforestation at the municipio level, but the absolute magnitude of urban sprawl is very small relative to total deforestation. No spatial correlation is found between urban settlement and the dedication of land to food crops. A weak but positive correlation is found between urban demand for timber and total deforestation, but the absolute magnitude of local timber demand is found to be very small in comparison to forest clearing. The recent diversification of the timber industry in order to absorb urban labor may have profound implications for demand on forest resources in the future. Electricity generation has been destructive of rain forest, and capacity already under construction is likely to have further such impacts. The cultural landscape of Rondonia reflects an orientation that is increasingly outward-looking. Rondonia's cities and towns are becoming more closely connected with one another and more fully integrated with the outside world. Early incentives to settle in Rondonia contributed to deforestation, but the curtailment of these incentives did not curtail deforestation. Rondonia is a place caught between two opposite pressures: the pressure to preserve the rain forest and the pressure to participate in the world economy as consumers.
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Fact or fiction| Random mating in field populations of western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte) emerging on Bt and refuge corn plantsSmith, Steven Joel 12 February 2015 (has links)
<p> The western corn rootworm, or WCR, (<i>Diabrotica virgifera virgifera </i> LeConte) is the most significant pest of field corn (<i>Zea mays</i>) in the United States, and has recently expanded its range into Europe. Since 2004, hybrid corn containing Bt toxins targeting the corn rootworm complex have been heavily adopted and are now the primary control measure for this pest in North American corn production. </p><p> The evolution of resistance is an ongoing concern, and to ensure Bt products will retain their usefulness, insect resistance management (IRM) tactics using various refuge structures have been adopted. One of the key tenets of the refuge strategy is that males and females emerging from Bt and refuge plantings mate randomly. A violation of this largely untested assumption would lead to acceleration of resistance development. </p><p> To generate empirical field data on mating rates between beetles emerging from Bt and refuge plants, field cage studies using field populations of WCR in Indiana were utilized. Various refuge configurations were tested; all refuge plants were labeled using the stable isotope N15. This mark persists in the adult beetles after eclosion, allowing for collection and analysis of isotopic ratios of beetles in mating pairs. This approach was used to test the random mating assumption in Bt and refuge beetles collected from field cages. Other data collected include emergence rates, timing and sex ratios for each of the treatments. </p><p> Results indicate that mating based on natal host may not be as important of a factor as initially thought. Mixed mating occurs at a high rate when there are higher numbers of susceptible rootworms even though the measured fitness parameters between <i>Cry3Bb1</i> and refuge adults were significantly different (p< 0.05). The main indication from this study is that not enough susceptible individuals are produced from a 5% refuge-in-a-bag strategy which is the dominant form of refuge planting in the United States. </p>
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Effects of landscape configuration on northern bobwhite in southeastern KansasFlock, Brian E. January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy / Department of Biology / Philip S. Gipson / Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) populations in much of the species range have been declining for the last 35 years. I trapped and equipped bobwhite with radio transmitters and tracked them during 2003-2005. I used these data to examine the effects of landscape configuration on survival as well as the habitat association of bobwhite in southeastern Kansas. I used the nest survival model in Program MARK to determine the effects of habitat configuration on weekly survival of radio equipped bobwhite during the Fall-Spring (1 October to 14 April) and the Spring-Fall (15 April to 30 September) at home range and 500 m buffer scales. Individual survival probability for the Fall-Spring period was 0.9439 (S.E. = 0.0071), and the most parsimonious model for the Fall-Spring period at the home range scale was B0 + percent woodland + percent cropland. At the 500 m buffer scale the most parsimonious model was B0 + percent Conservation Reserve (CRP) program land. The weekly survival probability for the Spring-Fall period was 0.9559 (S.E. = 0.0098). At the home range and 500 m buffer scales there were weak associations of habitat to survival during Spring-Fall with the most parsimonious model for both scales B0 + percent other. Using Euclidean Distances to measure distance from animal location to each habitat, I found that habitat selection was occurring during the Spring-Fall (Wilkes λ = 0.04, F 6,36 = 143.682, P < 0.001) and Fall-Spring (Wilkes λ = 0.056, F 6, 29 = 81.99, P < 0.001). During Spring-Fall bobwhite were associated with locations near cool-season grasses and during Fall-Spring preferred locations near woody cover. Bobwhite also showed habitat selection at a second more refined land use classification level for Spring-Fall (Wilkes λ = 0.006, F 16, 26 = 284.483, P < 0.001) and Fall-Spring (Wilkes λ = 0.004, F 16, 19 = 276.037, P < 0.001). During the Spring-Fall, bobwhites were associated with locations near cool-season grass pastures and roads and during Fall-Spring were associated with locations in close proximity to roads and CRP. Understanding the effects of habitat configuration on bobwhite is an important step in developing a broad-scale management plan.
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Private ownership of wild animals including endangered species: Conflict on the urban fringeKochera, Stephanie S. 19 August 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Control Techniques and Management Implications for the Invasive Ailanthus Altissima (Tree of Heaven)Lewis, Kevin Charles 24 August 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Developing an interpretive planning model for a national park: a stakeholder-based needs assessment study for KoreaCho, Kye Joong 19 April 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Growth response and adaptability of acer rubrum and acer XFREEMANII cultivars to soil compactionFair, Barbara A. 13 July 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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