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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.
1001

Forest property rights, the role of the state, and institutional exigency : the Ethiopian experience /

Bekele, Melaku. January 2003 (has links)
Diss. Uppsala : Sveriges lantbruksuniv., 2003.
1002

Development, fire history and current and past growth, of old-growth and young-growth forest stands in the Cascade, Siskiyou and mid-coast mountains of southwestern Oregon /

Sensenig, Thomas S. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Oregon State University, 2003. / Includes maps in pocket. Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 146-166). Also available online.
1003

Carbon storage in a Pacific Northwest conifer forest ecosystem : a chronosequence approach /

Janisch, Jack E. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2002. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the World Wide Web.
1004

Using remote sensing to detect forest change associated with timber processing mills in West Virginia

Soda, Miho. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--West Virginia University, 2003. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains vi, 18 p. : ill. (some col.), col. map. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 18).
1005

Modeling deforestation risk in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala

Grunberg, Wolfgang January 2000 (has links)
The tropical forest of Guatemala's 21,130 square kilometer Maya Biosphere Reserve and buffer zone is being impacted by deforestation due to an increase of the local population and establishment of over 200 new settlements over the last 20 years. Existing geographic information system databases and remote sensing data were used to determine how much of the observed deforestation could be explained by three factors: roads, human settlements, and soil quality. Each factor was analyzed separately using spatial and statistical analysis methods. These factors were then combined to create a final deforestation risk model. The deterministic model enables policy makers, as well as managers, to create scenarios that assess the impact of their actions on the forest on a regional scale.
1006

Ecology and conservation of the twin-spotted rattlesnake, Crotalus pricei

Prival, David Benjamin January 2000 (has links)
Although twin-spotted rattlesnakes (Crotalus pricei ) were first identified more than a century ago, little has been published about the ecology of this species and no information has been available regarding population characteristics. During 1997--99, I captured, measured, and marked 117 C. pricei in the Chiricahua Mountains to address this need for information. Lizards constituted the bulk of C. pricei prey, but their diet also included mammals, birds, and snakes. Mating and parturition were concentrated in August and early September. Movement patterns varied dramatically from year to year, as males moved substantially farther during the 1998 monsoon season (July--September) than in 1997. Crotalus pricei are sometimes collected illegally for the pet trade. About 90 people may have hunted for C. pricei at a well-known site during 1997--98. On average, snakes at this site were 38.1 mm smaller than snakes at other sites, an observation that could be attributed to collecting pressure.
1007

Climate response, age distribution, and fire history of a Corkbark Fir (Abies Lasiocarpa Var. Arizonica) stand in the Santa Catalina Mountains, Arizona

Psaltis, June January 2001 (has links)
The southernmost known North American stand of corkbark fir ( Abies lasiocarpa var. arizonica (Merriam) Lemm.) is found in the Santa Catalina Mountains just north of Tucson, Arizona. Climate response, age distribution, and fire history were studied in this small corkbark fir stand to provide baseline information for future management. Response function analysis indicated April--June precipitation from the current growing season, April--June temperature from the current growing season, November--March precipitation prior to the growing season, and August--October precipitation from the previous growing season as the most highly correlated factor with ring-width variance. Age distribution appeared to be steady state. A fire chronology developed for the corkbark fir site was used to test synchroneity of fire events with previously developed chronologies from nearby sites. Chi-squared analyses indicated significant association of fire years for all sites but not spread of fire from one site to another.
1008

An evaluation of the community conservation service at Tarangire and Lake Manyara national parks in Tanzania

Dembe, Ezekiel Aman January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
1009

A critical evaluation of the tropical forest industry in the Republic of Congo as it conforms to the International Tropical Timber Organization sustainable management objectives

Bondoumbou, Pierre Vincent January 1999 (has links)
One of the innovations in the management of forest resources in the 1990s is the use of criteria and indicators (C&I) as a tool to measure the sustainability of forest management practices in general, as well as, specific forest related activities such as timber industry. The International Tropical Timber Organization has developed a set of criteria and indicators for the measurement of sustainability in natural tropical forests. This study uses these criteria and indicators to critically evaluate the current status of the forest industry in the Republic of Congo as it conforms to the ITTO sustainable management objectives. The study identifies both the progress made to achieve the ITTO "objective 2000", and weaknesses that need to be addressed in order to reach an overall sustainable forest industry. Recommendations are made to correct the identified weaknesses.
1010

Abundance, diversity, community structure and mobility of moths in farmland

Eeles, Robert Martin George January 1997 (has links)
Changes in macro-moth populations related to habitat creation were monitored using light-traps between 1993 and 1995 on low-lying, previously intensively managed, arable land at College Farm, Long Wittenham, Oxfordshire (grid reference SU 554 939). Research measured the effects of the establishment of set-aside and agro-forestry in farmland on macro-moth abundance, diversity, guild and seral structure. College Farm data from the newly created habitats were compared with unchanging and established ones within the Farm, a nearby Garden (500 metres away at Long Wittenham) sampled concurrently, and data from other farmland, gardens and woodland sites. Mobility was measured within College Farm and between it and the Garden at Long Wittenham. Large numbers of moths, of a comparatively small number of ubiquitous species, were found within College Farm. Abundance, which can be as high as in woodlands, indicated that the farmland environment is less hostile to moths than has been previously thought. Analyses showed rapid and large increases of abundance in the newly created habitats on College Farm related to the establishment of a more diverse and architecturally more complex ground flora. The differences in abundance between the Farm and Garden, where moths were generally more numerous but which were sampled with more effective light traps, progressively decreased throughout the research period. Changes 10 abundance were less marked in the Garden in line with regional population changes. Species richness was low on College Farm in comparison to woodlands and gardens. Within the Farm it was highest along a linear drainage Ditch but increased rapidly in a tree Plantation in association with greater diversity of the ground flora. Species richness was found to be constant between years in the Garden. Both the Farm and Garden and other sites investigated in Oxfordshire and elsewhere in Britain exhibited constant species proportions within the larger families, sub-families and genera. Alpha diversity was constant for the Farm as a whole and for the Garden (and did not increase after the first field season at either site) but was found to increase significantly in a tree Plantation in the second year after its establishment. Removal of vagrant species and individuals from analyses of the Farm and Garden totals showed that alpha diversity increased for the Farm (but not the Garden) between 1993 and 1995. Diversity, dominance, evenness and dissimilarity measures showed distinct habitat differences on the Farm and that the tree Plantation improved to a similar state to that of the permanent Ditch in its second year. These improvements were not associated with the presence of trees but were related to increased herb diversity and complexity. Intensive management in the Plantation in 1995 resulted in reductions in diversity. Analyses of guild structure showed that herb feeding individuals were most abundant in a tree Plantation, associated with the ground flora, and that grass feeders dominated the catches in a Barley-field, along a drainage Ditch and in a field of Set-aside. There were some marked changes between years with grass feeders contributing greater numbers to all habitat totals, being greatest in 1995. Abundance changed asynchronously and disproportionally for herb, grass and polyphagous guilds on the Farm in comparison to the changes in the Garden indicating that habitat creation was the cause. The proportions of herb, grass, woody-plant, polyphagous and other moth species were found to be constant on the Farm and in the Garden and in all other habitats investigated. Species represented by fewer than 10 individuals on the Farm and fewer than 100 individuals in the Garden were found to comprise the vagrant fraction of their, respective, totals. The majority of woody-plant feeding species and the guild 'others' were contained within this fraction. There was no evidence for an increase in abundance or species richness of woody-plant feeders as a consequence of tree planting on the Farm. The majority of individuals on the Farm and in the Garden were representatives from early seral communities. Almost all others were contained within the vagrant fraction of the faunas in these sites. Abundance changed asynchronously and disproportionally for early seres on the Farm in comparison to the changes in the Garden indicating that habitat creation was the cause. Species proportions within all seres were found to be constant on the Farm, in the Garden and in other habitats investigated. Mark-release-recapture studies showed that certain species arc highly mobile in farmland, others are comparatively poorly mobile, and that patterns of mobility change (mobility between Farm habitats increased each year for some species) in association with habitat creation. Moths increasingly remained within the Farm as evidenced by progressive increases in recapture proportions there, progressive decreases in recaptures of Farm marked moths in the Garden, and increasing proportions of multiple recaptures.

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