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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.
1

Entstehung, Aufbau und Eigenarten der Moore sowie ihre Bedeutung für die Kultur, unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der nordwestdeutschen Moorgebiete ...

Benze, Erich Franz Ernst, January 1911 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Erlangen. / Lebenslauf. "Literaturverzeichnis": p. [vii]-ix.
2

The effects of wet and dry deposited ammonia on Calluna vulgaris

Uren, Sally Clare January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
3

Disturbance-based Management And Plant Species Change In Massachusetts Sandplain Heathlands Over The Past Two Decades

Martin, Kirsten 01 January 2013 (has links)
Massachusetts sandplain heathlands are habitats of conservation concern, harboring many rare plant species and providing habitat for animals that depend on openlands. These heathlands are threatened by human development, shrub encroachment in the absence of disturbance, and potentially increasing soil nutrient levels. Sandplain heathlands are managed with prescribed fire, in order to maintain their open structure and maintain species diversity. In order to assess how past management was correlated with species change, I used a data set that spanned twenty years from three different heathlands in Massachusetts. I looked for correlations between management and species change. Correlations between species change and prescribed burning were very site, or microsite, specific, indicating that variables such as vegetation type and edaphic characteristics need to be taken into account before management is applied. Prescribed fire was also associated with an increase in ruderal species in one of the sites studied, indicating that there may be undesirable effects of prescribed fire in this system. Species diversity was negatively associated with shrub encroachment, reinforcing the importance of preventing shrubs from encroaching into these heathlands. I also found evidence that burning has not been a successful technique in preventing shrub encroachment in these sites. Lastly, the nitrophilic species Carex pensylvanica increased in all three sites, indicating that future studies should investigate the possibility that sandplain heathlands are currently experiencing nitrogen deposition beyond their critical loads.
4

Autecology of the heath vegetation of South Australia /

Wojcik, Patricia January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis, M.Sc.--University of Adelaide.
5

Der heutige Stand der Moorkultur und Moorbesiedelung im deutschen Reiche, dargestellt an der Hand einer kulturtechnisch-ökonomischen Studienreise ...

Zanen, J. P., January 1906 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Giessen. / Lebenslauf. Literatur-Verzeichnis: p. [91]-92.
6

Some effects of management by fire on wet heath vegetation in western Scotland

Currall, James E. P. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
7

Post-fire succession in heathland communities

Hobbs, Richard J. January 1981 (has links)
A study was made of the post-fire development of several heathland community types in an -attempt to quantify and model the variations found in this development. Stands of various ages were subjected to experimental burning, and fire temperatures and severity were assessed. Fire severity was found to increase with stand age until the mature phase of Calluna, with a subsequent decline in the degenerate phase.Studies of the post-fire regeneration indicated that regrowth was more rapid and more diverse in stands which were young when burnt. Analyses of seed stores, substrates left by fire, and the ability of Calluna to regenerate vegetatively indicated that the potential of the vegetation to regenerate after fire decreased with stand age. Model analyses suggested that the age and composition of a stand before fire determined the initial floristic composition set up after fire, and this then determined the rate and direction of post-fire development.Chemical interactions between heathland species were investigated, and it was found that several species produced substances capable of inhibiting the growth or germination of other plants.Markov models were used to study the post-fire succession, but gave good predictions of development only for simple systems in which all the major species recolonised rapidly after fire. Statistical analyses indicated that the development shown by Calluna-Eriophorum bog after fire fits with the assumptions of a homogeneous first-order Markov chain.It was concluded that the vegetation development following fire is a complex probabilistic process of small-scale interactions between vegetation patches. The burning of old Calluna stands was considered to be unwise in terms of both management and conservation aims.
8

Studien über den Einfluss des Klimas auf das Gedeihen von Moorwiesen und Moorweiden

Brüne, Friedrich, January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Berlin. / Vita. Bibliography: p. 88.
9

Studien über den Einfluss des Klimas auf das Gedeihen von Moorwiesen und Moorweiden

Brüne, Friedrich, January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Berlin. / Vita. Bibliography: p. 88.
10

Aspects of the interaction between Xanthorrhoea australis and Phytophthora cinnamomi in south-western Victoria, Australia.

Daniel, Rosalie, mikewood@deakin.edu.au January 2002 (has links)
Diseases in natural ecosystems are often assumed to be less severe than those observed in domestic cropping systems due to the extensive biodiversity exhibited in wild vegetation communities. In Australia, it is this natural biodiversity that is now under threat from Phytophthora cinnamomi. The soilborne Oomycete causes severe decline of native vegetation communities in south-western Victoria, Australia, disrupting the ecological balance of native forest and heathland communities. While the effect of disease caused by P. cinnamomi on native vegetation communities in Victoria has been extensively investigated, little work has focused on the Anglesea healthlands in south-western Victoria. Nothing is known about the population structure of P. cinnamomi at Anglesea. This project was divided into two main components to investigate fundamental issues affecting the management of P. cinnamomi in the Anglesea heathlands. The first component examined the phenotypic characteristics of P. cinnamomi isolates sampled from the population at Anglesea, and compared these with isolates from other regions in Victoria, and also from Western Australia. The second component of the project investigated the effect of the fungicide phosphonate on the host response following infection by P. cinnamomi. Following soil sampling in the Anglesea heathlands, a collection of P, cinnamomi isolates was established. Morphological and physiological traits of each isolate were examined. All isolates were found to be of the A2 mating type. Variation was demonstrated among isolates in the following characteristics: radial growth rate on various nutrient media, sporangial production, and sporangial dimensions. Oogonial dimensions did not differ significantly between isolates. Morphological and physiological variation was rarely dependant on isolate origin. To examine the genetic diversity among isolates and to determine whether phenotypic variation observed was genetically based, Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analyses were conducted. No significant variation was observed among isolates based on an analysis of molecular variance (AMQVA). The results are discussed in relation to population biology, and the effect of genetic variation on population structure and population dynamics. X australis, an arborescent monocotyledon indigenous to Australia, is highly susceptible to infection by P. cinnamomi. It forms an important component of the heathland vegetation community, providing habitat for native flora and fauna, A cell suspension culture system was developed to investigate the effect of the fungicide phosphonate on the host-pathogen interaction between X. australis and P. cinnamomi. This allowed the interaction between the host and the pathogen to be examined at a cellular level. Subsequently, histological studies using X. australis seedlings were undertaken to support the cellular study. Observations in the cell culture system correlated well with those in the plant. The anatomical structure of X australis roots was examined to assist in the interpretation of results of histopathological studies. The infection of single cells and roots of X. australis, and the effect of phosphonate on the interaction are described. Phosphonate application prior to inoculation with P. cinnamomi reduced the infection of cells in culture and of cells in planta. In particular, phosphonate was found to stimulate the production of phenolic material in roots of X australis seedlings and in cells in suspension cultures. In phosphonate-treated roots of X australis seedlings, the deposition of electron dense material, possibly lignin or cellulose, was observed following infection with P. cinnamomi. It is proposed that this is a significant consequence of the stimulation of plant defence pathways by the fungicide. Results of the study are discussed in terms of the implications of the findings on management of the Anglesea heathlands in Victoria, taking into account variation in pathogen morphology, pathogenicity and genotype. The mode of action of phosphonate in the plant is discussed in relation to plant physiology and biochemistry.

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