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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.
141

Rural Sports: The Poetry of Fishing, Fowling, and Hunting, 1650-1800

McKnight, Philip D. January 2011 (has links)
"Rural Sports: The Poetry of Fishing, Fowling, and Hunting, 1650-1800" traces the evolution of poetry on the field sports over a 150-year span, with a view toward considering these poems in the first instance as sporting texts. This thesis analyzes sportsmen's attitudes toward their activities, noting the larger social implications of their sporting performances. The thesis also seeks to classify and understand the poems as distinct literary sub-genres. Current sociological insights into angling and hunting help to illustrate the poems' resemblances to one another, particularly Hobson Bryan's concept of "recreational specialization" and Norbert Elias's concept of "tension equilibrium." In providing a systematic survey of the rural sports poetry, this thesis argues that during successive stages of the period, poetry on certain sports came into vogue and then receded from fashion. This followed from historical and political developments but also from literary ones. The poetry on fishing after Izaak Walton's Compleat Angler (1653) maintained a dialogue between pastoral and georgic elements, as the two modes offered scope for the experience of angling. In the eighteenth century, the writers of hunting verse balanced a passion for sport with social and political awareness; hence, they tended to employ the techniques of the prospect view and topographical poetry, intermixing descriptive elements with didactic ones in the georgic mould. As the century progressed, hunting and shooting were either reproved in an increasing number of sentimental poems representing hunters as uncaring and pitiless toward animals or they were celebrated for their gentlemanly values and virtues in the manner of William Somervile's influential poem The Chace (1735) and George Markland's Pteryplegia (1727).
142

An investigation into the marketing of the local commercial hunting industry

Theron, W. J. 24 April 2014 (has links)
M.Com. (Business Management) / This study will focus on the hunting industry in South Africa. Being a dedicated hunter the researcher has great enthusiasm for and interest in the local hunting and wildlife industry. The study focuses on the marketing of the South African hunting industry. Therefore, this will be a study regarding the marketing of the South African hunting industry in general. The researcher will investigate the hunting industry and the background of the hunting industry, problems facing the hunting industry, future prospects and also the marketing related aspects of all the stakeholders within the industry. The investigation will focus on the hunting industry with consideration to the practical implication of marketing strategies, attitudes, and marketing objectives, current and future challenges for effective management of the industry. The empirical investigation will focus on the future of the hunting industry as a whole and what local farmers and game ranchers anticipate.
143

A Comparison of Cock Pheasant Harvests Among Areas Having Different Hunting Pressures, Cache County, Utah

Bartonek, James C. 01 May 1962 (has links)
Parsons (1953) found Utah's posted hunting unit system regulated hunting pressures over much of the state's pheasant range. He found inequalities of hunting, pressure among the posted hunting units because of their individualistic methods used to determine the number of hunting permits to be sold. Utah State Department of Fish and Game personnel recommend the number of permits to be sold by the hunting unit; but often, the hunting unit officers use the desired level of hunting pressure, size of cock harvest, and revenue from permit sales as decisive factors. By regulating hunting pressure on their own lands, the posted hunting units thereby regulate the hunting pressure on adjacent nonposted lands by excluding the supernumerary hunters from their units.
144

Evaluating Productivity of Southern Agroforestry for Fiber, Biofuels, and Wildlife Habitat

Gordon, Henry Gill 14 August 2015 (has links)
Wildlife habitat values associated with agroforestry systems in Mississippi are not fully understood. Landscape matrix changes resulting in close location of various agricultural and tree crops can provide habitat more suitable for use by game wildlife. This study examined the feasibility of improving habitat value by adopting agroforestry alley cropping practices. A completely randomized block design was utilized to ascertain production values for two different even-aged crop trees, shortleaf pine (Pinus echinata Mill.) and loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.), and four different agricultural crops, corn (Zea mays L.), switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.), grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.), and soybeans (Glycine max L.). Breeding bird surveys and camera surveys were used to quantify wildlife use and determine habitat improvement produced by this agroforestry management. If agroforestry land management improves wildlife habitat quality so hunters are willing to pay higher premiums, landowners can generate additional economic return from hunting leases.
145

Effect Of Hunting Frequency On Duck Abundance, Harvest, And Hunt Quality In Mississippi

St James, Elizabeth Anne 30 April 2011 (has links)
Waterfowl hunting is important historically, culturally, and economically in Mississippi and North America. I evaluated effect of hunting frequency (2 or 4 days/week) on duck abundance, harvest, and hunters’ perceived quality of their experience on Mississippi Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs). Neither relative abundance nor harvest of all ducks, mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), northern shoveler (A. clypeata), or green-winged teal (A. crecca) differed between experimental hunting frequencies. Duck harvest increased with hours spent afield. Hunters’ perceived quality did not differ between hunting frequencies but was greatest when hunters harvested > 4 ducks/ day and increased with harvest of larger sized ducks. I suggest WMAs may be hunted 4 days/week without impacting duck abundance, harvest, or hunt quality. I recommend continued evaluations of hunting frequency on duck abundance, harvest, and hunt quality to sustain science-guided management of waterfowl hunting on Mississippi public lands.
146

Discovering U.S. Government Threat Hunting Processes And Improvements

William Pierce Maxam III (15339184) 24 April 2023 (has links)
<p><strong>INTRODUCTION:</strong> Cyber Threat Hunting (TH) is the activity of looking for potential</p> <p>compromises that other cyber defenses may have missed. These compromises cost organiza-</p> <p>tions an estimated $10M each and an effective Threat Hunt can reduce this cost. TH is a</p> <p>new discipline and processes have not yet been standardized. Most TH teams operate with</p> <p>no defined process. This is a problem as repeatable processes are important for a mature</p> <p>TH team.</p> <p><strong>OBJECTIVES:</strong> This thesis offers a Threat Hunt process as well as lessons learned</p> <p>derived from government TH practice.</p> <p><strong>METHODS:</strong> To achieve this I conducted 12 interviews, 1 hour in length, with govern-</p> <p>ment threat hunters. The transcripts of these interviews were analyzed with process and</p> <p>thematic coding. The coding was validated with a second reviewer.</p> <p><strong>RESULTS:</strong> I present a novel TH process depicting the process followed by government</p> <p>threat hunters. Common challenges and suggested solutions brought up by threat hunters</p> <p>were also enumerated and described. The most common problems were minimal automation</p> <p>and missing measures of TH expertise. Challenges with open questions were also identified.</p> <p>Open questions include: determining how to identify the best data to collect, how to create</p> <p>a specific but not rigid process and how to measure and compare the effectiveness of TH pro-</p> <p>cesses. Finally, subjects also provided features that indicate expertise to TH team members</p> <p>and recommendations on how to best integrate newer members into a TH team.</p> <p><strong>CONCLUSION:</strong> This thesis offers a first look at government TH processes. In the short</p> <p>term, the process recommendations provided in this thesis can be implemented and tested.</p> <p>In the long term, experiments in this sensitive context remain an open challenge.</p>
147

Humane Trap Optimization

Tschoepe, Horst 05 1900 (has links)
<p> Optimization criteria for trap design were established and a qualitative optimization program on the design of two of the most promising series of traps was carried out. </p> <p> An evaluation of several existing traps was carried out using Johnston's technique. Two traps were calibrated and an impact testing device was designed and built for future research work to be conducted at Guelph University. </p> / Thesis / Master of Engineering (MEngr)
148

Three Essays on Vintage Products and Second-Hand Retail

Schibik, Aaron J. 08 1900 (has links)
Now more than ever, consumers are deciding to forgo modern products and are buying vintage instead. Yet, despite the growing importance of vintage products in the consumer marketplace, research investigating why consumers buy old, often outdated products remains limited. Research that examines customer shopping behavior in second-hand retail markets, were vintage products are bought and sold, is similarly rare. What drives consumers to buy vintage products? What factors influence customer-shopping behavior at second-hand retailers? This three-paper dissertation addresses these gaps by developing better and more actionable insights into why some consumers purchase vintage items. Furthermore, this three-paper dissertation looks to explain customer-shopping behavior and drives consumers to make a purchase at second-hand retail establishments.
149

Mistassini hunters of the boreal forest : ecosystem dynamics and multiple subsistence patterns

Feit, Harvey A. January 1969 (has links)
Note:
150

The Role Of Expectations On Waterfowl Hunter Satisfaction

Brunke, Kevin D 05 May 2007 (has links)
Hunter satisfaction has received extensive attention in the literature, but the role of expectations on satisfaction has been neglected. Consumer satisfaction researchers often use the expectancy disconfirmation paradigm (i.e., differences between expectations and reality) to address relationships between expectations and satisfaction. I used this paradigm to examine the relationship between expectations and satisfaction for waterfowl hunters in Arkansas and Mississippi. I found hunter satisfaction was a partial function of fulfilled expectations in both studies. Performance-only measures generally correlated more strongly with overall satisfaction than disconfirmations measured by a difference score. Conversely, disconfirmation of expectations for a season measured on a single item scale, had the greatest relationship with overall satisfaction for a season. Knowledge of congruence between hunter expectations and outcomes offers managers an avenue to effectively focus management efforts to improve satisfaction levels.

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