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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.
171

Landscape development for Navajo Hill of Mesa Verde National Park

Nee, Jac-ken January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas State University Libraries
172

Parkers potential för gynnande av humlor i urbana miljöer

Niva, Sanna January 2016 (has links)
Det här arbetet fokuserar på hur befintliga parker i centrala Gävle skulle kunna fylla en större funktion gällande gynnandet av humlor och annan biologisk mångfald och hur dessa parker skulle kunna omdesignas. Mina frågeställningar berör: befintliga parkers avsaknad av föda åt humlor, bristande möjligheter för dem att finna bo – och övervintringsplatser samt förslag på åtgärder för att motverka dessa problem. Resultatet av denna studie visar att parker kan fylla en större funktion gällande att gynna den biologiska mångfalden i urbana miljöer. Om inte bo– och övervintringsplatser och föda blir lätt åtkomligta för våra humlor riskerar vi att de minskar ännu mer i antal, och detta skulle kunna vara förödande för oss människor eftersom vi är helt beroende av dessa viktiga pollinatörer. Men med rätt kunskap och information till allmänhet och parkförvaltare går det att hjälpa humlor att skapa miljöer som hjälper humlor att kunna leva i urbana miljöer. Om vi med enkla medel inkluderar biologisk mångfald i stadens parker skulle vi kunna skapa gröna oaser där människor, djur och insekter kan trivas sida vid sida och även tillföra glädje för varandra. / This study is dealing with how existing parks in urban areas can fill a bigger role for bumblebees then they are today. My questions concern: lack of food for bumblebees in parks, lack of opportunities to find places to live and to hibernate and actions how to mitigate this. The results of this study show that existing parks can have a bigger positive impact on the biodiversity in urban areas. If bumblebees can’t find places to live or hibernate or find food, the risk is then that their populations will continue to decline which will have a strongly negative effect on us humans because we are depending on pollinators. With the right knowledge and measures we can make it easier for bumblebees to live in urban areas. To facilitate for biodiversity in the planning of parks means that we will create oases which both humans, birds and insects can benefit from.
173

Euphoria Wake Park, Market Validation and Business Planning

Rabbitt, Todd Francis January 2013 (has links)
This report entails the market validation, business planning and strategic planning for a full scale cable wake boarding park. Euphoria Wake Park has a vision to be open the first cable park in New Zealand. At this stage of the business, Auckland has been researched and the company is looking into moving into the resource consent process. While researching the potential for the cable park, it was found that although there it is very viable for Euphoria Wake Park to start in Auckland, the current stakeholders do not have the sufficient capital to do so. In order for this business to proceed, the current stakeholders of Euphoria Wake Park must work toward confirming resource consent and gaining external capital from investors.
174

Long-term forest monitoring program for Mammoth Cave National Park

Taylor, John Edward January 1997 (has links)
A long-term forest monitoring program was initiated at Mammoth Cave National Park (MCNP). The objectives of this project were to establish baseline data on the representative forest community types at MCNP based on dominant tree species. Permanent monitoring plots were established in different forest community types throughout the park. A total of 32 permanent plots were established for a combined sample area of 11.4 hectares. All stems larger than 5 cm dbh were measured and mapped within each permanent plot. Data on saplings were also collected. Distributions and abundances were determined for all species in permanent plots and combined for community type summaries. Stand tables were generated for four stem diameter size categories for each permanent plot. Stand analyses included calculation of values for species in four size categories.The results describe the forests of MCNP in various stages of succession. There is a trend toward increasing dominance of shade tolerant species in several of the community types. Species composition is in transition from the dry site, shade intolerant species in the canopy to shade tolerant species in the understory. Corpus f lorida, Acer saccharum, Fagus grandifolia, and Acer rubrum are prominent species in the understory and sapling layers. Early successional species continue to dominate heavily or recently disturbed locations on karst and dry upland sites. Juniperus virginiana is the dominant species in three of the seven community types sampled. The Hemlock and Beech-Maple Communities, Community Types II and VIII, appear to be maintaining their present species compositions and community structures. These are successionally "mature" forests, and include some of the most ecologically important areas of the park. However, Betula alleghaniensis is not reproducing in the Hemlock ravines community type, the only sites where this species occurs. Ailanthus altissima, an invasive exotic tree, was found in several of the areas sampled. / Department of Biology
175

Dorylaimida uit die Nasionale Krugerwildtuin

01 September 2015 (has links)
M.Sc. / This study embraces three facets, namely a checklist of all the freeliving and plantparasitic nematodes, reported from the Kruger National Park, descriptions of the nematode species found during the present study, and a historical review of the family Aporcelaimidae with emphasis on the genus Aporcelaimellus Heyns, 1965, a species compendium and descriptions of several new species ...
176

Russian and Swedish governmental support to entrepreneurial ventures through Science Parks and Incubators

Samay, Alexandr January 2016 (has links)
Universities are seen as an opportunity for economic growth and increased employment and university spin-offs, operating with new and emerging technologies, are considered as means of return on academic research. However, some problems may occur related to the large number amount of stakeholders and their goals. The government is one important player and it can act as a policy maker, provider of financial support, or even as an owner. Governments regularly provide the innovation market with co-working hubs, incubators and science parks.  The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the possibility of knowledge- transfer from the Swedish system to the Russian regarding the support from the government to the entrepreneurial ventures through the science parks and incubators, and what and why would prevent Russia to adopt this model.
177

Examining the responses and coping mechanisms of food leaders in the face of challenges : a case from Turkey

Turkmenoglu, Mehmet January 2016 (has links)
This research aims to explore how Turkish business leaders tackle and navigate challenges in times of crisis. Recent Gezi Park protests in Istanbul, Turkey triggered a multilayered crisis. These protests lasted more than two months, having long-term effects on Turkey’s social, cultural and economic life. Therefore, this thesis considers these Gezi Park protests as a crisis for food sector business leaders in the neighbourhood. This research examines leaders’ processes of dealing with the protests, by drawing on interviews with 40 leaders in the food sector. First, it investigates how these leaders addressed the protests, as leaders’ responses affected their businesses. Secondly, it discusses challenges experience by leaders during the protests. Finally, it investigates leaders ‘coping mechanisms’ in the face of challenges. The thematic analysis of data suggests that those leaders who helped the protestors by opening their doors prioritised humanity before any ideology. These leaders put humane values first, such as acting with conscience, feeling empathy and feeling compassion despite having opposing political views. This behaviour is considered successful leadership behaviour. Conversely, those leaders who put their self-interests first by closing their doors to the protestors are considered unsuccessful leaders. It emerged that leaders faced emotional, physical, interpersonal and financial challenges during the protests. Leaders coped with challenges by remaining hopeful about the future, by being patient, by being supported by family and friends, by becoming accustomed to the challenges, and by adopting an exit strategy.
178

Allocating the mineral and park resources on the east side of Lake Winnipeg

Miles, John Andrew 25 May 2016 (has links)
1971
179

Improving the transportation accessibility of the Ellis park for all people of Johannesburg and specially the previously disadvantaged communities

Abelson, Duncan Bernard January 2016 (has links)
A project report submitted to the Faculty of Engineering. University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Engineering. Johannesburg, 1997. / The previously disadvantaged communities of Greater Johannesburg generally rely on publlc transport to get from place to place. Disabled people, who can be considered to be part of the previously disadvantaged community, often do not have any form of transport available to them at all. People from these communities wishing to attend an event at the Ellis Park Precinct would either have to use the existing public transport or make their own transport arrangements. Traffic and transportation management plans have been implemented at the Ellis Park Precinct with the intention of ensuring the Precinct's transportation accessibility for all the people of Greater Johannesburg, but the needs of the previously disadvantaged communities, who are captive to public transport, were not formally provided for. This project report provides details of the truffle and transportation management plans that have been implemented and then recummends/suggests various transportation options that could improve the transportation accessibility of the Precinct for these previously disadvantaged communities.
180

Adopting a heterogeneity paradigm for understanding and managing elephants for biodiversity : a case study in riparian woodlands in Kruger National Park

Gaylard, Angela January 2016 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Johannesburg, 2015. / Decades of study devoted to solving the “elephant problem” have generally concurred that increasing elephant populations inevitably reduce biodiversity. However, recent evidence suggests that such reductions can be accompanied by increases in other components of biodiversity, and that ultimately elephant effects are scale-dependent. Although this new perspective now underpins elephant management strategies in savannas such as the Kruger National Park (KNP), South Africa, few empirical studies in support of this strategy have incorporated the contribution of spatial context, or allowed for the emergence of relevant scales, in their interpretations of heterogeneity. Moreover, use of traditional modes of scientific enquiry and statistical approaches for investigating heterogeneity in complex systems have been challenged. Recent advances in spatial statistics, together with an alternative mode of science that draws upon multiple lines of converging evidence rather than testing narrowlyfocused hypotheses, have the potential to address these challenges. However, their practical application for understanding elephants as agents of change remains lacking. Riparian zones along the ephemeral rivers in northern KNP provided an ideal landscape to explore the spatial and temporal parameters of elephant effects in response to surface water, as a critical resource, and hence to develop a framework for a heterogeneity approach for understanding and managing elephants as agents of change in savannas.

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