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Design of Power Exchange and Bidding System With ASP TechniqueHuang, Cong-Hui 16 June 2003 (has links)
With the deregulation of power industry and the market competition, low cost, reliable power supply, and secured system operations are major concerns of the advanced deregulation markets. It is a natural extension to revise the objectives of the traditional optimal power flow (OPF) to help dispatch the power. Maximizing social welfare to create more values of the market is becoming an interesting topic. In the deregulation environment, a user-friendly mechanism is desirable to form an auction market information framework (AMIF) for power auction and market operation.
This thesis proposed a prototype system to combine internet based technology, database system, and the auction market to construct an information framework of power auction market. The Internet technology used Dynamic HTML (DHTML) in WWW website to develop a convenient bidding environment for users. The database based on MS Access used open database connection (ODBC) technology to connect database and internet. The auction market integrates auction functions and re-designed OPF to support the auction mechanism and congestion management.
This research could also provide a solid foundation for Taiwan¡¦s power system deregulation in the future. The proposed mechanism and its expansion could guarantee a smooth migration process and successful market/system operation.
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Avian community structure and diversity in relation to coastal development in the Sian Ka’an Biosphere Reserve and Riviera Maya, Quintana Roo, MexicoRaymundo Sanchez, Angeles A 01 May 2010 (has links)
Habitat loss and fragmentation caused by tourist development along the eastern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico represents a big threat to the survival of Nearctic-Neotropical migratory songbirds. This habitat plays a crucial role for successful migration for many migratory birds. However, the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on these birds have not been well documented in the region. From September- December, 2006-2008, we mist-netted and conducted transect surveys to assess the variation in the avian community among three different levels of development (high, medium and low). The study area included two small reserves (10-20 ha) in the hotel zone associated with the Riviera Maya (high development), two sites with limited development within the Sian Ka’an Biosphere Reserve associated with small fishing camps (medium development), and two undeveloped sites located on a private ranch within Sian Ka’an (low development). I assessed species richness and abundance of four avian groups: the entire community, year-round residents, winter residents, and transients. Species richness and abundance decreased significantly with the greatest levels of disturbance. The high development level had the least species richness and abundance, whereas the medium development level had the greatest richness for all bird classes. However, my results suggest that small reserves in the hotel zone can be important compliments to the large, undisturbed reserves (Sian Ka’an) for both resident and migrant birds. Forty-six percent of all birds species captured in mist nets were Nearctic-Neotropical migrants; thus this group composed a significant component of the avian community. The dominance in the year-round resident community by the endemic Black Catbird (Dumetella glabrirostris) at medium and low development sites showed that coastal dune vegetation is also important in maintaining populations of endemic species, which are sensitive to levels of disturbance. The use of two different survey methods (mist-netting and transect surveys) produced complimentary descriptions of community composition. Because many year-round resident species and migrants depend on this scarce and discontinuous coastal habitat, and because of the intense development pressure on this coastal zone, better conservation strategies are needed to successfully sustain the avian community of this region.
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Temagami's tangled wild : race, gender and the making of Canadian nature /Thorpe, Jocelyn. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--York University, 2008. Graduate Programme in Environmental Studies. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet. MODE OF ACCESS via web browser by entering the following URL: http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:NR39056
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Sensitivity of stable isotopes (13C, 15N, and 18O) in bone to dietary specialization and niche separation among sympatric primates in Kibale National Park, Uganda /Carter, Melinda Lee. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Dept. of Anthropology, August 2001. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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Multidimensional Spatial Characterization of Plant Invasions in 'El Pinacate y Gran Desierto de Altar' Biosphere ReserveSanchez Flores, Erick. January 2006 (has links)
Invasive species are considered an agent of ecological change with more significant effects than global warming. Exotic plant invasions threaten biodiversity and ecosystem viability worldwide. Their effects in the Sonoran Desert ecosystems are a growing concern among ecologists and land managers. We hypothesized that highly dynamic desert environments are unstable, therefore more vulnerable to invasion by exotic plant species. To test this hypothesis we used a multidimensional approach to assess the spatial distribution of two exotic species: Brassica tournefortii (Saharan mustard) and Schismus arabicus (Arabian grass), in a portion of 'El Pinacate y Gran Desierto de Altar' Biosphere Reserve (PBR) in northwestern Sonora, Mexico. This approach combined genetic algorithms, geographic information systems, field methods, statistical analysis, and remote sensing modeling at multiple spatial and temporal scales to predict and test the current and potential distribution of the invasives over dynamic landscapes.Predicted probability of invasion was influenced strongly by human factors: Road networks were the strongest predictors of presence, revealing the potential importance of humans as vectors of invasiveness. Dynamic landscapes, associated mostly with vegetation losses, were detected spectrally in the eastern portion of the study area, very likely associated with past agricultural and current grazing activity. Combined models of high probability for invasion by B. tournefortii and S. arabicus over dynamic landscapes were tested against confirmed locations of the invasives and land cover types associated with invasion. Results confirmed the hypothesis of the study and suggest that more dynamic landscapes are more prone to invasion by these two exotic plants in the PBR. B. tournefortii was found associated mostly with landscapes occupied by microphyllous desert scrub and grassland, as well as sarcocaulescent desert scrub. S. arabicus was found more abundantly in the flat low lands occupied by microphyllous and crassicaulescent desert scrub. These relationships cannot, however, be conclusive and require further investigation due to the complex ecology of these invasives.
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Utilisation of low density vacuum zones by white rhinos in the Umfolozi Game Reserve.Shrader, Adrian Morgan. 19 December 2013 (has links)
White rhinos in the Umfolozi Game Reserve (UGR) are managed with a 'Sink
Management Policy' which utilises natural dispersal patterns of white rhinos from an
area of high density (the core), to areas of low density (vacuum zones). This study
was initiated to determine how white rhinos utilised the vacuum zones, as the
management staff of the UGR felt that white rhinos were not dispersing into them but
utilising them only as areas of trophic resources.
Significantly different white rhino densities were established in the Makhamisa and
Masinda vacuum zones by removing white rhinos from Masinda. Changes in the
density of white rhinos were monitored and the age and sex compositions determined.
No significant changes in the density of white rhino groups were recorded during the
study, however, the density of individuals in Makhamisa increased significantly in the
dry season, while the density in Masinda did not change. The reason for this increase
could not be determined, however, the most likely explanation was that rhinos moved
toward the Makhamisa study area in search of surface water which was present in the
White Umfolozi River. During the dry season the water level in the Umfolozi River
was low so the white rhinos where able to cross into the study area. However, owing
to the above average rainfall, resources were not limited in either study area, and most
likely in most of the reserve. Thus, it could not be determined why white rhinos
would need to enter the Makhamisa study area.
Changes in grass height, grass colour, and the availability of water in pans and
streams were monitored throughout the study. The grassland community compositions of the two study areas were found not to be significantly different. The
total utilisation of the different grassland communities by white rhinos during the
study were determined for both study areas. White rhinos in the two study areas
utilised the grassland communities in a similar pattern throughout the study. During
the wet and dry seasons, white rhinos primarily foraged in the short grassland
community (Panicum coloratum & Themeda-Urachloa), their staple grassland
community, and were not observed to switch and start foraging in the tall grassland
community (Themeda & Themeda-Panicum). their reserve community. White rhinos
in both study areas were able to forage in their stable grassland community
throughout the dry season because of the above average rainfall experienced during
the study
The results of the study suggest that white rhinos outside the study areas did not
utilise the vacuum zones for trophic resources. However, as the study was conducted
in a year with above average rainfall, these findings may not represent how white
rhinos utilise the vacuum zones in years with average or below average rainfall. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1998.
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The effect of the spatial scale of tree harvesting on woody seedling establishment and tree dynamic at Ongoye Forest Reserve.Louw, Sharon Lilla. January 2010
Subsistence harvesting pressure in most African countries focuses on the small and mostly unreproductive trees found in the understorey stratum and can have potentially insidious ecological effects. Harvest intensities at Ongoye Forest Reserve (OFR) vary significantly across the forest (range = 87 - 567 stumps ha-1), with harvesting focussed exclusively on poles from tree species that grow only in the understorey. Growing evidence indicates that seedling establishment from the pool of species available beneath a closed canopy is greatly influenced by the differential ability of species to take advantage of the short burst of resources in newly-created understorey gaps. Seedling dynamics in these gaps may determine forest tree diversity and dynamics and consequently harvest gaps have the potential to significantly affect natural forest dynamics. This study examined seedling establishment beneath intact understorey and within artificially created understorey gaps of different sizes (single stem gaps, two stem gaps, four stem gaps, eight stem gaps and control ‘gap’, where no stems were removed) that simulated different spatial scales of harvesting intensity of understorey trees. This experiment examined the proposition that successful seedling establishment and natural succession is strongly dependent on the scale of harvesting. Seedling abundance, species richness, irradiance (photosynthetically active radiation and the red to far-red ratio), soil nutrient composition and herbaceous layer cover was measured in each gap size in 2005 before harvesting, and again in 2007. The mean seedling abundance was not significantly different among gap treatments, although there was a trend towards more seedlings in 2005 than 2007. Seedling abundance in all gaps was greater than at control sites beneath the intact understorey. There was a continuous increase in seedling richness in 2007. An average species richness of 4.3 was recorded in the control sites, beneath a shaded understorey. Here, seedling richness increased by 18.24% with the removal of a single understorey tree (Gap 1). Species richness increased with increasing experimental gap size increased so that the greatest mean species richness (6.2 species) was recorded where eight neighbouring trees were removed (Gap 8). Light transmission reaching the seedling stratum was greater in larger gaps and there was a trend towards more seedlings and greater species richness in the higher light environments of such gaps. Soil nutrient levels did not influence seedling abundance and species richness in gaps. The herbaceous layer suppressed seedling establishment. In the largest gaps (115.4m2) created by harvesting, seedling composition was more deterministic than in small gaps where seedling establishment and density was random, accordingly there were more species in larger gaps from a more defined species assemblage. Current harvesting levels of pole-sized understorey trees, where only small gaps are created in the understorey, are unlikely to alter forest dynamics and species composition at OFR. This study demonstrates that harvesting eight adjacent trees crosses the harvest intensity threshold between sustainable natural tree dynamics and a potential successional shift to an alternative state. Clearly, for natural dynamics to be maintained harvesting intensities will have to be regulated. / http://hdl.handle.net/10413/631 / Thesis (M.Env.Dev.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2010.
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Leaf area index in a tropical dry forest in MexicoHuang, Yingduan Unknown Date
No description available.
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Habitat quality effects on the ecology of leopard on a small enclosed reserve.Owen, Cailey. January 2013 (has links)
Although the leopard (Panthera pardus) is one of the more successful large carnivores, challenges for leopard conservation emulate those of other more endangered carnivores, and they are a model species for investigating issues affecting carnivore persistence worldwide. This thesis represents a six year study of leopard on the Karongwe Game Reserve, South Africa, which provided a unique opportunity to observe various aspects of behavioural ecology in the absence of prey availability
constraints or human persecution. Small, enclosed reserves such as Karongwe make up 16.8% of the total land in South Africa and undertaking sound ecological research in these areas provides valuable data for evidence-based conservation and management. The leopard is notoriously shy and difficult to study and I used free darting and habituation to enhance visual observation, in order to understand the ecological processes influencing leopard reproductive success and survival. My results show that
leopard in the high prey area studied, consume almost double the number of ungulates as leopard in similar habitats elsewhere. This generalist predator improved its hunting success by selecting vulnerable prey and selectively hunted in habitats of intermediate density, where preferred prey were most abundant. Ample nutrition played a key role in reproductive health and reduced the duration of reproductive parameters below that previously recorded in the literature. Any additional nutritional input could not translate into increased population growth as females were already reproducing optimally. Female territorial size and habitat selection were determined by the availability of riparian habitat and resources of their preferred prey. Territoriality however was governed by prey biomass. Neighbouring leopards were territorial, sharing little space (average 11% territorial overlap) and
hunting five times more often in the core than in the rest of their territory. During periods of prey richness, females became more territorial and there was a positive “bottom up” effect through subadult recruitment. Density-dependent intraspecific and interspecific competition for limited space regulated the population around carrying capacity, and constrained population growth. These results
provide fundamental baseline data about leopard in the absence of human disturbance, or prey constraints. They highlight that, although the influence of optimal nutrition is important in the reproductive health and territoriality of leopard, habitat quality and quantity are ultimately what
govern leopard carrying capacity and population size. I provide baseline reproductive, carrying capacity and territorial data for agencies developing policy, and for setting priorities in conservation and management, as well as habitat protection and restoration, for not only this species but other threatened species as well. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville, 2013.
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The impact of repeated mild traumatic brain injuries (concussions) on the cognitive and academic functioning of early adolescent rugby union players: A controlled, longitudinal, prospective study.Alexander, Debbie. January 2007 (has links)
<p>This study investigated, within the context of Brain Reserve Capacity (BRC) theory, whether repeated concussions resulted in residual deficits in cognitive and academic functioning of early adolescent rugby players relative to non-contact sports controls.</p>
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