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Establishment of prairie grasses on strip mine spoilsRodgers, Cassandra Sue. Anderson, Roger C. January 1987 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Illinois State University, 1987. / Title from title page screen, viewed August 31, 2005. Dissertation Committee: Roger C. Anderson (chair), Dale E. Brickenholz, Anthony E. Liberta, Alan J. Katz, Jerome R. Cain. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 91-102) and abstract. Also available in print.
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Limitations to plant root growth in highly saline and alkaline bauxite residue /Kopittke, Peter Martin. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Queensland, 2004. / Includes bibliography.
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Restoration of degraded land a comparison of structural and functional measurements of recovery /Heckman, John Richard. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1997. / Title from PDF title page (viewed on Dec. 13, 2005). Includes bibliographical references.
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Long-term ecosystem development on an open-cut coal mine in central Queensland /Kopittke, Gillian Ruth. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.Phil.) - University of Queensland, 2006. / Includes bibliography.
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Determining the suitability of native grasses for highway revegetation sodStott, Lance Vear. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--Montana State University--Bozeman, 2007. / Typescript. Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Tracy A.O. Dougher. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 247-258).
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Long-Term Effectiveness of Revegetation at the Tuba City, Arizona Uranium Mill Tailings Disposal SiteBenally, Quentin Y., Benally, Quentin Y. January 2016 (has links)
Revegetation is a reclamation method used to stabilize land that has been disturbed (i.e. Uranium contamination) by mining in an effort to establish a sustainable plant community. During 1986-88, large amounts of topsoil were removed at the site adjacent to the Tuba City disposal cell to remove windblown contaminated soil and construct the Uranium disposal cell. Re-establishing a sustainable plant community is critical to minimizing dust emissions, controlling erosion, and improving rangeland condition, and enhancing evapotranspiration. The objective of this study was to evaluate the long-term effectiveness of revegetation efforts by 1) comparing plant species composition and abundance on the reclaimed area and native rangeland protected from grazing, 2) current rangeland condition by comparing plant communities on grazed and protected native rangeland 3) differences in soil fertility, particle size distribution, and morphology that could be influencing vegetation differences in the three areas, 4) landscape-scale evapotranspiration rates and effects on groundwater recharge in the three plant communities, and 5) the value of using relatively undisturbed Legacy Management parcels as reference areas. Plant cover in the revegetated area was greater in 2014 (24%) than in 1998 (15%); however, plant species composition and diversity in the revegetated area and in the reference area remained markedly different. The effectiveness of revegetation is improving, but given the extended amount of time the improvement is not matching the protected area’s percent cover. The reference area showed highest cover during the early cool-season. However, the grazed area possessed the highest plant species composition and highest foliar cover in the late warm-season. The vegetation relevé estimate and foliar cover statistics show the revegetated area (24%) was significantly less than the surrounding vegetation (35%), even after 26 years since original revegetation. These results are critical in assisting Legacy Management to identify environmentally sustainable methods for the continuous management of this site and others in the area.
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Natural revegetation of disturbed sites in British ColumbiaErrington, John Charles January 1975 (has links)
Factors affecting the natural revegetation of areas disturbed by airborne emissions were studied at the Anyox smelter on the northern coast of British Columbia. Revegetation of areas where vegetation and soil were removed by industry were studied on mine waste dumps on Vancouver Island, on mine wastes in the West Kootenays, and on abandoned logging roads on Vancouver Island and near Lumby.
At Anyox, much of the direct evidence of fume damage was eradicated by a fire in 1942, which occurred eight years after smelting operations ceased. This fire encompassed a five-mile radius surrounding the smelter. Tree-ring analysis on surviving western hemlock trees, extending from the edge of the fire to the head of Alice Arm, showed a strong relationship between the tonnage of ore smelted and the radial increment. Tree growth was initially depressed when smelting began in 1914 and remained low until smelter operations ceased. At this time the growth dramatically increased, but by 1970 the annual radial increment had returned to a slow rate similar to before smelting operations began.
Western hemlock was much less susceptible to fume damage than western red cedar. Although total fume kill occurred on western red cedar as far south as the Nass River, north to the head of Hastings Arm and East to the head of Alice Arm, total kill on hemlock took place within a few miles of the smelter. Fume damage was the heaviest near the smelter and near the head of Alice Arm where the topography confined the fumes, rendering them more effective.
Within the area affected by the 1942 fire, revegetation was slow near the smelter and was more rapid near the mature vegetation. Seeds which are easily dispersed by light wind, were responsible for the majority of colonizing species many of which were found rarely in the surrounding unburned vegetation.
On logging roads and mine waste materials, seed source availability appeared to be the major factor in determining the colonizing species. Light wind-blown seeds were the initial colonizers on coastal logging roads, and adjacent vegetation supplied the seed source for the interior logging roads. The establishment of salal through vegetative means was' observed to occur on coastal logging roads. Species with the ability to fix nitrogen, with the exception of alder, played a minor role in natural revegetation of most areas. Slow revegetation of large-scale disturbances was attributed partly to the lack of adequate seed.
The most common cause of slow revegetation in most areas was moisture deficiency. Moisture availability on mine wastes at Cumberland appeared to be determined by slope, aspect, color, shading and mound height. On logging road surfaces, in both Lumby and coastal areas, a reduction in plant growth on steeper slopes was attributed to reduced moisture. Wind exposure was found to be the most important factor governing revegetation of mine wastes in the West Kootenays.
Coarse textured material was related to a lower percentage cover of vegetation on the surface of coastal logging roads. Uniformly coarse textured material on the waste dumps in the West Kootenays precluded any significant statistical relationships. Coarse textured materials, nevertheless, had a general inhibitory effect on the rate of revegetation of many of the mine waste dumps.
Steep unstable slopes were a major factor which prevented revegetation of West Kootenay mine wastes and on the upslope of road cuts.
The scale of disturbance was found to magnify or obscure many of the factors important to successful plant colonization.
The chemical composition of waste material, although studied only peripherally, did not appear to be a major factor in determining the revegetation of disturbed areas at the sites studied. Low pH values, which are often taken as a barometer of mine waste toxicity, occurred rarely. In many instances, high pH values may have prevented the successful invasion of acid-loving species.
In applied reclamation procedures, it is mandatory that objectives for future land use be incorporated into planning, along with the anticipation of inhibiting factors. If no conditions are left which prevent plant growth, then reclamation will be straightforward and land use goals will be more easily satisfied. / Forestry, Faculty of / Graduate
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The role of grass-legume communities in revegetation of a subalpine mine site in British ColumbiaYamanaka, Koji January 1982 (has links)
This study describes an investigation of the potential for pioneer grass-legume communities to stabilize and ameliorate geologically-fresh soil leading to the establishment
of a self-sustaining, progressive plant succession on a surface-mined subalpine site.
The study area is located 2,000 m above sea level in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Field surveys at the site indicated extremely limited invasion of reclaimed areas (3-7 years old) by native species from the adjacent subalpine forest. Soils on revegetated sites were generally warmer and drier than soils of the associated forest and have less than half the content of fine soil fragments (<2 mm).
Field studies revealed chronological trends in grass-legume communities at four sites revegetated during 1974-1978 including: species composition, legumes (Trifolium repens L., T. hybridum L. and Medicago sativa L.) performing increasingly poorly on the older sites; biomass changes, a shoot to root ratio (S/R) decreasing from 2.3 to 0.2 as the communities aged; and litter accumulation which continued even on the oldest site.
Fertilizer (13-16-10) operationally applied at 150 -391 kg/ha enhanced the growth of Dactylis glomerata L. and litter degradation, and acidified the soil. Nitrogen fertilization
was also associated with two clear inverse relationships identified between D. glomerata and Festuca rubra L. biomass, and between soil pH and phosphorus levels.
In greenhouse tests grasses were revealed to be more efficient soil nitrogen consumers than were legumes and nitrogen fixation decreased significantly (P<0.01) and linearly with increasing grass seeding rates. In the presence of grasses, nitrogen fixation was positively correlated with aboveground legume biomass at all nitrogen fertilizer levels tested. The results further revealed that operational seeding and fertilizer rates at this site may not optimize plant productivity and the ability of legumes to fix nitrogen symbiotically. Field trials based upon the experimentaly derived combination (17.5 : 30 : 50 kg/ha grass seeding rate : legume seeding rate : nitrogen fertilizer rate) would be desirable to evaluate these data on the site.
Other potential practical implications from this study
are:
(1) The need for improved legume establishment, involving legume seed germination, species and variety selection, and selection of Rhizobium strains.
(2) Improved control of the operational fertilizer application.
(3) Alteration of grass and legume species composition of the present seed mix.
(4) Selective placement of initial material (overburden or spoil) handling.
A modification of the acetylene reduction assay, "the open system" technique, was developed for evaluation of legume nitrogen fixation of mine spoils. Although the unit developed is limited to detection of the presence or absence of ethylene, calibration with the closed system of ethylene
levels obtained by the open system appeared feasible. Further refinement of the system for quantitative use would increase its usefulness in nitrogen fixation studies of legumes on mine spoils, nitrogen fixing woody plants in forests, and legumes in grassland sods. / Land and Food Systems, Faculty of / Graduate
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Estudo da influência do ultrassom de baixa frequência sobre a germinação de Senna multijuga (rich.) H. S. Irwin & Barneby /Venâncio, Renata Samara Da Silva January 2019 (has links)
Orientador: Antonio Cesar Germano Martins / Resumo: A germinação é uma sequência ordenada de atividades metabólicas, que se inicia com a embebição e culmina na protrusão da radícula dos envoltórios da semente. Estudar esse processo é extremamente importante para produção de mudas, que poderão entre outras aplicações serem utilizadas na revegetação de áreas degradadas. Para o processo de germinação são necessários alguns fatores externos, como luz, água e oxigênio. A presença desses fatores é de grande importância para formação de plântulas normais. Algumas espécies são consideradas dormentes, por adotarem uma estratégia de sobrevivência para superar condições ambientais adversas. Para essas espécies a germinação não acontece mesmo quando as sementes são viáveis. Essas sementes germinam apenas quando esse processo é interrompido, o que pode ocorrer naturalmente quando as condições tornam-se mais favoráveis para a sobrevivência da espécie ou de forma induzida. Estudos demonstram que o ultrassom pode aumentar a taxa de germinação, no entanto, uma aplicação de dosagem excessiva pode causar danos graves à semente, impossibilitando a germinação. O presente trabalho teve objetivo estudar a quebra da dormência pela aplicação de ondas ultrassônicas de baixa frequência e avaliar o seu efeito sobre a germinação de sementes de Senna multijuga (Rich.) H. S. Irwin & Barneby, espécie utilizada na revegetação de áreas degradadas. Embora o ultrassom possua muitas aplicações, o seu uso para a quebra de dormência é ainda uma área pouco explorada... (Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Doutor
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Establishment, maintenance and reproduction of fireweed in distrubed and undisturbed sites at ScheffervilleBroderick, Daniel Hugh. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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