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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

A preliminary ecological survey of a temporary pond in a Douglas fir forest association with emphasis on the food and feeding habits of the Oregon newt, Triturus granulosus granulosus

Kelly, Robert W. 06 1900 (has links)
55 pages / This work has been done as a preliminary ecological survey of an aquatic habitat in a Douglas fir forest association. Since this is a preliminary study it is not expected to be complete in all details affecting the associations within a community. Little work of this type has been conducted previously, and much more work should be done along these lines in order to have a more complete understanding of the ecology of this, or a similar area. Perhaps this work will be of less value in itself than the assistance it may afford others who are beginning similar undertakings. In this work an attempt has been made to point out many of the physical factors which have an influence on, or directly affect the community, e.g., the size of the pond, the location, depth, etc. A descriptive account will be given of the flora and fauna, and an attempt has been made to present the interrelations between the organisms and their environment.
2

Bird Use of Lakes in the Claremont-Upland Area

Banschbach, Valerie 02 May 1986 (has links)
I studied water bird use of two lakes in the Claremont-Upland area to determine what physical, chemical, and biological aspects of these lakes provide suitable water bird habitat and food resources. I censused the Bernard Field Station Lake in Claremont and a gravel pit freshwater area in Upland from 10/85 to 3/86 for water bird use. I also mapped these sites, noted their water surface area and water depth changes, monitored their water chemistry, and censused their vegetation. The results of this work showed more total water birds per hour of observation time, and more birds per hour of observation time of each food preference type, at the Upland Lakes than at the BFS Lake, except for diving ducks, which I found at both sites in similar abundance, and coots, which I found at the BFS Lake in greater abundance than at the Upland Lakes. The Shannon-Weiner Index of Diversity, H', used to determine bird species diversity, was higher for most individual census dates and on average, at the Upland Lakes than at the BFS Lake. The Upland Lakes had fewer species and less abundance of true aquatic plants than the BFS Lake; however, the BFS Lake had fewer different types of habitat (i.e. open shoreline, thick emergent shoreline vegetation, mudflats, grassy areas, etc .) than did the Upland Lakes. The Upland Lakes, although originally very similar to the BFS Lake in total water surface area, came to have four times the water surface area of the BFS Lake as time progressed, due to winter rainfall and runoff. The results of bird censuses also showed many more migrant than resident birds using the Upland Lakes area, while few migrant birds used the BFS Lake. Water bird use differences between these sites are the resuIt of the interaction of the unique ecological factors of each site. The Upland Lakes provide more diverse habitats, greater water surface area, a more accessible, open, isolated location for stopovers for migratory birds than the BFS Lake provides. The BFS Lake provides only two major habitat types for water bird use: thick shoreline emergent vegetation (mostly cattails), and open water. Diving ducks and coots utilize these habitats well and thus, with the exception of migratory flocks of diving ducks, used the BFS Lake as frequently, or more frequently than they used the Upland Lakes. Other birds that forage in muddy, open shore or grassy, open shore areas preferred the Upland Lakes area (dabbling ducks and shorebirds). Additional observation of similar water area in Claremont, Upland, and Montclair, California could produce a larger data base to demonstrate conclusively such tentative findings of this study as size of water surface area being directly proportional to amount of migratory bird use.
3

Evaluating Habitat Restoration in the St. Clair-Detroit River System

Fischer, Jason L. January 2019 (has links)
No description available.

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