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Harvesting System (harvesting + system)
Selected AbstractsGround beetle responses to patch retention harvesting in high elevation forests of British ColumbiaECOGRAPHY, Issue 5 2004Jeffrey P. Lemieux The effect of a forest harvesting system whereby small (typically 0.1,2.0 ha) patches of standing timber are retained inside of harvests, was compared to conventional clearcutting for its effect on ground beetle assemblages. Two seasons of pitfall trapping entailed 46,451 trap days, and yielded 15,799 individuals of 28 species; abundance was dominated by four species comprising 92.4% of the catch. Most species were known to have wide geographic distributions in Canada and Alaska but many species seemed to respond to disturbance on a site-specific basis. Contrary to findings of similar studies, no species could be characterized as "mature-forest specialists", or "forest generalists". Forest patches and edge habitats immediately inside the forest canopy contained assemblages more closely related to mature forest than to cleared areas. Harvested areas with patches yielded catches distinct from typical clearcuts, based primarily on changes in abundance of one common species. Climatic regimes and landscape disturbance levels were the two important factors distinguishing our study from others, and we have suggested that these may influence the degree to which patches are an effective conservation tool. [source] Multifunctional Magnetic Optical Sensor Particles with Tunable Sizes for Monitoring Metabolic Parameters and as a Basis for NanotherapeuticsADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 11 2010Günter Mistlberger Abstract Magnetic optical sensor particles with multifunctional cores and shells are synthesized via a facile nanoprecipitation method and the subsequent modification of the particle shell. The hydrophobic particle core includes optical oxygen indicators, a light harvesting system, photosensitizers, and magnetic nanoparticles. Further functionalities are introduced by modifying the shell with enzymes, antibodies, multiple layers of polyelectrolytes, stimuli-responsive polymers, and luminescent indicator dyes. The hydrodynamic diameter is tunable by varying different precipitation parameters. [source] DYNAMICS OF SPATIAL EXPLOITATION: A METAPOPULATION APPROACHNATURAL RESOURCE MODELING, Issue 3 2001JAMES N. SANCHIRICO ABSTRACT. In this paper we present a bioeconomic model of a harvesting industry operating over a heterogeneous environment comprised of discrete biological populations interconnected by dispersal processes. The model generalizes the Gordon [1954]/Smith [1968] model of open-access rent dissipation by accounting for intertemporal and spatial "Ricardian" patterns of exploitation. This model yields a simple, but insightful, framework from which one can investigate factors that contribute to the evolution of resource exploitation patterns over space and time. For example, we find that exploitation patterns are driven by biological and fleet dispersal and biological and economic heterogeneity. We conclude that one cannot really understand the biological processes operating in an exploited system without knowing as much about the harvesting system as about the biological system. [source] 175 Toward an Optical Biogeography of the OceansJOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 2003A. M. Wood Remote sensing of ocean color has revolutionized our ability to understand the processes leading to the observed distribution of different taxa in marine waters. Many scientists in the remote sensing and optics community are working toward retrieval of species distributions using ocean color measurements to derive the concentration of recognized chemotaxonomic markers. In this talk, I work toward an optical biogeography of the ocean by viewing the optical environment as a selection regime that creates biogeographic boundaries or "optical fences" defining the distribution of taxa with different light harvesting systems and/or different physiologies. Working primarily with data from a wide range of tropical, sub-tropical, and warm temperate coastal margins, I show that there is a close association between the distribution of different spectral forms of PE-containing picocyanobacteria and the optical properties of the water masses in which they are found. This pattern also appears to be reflected in the distribution some dinoflagellate taxa, indicating that the optical environment encompasses a range of key niche parameters that, in turn, determine the biogeographic distribution of species. [source] The response of Phragmites australis to harvesting pressure in the Muzi Swamp of the Tembe Elephant Park, South AfricaLAND DEGRADATION AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 5 2004J. A. Tarr Abstract Phragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. ex Steud. has been harvested in the Muzi Swamp in Maputaland, South Africa for generations. Over the last ten years, however, a flourishing trade in this reed has developed. Concern has now been expressed that at the current levels of utilization the ecological integrity of the Muzi Swamp is being compromised, and that the current harvesting rates are not sustainable in the long term. The hypothesis was put forward that a degradation gradient exists with the most severe degradation occurring the closest to where community members enter the park, and the least degradation the furthest from this point. The results of this study, however, show no distinct degradation gradient. Yet the overall condition of the reeds in the harvesting area is poorer than in the non-utilized area. Expansion of the current harvesting area, coupled with adaptive harvesting systems and yearly monitoring will improve the quality of the reeds within the harvesting area without affecting the harvesting quotas. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |