scholarly journals A Geo-botanical Study of Alder Forest and Elm Forest in a Small Tributary Basin

1976 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 83-93
Author(s):  
Hajime MAKITA ◽  
Takao KIKUCHI ◽  
Osamu MIURA ◽  
Kei SUGAWARA
2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-185
Author(s):  
Jesse Aberbach

This article considers how the children's books written by two nineteenth-century female writers, Eliza Tabor and Mary Martha Sherwood, when they accompanied their husbands to India, enabled them to navigate this new environment and their position as respectable middle-class women while revealing how India was deemed a place where British childhood was impossible. Just as many women took up botanical study to legitimise their ‘otherwise transgressive presence in imperial spaces’ (McEwan 219), writing for children enabled others to engage with the masculine world of travelling and earning money without compromising their femininity. Addressing their work to children also seems to have helped both writers to deal with the absence of their own children: the Indian climate made it impossibly challenging for most British infants and children. In this way their writing gives expression to what might be termed a crisis of imperial motherhood. Underlying the texts is an anxiety relating to British settlement and an attempt to comprehend and control a place that threatened their maternal roles.


1979 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-88
Author(s):  
S.E. Penttinen ◽  
P.H. Bouthillier ◽  
S.E. Hrudey

Abstract Studies on the chronic low dissolved oxygen problems encountered under winter ice in the Red Deer River have generally been unable to account for dissolved oxygen depletion in terms of known manmade inputs. An experimental program was developed to assess the possible nature and approximate bounds of oxygen demand due to natural organic runoff carried to the Red Deer River by a small tributary stream, the Blindman River. The study employed an electrolytic respirometer on stream water samples subjected to prior concentration by vacuum evaporation. Evaluation of carbon and nitrogen budgets in conjunction with the measured oxygen demand indicate that biochemical oxygen demand is originating with natural organic runoff in tributaries of the Red Deer River. The results provide a basis for estimation of the possible contribution to the observed oxygen demand in the Red Deer River originating from natural organic runoff.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soely Luyando-Flusa ◽  
◽  
Christopher J. Hein ◽  
Leslie Reeder-Myers ◽  
Torben Rick ◽  
...  

1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene D. Hetherington

Water quality was monitored in the Lens Creek watershed on southern Vancouver Island to determine nitrogen loss following fall application of 224 kg N/ha urea fertilizer on a second-growth Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) forest. Peak nitrogen concentrations measured in two small tributary streams were 14 mg/L as urea, 1.9 mg/L as ammonia, and 9.3 mg/L as nitrate. For the first 14 months, estimated nitrogen outputs in excess of background amounts were 5.9 and 14.5% of the total applied nitrogen for the two subsidiary watersheds with 46 and 80% of their drainage areas fertilized, respectively. These losses were considerably higher than amounts of less than 1% previously reported for western North America. Increased levels of urea N and ammonia N were short-lived, while nitrate N remained above background levels for the study duration. Reasons for the high nitrogen loss include nitrification of the urea during 7 weeks of mild, dry weather following fertilization, presence of alder and swampy areas adjacent to the streams, high soil permeability, steep slopes, and abundant, above average early winter rainfall. The watersheds had been previously fertilized, but any influence of this first fertilization on nitrogen loss during the present study is unknown. Lens Creek water quality was not adversely affected by the fertilization in terms of drinking water standards or toxicity to fish.


2014 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dariusz Kubiak ◽  
Paweł Czarnota ◽  
Anna Zduńczyk ◽  
Maria Dynowska ◽  
Grzegorz Leśniański ◽  
...  

The paper presents the list of 159 taxa, including 151 lichens and 8 saprotrophic or parasitic (lichenicolous) fungi, recorded in the designed Special Area of Conservation NATURA 2000 „Middle Łyna River Valley – Smolajny” (the Forest Division of Wichrowo). The analysed area (2953 ha) covers mostly forest communities, with natural character, associated with the valley of the Łyna river (hillside lime-oak-hornbeam forests, streamside alder-ash forest, riparian black alder forest).


1989 ◽  
Vol 118 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 51-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Domenach ◽  
F. Kurdali ◽  
R. Bardin

Author(s):  
Amelia T McReynolds ◽  
Megan L. Hoff ◽  
Angelena A. Sikora ◽  
Cynthia I. Nau ◽  
Michael J. Pietraszek ◽  
...  

Small tributaries of the Great Lakes serve as important habitat during critical life stages of many fish species, though temporal and spatial dynamics of the assemblage that uses these systems are seldom investigated. This study quantifies larval and adult fish assemblages captured by fyke net and light traps among small tributary mouths of Green Bay, Lake Michigan. Ten tributaries harbored a total of forty-five species representing seventeen families, with the most abundant including spottail shiner (Notropis hudsonius (Clinton 1824)) in adult assemblages and white sucker (Catostomus commersonii (Lacepède 1803)) in larval assemblages. Larval fish assemblage structures differed over five biweekly sampling events in May and June. Adult fish assemblage structures varied among tributaries but not among spring, summer, and fall samples. Larval and adult species assemblages at these rivermouths are likely influenced by hydrology, habitat structure, and species-specific ecology. Water movement may transport larvae into rivermouths, as larval assemblages were dominated by species that spawn in coastal habitats. Adult species richness varied with longitude, with the greatest diversity in tributaries on the west shore. This investigation of fish assemblages highlights the spatial and temporal variation that occurs in these systems and their role in shaping fish populations in Green Bay.


2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 383-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Ferreira Haluch ◽  
Vinícius Abilhoa

A new species of characid fish, Astyanax totae, is described from a small tributary in the upper drainage of the rio Iguaçu, Paraná basin, Brazil. The new species is distinct from most species of Astyanax by the vertically elongated humeral spot, slightly expanded above the lateral line to posterodorsal margin of opercle, followed by a midlateral dark stripe expanded from the humeral region to the median caudal-fin rays, maxilla with 2 to 5 teeth (usually 3) and 15 to 18 branched anal-fin rays.


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