213 research outputs found

    Intergeneric crossability barriers in the Triticeae

    Get PDF
    Call number: LD2668 .T4 1978 K54Master of Scienc

    Conservation strategies to mitigate impacts from climate change in Amazonia

    Get PDF
    Protected area systems and conservation corridors can help mitigate the impacts of climate change on Amazonian biodiversity. We propose conservation design criteria that will help species survive in situ or adjust range distributions in response to increased drought. The first priority is to protect the western Amazon, identified as the ā€˜Core Amazonā€™, due to stable rainfall regimes and macro-ecological phenomena that have led to the evolution of high levels of biodiversity. Ecotones can buffer the impact from climate change because populations are genetically adapted to climate extremes, particularly seasonality, because high levels of habitat diversity are associated with edaphic variability. Future climatic tension zones should be surveyed for geomorphological features that capture rain or conserve soil moisture to identify potential refugia for humid forest species. Conservation corridors should span environmental gradients to ensure that species can shift range distributions. Riparian corridors provide protection to both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Multiple potential altitudinal corridors exist in the Andes, but natural and anthropogenic bottlenecks will constrain the ability of species to shift their ranges and adapt to climate change. Planned infrastructure investments are a serious threat to the potential to consolidate corridors over the short and medium term

    Extragalactic Zeeman Detections in OH Megamasers

    Full text link
    We have measured the Zeeman splitting of OH megamaser emission at 1667 MHz from five (ultra)luminous infrared galaxies ([U]LIRGs) using the 305 m Arecibo telescope and the 100 m Green Bank Telescope. Five of eight targeted galaxies show significant Zeeman-splitting detections, with 14 individual masing components detected and line-of-sight magnetic field strengths ranging from ~0.5-18 mG. The detected field strengths are similar to those measured in Galactic OH masers, suggesting that the local process of massive star formation occurs under similar conditions in (U)LIRGs and the Galaxy, in spite of the vastly different large-scale environments. Our measured field strengths are also similar to magnetic field strengths in (U)LIRGs inferred from synchrotron observations, implying that milligauss magnetic fields likely pervade most phases of the interstellar medium in (U)LIRGs. These results provide a promising new tool for probing the astrophysics of distant galaxies.Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures, 8 tables. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal v680n2, June 20, 2008; corrected 2 typo

    Thirty Years of Land-cover Change in Bolivia

    Get PDF
    Land-cover change in eastern lowland Bolivia was documented using Landsat images from five epochs for all landscapes situated below the montane tree line at approximately 3000 m, including humid forest, inundated forest, seasonally dry forest, and cloud forest, as well as scrublands and grasslands. Deforestation in eastern Bolivia in 2004 covered 45 411 km2, representing;9% of the original forest cover, with an additional conversion of 9042 km2 of scrub and savanna habitats representing 17 % of total historical land-cover change. Annual rates of land-cover change increased from;400 km2 y1 in the 1960s to;2900 km2 y1 in the last epoch spanning 2001 to 2004. This study provides Bolivia with a spatially explicit information resource to monitor future land-cover change, a prerequisite for proposed mechanisms to compensate countries for reducing carbon emissions as a result of deforestation. A comparison of the most recent epoch with previous periods shows that policies enacted in the late 1990s to promote forest conservation had no observable impact on reducing deforestation and that deforestation actually increased in some protected areas. The rate of land-cover change continues to increase linearly nationwide, but is growing faster in the Santa Cruz department because of the expansion of mecha-nized agriculture and cattle farms

    The behavior of the high-latitude F-region neutral thermosphere in relation to IMF parameters

    Full text link
    Ground based incoherent scatter radar (ISR) and Fabry Perot interferometer (FPI) studies in the northern high latitudes during the period 1983 to 1989 have shown that the F-region neutral wind field pattern depends upon the sign of the IMF parameters. For example, the cell structure of the northern hemisphere high latitude neutral wind field during periods of low geomagnetic activity depends to a large degree upon the sign of the IMF By parameter.Long term monitoring of the F-region thermosphere by FPI in Thule, Greenland, and by both FPI and ISR in Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland, have made it possible to produce maps of average meridional and zonal wind fields for various IMF configurations for northern high latitudes. Comparison of observations with theoretical wind field modelling, such as the Vector Spherical Harmonic model, indicates that most observed features are consistent with the models.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/30327/1/0000729.pd

    Increasing biomass in Amazonian forest plots

    Get PDF
    A previous study by Phillips et al. of changes in the biomass of permanent sample plots in Amazonian forests was used to infer the presence of a regional carbon sink. However, these results generated a vigorous debate about sampling and methodological issues. Therefore we present a new analysis of biomass change in old-growth Amazonian forest plots using updated inventory data. We find that across 59 sites, the above-ground dry biomass in trees that are more than 10 cm in diameter (AGB) has increased since plot establishment by 1.22 Ā± 0.43 Mg per hectare per year (ha-1 yr-1), where 1 ha = 104 m2), or 0.98 Ā± 0.38 Mg ha-1 yr-1 if individual plot values are weighted by the number of hectare years of monitoring. This significant increase is neither confounded by spatial or temporal variation in wood specific gravity, nor dependent on the allometric equation used to estimate AGB. The conclusion is also robust to uncertainty about diameter measurements for problematic trees: for 34 plots in western Amazon forests a significant increase in AGB is found even with a conservative assumption of zero growth for all trees where diameter measurements were made using optical methods and/or growth rates needed to be estimated following fieldwork. Overall, our results suggest a slightly greater rate of net stand-level change than was reported by Phillips et al. Considering the spatial and temporal scale of sampling and associated studies showing increases in forest growth and stem turnover, the results presented here suggest that the total biomass of these plots has on average increased and that there has been a regional-scale carbon sink in old-growth Amazonian forests during the previous two decades

    Auroral zone effects on hydrogen geocorona structure and variability

    Full text link
    The instantaneous structure of planetary exospheres is determined by the time history of energy dissipation, chemical, and transport processes operative during a prior time interval set by intrinsic atmospheric time scales. The complex combination of diurnal and magnetospheric activity modulations imposed on the Earth's upper atmosphere no doubt produce an equally complex response, especially in hydrogen, which escapes continuously at exospheric temperatures. Vidal-Madjar and Thomas (1978) have discussed some of the persistent large scale structure which is evident in satellite ultraviolet observations of hydrogen, noting in particular a depletion at high latitudes which is further discussed by Thomas and Vidal-Madjar (1978). The latter authors discussed various causes of the H density depletion, including local neutral temperature enhancements and enhanced escape rates due to polar wind H+ plasma flow or high latitude ion heating followed by charge exchange. We have reexamined the enhancement of neutral escape by plasma effects including the recently observed phenomenon of low altitude transverse ion acceleration. We find that, while significant fluxes of neutral H should be produced by this phenomenon in the auroral zone, this process is probably insufficient to account for the observed polar depletion. Instead, the recent exospheric temperature measurements from the Dynamics Explorer-2 spacecraft suggest that neutral heating in and near the high latitude cusp may be the major contributor to depleted atomic hydrogen densities at high latitudes.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/25686/1/0000240.pd

    On the dynamics and composition of the high-latitude thermosphere

    Full text link
    Recent experimental measurements of the dynamics of the neutral upper thermosphere have demonstrated the important roles of ion-drag and Joule heating processes in establishing the basic neutral wind morphology and controlling neutral composition, particularly in the high-latitude region. Instruments on the Dynamics Explorer-2 spacecraft (DE 2), for example, were capable of measuring the three-dimensional vector neutral wind and ion drift in the thermosphere along the orbital track, together with constituent densities and temperatures. Ground-based optical and radar measurements of winds and temperatures from observatories in Greenland have contributed additional measurements of thermospheric neutral wind velocities and ionospheric parameters. The comprehensive nature of these various data sets has enabled more stringent experimental constraints to be placed on the numerical models of the region (thermosphere-ionosphere general circulation models, TIGCMs), leading to an improved theoretical understanding of the important physical processes that control thermospheric circulation and variability. In addition, the measurements have enabled the development of semi-empirical models of thermosphere dynamics which can be used in various theoretical studies. The Vector Spherical Harmonic (VSH) model, for example, provides a description of global thermospheric state variables (wind, temperature and density), using a combination of empirical data and NCAR-TIGCM calculations. This paper presents a brief review of some of the more recent progress made in this area by the team of researchers at the University of Michigan, with emphasis on the interpretation of experimental measurements made from DE 2 and from ground-based observatories in Thule and Sondrestromfjord, Greenland. Comparisons between individual data sets from these sources and the VSH model are also presented.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29167/1/0000212.pd

    Modelling of composition changes during F-region storms: a reassessment

    Full text link
    A recalculation of the global changes of thermospheric gas composition, resulting from strong heat inputs in the auroral ovals, shows that (contrary to some previous suggestions) widespread increases of mean molecular mass are produced at mid-latitudes, in summer and at equinox. Decreases of mean molecular mass occur at mid-latitudes in winter. Similar results are given by both the `UCL' and `NCAR TIGCM' three-dimensional models. The computed composition changes now seem consistent with the local time and seasonal response observed by satellites, and can broadly account for `negative storm effects' in the ionospheric F2-layer at mid-latitudes.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29311/1/0000375.pd

    Mars Aeronomy Observer: Report of the Science Working Team

    Get PDF
    The Mars Aeronomy Observer (MAO) is a candidate follow-on mission to Mars Observer (MO) in the Planetary Observer Program. The four Mariner and two Viking spacecraft sent to Mars between 1965 and 1976 have provided a wealth of information concerning Martian planetology. The Mars Observer, to be launched in 1990, will build on their results by further examining the elemental and mineralogical composition of the surface, the strength and multipolar composition of the planetary magnetic field, the gravitational field and topography, and the circulation of the lower atmosphere. The Mars Aeronomy Observer is intended to address the last major aspects of Martian environment which have yet to be investigated: the upper atmosphere, the ionsphere, and the solar wind interaction region
    • ā€¦
    corecore