987 resultados para Forestry management
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Potential impacts of plantation forestry practices on soil organic carbon and Fe available to microorganisms were investigated in a subtropical coastal catchment. The impacts of harvesting or replanting were largely limited to the soil top layer (0–10 cm depth). The thirty-year-old Pinus plantation showed low soil moisture content (Wc) and relatively high levels of soil total organic carbon (TOC). Harvesting and replanting increased soil Wc but reduced TOC levels. Mean dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and microbial biomass carbon (MBC) increased in harvested or replanted soils, but such changes were not statistically significant (P > 0.05). Total dithionite-citrate and aqua regia-extractable Fe did not respond to forestry practices, but acid ammonium oxalate and pyrophosphate-extractable, bioavailable Fe decreased markedly after harvesting or replanting. Numbers of heterotrophic bacteria were significantly correlated with DOC levels (P < 0.05), whereas Fe-reducing bacteria and S-bacteria detected using laboratory cultivation techniques did not show strong correlation with either soil DOC or Fe content.
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La presente tesis examina el uso potencial y actual de las técnicas de simulación visual aplicadas al campo de la gestión y la planificación del arbolado urbano. El estudio incluye las aplicaciones potenciales de las visualizaciones por ordenador, así como los beneficios que esto acarrearía. También se analizan las posibles barreras que surgirían de la implementación de esta nueva herramienta y se ofrece una lista de recomendaciones para superarlas. La investigación tiene un carácter exploratorio que utiliza una combinación de técnicas de investigación cuantitativas y cualitativas, dónde se emplean cuestionarios y entrevistas personales semi-estructuradas para estudiar y analizar las opiniones y reacciones de los gestores de arbolado urbano de los distritos de la ciudad de Londres (Reino Unido), denominados Tree Officers (LTOs). Para el desarrollo de la tesis se recopilaron y analizaron las respuestas al cuestionario del 41 por ciento de los LTOs pertenecientes al 88 por ciento de los distritos de Londres y se realizaron un total de 17 entrevistas personales. Los resultados del análisis estadístico de las respuestas del cuestionario y los análisis cruzados de las distintas variables se complementaron con las conclusiones obtenidas del análisis temático de los datos cualitativos recopilados durante las entrevistas. Los usos potenciales de las técnicas de simulación visual aplicadas a la gestión y planificación del arbolado urbano sugeridos fueron obtenidos combinado las conclusiones de, primero, la comparación de las cuestiones que los LTOs consideraron que más tiempo y recursos necesitaban y que actualmente no era posible resolverlas satisfactoriamente con las herramientas y los procesos disponibles, con la información acerca de cómo se habían empleado las visualizaciones en situaciones similares en otros campos tales como planificación urbano, el paisajismo o la gestión forestal. Segundo, se analizaron las reacciones y opiniones de los LTOs ante un conjunto de visualizaciones presentadas durante las entrevistas, desarrolladas ad hoc para mostrar un abanico representativo de ejemplos de utilización de las técnicas de simulación visual, que, a su vez se complementaron con los usos adicionales que los propios LTOs sugirieron tras ver las visualizaciones presentadas. Los resultados muestran que el uso actual de simulaciones visuales por parte de los LTOs es muy limitado pero si que reciben un gran número de visualizaciones de otros departamentos y como parte de la documentación presentada en las solicitudes de permisos para edificación o desarrollo urbanístico. Los resultados indican que las visualizaciones que son presentadas a los LTOs no son objetivas ni precisas por lo que se argumenta que esta situación es un factor importante que impide una toma de decisiones adecuada y una correcta transmisión de infracción al público y al resto de partes implicadas. Se sugiere la creación de un código que regule el uso de visualizaciones en el campo de la gestión y planificación del arbolado urbano. ABSTRACT This thesis examined the use of computer visualizations in urban forestry management and planning. Potential roles of visualizations were determined the benefits that its use would provide. Additionally, the possible barriers in the implementation of visualizations in urban forestry management and planning were also studied and recommendations on how to overcome them were provided The research conducted was an exploratory study using survey research methods and personal semi-structured interviews. The perspectives and reactions of London (UK) boroughs’ tree officers (LTOs) were analysed combining quantitative and qualitative research methods. The study surveyed 41 percent of all Tree Officers in London, obtaining responses from 88 percent of the boroughs and performed 17 personal interviews. Statistical analysis of the data and cross-variables analysis provided rich information that was then complemented with the conclusions from thematic analysis of the qualitative data from the interviews. Potential roles of visualizations were determined first by understanding the challenges that LTOs are facing today and comparing them with how visualizations have helped in similar situations in urban forestry and other related fields like landscape architecture, urban planning and forestry; second, the reactions of LTOs to a set of examples of proposed uses of visualizations were also complemented with the additional uses proposed by LTOs after seeing the visualizations. The visualizations were created ad hoc to show a variety of representative examples of the sue of visualization in urban forestry management and planning and were presented during the interviews to LTOS. Results show that the current production of visualizations is very reduced among tree officers but that they are frequent receptors of visualizations coming from other departments and as part of the documentation of planning applications. Findings show that the current visualizations that get to Tree Officers are biased and inaccurate and therefore it is argued the the current use of visualizations is a threat to legitimate informed decision making and public information. The development of a code for the use of visualizations in urban forestry management and planning is suggested.
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"Embodies the results of a three-year study ... under a grant from the Charles Lathrop Pack forestry foundation ... [The] purpose is to bring together a body of knowledge regarding the inventory factors of timber stands and to outline a procedure for studying them."--Introd.
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Caption title.
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The tropical afro-montane forest of the Northwest region is unique and under direct threat from the high population density of the region. Community-based forestry management is an opportunity to sustainably manage the remaining forest fragments. Community forestry was introduced to Cameroon with the legislation of the 1994 Forestry Law. Over two decades later little research has been conducted in the Northwest region of Cameroon. Twenty-four semi-structured interviews were conducted, and samples of forestry records were analyzed as exploratory research that would act as a base for further research. This research found that the tenure of the community over the community forest needed to be strengthened, marginalized populations needed to be empowered to participate, and governance needed to be improved both nationally, and locally. Further research will strengthen these conclusions and help Cameroon, and community forests around the world, be effectively established and managed.
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Forest policy and forestry management in Tasmania have undergone a number of changes in the last thirty years, many explicitly aimed at improving industry sustainability, job security, and forest biodiversity conservation. Yet forestry remains a contentious issue in Tasmania, due to a number of interacting factors, most significant of which is the prevalence of a ‘command and control’ governance approach by policymakers and managers. New approaches such as multiple-stakeholder decision-making, adaptive management, and direct public participation in policymaking are needed. Such an approach has been attempted in Canada in the last decade, through the Canadian Model Forest Program, and may be suitable for Tasmania. This paper seeks to describe what the Canadian Model Forest approach is, how it may be implemented in Tasmania, and what role it may play in the shift to a new forestry paradigm. Until such a paradigm shift occurs contentions and confrontations are likely to continue.
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One of our most pressing needs in creating a more sustainable world is the explicit development of holistic policy. This is becoming increasingly apparent as we are faced with more and more ‘wicked problems', the most difficult class of problems that we can conceptualize. Such problems consist of ‘clusters’ of problems, and include socio-political and moral-spiritual issues. This paper articulates a methodology that can be applied to the analysis and design of underlying organizational structures and processes that will consistently and effectively address wicked problems while being consistent with the advocated 'learning by doing' approach to change management and policy making. This transdisciplinary methodology—known as the institutionalist policymaking framework—has been developed from the perspective of institutional economics synthesized with perspectives from ecological economics and system dynamics. In particular it draws on the work first presented in Hayden’s 1993 paper ‘Institutionalist Policymaking’—and further developed in his 2006 book, at the heart of which lies the SFM—and the applicability of this approach in tackling complex and wicked problems.
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Iron (Fe) biogeochemistry is potentially of environmental significance in plantation-forested, subtropical coastal ecosystems where soil disturbance and seasonal water logging may lead to elevation of Fe mobilization and associated water quality deterioration. Using wet-chemical extraction and laboratory cultivation, we examined the occurrence of Fe forms and associated bacterial populations in diverse soils of a representative subtropical Australian coastal catchment (Poona Creek). Total reactive Fe was abundant throughout 0e30 cm soil cores, consisting primarily of crystalline forms in well-drained sand soils and water-logged loam soils, whereas in water-logged, low clay soils, over half of total reactive Fe was present in poorly-crystalline forms due to organic and inorganic complexation, respectively. Forestry practices such as plantation clear-felling and replanting, seasonal water logging and mineral soil properties significantly impacted soil organic carbon (C), potentially-bioavailable Fe pools and densities of S-, but not Fe-, bacterial populations. Bacterial Fe(III) reduction and abiotic Fe(II) oxidation, as well as chemolithotrophic S oxidation and aerobic, heterotrophic respiration were integral to catchment terrestrial FeeC cycling. This work demonstrates bacterial involvement in terrestrial Fe cycling in a subtropical coastal circumneutral-pH ecosystem.
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4 p.
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29 p.