997 resultados para Water balances


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La degradación por salinización de los suelos regados con aguas salobres viene aumentando a escala mundial. El problema de la concentración de sales más solubles que el yeso depende principalmente del agua de riego, la aridez climática y la ausencia de drenaje. Estas condiciones se dan en el aluvium del río Limón, que es un tributario del lago Maracaibo, sito en el estado de Zulia de Venezuela. La regulación del río Limón mediante el cierre de los embalses de Manuelote y Tulé ha disminuido los aportes de aguas y sedimentos de las avenidas de inundación, que tienen carácter diluyente. Por otro lado, el balance de sales solubles en el suelo ha registrado una acumulación neta en los años de extrema aridez anteriores al año 2006, dado que la mayor dilución de las aguas ombrogénicas embalsadas procedentes de las lluvias no ha sido suficiente para compensar la concentración por evapotranspiración “in situ” de las aguas retenidas en la cuenca baja, sobre todo en ausencia de desagüe superficial y drenaje profundo. Las inundaciones posteriores a 2006 fueron suficientes para disminuir la salinidad superficial hasta los valores encontrados en 2010. El estudio experimental de esta problemática en el sector del caño San Miguel ha sido abordado mediante el establecimiento del perfil de salinidad acoplado con el perfil hipotético de humedad usado en la taxonomía de suelos. Este perfil define la disponibilidad del agua del suelo para la vegetación en función de tres potenciales: 1) el potencial físico-químico o matricial, que depende de la energía de adsorción a la superficie de las partículas; 2) el potencial gravitatorio, que depende de la profundidad; y 3) el potencial osmótico, que depende de la concentración de la solución del suelo; lo que supone un avance respecto a tener en cuenta sólo el perfil de humedad, que solamente considera el potencial gravi-químico integrado por el matricial y el gravitatorio. El perfil normalizado de 200 mm de de agua útil, retenida entre 33 y 1500 kPa de succión, incluye ocho fases gravi-químicas de 25 mm. La presente investigación incluye el potencial osmótico estimado por la conductividad eléctrica del extracto de pasta saturada. Los experimentos de lavado de sales en columnas de suelo, simulando la distribución de las lluvias en cinco años representativos de los cuartiles estadísticos de la serie disponible de 38 años completos, han determinado el comportamiento de las sales solubles en un suelo sometido a drenaje. Los resultados han evidenciado que el balance de sales unido al balance de agua controla la degradación de los agrosistemas por salinización. La alternativa frutícola puede ser aumentada en estas condiciones, porque el balance de sales favorece el establecimiento de cultivos permanentes a costa de otros usos del suelo de menor interés económico, como el cultivo de forrajes en regadío y el aprovechamiento de los pastizales en secano durante el barbecho de desalinización, cuya caracterización se ha completado con el estudio de la vegetación indicadora del grado de salinidad. ABSTRACT Saline degradation of soils irrigated with brackish water is increasing worldwide. The problem of salts concentration more soluble than gypsum depends on irrigation water quality, climatic aridity, and drainage limitations. These conditions meet in Limón River alluvium, which is tributary to Maracaibo´s Lake in Zulia State, Venezuela. Limón River regulation by closing Manuelote and Tulé reservoirs has diminished the input of water and sediments from inundations, which exerted dilutive effects. On the other hand, the soil balance of soluble salts has registered a net accumulation during those extremely dry years before 2006 because the greater dilution of ombrogenic dammed water coming from rain has not been enough to compensate salt concentration by “in situ” evapotranspiration in middle basin water, mainly in the absence of superficial runoff and deep drainage. Floods after 2006 were enough to reduce the high superficial salinity figures to those addressed in 2010. The experimental study of this trouble in San Miguel´s pipe area has been addressed through of the establishment of its salinity profile together to the hypothetic moisture profile typically used in soil taxonomy. This salinity profile describes soil water availability for vegetation according to three potentials: 1) physico-chemical or matrix potential, which depends on the adsorption energy of the soil solution to the surface of soil particles; 2) gravitational potential, which depends on soil depth; and 3) osmotic potential, which depends on the concentration of the soil solution. This represents an advance from just using moisture regime, which only considers the matrix and gravitational components of a gravi-chemical potential. The standardized moisture profile of 200 mm useful water being retained between 33 and 1500 kPa includes eight gravi-chemical stages of 25 mm. This research also includes the osmotic component, which is estimated by the electric conductivity of the saturated paste extract. Salts leaching trials in soil columns simulating rain distribution along five model years, representing the statistical quartiles of the available series of 38 complete years, have determined the behaviour of soluble salts in a soil being subjected to drainage. Results have evidenced that salt and water balances considered together are able to control the agrosystem’s degradation by salinization. The fruit production alternative could be improved under these conditions because the salts balance favours the establishment of permanent crops to the detriment of other soil uses of lower economical interest such as irrigated forage and non-irrigated pasture during desalinization fallow, which characterization has been completed through assessing the presence of salinity-indicator vegetation.

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La infiltración de agua en el suelo y la recarga profunda del agua subterránea contenida en los acuíferos es un proceso lento en relación con otros fenómenos hidrológicos. La redacción de esta tesis ha pretendido contribuir al estudio de la influencia que el almacenamiento de la precipitación sólida en forma de manto de nieve y su eventual fusión puedan tener sobre dicho proceso en áreas de media montaña (1.000 – 2.000 m.) en las que con gran frecuencia se sitúan las cabeceras de los ríos peninsulares. Para ello se ha partido del análisis de las diferentes variables intervinientes durante un determinado periodo temporal y sobre un espacio geográfico concreto, por lo que su metodología es de naturaleza empírica. La extensión del periodo (2002/03 a 2010/11) ha venido condicionada por la disponibilidad de los valores de algunas de sus principales variables, como han sido el equivalente en agua de la nieve acumulada y los caudales procedentes de su fusión. Éstos se han obtenido como resultado de la aplicación del modelo ASTER, desarrollado en el programa de Evaluación de los Recursos Hídricos procedentes de la Innivación (ERHIN), calibrado – entre otros- con datos de precipitaciones, temperatura y caudales provenientes a su vez del Sistema Automático de Información Hidrológica (SAIH). Ambos programas fueron implantados por la Administración en las diferentes Confederaciones Hidrográficas y en determinados Organismos de cuenca actuales, en cuyo desarrollo participó el autor de esta tesis. En cuanto a la zona de estudio se ha procedido a su elección considerando las posibles áreas de media montaña en las que la presencia de la nieve fuera hidrológicamente significativa y estuvieran constituidas litológicamente por afloramientos permeables que no impidieran la infiltración en el terreno y la formación de acuíferos de cierta relevancia. El interés se centró discrecionalmente en la cuenca del Tajo, tanto por el carácter estratégico de la misma -como suministradora en la actualidad de excedentes a otras cuencas deficitarias- como por el valor representativo de sus condiciones climáticas y orográficas en relación con otras cuencas hidrográficas peninsulares. Para ello se partió de las cabeceras de ríos identificadas por el programa ERHIN por su interés nivológico para la implantación del modelo ASTER y de las Masas de Agua Subterráneas MASb (antes Unidades Hidrogeológicas UUHH) definidas en los planes hidrológicos. La intersección en el territorio de ambos criterios condujo, finalmente, a la zona del Alto Tajo, en la que se cumplen ambos requisitos. El tramo quedó concretado en el comprendido entre las cabeceras de los ríos Tajo y Guadiela y la cola de los embalses de Entrepeñas y Buendía respectivamente, puntos de cierre para la calibración llevada a cabo en la modelización ASTER. Gran parte de éste discurre, en su parte alta, sobre rocas carbonatadas (calizas y dolomías del Jurásico y Cretácico), relacionados con las MASb de Tajuña-Montes Universales, Molina de Aragón y Sigüenza-Maranchón. Los valores diarios de las reservas de agua en forma de nieve, evapotranspiración y caudales procedentes de la fusión se han obtenido a partir de los resultados del mencionado modelo, procediéndose al cálculo de la infiltración por balance hídrico durante el periodo de estudio considerado, teniendo en cuenta los valores de precipitación, evapotranspiración y aportaciones de caudales. Esto ha requerido el estudio previo de las condiciones hidrogeológicas de la zona seleccionada con objeto de conocer las posibles interconexiones subterráneas que pudieran alterar los saldos entre las variables intervinientes anteriormente citadas. Para ello se ha llevado a cabo la recopilación y análisis de la información hidrogeológica correspondiente a la documentación de los planes hidrológicos del Tajo (Plan Hidrológico de la cuenca del Tajo RD 1664/1998 y el actual Plan Hidrológico de la parte española de la Demarcación Hidrográfica del Tajo RD 270/2014) y de los estudios previos realizados por el organismo de cuenca y el Instituto Geológico y Minero de España (lGME) fundamentalmente. En relación con la MASb Tajuña-Montes Universales -cuya extensión supera la zona seleccionada- dichos estudios consideran su estructura geológica y distribución litológica, con intercalaciones impermeables que actúan como barreras, dividiendo a éstas en Subunidades e identificando las zonas de drenaje de sus respectivos acuíferos. También se ha considerado la documentación y estudios previos del Plan Hidrológico Nacional sobre las Unidades Hidrogeológicas compartidas entre ámbitos geográficos de diferentes planes hidrológicos. Se concluye que las divisorias hidrográficas de las cabeceras son sensiblemente coincidentes o abarcan las Subunidades Montes Universales meridionales, Priego, Cifuentes, Zaorejas, u Montes Universales septentrionales, que drenan hacia el Tajo/Guadiela (bien directamente, bien a través de afluentes como el Gallo, Ablanquejo, Cabrillas, Cuervo…), MASb Molina de Aragón, que drena al Tajo a través del río Gallo y MASb Sigüenza—Maranchón, que drena su parte correspondiente hacia el Tajo a través del Ablanquejo. Se descartan – salvo la pequeña salvedad del manantial de Cifuentes- las conexiones hidrogeológicas con otras MASb o Subunidades por lo que las cabeceras del Tajo y del Guadiela pueden considerarse como un Sistema independiente donde las precipitaciones no evaporadas escurren superficialmente o se infiltran y descargan hacia los embalses de Entrepeñas y Buendía. La cuantificación diaria y acumulada de los balances hídricos ha permitido calcular la evolución aproximada de las reservas de agua subterránea desde la fecha inicial. Originalmente los balances se realizaron de forma separada en las cabeceras del Tajo y del Guadiela, cuyos valores acumulados manifestaron una tendencia creciente en la primera y decreciente en la segunda. Dicha situación se equilibra cuando el balance se practica conjuntamente en ambas, apreciándose en la variación del volumen de agua subterránea una evolución acorde hidrológicamente con los ciclos de verano/invierno y periodos de sequía, manteniéndose sus valores medios a largo/medio plazo, poniendo en evidencia la existencia de interconexiones subterráneas entre ambas cuencas. El balance conjunto, agregando la cabecera del Tajuña (que también comparte los materiales permeables de la MASb Tajuña-Montes Universales) no reveló la existencia de nuevas interrelaciones hidrogeológicas que influyeran en los balances hídricos realizados Tajo/Guadiela, confirmando las conclusiones de los estudios hidrogeológicos anteriormente analizados. Se ha procedido a confrontar y validar los resultados obtenidos de la evolución de las reservas de agua subterránea mediante los siguientes procedimientos alternativos: - Cálculo de los parámetros de desagüe de la curva de agotamiento correspondiente al volumen de agua subterránea drenante hacia el Tajo/Guadiela. Éste se ha realizado a partir de las aportaciones mensuales entrantes en los embalses de Entrepeñas y Buendía durante los meses de junio, julio, agosto y septiembre, cuyos valores responden al perfil típico de descargas de un acuífero. A partir de éstos se ha determinado el volumen drenante correspondiente al primero de junio de cada año de la serie histórica considerada. - Determinación del caudal base por el método Wallingford y deducción de los volúmenes drenantes. Estimación de las recarga anuales - Cuantificación de la recarga anual por el método Sanz, Menéndez Pidal de Navascués y Távara. Se obtuvieron valores de recarga muy aproximados entre los calculados por los dos últimos procedimientos citados. Respecto a las reservas de agua subterránea almacenadas siguen una evolución semejante en todos los casos, lo que ha permitido considerar válidos los resultados conseguidos mediante balance hídrico. Confirmada su solidez, se han buscado correlaciones simples entre el volumen de las reservas subterráneas (como indicador estimativo del efecto de la infiltración) y los volúmenes procedentes de la fusión. La conclusión es que estos últimos no tienen un efecto determinante a escala anual sobre la infiltración,recarga y variación de los volúmenes de agua subterránea, frente al peso de otras variables (precipitación y evapotranspiración). No obstante se ha encontrado una buena correlación múltiple entre la recarga estimada y la precipitación eficaz (precipitación menos evapotranspiración) y fusión, que ha permitido cuantificar la contribución de esta última. Posteriormente se ha recurrido a la selección de los episodios más intensos de acumulación /fusión en las cabeceras del Tajo y Guadiela. Y se procedió a la comparación entre los resultados obtenidos por aplicación del modelo de simulación en los mismos periodos (normalmente de varios días de duración) con datos reales y con datos ficticios de temperatura que anularan o disminuyeran la presencia de nieve, apreciándose una gran sensibilidad del efecto de la temperatura sobre la evapotranspiración y estableciéndose nuevamente correlaciones lineales entre los volúmenes de fusión y el incremento de reservas subterráneas. Las mismas confirman el efecto “favorecedor” de la acumulación de agua en forma de nieve y su posterior licuación, sobre sobre la infiltración de agua en el suelo y almacenamiento subterráneo. Finalmente se establecieron varios escenarios climáticos (+1ºC; +3ºC; +1ºC y – 10% precipitación; y 3ºC – 10% precipitación) compatibles con las previsiones del IPCC para mediados y finales del presente siglo, determinándose mediante simulación ASTER los correspondientes valores de fusión. La correlación establecida a escala anual ha permitido evaluar el efecto de la disminución del volumen de fusión - en los diferentes escenarios – sobre la recarga, pronosticando un descenso de los caudales de estiaje y la desaparición del “efecto nieve” sobre la infiltración y recarga con un aumento de 3ºC de temperatura. Teniendo en cuenta las condiciones de representatividad de la zona elegida, resulta verosímil la extensión de las anteriores conclusiones a otras cabeceras fluviales enclavadas en áreas de media montaña situadas entre 1000 a 2000m y sus efectos aguas abajo.Water infiltration into the soil and groundwater recharge deep water in aquifers is slow relative to other hydrological phenomena. The wording of this thesis aims to contribute to the study of the influence that the storage of solid precipitation as snow cover and its eventual melting may have on this process in mid-mountain areas (1000 - 2,000 m) where very often the headwaters of the peninsular rivers are located. For this party analysis of the different variables involved has over a given time period and a particular geographical area, so that their methodology is empirical in nature. The extension of the period (2002/03 to 2010/11) has been conditioned by the availability of the values of some of its key variables, as were the water equivalent of the snow and flows from melting. These have been obtained as a result of the application of ASTER model, developed in the program Evaluation of Water Resources from the Innivation (ERHIN), calibrated - among others data of rainfall, temperature and flow from turn System Automatic Hydrological Information (SAIH). Both programs were implemented by the Administration in the different Water Boards and to undertakings for current basin, in which the author participated development of this thesis. As for the study area has proceeded at its option considering the possible areas of midmountain in the presence of snow outside hydrological meaningful and they were lithology consisting of permeable outcrops that did not prevent infiltration into the ground and forming aquifers of some significance. We were interested discretion in the Tagus basin, therefore the strategic nature of it, as currently supplying surplus to other basins deficit- as the representative value of its climate and terrain conditions in relation to other peninsular river basins . To do this we started from the headwaters identified by the ERHIN program for its implementation snow interest to the ASTER model and Ground Water Bodies MASb (before UUHH Hydrogeological Units) defined in hydrological plans. The intersection in the territory of both criteria led eventually to the Alto Tajo, in which both requirements are met. The section was finalized in the period between the headwaters of the Tagus and Guadiela rivers and reservoirs end Entrepeñas and Buendia respectively checking points for calibration performed in ASTER modeling. Much of it runs on carbonate rocks (limestones and dolomites of Jurassic and Cretaceous) related MASb of Tajuña -Montes Universal, Molina de Aragón and Sigüenza-Maranchón. The daily values of water reserves in the form of snow, evapotranspiration and flow from melting were obtained from the results of this model, proceeding to the calculation of infiltration water balance during the study period considered, taking into account values of precipitation, evapotranspiration and input flow. This has required the prior examination of the hydrogeological conditions of your required in order to know the possible underground interconnections that could alter the balance between the intervening variables aforementioned area. For this we have carried out the collection and analysis of hydrogeological information relevant documentation Tagus river management plans (Hydrological Plan Tajo Basin RD 1664/1998 and the current Hydrological Plan of the Spanish part of the River Basin Tagus RD 270/2014) and previous studies by the basin organization and the Geological Survey of Spain (IGME) mainly. Regarding the MASb Tajuña- Montes Universal - whose length exceeds the area selected - these studies consider its geological structure and lithology distribution with waterproof collations that act as barriers, dividing it into subunits and identifying areas draining their respective aquifers. It has also considered the documentation and previous studies of the National Hydrological Plan on shared among different geographical areas management plans Hydrogeological Units. We conclude that river dividing the headers are substantially coincident or covering Subunits southern Universal Montes, Priego Cifuentes, Zaorejas and northern Universal Mounts, which drain into the Tagus / Guadiela (either directly or through tributaries such as Gallo, Ablanquejo , whitecaps , Raven ...), MASb Molina de Aragón which drains through the Tajo del Gallo and MASb Sigüenza- Maranchón river that drains into the Tagus using the Ablanquejo . Discarded - except the small exception of spring Cifuentes -hydrogeological connections with other MASb or Subunits so the headwaters of the Tagus and Guadiela be considered as a separate system, where rainfall not evaporated runs on surface or infiltrates and eventually discharged into reservoirs Entrepeñas and Buendia. The daily and cumulative quantification of water balances allowed us to compute the approximate evolution of groundwater reserves from its initial date. Initially balances were performed separately in the headwaters of the Tagus and Guadiela, whose cumulative values showed an increasing trend in the first and decreasing in the second. This situation is balanced when the balance is practiced together in both , appreciating the change in volume of groundwater hydrological evolution commensurate with the cycles of summer / winter and drought periods , keeping their average long / medium term values and putting in shows the existence of underground interconnections between the two basins. The overall balance, adding header Tajuña (which also shares the permeable materials MASb Tajuña -Montes Universal ) did not reveal the existence of new hydrogeological interrelationships that influenced water balances made Tajo / Guadiela, confirming the findings of the hydrogeological studies previously analyzed. We proceeded to confront and validate the results of the evolution of groundwater reserves by the following alternative procedures: - Calculate the parameters drain depletion curve corresponding to the volume of groundwater draining into the Tajo / Guadiela. This has been made from monthly inflows in the reservoirs of Entrepeñas and Buendia during the months of June, July, August and September, whose values match the typical profile of an aquifer discharges. From these has been determined for the first of June each year of the time series considered drainage volume - Determination of base flow by Wallingford method and deduction of drainage volumes. Estimate of annual recharge - Quantification of the annual recharge by the method Sanz Menéndez Pidal of Navascués and Távara. Very approximate values recharge between calculated for the last two mentioned methods were obtained. Concerning groundwater reserves stored follow a similar pattern in all cases, allowing consider valid the results achieved through water balance. Confirmed its robustness, simple correlations were sought between the volume of groundwater reserves (as estimated indicator of the effect of infiltration) and volumes from the melting. The conclusion is that the latter do not have a decisive effect on the annual scale infiltration, recharge and variation in volumes of groundwater, against the weight of other variables (precipitation and evapotranspiration). However found a good multiple correlation between the estimated recharge and effective precipitation (precipitation minus evapotranspiration) and fusion, which allowed quantify the contribution of the latter. Subsequently it has resorted to the selection of the most intense episodes of accumulation / melting in the headwaters of the Tagus and Guadiela. And we proceeded to the comparison between the results obtained by application of the simulation model in the same periods (usually several days) with real data and fictitious temperature data to annul or decrease the presence of snow, appreciating a great sensitivity of the effect of temperature on evapotranspiration and establishing linear correlations between the volumes of melting and increased groundwater reserves again. They confirm the “flattering " effect of water accumulation as snow and subsequent liquefaction of the infiltration of water into the soil and underground storage. Finally various climate scenarios (+1ºC; +3ºC; +1ºC y – 10% precipitation; y 3ºC – 10% precipitation) were established consistent with IPCC projections for mid - to late - century, determined through simulation ASTER corresponding values of melting. The correlation established on an annual scale has allowed to evaluate the effect of decreasing the volume of melt - in different scenarios - on recharge, predicting a decline in low flows and the disappearance of "snow effect" on infiltration and recharge with an increase of 3°C temperature. Given the conditions of representativeness of the chosen area, plausible extension of the above findings to other landlocked headwaters in mid-mountain areas located between 1000 to 2000m and its downstream effects.

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Forests change with changes in their environment based on the physiological responses of individual trees. These short-term reactions have cumulative impacts on long-term demographic performance. For a tree in a forest community, success depends on biomass growth to capture above- and belowground resources and reproductive output to establish future generations. Here we examine aspects of how forests respond to changes in moisture and light availability and how these responses are related to tree demography and physiology.

First we address the long-term pattern of tree decline before death and its connection with drought. Increasing drought stress and chronic morbidity could have pervasive impacts on forest composition in many regions. We use long-term, whole-stand inventory data from southeastern U.S. forests to show that trees exposed to drought experience multiyear declines in growth prior to mortality. Following a severe, multiyear drought, 72% of trees that did not recover their pre-drought growth rates died within 10 years. This pattern was mediated by local moisture availability. As an index of morbidity prior to death, we calculated the difference in cumulative growth after drought relative to surviving conspecifics. The strength of drought-induced morbidity varied among species and was correlated with species drought tolerance.

Next, we investigate differences among tree species in reproductive output relative to biomass growth with changes in light availability. Previous studies reach conflicting conclusions about the constraints on reproductive allocation relative to growth and how they vary through time, across species, and between environments. We test the hypothesis that canopy exposure to light, a critical resource, limits reproductive allocation by comparing long-term relationships between reproduction and growth for trees from 21 species in forests throughout the southeastern U.S. We found that species had divergent responses to light availability, with shade-intolerant species experiencing an alleviation of trade-offs between growth and reproduction at high light. Shade-tolerant species showed no changes in reproductive output across light environments.

Given that the above patterns depend on the maintenance of transpiration, we next developed an approach for predicting whole-tree water use from sap flux observations. Accurately scaling these observations to tree- or stand-levels requires accounting for variation in sap flux between wood types and with depth into the tree. We compared different models with sap flux data to test the hypotheses that radial sap flux profiles differ by wood type and tree size. We show that radial variation in sap flux is dependent on wood type but independent of tree size for a range of temperate trees. The best-fitting model predicted out-of-sample sap flux observations and independent estimates of sapwood area with small errors, suggesting robustness in new settings. We outline a method for predicting whole-tree water use with this model and include computer code for simple implementation in other studies.

Finally, we estimated tree water balances during drought with a statistical time-series analysis. Moisture limitation in forest stands comes predominantly from water use by the trees themselves, a drought-stand feedback. We show that drought impacts on tree fitness and forest composition can be predicted by tracking the moisture reservoir available to each tree in a mass balance. We apply this model to multiple seasonal droughts in a temperate forest with measurements of tree water use to demonstrate how species and size differences modulate moisture availability across landscapes. As trees deplete their soil moisture reservoir during droughts, a transpiration deficit develops, leading to reduced biomass growth and reproductive output.

This dissertation draws connections between the physiological condition of individual trees and their behavior in crowded, diverse, and continually-changing forest stands. The analyses take advantage of growing data sets on both the physiology and demography of trees as well as novel statistical techniques that allow us to link these observations to realistic quantitative models. The results can be used to scale up tree measurements to entire stands and address questions about the future composition of forests and the land’s balance of water and carbon.

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At head of title: Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. Fuel Research.

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Bioelectrical impedance analysis, (BIA), is a method of body composition analysis first investigated in 1962 which has recently received much attention by a number of research groups. The reasons for this recent interest are its advantages, (viz: inexpensive, non-invasive and portable) and also the increasing interest in the diagnostic value of body composition analysis. The concept utilised by BIA to predict body water volumes is the proportional relationship for a simple cylindrical conductor, (volume oc length2/resistance), which allows the volume to be predicted from the measured resistance and length. Most of the research to date has measured the body's resistance to the passage of a 50· kHz AC current to predict total body water, (TBW). Several research groups have investigated the application of AC currents at lower frequencies, (eg 5 kHz), to predict extracellular water, (ECW). However all research to date using BIA to predict body water volumes has used the impedance measured at a discrete frequency or frequencies. This thesis investigates the variation of impedance and phase of biological systems over a range of frequencies and describes the development of a swept frequency bioimpedance meter which measures impedance and phase at 496 frequencies ranging from 4 kHz to 1 MHz. The impedance of any biological system varies with the frequency of the applied current. The graph of reactance vs resistance yields a circular arc with the resistance decreasing with increasing frequency and reactance increasing from zero to a maximum then decreasing to zero. Computer programs were written to analyse the measured impedance spectrum and determine the impedance, Zc, at the characteristic frequency, (the frequency at which the reactance is a maximum). The fitted locus of the measured data was extrapolated to determine the resistance, Ro, at zero frequency; a value that cannot be measured directly using surface electrodes. The explanation of the theoretical basis for selecting these impedance values (Zc and Ro), to predict TBW and ECW is presented. Studies were conducted on a group of normal healthy animals, (n=42), in which TBW and ECW were determined by the gold standard of isotope dilution. The prediction quotients L2/Zc and L2/Ro, (L=length), yielded standard errors of 4.2% and 3.2% respectively, and were found to be significantly better than previously reported, empirically determined prediction quotients derived from measurements at a single frequency. The prediction equations established in this group of normal healthy animals were applied to a group of animals with abnormally low fluid levels, (n=20), and also to a group with an abnormal balance of extra-cellular to intracellular fluids, (n=20). In both cases the equations using L2/Zc and L2/Ro accurately and precisely predicted TBW and ECW. This demonstrated that the technique developed using multiple frequency bioelectrical impedance analysis, (MFBIA), can accurately predict both TBW and ECW in both normal and abnormal animals, (with standard errors of the estimate of 6% and 3% for TBW and ECW respectively). Isotope dilution techniques were used to determine TBW and ECW in a group of 60 healthy human subjects, (male. and female, aged between 18 and 45). Whole body impedance measurements were recorded on each subject using the MFBIA technique and the correlations between body water volumes, (TBW and ECW), and heighe/impedance, (for all measured frequencies), were compared. The prediction quotients H2/Zc and H2/Ro, (H=height), again yielded the highest correlation with TBW and ECW respectively with corresponding standard errors of 5.2% and 10%. The values of the correlation coefficients obtained in this study were very similar to those recently reported by others. It was also observed that in healthy human subjects the impedance measured at virtually any frequency yielded correlations not significantly different from those obtained from the MFBIA quotients. This phenomenon has been reported by other research groups and emphasises the need to validate the technique by investigating its application in one or more groups with abnormalities in fluid levels. The clinical application of MFBIA was trialled and its capability of detecting lymphoedema, (an excess of extracellular fluid), was investigated. The MFBIA technique was demonstrated to be significantly more sensitive, (P<.05), in detecting lymphoedema than the current technique of circumferential measurements. MFBIA was also shown to provide valuable information describing the changes in the quantity of muscle mass of the patient during the course of the treatment. The determination of body composition, (viz TBW and ECW), by MFBIA has been shown to be a significant improvement on previous bioelectrical impedance techniques. The merit of the MFBIA technique is evidenced in its accurate, precise and valid application in animal groups with a wide variation in body fluid volumes and balances. The multiple frequency bioelectrical impedance analysis technique developed in this study provides accurate and precise estimates of body composition, (viz TBW and ECW), regardless of the individual's state of health.

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Nutrient mass balances have been used to assess a variety of land resource scenarios, at various scales. They are widely used as a simple basis for policy, planning, and regulatory decisions but it is not clear how accurately they reflect reality. This study provides a critique of broad-scale nutrient mass balances, with particular application to the fertiliser use of beef lot-feeding manure in Queensland. Mass balances completed at the district and farm scale were found to misrepresent actual manure management behaviour and potentially the risk of nutrient contamination of water resources. The difficulties of handling stockpile manure and concerns about soil compaction mean that manure is spread thickly over a few paddocks at a time and not evenly across a whole farm. Consequently, higher nutrient loads were applied to a single paddock less frequently than annually. This resulted in years with excess nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium remaining in the soil profile. This conclusion was supported by evidence of significant nutrient movement in several of the soil profiles studied. Spreading manure is profitable, but maximum returns can be associated with increased risk of nutrient leaching relative to conventional inorganic fertiliser practices. Bio-economic simulations found this increased risk where manure was applied to supply crop nitrogen requirements (the practice of the case study farms, 200-5000 head lot-feeders). Thus, the use of broad-scale mass balances can be misleading because paddock management is spatially heterogeneous and this leads to increased local potential for nutrient loss. In response to the effect of spatial heterogeneity policy makers who intend to use mass balance techniques to estimate potential for nutrient contamination should apply these techniques conservatively.

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The statistically steady humidity distribution resulting from an interaction of advection, modelled as an uncorrelated random walk of moist parcels on an isentropic surface, and a vapour sink, modelled as immediate condensation whenever the specific humidity exceeds a specified saturation humidity, is explored with theory and simulation. A source supplies moisture at the deep-tropical southern boundary of the domain and the saturation humidity is specified as a monotonically decreasing function of distance from the boundary. The boundary source balances the interior condensation sink, so that a stationary spatially inhomogeneous humidity distribution emerges. An exact solution of the Fokker-Planck equation delivers a simple expression for the resulting probability density function (PDF) of the wate-rvapour field and also the relative humidity. This solution agrees completely with a numerical simulation of the process, and the humidity PDF exhibits several features of interest, such as bimodality close to the source and unimodality further from the source. The PDFs of specific and relative humidity are broad and non-Gaussian. The domain-averaged relative humidity PDF is bimodal with distinct moist and dry peaks, a feature which we show agrees with middleworld isentropic PDFs derived from the ERA interim dataset. Copyright (C) 2011 Royal Meteorological Society

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An experimental investigation was made of forced convection film boiling of subcooled water around a sphere at atmospheric pressure. The water was sufficiently cool that the vapor condensed before leaving the film with the result that no vapor bubbles left the film. The experimental runs were made using inductively heated spheres at temperatures above 740°C. and using inlet water temperatures between 15°C. and 27°C. The spheres used had diameters of 1/2 inch, 9/16 inch, and 3/8 inch and were supported by the liquid flow. Reynolds numbers between 60 and 700 were used.

Analysis of the collected non-condensables indicated that oxygen and nitrogen dissolved in the water accumulated within the vapor film and that hetrogeneous chemical reactions occurred at the sphere surface. An iron-steam reaction resulted in more than 20% by volume hydrogen in the film at wall temperatures above 900°C. At temperatures near 1100°C. more than 80% by volume of the film was composed of hydrogen. It was found that gold plating of the sphere could eliminate this reaction.

Material and energy balances were used to derive equations which may be used to predict the overall average heat transfer coefficients for subcooled film boiling around a sphere. These equations include the effect of dissolved gases in the water. Equations also were derived which may be used to predict the composition of the film for cases in which an equilibrium exists between the dissolved gases and the gases in the film.

The derived equations were compared to the experimental results. It was found that a correlation existed between the Nusselt number for heat transfer from the vapor-liquid interface into the liquid and the Reynolds number, liquid Prandtl number product. In addition, it was found that the percentage of dissolved oxygen removed during the film boiling could be predicted to within 10%.