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Treeline Responses To Climate Change In High-Elevation Landscapes Of Western Montana, U.S.A., David F. Mann
Treeline Responses To Climate Change In High-Elevation Landscapes Of Western Montana, U.S.A., David F. Mann
Doctoral Dissertations
The purpose of this research was to use whitebark pine trees at three major sites in western Montana to: (1) determine tree species response to climate, (2) reconstruct past climate conditions, (3) determine the effects of climate shifts on treeline, and (4) reconstruct fire history from fire-scar data. I collected samples from whitebark pine and subalpine fir and from remnant whitebark pine in the western Beaverhead-Deerlodge and Lolo National Forests.
In the climate response analysis, the Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI) had the highest correlations with whitebark pine growth. The strongest relationship occurred in the previous year’s June and July. …
Parallel Simulation Of Individual-Based, Physiologically-Structured Population And Predator-Prey Ecology Models, Jeffrey A. Nichols
Parallel Simulation Of Individual-Based, Physiologically-Structured Population And Predator-Prey Ecology Models, Jeffrey A. Nichols
Doctoral Dissertations
Utilizing as testbeds physiologically-structured, individual-based models for fish and Daphnia populations, techniques for the parallelization of the simulation are developed and analyzed. The techniques developed are generally applicable to individual-based models. For rapidly reproducing populations like Daphnia which are load balanced, then global birth combining is required. Super-scalar speedup was observed in simulations on multi-core desktop computers.
The two populations are combined via a size-structured predation module into a predator-prey system with sharing of resource weighted by relative mass. The individual-based structure requires multiple stages to complete predation.
Two different styles of parallelization are presented. The first distributes both populations. …
Survival Strategies Of Eelgrass In Reduced Light, Caroline A. Ochieng
Survival Strategies Of Eelgrass In Reduced Light, Caroline A. Ochieng
Doctoral Dissertations
Light reduction due to anthropogenic impacts is the most widespread cause of worldwide decline of eelgrass, an ecologically important marine angiosperm whose role in supporting overall coastal ecosystem productivity has been widely recognized. Understanding eelgrass plant and meadow responses to light reduction has therefore received significant research interest over the last 30 years, while managers have sought tools to identify critical thresholds for light availability and predict impacts of human-induced disturbances in order to prevent further eelgrass loss. In the present thesis, a review of some of the literature on light reduction and its effects on eelgrass (i) summarized the …