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Articles 1 - 30 of 45
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Interview With Carol Mayer-Reed, Mayer/Reed, 2006 (Audio), Carol Mayer-Reed
Interview With Carol Mayer-Reed, Mayer/Reed, 2006 (Audio), Carol Mayer-Reed
All Sustainability History Project Oral Histories
Interview of Carol Mayer-Reed by Robyn Russnogle at on December 1st, 2006.
The interview index is available for download.
From Herd Diversification To Livelihood Diversification As A Response To Poverty: The Case Of The Waso Boran Of Northern Kenya, D. Layne Coppock, Abdullahi D. Jillo, Abdillahi A. Aboud
From Herd Diversification To Livelihood Diversification As A Response To Poverty: The Case Of The Waso Boran Of Northern Kenya, D. Layne Coppock, Abdullahi D. Jillo, Abdillahi A. Aboud
Environment and Society Faculty Publications
The Waso Boran of northern Kenya used to have large, mobile, and diverse herds of livestock that exploited equally large and diverse rangelands. Forty years of human population growth, drought, environmental change, and lack of relevant policies have altered this situation, however, with the majority of Waso Boran today being livestock poor and engaged in a variety of non-pastoral activities to diversify their livelihoods. One-third of 540 households we surveyed in Isiolo District now have ten head of cattle or less, and a larger census suggests that only 15 percent of households can currently be categorized as mobile pastoralists. The …
Community Perceptions Concerning Key Ecological Resources At Risk In Baringo District, Kenya, D. Layne Coppock, Mark N. Mutinda, Abdillahi A. Aboud
Community Perceptions Concerning Key Ecological Resources At Risk In Baringo District, Kenya, D. Layne Coppock, Mark N. Mutinda, Abdillahi A. Aboud
Environment and Society Faculty Publications
Key ecological resources in arid and semi-arid lands are often characterized by small patches of seasonal grazing and important water points that lend critical support to entire production systems. When key resources are degraded or lost, production systems can be badly compromised. The Baringo District of north-central Kenya is well known for enduring decades of environmental degradation and food relief. As an initial part of an effort to map and characterize key ecological resources at risk in Baringo, we interviewed 136 resident leaders from pastoral and agro-pastoral areas. We asked them to identify and rank their most vulnerable ecological resources, …
Collective Action By Women’S Groups To Combat Drought And Poverty In Northern Kenya, D. Layne Coppock, Solomon Desta, Getachew Gebru, Adan Wako, Ibrahim Aden, Chachu Tadecha, Seyoum Tezera
Collective Action By Women’S Groups To Combat Drought And Poverty In Northern Kenya, D. Layne Coppock, Solomon Desta, Getachew Gebru, Adan Wako, Ibrahim Aden, Chachu Tadecha, Seyoum Tezera
Environment and Society Faculty Publications
Collective action can be an effective means of local development and risk reduction among rural people, but few examples have been documented in pastoral areas. We conducted extensive interviews for 16 women’s groups residing in northern Kenya. Our objectives were to understand how groups were formed, governed, and sustained and what activities they have pursued. The groups we interviewed were 10 years old, on average. Charter memberships averaged about 24 women, 20 of whom were illiterate. Half of the groups formed after facilitation by a development partner and half formed spontaneously. Groups are governed under detailed constitutional frameworks with elected …
Public Engagement To Prioritize The Pastoral Research Agenda At The Pastoral And Agro-Pastoral Research Center Of Oari In Ethiopia, D. Layne Coppock, Getachew Gebru, Lemma Gizachew, Sintayehu Mesele, Mohammed Hassena, Solomon Desta
Public Engagement To Prioritize The Pastoral Research Agenda At The Pastoral And Agro-Pastoral Research Center Of Oari In Ethiopia, D. Layne Coppock, Getachew Gebru, Lemma Gizachew, Sintayehu Mesele, Mohammed Hassena, Solomon Desta
Environment and Society Faculty Publications
The Oromia Agricultural Research Institute (OARI) has a mandate to conduct agricultural and livestock research throughout the Regional State of Oromia in Ethiopia. OARI has recently opened a facility near Yabello town on the Borana Plateau called the Pastoral and Agro-Pastoral Research Center. A meeting was held in August 2006 at Yabello that involved representatives from pastoral communities, the private sector, government, and non-governmental organizations. The aim was to engage stakeholders in a process of problem prioritization and set the stage to create new partnerships to better address pressing problems. The final priorities included: addressing a general decline in forage …
Changes In Land Cover And Soil Conditions For The Yabelo District Of The Borana Plateau, 1973-2003, D. Layne Coppock, Sintayehu Mesele, Heluf Gebrekidan, Lemma Gizachew
Changes In Land Cover And Soil Conditions For The Yabelo District Of The Borana Plateau, 1973-2003, D. Layne Coppock, Sintayehu Mesele, Heluf Gebrekidan, Lemma Gizachew
Environment and Society Faculty Publications
It has been proposed that the Borana Plateau has markedly changed in terms of land cover and land use in recent decades, but no hard data have been available to critically assess this claim. In addition, systematic analysis of soil properties has been limited. Research was designed to measure changes in land cover/land use over 30 years in the 400-km2 Yabelo District of southern Ethiopia using three satellite images taken at an average interval of 15 years. Samples were also collected to assess variation in the physical and chemical properties of dominant soils. Results indicated that Yabelo District has indeed …
Interview With Laurel Macdonald-Bonnell, Macdonald Environmental, 2006 (Audio), Laurel Macdonald-Bonnell
Interview With Laurel Macdonald-Bonnell, Macdonald Environmental, 2006 (Audio), Laurel Macdonald-Bonnell
All Sustainability History Project Oral Histories
Interview of Laurel McDonald by Chloe Collins at MacDonald Environmental Planning on November 29th, 2006.
The interview index is available for download.
Interview With Brian Croak, Croak Creations, 2006 (Audio), Brian Croak
Interview With Brian Croak, Croak Creations, 2006 (Audio), Brian Croak
All Sustainability History Project Oral Histories
Interview of Brian Croak by Chloe Collins on November 28th, 2006.
The interview index is available for download.
Policy Tools For Smart Growth In New England, New England Environmental Finance Center
Policy Tools For Smart Growth In New England, New England Environmental Finance Center
Smart Growth
Across New England communities have been experiencing a rapid outward surge of development away from our community and downtown centers. Effects of sprawl include a loss of wildlife habitat, farm and timber lands; increased costs of community services and higher taxes; auto-dependency, longer commutes, and increased congestion; increases in air and water pollution; a sedentary lifestyle and increased obesity; and losses to one’s sense of place and social ties.
State-level responses to sprawl have surfaced throughout New England in recent years. This report describes 11 examples of these responses, representing all six New England states and a diversity of recent …
The Importance Of Emerging Biobased Industries To Engineering And Technology, Kurt A. Rosentrater, R. Balamuralikrishma
The Importance Of Emerging Biobased Industries To Engineering And Technology, Kurt A. Rosentrater, R. Balamuralikrishma
Kurt A. Rosentrater
Our society has developed an insatiable demand for energy and material goods. Historically, these needs have been met primarily by fossil fuels and other non-renewable raw materials. As environmental concerns grow, however, renewable resources are gaining increased attention. This paper examines the emergence and importance that biobased industries are increasingly beginning to play. A biobased enterprise, similar in concept to a traditional refinery or factory, utilizes conversion technologies to produce various products. These operations are rapidly increasing both in number as well as in capacity throughout this country, and are poised to add significantly to the nation’s energy and material …
Analytical And Experimental Studies Of Properties Of Ethanol Coproduct-Filled Plastics, Robert Tatara, Andrew Otieno, Srikrishna Suraparaju, Kurt A. Rosentrater
Analytical And Experimental Studies Of Properties Of Ethanol Coproduct-Filled Plastics, Robert Tatara, Andrew Otieno, Srikrishna Suraparaju, Kurt A. Rosentrater
Kurt A. Rosentrater
As the renewable fuels industry continues to grow, the quantity of resulting byproducts has expanded in tandem. Currently, these materials are primarily used for animal feed, but at some point will saturate the animal feeds market. Thus, it is necessary to investigate alternative methods and applications by which these coproducts can be utilized. One potential application for these process residues involves plastics manufacturing. Due, in part, to the increasing cost of resins and conventional fillers, alternate fillers have been increasingly sought. Many of these include biological materials such as grasses, bamboo, starch, chicken feathers, soy protein, and cellulose. Not only …
The Growing Together Guide: A Companion Resource To The New England Environmental Finance Center/Melissa Paly Film, New England Environmental Finance Center
The Growing Together Guide: A Companion Resource To The New England Environmental Finance Center/Melissa Paly Film, New England Environmental Finance Center
Smart Growth
What local leader or public official wants to be faced with an SOS the “same old story” of public discord and confrontation over growth and development in one’s community? That situation has become a problem for efforts to promote smart growth. Investments are needed in the walkable, compact, traditional‐streetscape and mixed use neighborhoods and developments that are more sustainable and healthy than sprawl, for both people and the landscape. Yet attempts at such change all too often end up mired in costly public controversy and stalemate.
Current Status And 25 Year Trends For Soil Acidity, Fertility And Salinity In The Coastal Catchments Of The Peel-Harvey, Robert Summers, David Weaver
Current Status And 25 Year Trends For Soil Acidity, Fertility And Salinity In The Coastal Catchments Of The Peel-Harvey, Robert Summers, David Weaver
All other publications
The current status and trends of soil analyses in the coastal catchment of the Peel Harvey estuary were developed from historical soil data (1982 to 1991) combined with a renewed sampling to greater depth (1 m). This report encompasses the data collected from the first year of the project. Soil phosphorus content was found to be high but has dropped slightly since 1991. Soil pH is very low and is likely to be limiting production but have risen slightly since 1991. Soil potassium content is generally so low that it may be limiting production especially to the west of the …
Interview With Ted Morris, Dayton Meat Company, 2006 (Audio), Ted Morris
Interview With Ted Morris, Dayton Meat Company, 2006 (Audio), Ted Morris
All Sustainability History Project Oral Histories
Interview of Ted Morris by Matt Witke on August 17th, 2006.
The interview index is available for download.
Interview With Oscar Lozano, Dayton Meat Company, 2006 (Audio), Oscar Lozano
Interview With Oscar Lozano, Dayton Meat Company, 2006 (Audio), Oscar Lozano
All Sustainability History Project Oral Histories
Interview of Oscar Lozano by Brad Schuler on August 14th, 2006.
The interview index is available for download.
Sheep Updates 2006 - Part 4, K. G. Geenty, A. A. Swan, A. J. Smith, J. L. Smith, Chris Oldham, R. G. Woodgate, R. A. Love, E. Dobbe, H. M. Hoult, J. Pearson, S. Hill, A. Van Burgel, R. B. Besier, R. Warburton, L. Mathwin, D. Rogers, E. Crossley, Allan Herbert, P. Nichols, Tony Albertsen, Darryl Mcclements, Graeme Martin, Penny Hawken, Caroline Vinoles, Beth Paganoni, Dominique Blanche
Sheep Updates 2006 - Part 4, K. G. Geenty, A. A. Swan, A. J. Smith, J. L. Smith, Chris Oldham, R. G. Woodgate, R. A. Love, E. Dobbe, H. M. Hoult, J. Pearson, S. Hill, A. Van Burgel, R. B. Besier, R. Warburton, L. Mathwin, D. Rogers, E. Crossley, Allan Herbert, P. Nichols, Tony Albertsen, Darryl Mcclements, Graeme Martin, Penny Hawken, Caroline Vinoles, Beth Paganoni, Dominique Blanche
Sheep Updates
This session covers seven papers from different authors:
MANAGEMENT
1. Wool and meat traits in Merino flocks in different regions, K.G. Geenty, A.A. Swan, A.J. Smith, J.L. Smith, Sheep CRC and CSIRO Livestock Industries, Armidale
2. Fat score or Condition score? - It all depends on what you want to do! Chris Oldham, Department of Agriculture and Food Western Australia
3. Sheep worm control - the latest for Western Australia, RG Woodgate, RA Love, E Dobbe, HM Hoult, J Pearson, S Hill, A van Burgel and RB Besier, Department of Agriculture and Food Western Australia
PASTURES
4. Rethinking pasture production …
Changing Maine, 1960-2010: Teaching Guide, Richard Barringer, New England Environmental Finance Center
Changing Maine, 1960-2010: Teaching Guide, Richard Barringer, New England Environmental Finance Center
Maine History & Policy Development
Unlike forty years ago, none of us is now certain what the future holds for Maine – except that it will be different. Maine has been transformed by the events of the recent decades. We have come into a new world, a new time – a new historical era, if you will. This new era, like previous eras in Maine history, will require of us new ways of thinking, new ways of understanding, new ways of organizing ourselves as a community of people, if the values and culture we share and cherish are to endure and flourish.
The Land Is In Your Hands : A Practical Guide For Owners Of Small Rural Landholdings In Western Australia, Department Of Agriculture And Food, Wa
The Land Is In Your Hands : A Practical Guide For Owners Of Small Rural Landholdings In Western Australia, Department Of Agriculture And Food, Wa
Bulletins 4000 -
This Bulletin discusses various aspects of managing a small farm or property in Western Australia, including soil and land care, vegetation and plant control on farm holdings, water resource management, biosecurity, plant, animal and insect pest control and livestock management.
The Environmental Impact Of Dietary Choice And Agriculture In California, Harold J. Marlow Jr.
The Environmental Impact Of Dietary Choice And Agriculture In California, Harold J. Marlow Jr.
Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects
Food demand influences agricultural production. Modern agricultural practices have resulted in polluted soil, air and water, eroded soil, dependence on imported oil, and loss of biodiversity. The goal of this research is to investigate the environmental impact of pesticide and fertilizer application, water consumption, and energy used to produce commodities for a vegetarian and non vegetarian diet in California. The working assumption is that greater number and amount of inputs are associated with greater environmental impact. The literature supports this notion. To accomplish this goal, dietary preferences were quantified using the Adventist Health Study and state agricultural data were collected …
Lockhart Catchment Appraisal 2005, Susan Murphy-White, P Leoni
Lockhart Catchment Appraisal 2005, Susan Murphy-White, P Leoni
Resource management technical reports
The Lockhart Catchment is the largest subcatchment of the Avon River Basin covering just over 3.56 million hectares, including 15 Shires running from Quairading and Bruce Rock in the north to Pingrup and Lake King in the south. This document aims to give the reader a starting point from which to further assess larger scale areas of the catchment for the purpose of planning to reverse and improve land degradation and sustainable farming in Western Australia.
Evaluating Linear And Nonlinear Models For The Respiration Rate Of Four Breeds Of Heat Stressed Feedlot Heifers, Q. Huang, A. M. Parkhurst, T. M. Brown-Brandl, R. A. Eigenberg, J. A. Nienaber
Evaluating Linear And Nonlinear Models For The Respiration Rate Of Four Breeds Of Heat Stressed Feedlot Heifers, Q. Huang, A. M. Parkhurst, T. M. Brown-Brandl, R. A. Eigenberg, J. A. Nienaber
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
Heat stress is a factor that causes loss of production and even death in cattle. Animals differ in vulnerability to heat stress. One reason for the difference may be the coat color associated with different breeds or genotypes. A good measure of the heat stress is respiration rate which increases in response to increasing ambient temperature. The objective of this study is to characterize the respiration rates of four genotypes of heat stressed feedlot heifers. Linear and nonlinear models will be compared to find an appropriate method of detecting differences among genotypes.
A Comparison Of Models And Designs For Experiments With Nonlinear Dose-Response Relationships, Shengjie Guo, W. W. Stroup, E. T. Paparozzi, M. E. Conley
A Comparison Of Models And Designs For Experiments With Nonlinear Dose-Response Relationships, Shengjie Guo, W. W. Stroup, E. T. Paparozzi, M. E. Conley
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
Research investigating dose-response relationship is common in agricultural science. Animal response to drug dose and plant response to amount of irrigation, pesticide, or fertilizer are familiar examples. This paper is motivated by plant nutrition research in horticulture. Plant response to level of nutrient applied is typically sigmoidal, i.e. no response at very low levels, observable response at mid-levels, point-of-diminishing returns and plateau at high levels. Plant scientists need accurate estimates of these response relationships 1) to determine lower threshold below which plants show deficiency symptoms and 2) to determine upper point-of-diminishing returns, above which excessive doses are economically and environmentally …
Decision Quality Metrics – A Tool For Managing Quality Of Repeated Bioassays, Nancy Ferry, William Letsinger
Decision Quality Metrics – A Tool For Managing Quality Of Repeated Bioassays, Nancy Ferry, William Letsinger
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
Bioassays are often used in tiered screening systems to detect potential products, such as crop protection products. Often these assays are not replicated. The ultimate products of these bioassays are decisions, with biologically “active” compounds advanced to the next level of screening. Activity is determined by the response of the test organisms (e.g., weeds, insects or fungi) to each compound. The reproducibility of the bioassay is crucial. There are two types of possible errors in screening, false positives and false negatives. The quality of the decisions based upon these bioassays can be monitored through time using controls. This paper will …
Evaluating Nonlinear Crossed Random Effects Models For Comparing Temperature Of Feeding Pigs Under Different Thermal Environments, M. Zhou, A. M. Parkhurst, R. A. Eigenberg, J. A. Nienaber, G. L. Hahn
Evaluating Nonlinear Crossed Random Effects Models For Comparing Temperature Of Feeding Pigs Under Different Thermal Environments, M. Zhou, A. M. Parkhurst, R. A. Eigenberg, J. A. Nienaber, G. L. Hahn
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
The thermal environment plays a large role in an animal’s ability to convert feed into weight gain. A better understanding of a pig’s metabolism will help swine producers select environmental specifications for optimizing feed conversion. The objectives of this study are to 1) characterize the thermoregulatory responses of pigs during a feeding event 2) compare those responses for three thermal environmental treatments applied in a Latin Square design 3) investigate different procedures for fitting nonlinear mixed-effect models with crossed random effects (NLME function in R, %NLINMIX macro in SAS, random effects modeling in AD Model Builder: ADMB-RE). We found that …
Modeling Dispersal Of Yellow Starthistle In The Canyon Grasslands Of North Central Idaho, Bahman Shafii, William J. Price, Timothy S. Prather, Lawrence W. Lass, Derek Howard
Modeling Dispersal Of Yellow Starthistle In The Canyon Grasslands Of North Central Idaho, Bahman Shafii, William J. Price, Timothy S. Prather, Lawrence W. Lass, Derek Howard
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
Yellow starthistle is an invasive plant species that reduces productivity and plant diversity within the canyon grasslands of Idaho. Early detection of yellow starthistle and predicting its spread have important managerial implications that could greatly reduce the economic/environmental losses due to this weed. The spread of an invasive plant species depends on its ability to reproduce and disperse seed into new areas. Typically, information on the factors that directly affect a plant’s ability to reproduce and subsequently disperse seed is not available or difficult to obtain. Alternatively, topographic factors, such as slope and aspect as well as competitive correlates such …
All Possible Model Selection In Proc Mixed – A Sas Macro Application, George C J Fernandez
All Possible Model Selection In Proc Mixed – A Sas Macro Application, George C J Fernandez
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
A user-friendly SAS macro application to perform all possible model selection of fixed effects including quadratic and cross products in the presence of random and repeated measures effects using SAS PROC MIXED is available. This macro application will complement the model selection option currently available in the SAS PROC REG for multiple linear regressions and the experimental SAS procedure GLMSELECT that focuses on the standard independently and identically distributed general linear model for univariate responses. Options are also included in this macro to select the best covariance structure associated with the user-specified fully saturated repeated measures model; to graphically explore …
Using Random Sampling To Estimate Insect Counts As Response Surfaces Involving Space And Time, Benjamin G. Mullinix, Glynn Tillman
Using Random Sampling To Estimate Insect Counts As Response Surfaces Involving Space And Time, Benjamin G. Mullinix, Glynn Tillman
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
In fall 2000, an on-farm sustainable agricultural research project was established for cotton (Gossypium hirstum L.) in Tift County, Georgia. Twenty fields that were to be planted to cotton in 2001 were identified which were approximately 5 to 10 acres in size. Four randomly selected fields were assigned to each of five cover crops: 1) cereal rye (Secale cereale L.); 2) crimson clover (Trifolium incarnatum L.); 3) legume mixture of balansa clover (T. michelianum Savi), crimson clover, and hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth); 4) previous legume mixture plus cereal rye; and 5) no cover crop (fallow) in conventionally tilled fields. …
An Estimator Of Treatment Effects Under Combined Sampling And Experimental Designs, Christina D. Smith
An Estimator Of Treatment Effects Under Combined Sampling And Experimental Designs, Christina D. Smith
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
Sampling design and experimental design have developed relatively independently in recent statistical history. However, many studies do involve both a sampling design and an ex-perimental design. For example, a polluted site may be exhaustively partitioned into area plots, a random sample of plots selected, and the selected plots randomly assigned to three clean-up regimens. To date there is no commonly used procedure for incorporating both the sampling design and the experimental design into the estimation of treatment effects. For this reason we will consider an estimator of treatment effect that does incorporate both sampling and experimental designs and discuss some …
Appropriate Statistical Methods For Comparing Sources Of Nutritional Methionine, D. D. Kratzer, R. C. Littell
Appropriate Statistical Methods For Comparing Sources Of Nutritional Methionine, D. D. Kratzer, R. C. Littell
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
Kratzer and Ash(1996) presented Experimentation Science as a process to accomplish the Scientific Method with a complete protocol including relevant statistical design and analyses The first principal to sound Experimentation Science is the principle of Relevance. This is a case study primarily of Relevance in Experimentation Science. In our consulting work we found a so called “performance” design as not relevant because of the use of null hypothesis testing to promote a concept of equivalence. The best alternative involves equivalence testing, more replication and representative-ness. Secondly we found a dose response design for two products where non-linear asymptotic regression is …
Clustering A Series Of Replicated Polyploid Gene Expression Experiments In Maize, Lingling An, Nicole C. Riddle, James A. Birchler, R. W. Doerge
Clustering A Series Of Replicated Polyploid Gene Expression Experiments In Maize, Lingling An, Nicole C. Riddle, James A. Birchler, R. W. Doerge
Conference on Applied Statistics in Agriculture
Ploidy level is defined as the number of individual sets of chromosomes contained in a single cell. Many important crop plants, such as potato, soybean and wheat are polyploid. Although it is widely known that polyploidy is a frequent evolutionary event, it is not fully understand why polyploids have been so successful. In this work cluster analysis is employed to study gene expression changes in a maize inbred line (B73) across a range of polyploidy levels. The B73 ploidy series includes monoploid, diploid, triploid and tetraploid plants and consists of biological and technical replicates as measured by microarray technology. An …