EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

Book The Effect of Land use on Nutrient Cycles of Tropical Streams on the Osa Peninsula  Costa Rica

Download or read book The Effect of Land use on Nutrient Cycles of Tropical Streams on the Osa Peninsula Costa Rica written by Kelly Bringhurst and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The effect of land-use on nutrient cycles of tropical streams on the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica: a paired catchment approach to investigate current conditions and projected changes. Kelly N. Bringhurst Abstract This study is concerned with potential environmental degradation of soils, rivers and coastal regions of the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica due to deforestation. A paired, small-catchment approach to the study of environmental pressures on nutrient transfer and aquatic enrichment was used with one catchment that had been cleared for pasture (CN9) and the second primarily undisturbed tropical wet forest (CS 1). Nutrients and related parameters in soils and transferred in normal hydrological discharge were investigated. Soils in the study area are oxisols with concentrations of organic matter, total and plant available P higher in the forested catchment. Indirect measures of suspended sediment by turbidity showed an increase in the deforested catchment stream. Water input via rainfall for the year June 2008-June 2009 was approximately 5000 mm. Stream discharge was approximately 3300 mm year" for each catchment as measured by continuous recorders and evapotranspiration was, on average, 1500 mm year". These data suggested a good resolution of the water balance from independent measurements. The effect of deforestation on stream discharge was a 59% increase in flow during the wet season and an increase in the Q5:Q95 ratio showing that the deforested stream was flashier. Loss of forest canopy and decreased organic matter in the soil resulted in a depletion of available N. The deforested catchment loss of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) increased 33% over the forested catchment. Soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) showed a 47% increase in the deforested catchment compared with the forested catchment. The molar N:P ratios were lower than expected and both streams were well below the 0.06 mg L-1 level at which N- limitation has been reported. Effects of nutrient loading have been observed through increased algal growth on equipment surfaces in the deforested catchment stream and increased nutrient yields will likely lead to eutrophication of coastal waters. Key Words - eutrophication, phosphorus, nitrogen, suspended sediment, deforestation, tropical forest.

Book Characterizing the Effect of Land use on the Nitrogen Cycle in Northwestern Costa Rica

Download or read book Characterizing the Effect of Land use on the Nitrogen Cycle in Northwestern Costa Rica written by Nathan M. Geller and published by . This book was released on 2008 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Effects of Landuse and Weathering on Available Nutrients in Volcanic Ash Soils of Costa Rica

Download or read book Effects of Landuse and Weathering on Available Nutrients in Volcanic Ash Soils of Costa Rica written by Sam Gerrits and published by Bib. Orton IICA / CATIE. This book was released on 1995 with total page 312 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book The Impact of Land Use Practices on Nutrients in Freshwater Streams  Guanacase  Costa Rica

Download or read book The Impact of Land Use Practices on Nutrients in Freshwater Streams Guanacase Costa Rica written by Lindsay Hagamen and published by . This book was released on 2008 with total page 39 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Land Use Dynamics on Costa Rica s Osa Peninsula

Download or read book Land Use Dynamics on Costa Rica s Osa Peninsula written by Abigail Alexandra Hewitt and published by . This book was released on 2013 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Ecology and Morphometry of Tropical Freshwater Fish Assemblages in the Osa Peninsula and Southwestern Costa Rica

Download or read book Ecology and Morphometry of Tropical Freshwater Fish Assemblages in the Osa Peninsula and Southwestern Costa Rica written by Michael R. Monfredi and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page 116 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The geologic past of what we now know as Central America has provided a favorable and interesting history for the development of high levels of biological diversity currently observed. One of the most biologically diverse countries here is Costa Rica, which possesses greater richness values than five of the other Central American countries in birds, amphibians, and fishes, and has the greatest number of known plant species as of the year 2000. In order to better understand the current state of fish communities across the southwestern region of Costa Rica, I set out to accomplish three main goals: 1) to provide a more extensive understanding of stream fish communities throughout Osa and nearby mainland Costa Rica, and how they are influenced by abiotic and physical factors, 2) to compare individual species morphometry across streams influenced by a variety of physical and abiotic factors to determine the potential affect of those factors on fish size relationships, and 3) to compare freshwater fish communities, and individual species morphology, in pristine conditions with those communities/individuals present in a variety of surrounding land use patterns (e.g. agricultural lands, cattle ranches, and rural areas). The characid Astyanax aeneus (37%), gobies Awaous transandeanus (9%) and Sicydium salvini (8.7%), and poecilid Poecilia gilli (8.5%) were the most abundant species collected/observed. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed that four main factors are influencing community composition; namely distance from ocean, current land-use type, geologic history, and canopy cover. Furthermore, I found statistical differences in overall community structure between different land-use types as well as different geological landmasses. In regards to species morphometry, stream physical characteristics (i.e. distance from ocean, temperature, percent canopy cover, and geologic region), accompanied by differing surrounding land-use patterns, were found to be significantly related to either overall sizes or size allometric relationships, or both, among five species from the Osa Peninsula and neighboring mainland in Costa Rica. I conclude that this research provides an intricate knowledge of tropical stream fish communities throughout southwestern Costa Rica; however, broader reaching impacts were also achieved as this research can be used as either a model for further study design or as a basis for comparison with other tropical or temperate stream communities.

Book Living on the Edge

Download or read book Living on the Edge written by Andrew John Skrinyer and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 60 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Tropical rainforests are critical to continued human existence on Earth. Carbon sequestration, the global hydrological cycle, and medicinal plants are best provided by large tracts of intact rainforest. Unfortunately, forest loss is prevalent throughout the tropics, which house the world’s most biodiverse ecosystems. I conducted an assessment of standing forest health and a primate census at the Piro Biological Station on the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica over a 6-week period in 2014. I characterized edge effects throughout the forest in relation to land cover types that border the forest edge, compared edge-to-interior forest at the site, and related these data to the distribution of four primate species (Ateles geoffroyi, Saimiri oerstedii, Alouatta palliata, and Cebus capucinus) found there. My results and satellite imagery suggest that this area is currently undergoing a period of forest regeneration. Likewise, a primate census revealed that Ateles geoffroyi, listed as Endangered by the IUCN Red List, is abundant throughout the site, equally utilizing both edge and interior forest during the wet season. Since the nearby Corcovado National Park is known for its abundant Ateles geoffroyi population, this study reinforces the possibility of habitat corridors between Piro and Corcovado.

Book Effects of Land Use on Regional Nitrous Oxide Emissions in the Humid Tropics of Costa Rica

Download or read book Effects of Land Use on Regional Nitrous Oxide Emissions in the Humid Tropics of Costa Rica written by Roelof Arthur Jan Plant and published by . This book was released on 1999* with total page 129 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Nitrous oxide if formed in soil as an intermediate product from nitrification and denitrification, soil processes that operate at the microsite scale. Land use changes strongly affect soil nitrogen (N) cycling; especially conversion of natural forest to agricultural land generally increases N 2 O emissions. Therefore, land use is an important distal process control on N 2 O emissions from soil. Effects of land use change on N 2 O must be studied at scales relevant to agricultural land use planning and policy making.

Book Effects of Deforestation and Riparian Buffers on Lotic Communities in Southeastern Costa Rica

Download or read book Effects of Deforestation and Riparian Buffers on Lotic Communities in Southeastern Costa Rica written by Christopher M. Lorion and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 264 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Freshwater biodiversity in the tropics is threatened by a variety of anthropogenic factors, and land cover change may have the most widespread and pervasive impacts. Costa Rica has experienced extensive deforestation, and there is a great need to understand how land cover change has affected stream ecosystems and investigate strategies for mitigating these impacts. Understanding the distribution of freshwater biodiversity in relatively pristine systems is also critical for effective conservation planning. To examine the effects of deforestation on stream communities in southeastern Costa Rica and test the hypothesis that riparian forest buffers can reduce these effects, comparisons were made between forested stream reaches and stream reaches adjacent to pasture with and without a riparian forest buffer. Based on these comparisons, deforestation appeared to significantly alter the diversity and taxonomic composition of fish and benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages in the study streams, as well as stream temperatures and allochthonous inputs. Reaches with a riparian forest buffer, however, generally maintained aquatic assemblages and stream ecosystem conditions more similar to those observed in forested reaches. Overall, these results provide support for existing Costa Rican regulations mandating riparian forest protection, and suggest that appropriate riparian management could significantly reduce the impacts of deforestation on tropical stream biota. To investigate landscape-scale patterns in fish diversity, stream fishes were sampled along an altitudinal gradient of nearly 500 m in the Sixaola River basin. Fish diversity decreased steeply with increasing elevation, and the main gradient in assemblage structure was strongly correlated with several stream habitat variables. Diadromous fishes were common throughout the altitudinal gradient and dominated the highest elevation sites, highlighting the importance of longitudinal connectivity in Mesoamerican river systems. Systematic conservation planning that focuses on terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, as well as biophysical linkages between these realms, could potentially identify more efficient and effective reserve networks. A critical evaluation of existing planning methods illustrates how incorporating linkages among ecosystems increases planning complexity. Several of the methods reviewed would be applicable to an example planning domain in Costa Rica and Panama, but new tools will be needed to realize the full potential of a comprehensive planning approach.

Book Land Use  Hydrological Processes and Ecosystem Services in the Upper Reventaz  n Watershed  Costa Rica

Download or read book Land Use Hydrological Processes and Ecosystem Services in the Upper Reventaz n Watershed Costa Rica written by Ryan Toohey and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page 374 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Costa Rica experienced large scale deforestation between the 1940s and 1980s. Due to the rapid loss of forest, the Costa Rican government initiated the Pagos para Servicios Ambientales, or Environmental Service Payments (ESPs), program that linked ecosystem services such as biodiversity conservation and hydrological services to forested land cover by compensating private landowners for forest preservation, regeneration, or agroforestry activities. However, the effect of land use on hydrological services and processes remains an area of active research. Within the framework of the ESPs, this research investigated: 1) understanding the regional tropical hydrology, 2) determining whether regional land uses impact soil characteristics and hydrological processes, and 3) evaluating the significance and overlap of different ecosystem services within the context of conservation planning. In the first chapter, I measured soil properties and hydrological processes within common regional land uses (forest, coffee, sugar cane and pasture) at the point, the plot, and the field scales. Macropore networks facilitated much more percolation in the forest and coffee. Compaction in the sugar and pasture diverted precipitation horizontally as surface runoff and lateral flow. In Chapter 2, I investigated whether similar results could he observed at greater scales using one-cell and watershed model simulations based on the Soil Moisture Routing model. I combined land use parameterization to investigate the interplay of antecedent moisture content (AMC), infiltration, surface runoff and percolation using a one-cell model. At this scale, a 'fill and spill' runoff generation mechanism was observed when precipitation intensity exceeded the different land use soil storage amounts and conductivities. The greatest differences between land uses were observed at AMC less than field capacity where subsurface connectivity was limited within the sugar and pasture. Seven nested watersheds were classified as either forested (>85% forested) or mixed-land use watersheds (

Book Effects of Forest Clearing and Land Use on Soil Properties of Two Land Use Sequences in Cocori  Atlantic Zoneof Costa Rica

Download or read book Effects of Forest Clearing and Land Use on Soil Properties of Two Land Use Sequences in Cocori Atlantic Zoneof Costa Rica written by and published by Bib. Orton IICA / CATIE. This book was released on with total page 68 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Fine root dynamics within land use change from tropical forests to agriculture  A systematic review protocol

Download or read book Fine root dynamics within land use change from tropical forests to agriculture A systematic review protocol written by Sebastian Persch and published by CIFOR. This book was released on 2015-12-30 with total page 26 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Conversion of tropical forests to agriculture contributes significantly to global warming, causing an estimated 12–18% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. However, estimates of ecosystem carbon fluxes are not accurate mainly because of the limited understanding of their belowground components. Root dynamics, i.e. root production, mortality and decomposition, are crucial elements of ecosystem functioning; an understanding of root dynamics is required to estimate the carbon cycle accurately.

Book THE EFFECTS OF LAND USE ON PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES ON TROPICAL SOILS  COSTA RICA

Download or read book THE EFFECTS OF LAND USE ON PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES ON TROPICAL SOILS COSTA RICA written by and published by . This book was released on 2004 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: It is well documented that changes in land use result in changes in soil properties. Costa Rica offers one of the most unique settings for studying soils and land use changes in the tropics. Once almost completely covered in forest, the country now bears the scars of colonization and development. However, Costa Rica is currently a working model of ecological protection and home to a successful eco-tourism industry. By setting aside large tracts of land for conservation, Costa Rica is a perfect location to compare changes in soil properties with changes in land use. The soils at the Texas Christian University San Ramon Tropical Research Station in Costa Rica, a private facility dedicated to conservation and research, have never been studied. In order to understand how land use changes have affected them, soil quality analyses were conducted. Soil pits in primary growth forest, secondary growth forest, and deforested land once used for cattle grazing were be dug in order to carry out a suite of soil tests. The results indicate that while bulk density will increase following deforestation and cattle trampling, soil porosity will return with forest succession. Cation exchange capacity results on the other hand indicate that soil fertility increases with the introduction of grasses in deforested areas. Cations also show a return to pre-disturbance levels with forest succession, which in this case is lower than post-disturbance levels.

Book Economic Valuation  Land Use Change and Ecosystem Services in the Nicoya Peninsula of Costa Rica

Download or read book Economic Valuation Land Use Change and Ecosystem Services in the Nicoya Peninsula of Costa Rica written by Héctor S. Tavárez Vargas and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 316 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Anthropogenic land use change affects the provision of ecosystem services (ES), including water provisioning and habitat for pollinators. Understanding the value of benefits provided by forests is crucial for the design of current and future water provisioning and ES conservation policies. However, special attention should be devoted to understanding the validity of the methods widely used for the estimation of benefit-value. The first chapter of this dissertation provides an overview of the social-ecological system in the Nicoya Peninsula of Costa Rica and the rationale for the research I conducted. The second chapter of this dissertation examines the value of water for household uses, obtained from two different water-provisioning projects: well construction and reforestation. Results from contingent valuation and choice experiments methods show that residents are willing to pay a considerable amount for household water and that water generated from reforestation has a higher value than water generated from well construction. The third chapter of this dissertation examines the effects of incorporating risk as a separate attribute in choice experiments, and the effects of positive or negative framing on estimates of willingness to pay. We found that residents are willing to pay more for reforestation and additional water when information about risk is provided as a separate attribute and when risk is presented positively (e.g., probability of success vs. probability of failure) in choice experiments. The last chapter presents an interdisciplinary mixed-methods approach for using local ecological knowledge to generate practical information for the valuation of ES. We used beekeepers as a case study, as they have been working in the Nicoya Peninsula region for many years and their livelihoods are impacted by land use change. Results from a questionnaire showed that participants prefer forests for beekeeping, and rank native trees as their most important floral resources. In interviews, beekeepers reported a loss of floral resources over time, which is often due to land use changes that have been incentivized by policies at the national level. This research provides insights into resource changes from the species to landscape scale and recommendations for improving ES management and conservation policies.

Book Dipping of Furniture and Furniture Components

Download or read book Dipping of Furniture and Furniture Components written by and published by . This book was released on with total page 5 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: