Search results for "growing season"

showing 10 items of 100 documents

Novel leaf-level measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence for photosynthetic efficiency

2015

Solar induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) from vegetation can now be obtained from satellites as well as ground-based field studies, at select wavelengths associated with atmospheric features. At the leaf level, full spectrum (650–800 nm) chlorophyll emissions (ChlF) can be measured using specialized instrumentation to support interpretation of these SIF observations. We found that ChlF spectra differ for leaf bottoms versus upper leaf surfaces, potentially affecting within-canopy radiative scattering. Our ChlF measurements for leaves of eight tree species (n≥125) obtained during fall 2013 senescence at the Duke Forest in North Carolina, USA and the 2014 growing season (n=72) at the USDA…

Fluorescence Geophysical measurements Indexes Reflectivity Remote sensing Vegetation Vegetation mappingGrowing seasonVegetationPhotosynthetic efficiencyPhotochemical Reflectance Indexchemistry.chemical_compoundHorticultureGEO/10 - GEOFISICA DELLA TERRA SOLIDAchemistryChlorophyllRadiative transferEnvironmental scienceTree speciesChlorophyll fluorescenceRemote sensing
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Interannual to decadal variability of summer sea surface temperature in the Sea of Okhotsk recorded in the shell growth history of Stimpson's hard cl…

2017

Abstract Sclerochronological and shell stable oxygen isotopic analyses were conducted on live-caught specimens of Stimpson's hard clams, Mercenaria stimpsoni , from the southern Sea of Okhotsk, off northern Hokkaido, Japan. In this region, the main growing season of this species during early ontogeny (below the age of 12 years) lasts from mid-spring to mid-fall at sea surface temperatures (SST) between approximately 10 and 22 °C. Growth cessation begins between late fall and early spring at SST, below approximately 6 °C; however, shell growth was largely limited to the summer season later in life. Counting of annual increments indicated that this species had a relatively long life span of u…

Global and Planetary Change010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesOntogenyMercenaria stimpsoniGrowing seasonOceanic climate010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanography01 natural sciencesSummer seasonSea surface temperatureOceanographySclerochronologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesChronologyGlobal and Planetary Change
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European phenological response to climate change matches the warming pattern

2006

Global climate change impacts can already be tracked in many physical and biological systems; in particular, terrestrial ecosystems provide a consistent picture of observed changes. One of the preferred indicators is phenology, the science of natural recurring events, as their recorded dates provide a high-temporal resolution of ongoing changes. Thus, numerous analyses have demonstrated an earlier onset of spring events for mid and higher latitudes and a lengthening of the growing season. However, published single-site or single-species studies are particularly open to suspicion of being biased towards predominantly reporting climate change-induced impacts. No comprehensive study or meta-an…

Global and Planetary ChangeSeries (stratigraphy)EcologyPhenologyGlobal warmingGrowing seasonClimate changeLatitudeGeographyClimatologyEnvironmental ChemistryTerrestrial ecosystemsense organsEcosystem ecologyGeneral Environmental ScienceGlobal Change Biology
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The effect of environmental uncertainty and diapause investment on the occurrence of specialist and generalist species

2014

The evolution of specialist and generalist strategies is a central topic in ecology with strong implications for the biodiversity and structure of communities. Environmental unpredictability has been suggested as a key factor affecting the relative advantages of generalist species. However, life cycle features, like diapause, can also play a major role in the competitive dynamics between generalists and specialists. Zooplanktonic communities of continental waters are suitable models to study this; they inhabit water bodies that vary temporally with different degrees of uncertainty and rely on the production of diapause stages to survive across the year. We developed a simple theoretical mod…

Habitat suitabilityEcologyEcology (disciplines)BiodiversityGrowing seasonAquatic ScienceDiapauseBiologyInvestment (macroeconomics)Generalist and specialist speciesZooplanktonEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternational Review of Hydrobiology
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Transient soil-moisture dynamics and climate change in Mediterranean ecosystems

2008

[1] Plants in Mediterranean ecosystems have developed different strategies to cope with transient soil-moisture dynamics induced by the markedly out of phase seasonal behavior of rainfall and temperature. Deep-rooted plants use the soil moisture stored in the wet winter (extensive users), while shallower rooted plants exploit both the wet season storage and the more sporadic growing season rainfall (intensive users). Using stochastic models of soil-moisture dynamics, we present an analytical and numerical description of the probabilistic structure of the soil-moisture storage at the beginning of the growing season in relation to the dynamics of the wet season and then study its evolution du…

HydrologyMediterranean climateWet seasonEcohydrologyEnvironmental scienceClimate changeGrowing seasonRoot systemVegetationWater contentWater Science and TechnologyWater Resources Research
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Determining water use of sorghum from two-source energy balance and radiometric temperatures

2011

Estimates of surface actual evapotranspiration (ET) can assist in predicting crop water requirements. An alternative to the traditional crop-coefficient methods are the energy balance models. The objective of this research was to show how surface temperature observations can be used, together with a two-source energy balance model, to determine crop water use throughout the different phenological stages of a crop grown. Radiometric temperatures were collected in a sorghum (<i>Sorghum bicolor</i>) field as part of an experimental campaign carried out in Barrax, Spain, during the 2010 summer growing season. Performance of the Simplified Two-Source Energy Balance (STSEB) model was …

Hydrologylcsh:GE1-350biologylcsh:TEnergy balancelcsh:Geography. Anthropology. RecreationGrowing seasonSorghumbiology.organism_classificationlcsh:Technologylcsh:TD1-1066Crop coefficientlcsh:GEvapotranspirationLysimeterEnvironmental sciencelcsh:Environmental technology. Sanitary engineeringIrrigation managementWater uselcsh:Environmental sciencesHydrology and Earth System Sciences
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The Carini Experimental Station for Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture – Preliminary Indications

1992

A two year experiment, to study the feasibility of wastewater reuse for a safe irrigation in the Sicilian context, has been initiated. Eight plots in two fields, totalling 629 m2, were planted with cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp.), the irrigation water being supplied by a pilot plant treating 22 m3/day of municipal wastewater. The plant consists of an extended aeration biological system followed by rapid sand filtration and a choice of disinfection systems. Analyses performed on all waters used in the experiment indicate that safe irrigation water, virtually pathogen-free, can be produced if careful operational techniques are adopted. Despite all possible care, however, soil samples tak…

IrrigationEngineeringEnvironmental EngineeringSoil testbusiness.industryEnvironmental engineeringGrowing seasonContext (language use)Pilot plantWastewaterAgricultureExtended aerationbusinessWater Science and TechnologyWater Science and Technology
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Cold tolerance during larval development: effects on the thermal distribution limits of Leptinotarsa decemlineata

2009

Insects' cold tolerance during their development is a surprisingly understudied subject in ecology, despite the fact that subzero temperatures during the growing season are common at high altitudes and latitudes. Subzero temperatures can have detrimental effects on organisms, restricting a species' range. This study addresses the question whether night frosts during the growing season have an instant or delayed negative impact on larval mortality of the Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). We also tested whether populations from the centre (Poland) and margins (Russia) of the distribution range of L. decemlineata differ in their responses to s…

LarvaEcologyfungiColorado potato beetleSpecies distributionGrowing seasonBiologybiology.organism_classificationHorticultureInsect ScienceFrostPEST analysisLeptinotarsaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOverwintering
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Unpredictability of fish recruitment: interannual variation in young-of-the-year abundance

2000

In 1989-1998, vendace larvae Coregonus albula were sampled in Finnish lakes following a stratified random sampling design. The abundance of young-of-the-year vendace after the first growing season was estimated using catch-per-unit-effort statistics. The number or total area of nursery places hardly limited the recruitment of vendace in the study lakes. The major proportion of prerecruit mortality of vendace occurred in the larval phase and larval sampling produced significant information on young-of-the-year survival. Although larval abundances and recruitment were clearly associated only in Lake Onkamo, generally high larval abundance was needed to produce high number of recruits.

LarvabiologyEcologyfungiGrowing seasonAquatic animalAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityStratified samplingAbundance (ecology)Coregonus albulaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSalmonidaeJournal of Fish Biology
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Spatial and temporal characteristics of potential evapotranspiration trends over China

2000

This paper analyses the time series (1954–1993) of Penman–Monteith evapotranspiration estimates for 65 stations in mainland China and Tibet, for the country as a whole and for individual stations. The analysis shows that for China as a whole, the potential evapotranspiration (PET) has decreased in all seasons. On a regional basis, northeast and southwest China have experienced moderate evapotranspiration increases, while in northwest and southeast China evapotranspiration has decreased to a much higher extent. South of 35°N, sunshine appears to be most strongly associated with evapotranspiration changes while wind, relative humidity and maximum temperature are the primary factors in northwe…

Mainland ChinaAtmospheric ScienceAltitudeClimatologyEvapotranspirationEnvironmental scienceGrowing seasonClimate changeSpatial variabilityPrecipitationChinaInternational Journal of Climatology
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