FACTORS INFLUENCING THE MORTALITY OF SCOLYTUS MULTISTRIATUS (COLEOPTERA: SCOLYTIDAE) IN ELM BRANCHES IN CALIFORNIA

1985 ◽  
Vol 117 (7) ◽  
pp. 819-828 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann E. Hajek ◽  
Donald L. Dahlsten

AbstractPopulations of Scolytus multistriatus (Marsham) from two areas of California were sampled in 1979 to investigate various factors influencing mortality. English-elm bolts (Ulmus procera Salisb.) ranging between 2.0 and 12.9 cm in diameter yielded mean mortalities from 49.1 to 86.0%. Mortality was highly correlated with egg density for branch samples from 7.0 to 12.9 cm in diameter. The minimum acceptable elm-branch diameter (2.8 cm) was attacked only during the first sampling period (mid-May to mid-June). Branch diameter, and therefore bark thickness, demonstrated a strong positive relationship with the density of S. multistriatus eggs, attacks, gallery lengths, and emerged adults. Gallery length density was positively correlated with attack density. At low attack densities in small-diameter branches, mean gallery lengths were shorter.

Fire Ecology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Alina Cansler ◽  
Sharon M. Hood ◽  
Phillip J. van Mantgem ◽  
J. Morgan Varner

Abstract Background Predictive models of post-fire tree and stem mortality are vital for management planning and understanding fire effects. Post-fire tree and stem mortality have been traditionally modeled as a simple empirical function of tree defenses (e.g., bark thickness) and fire injury (e.g., crown scorch). We used the Fire and Tree Mortality database (FTM)—which includes observations of tree mortality in obligate seeders and stem mortality in basal resprouting species from across the USA—to evaluate the accuracy of post-fire mortality models used in the First Order Fire Effects Model (FOFEM) software system. The basic model in FOFEM, the Ryan and Amman (R-A) model, uses bark thickness and percentage of crown volume scorched to predict post-fire mortality and can be applied to any species for which bark thickness can be calculated (184 species-level coefficients are included in the program). FOFEM (v6.7) also includes 38 species-specific tree mortality models (26 for gymnosperms, 12 for angiosperms), with unique predictors and coefficients. We assessed accuracy of the R-A model for 44 tree species and accuracy of 24 species-specific models for 13 species, using data from 93 438 tree-level observations and 351 fires that occurred from 1981 to 2016. Results For each model, we calculated performance statistics and provided an assessment of the representativeness of the evaluation data. We identified probability thresholds for which the model performed best, and the best thresholds with either ≥80% sensitivity or specificity. Of the 68 models evaluated, 43 had Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic Curve (AUC) values ≥0.80, indicating excellent performance, and 14 had AUCs <0.7, indicating poor performance. The R-A model often over-predicted mortality for angiosperms; 5 of 11 angiosperms had AUCs <0.7. For conifers, R-A over-predicted mortality for thin-barked species and for small diameter trees. The species-specific models had significantly higher AUCs than the R-A models for 10 of the 22 models, and five additional species-specific models had more balanced errors than R-A models, even though their AUCs were not significantly different or were significantly lower. Conclusions Approximately 75% of models tested had acceptable, excellent, or outstanding predictive ability. The models that performed poorly were primarily models predicting stem mortality of angiosperms or tree mortality of thin-barked conifers. This suggests that different approaches—such as different model forms, better estimates of bark thickness, and additional predictors—may be warranted for these taxa. Future data collection and research should target the geographical and taxonomic data gaps and poorly performing models identified in this study. Our evaluation of post-fire tree mortality models is the most comprehensive effort to date and allows users to have a clear understanding of the expected accuracy in predicting tree death from fire for 44 species.


2003 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 683 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Gladstone ◽  
Maria J. Schreider

Mangrove forests around the world are being impacted by development in adjacent land and water areas. An after-control-impact study was undertaken to assess the effects of mangrove forest pruning on the associated benthic macroinvertebrate fauna. Pruning, undertaken 5 years before our sampling period, reduced the height of the forest canopy from 5 m to 1 m. Macrobenthic assemblages were sampled in September 2000 and January 2001 from two randomly selected sites within the pruned section of forest, and two sites in each of two control locations in the same forest. Assemblage composition in the pruned and undisturbed mangrove forests was not significantly different, nor were there significant differences in variability between the two areas. Similarity matrices for assemblages based on higher taxonomic groups and molluscs were highly correlated with similarity matrices for all taxa, indicating the utility of more rapid forms of assessment in this habitat. The results suggest that although short-term impacts may have occurred, no impact on macroinvertebrate assemblages was evident 5 years after the pruning.


1987 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 639-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Earle ◽  
H. C. Duthie ◽  
David A. Scruton

Phytoplankton samples collected from 97 headwater lakes throughout insular Newfoundland were analyzed and used as a basis for a statistical evaluation of the environmental factors influencing species distributions. A selected subset of 77 taxa were clustered using a complete-linkage cluster analysis. The final 12 clusters represent the associations of species found occurring together in insular Newfoundland. Physical, chemical, and morphometric data collected with the phytoplankton served to characterize the environment. Factor analysis simplified the original variables, many of which were highly correlated and uninterpretable, into seven derived environmental factors: dystrophy, hardness, salinity, lake size, season, watershed influence, and orthophosphate enrichment. The resulting orthogonally rotated (VARIMAX) scores comprising these seven factors were correlated with species abundances. Spearman correlations showed several relationships between species distributions and the seven derived environmental factors. Although the analysis identified a subset of naturally acidic, dystrophic lakes, it failed to reveal any evidence of anthropogenic acidification in the lakes studied. For the most part, the members from each of the cluster groups demonstrated similar relationships with the derived environmental factors. The evidence suggests that the cluster groups may represent species associations; groups of species that co-occur because of their common requirements for specific environmental conditions. Phytoplankton autecological findings resulting from this study of insular Newfoundland lakes correspond well with conclusions derived independently from a comparable study of 95 headwater lakes in Labrador.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kailash Prasad Thakur

Abstract This paper presents a driver model analysis of the maintenance of speed on highways by drivers of various capabilities. The results indicate that for an expert driver the speed is highly correlated with the free distance in front of the vehicle (or gap with the lead vehicle). Whereas, for a novice driver the speed is very poorly correlated with the gap. This correlation is always positive and varies between 0.05 for novice driver and 0.85 for expert driver. The correlation of speed with the risk-time (time to impact) showed a different trend. This correlation is negative and varies between 0.5 for an expert driver to 0.8 for novice ones. The results compare fairly well with the laboratory-based driver simulation studies carried out by Charlton. The effect of road roughness upon the maintenance of speed, gap and risk-time is also investigated.


2002 ◽  
Vol 32 (12) ◽  
pp. 2094-2105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shawn Fraver ◽  
Robert G Wagner ◽  
Michael Day

We examined the dynamics of down coarse woody debris (CWD) under an expanding-gap harvesting system in the Acadian forest of Maine. Gap harvesting treatments included 20% basal area removal, 10% basal area removal, and a control. We compared volume, biomass, diameter-class, and decay-class distributions of CWD in permanent plots before and 3 years after harvest. We also determined wood density and moisture content by species and decay class. Mean pre-harvest CWD volume was 108.9 m3/ha, and biomass was 23.22 Mg/ha. Both harvesting treatments increased the volume and biomass of non-decayed, small-diameter CWD (i.e., logging slash), with the 20% treatment showing a greater increase than the 10% treatment and both treatments showing greater increases than the control. Post-harvest reduction of advanced-decay CWD due to mechanical crushing was not evident. A mean of 18.48 m3 water/ha (1.85 L/m2) demonstrates substantial water storage in CWD, even during an exceptionally dry sampling period. The U-shaped temporal trend in CWD volume or biomass seen in even-aged stands may not apply to these uneven-aged stands; here, the trend is likely more complex because of the superimposition of small-scale natural disturbances and repeated silvicultural entries.


Author(s):  
Musriyadi Nabiu ◽  
. Reflis ◽  
. Aswin

This research is intended to study characteristics of P4K creditors who are delinquent their credit payments, examine factors influencing their late P4K credit payments.  From 40 P4K creditors, only 23 creditors are able to accessed for this research and willing to participate.  Rank spearman correlation and t-test methods are used to analyze the data gathered from respondents.  The research finds that the level of family income and respondent’ perception on rural development are highly correlated to the level of P4K credit payment while number of family, working motivation and respondents perception on P4K program are not.Key words: credit payment, socio-economic factors      


1992 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffery Pittam ◽  
John Ingram

ABSTRACTThis study considered the accuracy of perception and production of the compound-phrasal contrast by Vietnamese-Australians learning English and examined phonological, demographic, and speaker normalization factors that might influence acquisition of the contrast. In the study, 32 Vietnamese subjects took part; their performance on the perception part of the study was compared to that of 32 native English-speaking Australians. Complexity of phonological environment, in terms of number of syllables and consonant clusters alien to Vietnamese phonology, and length of residence in Australia were found to be the major factors influencing both the perception and production of the contrast. Accuracy of perception and production were highly correlated. Australian subjects, while performing significantly better than Vietnamese subjects on the perception task, nevertheless demonstrated the same pattern of accuracy across different levels of phonological complexity as had the latter.


Author(s):  
R.J. Dewhurst ◽  
A.J.F. Webster

It has long been recognised that there is a strong positive relationship between the level of absorbed (microbial) purines and purine derivative excretion in the urine. We have used estimates based on urinary allantoin N excretion (AN) to investigate some of the factors influencing the energetic efficiency of microbial yield from the rumen (E). Figures 1 and 2 illustrate the model that has been adopted.It has been tentatively assumed that, at reasonable levels of intake, exogenous purine supply exceeds “a” moles (Figure 2) so that purine salvage is saturated (Condon & Hatfield, 1970), de novo synthesis inoperant (Condon, Hall & Hatfield, 1970) and the net endogenous contribution to AN negligible. In these circumstances AN will be linearly related to microbial (purine) yield from the rumen.


1984 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 739-745 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura P. Otis

Factors associated with willingness to taste 12 unusual foods were examined among 42 mature university students in a realistic taste testing situation. Low or nonsignificant correlations were found between subjects' willingness to taste the different foods and their scores on personality measures of sensation seeking as well as their ratings of familiarity with each food. Unexpectedly, age was a significant factor, with the older subjects being somewhat more willing to taste the unusual foods. Only a scale of items dealing specifically with food habits was highly correlated with subjects' willingness to try the unusual foods. The results suggest that food adventurousness is best accounted for by highly specific attitudes about food rather than general personality measures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-234
Author(s):  
Gezim Jusufi ◽  
Fatos Ukaj ◽  
Suada Ajdarpašić

The aim of the paper is to provide a better understanding of factors influencing product innovations that are important to SMEs’ exporting activities. A probit model is used to analyse the innovation pattern in 100 Kosovo manufacturing and exporting SMEs. They export to the EU and regional countries’ markets. Our data shows that there is a link between the type of product innovation and the increase in exports. Incremental innovation shows a strong positive relationship with export growth of these SMEs , a result should prove helpful to both researchers of SME product innovation and managers of exporting SMEs. This study addresses the current gap that is present in the Western Balkan literature by evaluating the impact of product innovation on SMEs export performance.


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