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Journal articles on the topic "Stream measurements Victoria"

1

White, R. E., B. P. Christy, A. M. Ridley, A. E. Okom, S. R. Murphy, W. H. Johnston, D. L. Michalk, et al. "SGS Water Theme: influence of soil, pasture type and management on water use in grazing systems across the high rainfall zone of southern Australia." Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 43, no. 8 (2003): 907. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ea02239.

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Eleven experimental sites in the Sustainable Grazing Systems (SGS) national experiment were established in the high rainfall zone (HRZ, >600 mm/year) of Western Australia, Victoria and New South Wales to measure components of the water balance, and pathways of water movement, for a range of pastures from 1997 to 2001. The effect of widely spaced river red gums (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) in pasture, and of belts of plantation blue gums (E. globulus), was studied at 2 of the sites. The soil types tested ranged from Kurosols, Chromosols and Sodosols, with different subsoil permeabilities, to Hydrosols and Tenosols. The pasture types tested were kikuyu (Pennisetum clandestinum), phalaris (Phalaris aquatica), redgrass (Bothriochloa macra) and annual ryegrass (Lolium rigidum), with subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) included. Management variables were set stocking v. rotational grazing, adjustable stocking rates, and level of fertiliser input. Soil, pasture and animal measurements were used to set parameters for the biophysical SGS pasture model, which simulated the long-term effects of soil, pasture type, grazing method and management on water use and movement, using as inputs daily weather data for 31 years from selected sites representing a range of climates. Measurements of mean maximum soil water deficit Sm were used to estimate the probability of surplus water occurring in winter, and the average amount of this surplus, which was highest (97–201 mm/year) for pastures in the cooler, winter-rainfall dominant regions of north-east and western Victoria and lowest (3–11 mm/year) in the warmer, lower rainfall regions of the eastern Riverina and Esperance, Western Australia. Kikuyu in Western Australia achieved the largest increase in Sm compared with annual pasture (55–71 mm), while increases due to phalaris were 18–45 mm, and those of native perennials were small and variable. Long-term model simulations suggested rooting depth was crucial in decreasing deep drainage, to about 50 mm/year for kikuyu rooting to 2.5 m, compared with 70–200 mm/year for annuals rooting to only 0.8 m. Plantation blue gums dried the soil profile to 5.25 m by an average of 400 mm more than kikuyu pasture, reducing the probability of winter surplus water to zero, and eliminating drainage below the root zone. Widely spaced river red gums had a much smaller effect on water use, and would need to number at least 14 trees per hectare to achieve extra soil drying of about 50 mm over a catchment. Soil type affected water use primarily through controlling the rooting depth of the vegetation, but it also changed the partitioning of surplus water between runoff and deep drainage. Strongly duplex soils such as Sodosols shed 50% or more surplus water as runoff, which is important for flushing streams, provided the water is of good quality. Grazing method and pasture management had only a marginal effect in increasing water use, but could have a positive effect on farm profitability through increased livestock production per hectare and improved persistence of perennial species.
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2

Massawe, Ezrael J., Richard Kimwaga, and Fredrick Mwanuzi. "Modelling Transport of Nitrogen Compounds in Geita Wetland along Mtakuja River." Tanzania Journal of Engineering and Technology 37, no. 2 (June 30, 2018): 89–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.52339/tjet.v37i2.486.

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The impacts of excessive nitrogen loading to streams in a watershed occur in the receiving waters such as rivers at the outlet of the watershed. To quantify the impacts of land use and management practices on the nitrogen loading at the watershed outlet, simulation models are needed that can both predict the nitrogen loading at the edge of individual fields and predict the fate of nitrogen as it moves through the river network to the watershed outlet. This paper presents the results of a model analysis for describing the processes governing transformations and transport of nitrogen compounds (NO3-N and NH4-N) through Mtakuja River in the Geita wetland. The model was made in Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT), a watershed model developed to assess the impact of land management practices on water, sediment and agricultural chemical yields with varying soils, land use and management conditions. Two monitoring stations namely MTSP1 and MTSP2 were established along Mtakuja River. A set of SWAT model inputs representative of the water conditions was collected from the established monitoring stations. The model was calibrated and validated for the prediction of flow and nitrogen compounds (NO3-N and NH4-N) transport, against a set of measured mean monthly monitoring data. Sensitive model parameters were adjusted within their feasible ranges during calibration to minimize model prediction errors. At the gauging station MTSP2, the calibration results showed that the model predicted mean monthly flow within 18% of the measured mean monthly flow with the r2 coefficient and Nash-Sutcliffe (NSE) were 0.84 and 0.82, respectively. At the water quality monitoring station MTSP2, the calibration results showed the model predicted nitrogen compounds (NO3-N and NH4-N) loadings within 21% and 23% of their respective measured mean monthly loadings. The mean monthly comparisons of r 2 values for nitrogen compounds ranged from 0.77 to 0.81 while the Nash-Sutcliffe Efficiency (NSE) values were between 0.72 and 0.73. The model results and field measurements demonstrated that about 70% of the annual nitrogen compounds loadings which would otherwise reach Lake Victoria are retained in the wetland. The Mtakuja river model can therefore be used for prediction of nitrogen compounds (NO3-N and NH4-N) transformation processes in the Geita wetland.
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Lucchitta, B. K., K. Edwards, E. M. Eliason, and J. Bowell. "Multi-Spectral Landsat Image Maps of Antarctica (Abstract)." Annals of Glaciology 9 (1987): 250. http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/s0260305500000926.

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The US Geological Survey is conducting a program to prepare digitally enhanced Multispectral Scanner (MSS) Landsat images of Antarctica. The goal is to furnish accurate planimetric, false-colour composite image maps in Lambert conformal conic projection for the following purposes: (1) to locate and delineate blue-ice areas for the collection of meteorites; (2) to produce special purpose maps showing selected features; (3) to provide synoptic views that aid in the detection and interpretation of glaciological features associated with the inland ice sheet, outlet glaciers, ice streams, and ice shelves; (4) to monitor changes in coastline and glacial features; (5) to enable the superposition and correlation of different types of digital cartographic data; and (6) to furnish spectral and (or) structural information in areas of limited bedrock outcrop to aid in regional geologic interpretation. Only the first four of these objectives are addressed here.About 170 Landsat computer-compatible tapes covering Victoria Land, the coastline of West Antarctica, the Antarctic Peninsula, and other selected areas were assembled into false-color, multi-spectral, digital composites of band 4 (0.5 to 0.6 μm, green), band 5 (0.6 to 0.7 μm, red) and band 7 (0.8 to 1.1 μm, near infra-red). The tapes were subjected to routine image-processing procedures, such as noise removal and radiometric and geometric corrections. Further processing included haze removal and enhancement by linear stretching of individual MSS bands based on inspection of gray-value (digital-number) histograms. Saturation of snow-covered scenes in bands 4, 5, and 6 is a severe problem in Landsat MSS images of Antarctica and makes many images unsuitable for multi-spectral work. We have developed special techniques to restore the saturated snow-and-ice information in these bands to overcome this problem.The Landsat image maps have different formats, depending on their planned applications. An example of a planimetric image map is the one of the McMurdo Sound area; it is based on excellent ground control and processed at full spatial resolution. It comprises five complete and three partial 1 : 250 000 scale topographic quadrangles. One of these is the Convoy Range quadrangle which includes the Allan Hills meteorite-collection site. Blue-ice areas show exceptionally well on this quadrangle, and new information on blue-ice locations and delineations was obtained from it.Thematic maps prepared for the Byrd Glacier area selectively show only rock or ice areas, thus depicting the location of desired features. Synoptic-view maps and mosaics provide information on flow lines associated with ice streams, the location of ice rises, ice rumples, and other possible grounded areas, and the location and extent of buried mountain ranges. Image maps which cover the same area at different times do show changes: a 10-year interval between Landsat images obtained in the Byrd Glacier area shows that crevasses had opened and rifts had drifted within the floating part of the glacier; measurements of the changed positions have yielded average velocities for glacier and ice-shelf movements in that area. The ease with which the dynamics of the coastline can be monitored on Landsat images is particularly useful, because such changes have implications for variations in world climate.
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4

Lucchitta, B. K., K. Edwards, E. M. Eliason, and J. Bowell. "Multi-Spectral Landsat Image Maps of Antarctica (Abstract)." Annals of Glaciology 9 (1987): 250. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260305500000926.

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Abstract:
The US Geological Survey is conducting a program to prepare digitally enhanced Multispectral Scanner (MSS) Landsat images of Antarctica. The goal is to furnish accurate planimetric, false-colour composite image maps in Lambert conformal conic projection for the following purposes: (1) to locate and delineate blue-ice areas for the collection of meteorites; (2) to produce special purpose maps showing selected features; (3) to provide synoptic views that aid in the detection and interpretation of glaciological features associated with the inland ice sheet, outlet glaciers, ice streams, and ice shelves; (4) to monitor changes in coastline and glacial features; (5) to enable the superposition and correlation of different types of digital cartographic data; and (6) to furnish spectral and (or) structural information in areas of limited bedrock outcrop to aid in regional geologic interpretation. Only the first four of these objectives are addressed here. About 170 Landsat computer-compatible tapes covering Victoria Land, the coastline of West Antarctica, the Antarctic Peninsula, and other selected areas were assembled into false-color, multi-spectral, digital composites of band 4 (0.5 to 0.6 μm, green), band 5 (0.6 to 0.7 μm, red) and band 7 (0.8 to 1.1 μm, near infra-red). The tapes were subjected to routine image-processing procedures, such as noise removal and radiometric and geometric corrections. Further processing included haze removal and enhancement by linear stretching of individual MSS bands based on inspection of gray-value (digital-number) histograms. Saturation of snow-covered scenes in bands 4, 5, and 6 is a severe problem in Landsat MSS images of Antarctica and makes many images unsuitable for multi-spectral work. We have developed special techniques to restore the saturated snow-and-ice information in these bands to overcome this problem. The Landsat image maps have different formats, depending on their planned applications. An example of a planimetric image map is the one of the McMurdo Sound area; it is based on excellent ground control and processed at full spatial resolution. It comprises five complete and three partial 1 : 250 000 scale topographic quadrangles. One of these is the Convoy Range quadrangle which includes the Allan Hills meteorite-collection site. Blue-ice areas show exceptionally well on this quadrangle, and new information on blue-ice locations and delineations was obtained from it. Thematic maps prepared for the Byrd Glacier area selectively show only rock or ice areas, thus depicting the location of desired features. Synoptic-view maps and mosaics provide information on flow lines associated with ice streams, the location of ice rises, ice rumples, and other possible grounded areas, and the location and extent of buried mountain ranges. Image maps which cover the same area at different times do show changes: a 10-year interval between Landsat images obtained in the Byrd Glacier area shows that crevasses had opened and rifts had drifted within the floating part of the glacier; measurements of the changed positions have yielded average velocities for glacier and ice-shelf movements in that area. The ease with which the dynamics of the coastline can be monitored on Landsat images is particularly useful, because such changes have implications for variations in world climate.
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Books on the topic "Stream measurements Victoria"

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Victoria. Department of Sustainability and Environment. Index of stream condition: The second benchmark of Victorian river condition. Melbourne: Dept. of Sustainability and Environment, 2005.

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