01087nam0 22002653i 450 SUN011355820180112102913.18707-8031-022-50.0020180112d1994 |0engc50 baengUS|||| |||||*Mathematical foundations for electromagnetic theoryDonald G. DudleyNew YorkIEEE1994XIII, 250 p.ill.24 cm.001SUN01135622001 *IEEE series on electromagnetic wawes210 New YorkIEEE.USNew YorkSUNL000011Dudley, Donald G.SUNV087673152813IEEESUNV005672650ITSOL20181109RICASUN0113558UFFICIO DI BIBLIOTECA DEI DIPARTIMENTI DI INGEGNERIA05 CONS D IV 496 05 UBI399 UFFICIO DI BIBLIOTECA DEI DIPARTIMENTI DI INGEGNERIAIT-CE0100UBI399CONS D IV 496caMathematical foundations for electromagnetic theory41314UNICAMPANIA01177nam a2200277 i 4500991001459829707536051220s2001 it a 100 0 ita d8871070593b13375945-39ule_instDip.to Matematicaeng510AMS 00B25Scienza e pubblico :come comunicare : Pisa, Scuola Normale Superiore, 9 novembre 2000, nell'ambito della settimana europea della scienza : secondo convegno /a cura di Franco Conti e Gianni Fochi[S.l. :s.n.],2001 printing(Pisa :Centro stampa SNS)99 p. ;24 cmOn the title page: SNS-UGIS Scuola Normale Superiore ; Unione giornalisti italiani scientificiScienceCongresses2000Conti, FrancoFochi, GianniConvegno <2. ;2000 ;Pisa>.b1337594521-09-0601-02-06991001459829707536LE013 00B CON11 (2001)12013000200989le013gE12.00-l- 04040.i1418749801-02-06Scienza e pubblico1094326UNISALENTOle01320-12-05ma -itait 0006971nam 2200661Ia 450 991096634340332120200520144314.00-8166-5536-70-8166-1470-9(CKB)1000000000479322(EBL)3039172(SSID)ssj0000097168(PQKBManifestationID)11109000(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000097168(PQKBWorkID)10113756(PQKB)10878379(Au-PeEL)EBL3039172(CaPaEBR)ebr10194444(OCoLC)923703308(MiAaPQ)EBC3039172(BIP)36009341(BIP)10618(EXLCZ)99100000000047932219880607d1987 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAdaptive strategies and population ecology of northern grouse[Volume 1] /Arthur T. Bergerud and Michael W. Gratson, editors1st ed.Minneapolis University of Minnesota Pressc19871 online resource (835 pages) illustrationsA Wildlife Management Institute-sponsored book."0-8166-1469-5 Includes bibliographies and index.""Contents""; ""Authors""; ""Preface""; ""Acknowledgments""; ""Part I. Population Studies""; ""FOREST GROUSE""; ""Chapter 1. A Relation between Aggressive Behavior and Population Dynamics in Blue Grouse""; ""1.1 Introduction""; ""1.2 Study areas and methodology""; ""1.3 Demographic findings""; ""1.4 Behavioral findings""; ""1.5 Discussion""; ""1.6 Summary""; ""Chapter 2. Demography and Behavior of Insular Blue Grouse Populations""; ""2.1 Introduction""; ""2.2 Description of study areas""; ""2.3 Methods""; ""2.4 Demography""; ""2.5 Behavior""; ""2.6 Discussion""; ""2.7 Summary""""Chapter 3. Demography and Behavior of Ruffed Grouse in British Columbia"" ""3.1 Introduction""; ""3.2 Study area and methods""; ""3.3 Demographic Findings""; ""3.4 Aggressiveness and approachability of birds""; ""3.5 Discussion""; ""3.6 Summary""; ""Chapter 4. Winter Arboreal Feeding Behavior of Ruffed Grouse in East-Central Minnesota""; ""4.1 Introduction""; ""4.2 Study area and methods""; ""4.3 Results and discussion""; ""4.4 Conclusions""; ""4.5 Summary""; ""STEPPE GROUSE""; ""Chapter 5. Spatial Patterns, Movements, and Cover Selection by Sharp-tailed Grouse""; ""5.1 Introduction""""5.2 Study area"" ""5.3 Methods""; ""5.4 Results""; ""5.5 Discussion""; ""5.6 Summary""; ""Chapter 6. Reproductive Ecology of Female Greater Prairie Chickens in Minnesota""; ""6.1 Introduction""; ""6.2 Study area""; ""6.3 Methods""; ""6.4 Results""; ""6.5 Discussion""; ""6.6 Summary""; ""Chapter 7. Mate Choice by Female Sage Grouse""; ""7.1 Introduction""; ""7.2 Study area and methods""; ""7.3 Territorial establishment and mating success""; ""7.4 Hen selection of mating centers or cocks""; ""7.5 Discussion""; ""7.6 Summary""; ""TUNDRA GROUSE""""Chapter 8. Behavior of White-tailed Ptarmigan during the Breeding Season"" ""8.1 Introduction""; ""8.2 Study areas""; ""8.3 Methods""; ""8.4 Early territorial behavior""; ""8.5 Territories and territorial maintenance""; ""8.6 Pair bonds""; ""8.7 The brood period""; ""8.8 Male postbreeding flocks""; ""8.9 Summary""; ""Chapter 9. Cyclic Population Changes and Some Related Events in Rock Ptarmigan in Iceland""; ""9.1 Introduction""; ""9.2 Study areas""; ""9.3 Methods""; ""9.4 Results and Discussion""; ""9.5 Summary""; ""Chapter 10. Winter Survival and Breeding Strategies of Willow Ptarmigan""""10.1 Introduction"" ""10.2 Study area""; ""10.3 Methods""; ""10.4 Numbers, breeding success, and mortality""; ""10.5 The winter environment""; ""10.6 Ptarmigan survival strategies for the winter environment""; ""10.7 Spring spacing behavior and its effect on the population""; ""10.8 Conclusions""; ""10.9 Summary""; ""Chapter 11. Demography of an Island Population of Willow Ptarmigan in Northern Norway""; ""11.1 Introduction""; ""11.2 Study area""; ""11.3 Materials and methods""; ""11.4 General features of population variations""; ""11.5 Annual variations in production""; ""11.6 Hypotheses to explain changes in production"""Adaptive Strategies and Population Ecology of Northern Grouse" was first published in 1988. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. This book is at once a major reference to the species of grouse that inhabit North America and the Holarctic and a synthesis of all the available data on their ecology, sociobiology, population dynamics, and management. The book undertakes to answer two long-standing questions in population ecology: what actually regulates the numbers within a population, and what are the breeding and survival strategies evolved in this northern environment? For Volume I, editors Arthur T. Bergerud and Michael W. Gratson have drawn together their own work and that of colleagues in North America, Iceland, and Norway--in all, eleven research studies, averaging six years' duration, on eight species of grouse. These studies deal with the blue and ruffed grouse of the forest habitat; the sharp-tailed grouse, prairie chicken, and sage grouse of the prairie or steppe; and the white-tailed, rick, and willow ptarmigan found in alpine and arctic tundras. The authors describe the rich repertoire of behavior patterns developed by the hen and the cock to achieve their two primary objectives--first, to stay alive, and then to breed. Volume II, primarily the work of Bergerud, synthesizes the evidence in Volume I and in the grouse research literature from a theoretical perspective. Several potentially controversial sociobiological hypotheses are advanced to account for flocking behavior, migration, dispersal, roosting and feeding behavior, mate choice and mating systems. The demographic analysis provides new insights into cycles of abundance, the limitation of numbers, and the demographic factors that determine densities. The contributors, besides Bergerud and Gratson: R.C. Davies, A. Gardarson, J.E. Hartzler, R.A. Huempfner, D.A. Jenni, D.H. Mossop, S. Myrberget, R.E. Page, R.K. Schmidt, W.D. Svedarsky, and J.R. Tester.GrouseBird populationsAdaptation (Biology)Grouse.Bird populations.Adaptation (Biology)598/.616Bergerud A. T1863145Gratson Michael W1863146MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910966343403321Adaptive strategies and population ecology of northern grouse4469634UNINA