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Selected Abstracts


Ground Water Transfer Initiates Complete Reductive Dechlorination in a PCE-Contaminated Aquifer

GROUND WATER MONITORING & REMEDIATION, Issue 3 2007
R. Lookman
We conducted a field test to investigate whether ground water transfer from one site (showing complete natural reductive dechlorination of chlorinated ethenes to ethene) could induce full reductive dechlorination at another site polluted with tetrachloroethene and its partial dechlorination products trichloroethene and cis -dichloroethene (cDCE). Addition of electron donor (lactate) at the test site established low redox conditions but did not stimulate further dechlorination past cDCE. After transferring 2 m3 of ground water from the first site to the test site, full dechlorination commenced and high levels of ethene were measured to distances up to 6 m downstream of the injection location within 7 months. Ground water samples from monitoring wells were analyzed before and after inoculation of the test site for the presence of Dehalococcoides species (16S ribosomal RNA) and vinyl chloride reductase (vCRA) genes using the polymerase chain reaction. These tests showed that Dehalococcoides species were present both before and after ground water transfer, while vCRA genes were detected at the test site only after ground water transfer. The vCRA genes were detected in ground water samples collected 6 m downstream of the injection locations 7 months after ground water transfer, suggesting that the microorganisms carrying the dehalogenase genes were effectively transported in the aquifer. [source]


Bone healing with electric current: a histological assessment

ORTHODONTICS & CRANIOFACIAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2000
Hui-Ling Chen
Skeletal relapse is a major concern after correction of retrognathism with surgical mandibular advancement. It was hypothesized that the stimulation from a direct electric current can accelerate the osseous repair through the enhancement of the maturation of fibrocartilage. Furthermore, this stimulation may enhance the mechanical properties of the facial osteotomy site and reduce the skeletal relapse. The purpose of the present study was to examine the osteotomy site histologically and determine the effect of post-surgical electrical stimulation on the healing of a facial osteotomy site in a rat model. Three groups of adult male Sprague,Dawley rats, 15 in each group (direct electric current, electric sham, and control), were used to generate data. Electrodes were placed in both the direct electric current and the electric sham groups. A 20-,A direct current was delivered to the osteotomy site only in the direct electric current group. Histological slides of the osteotomy site for each animal were prepared and interpreted to characterize the healing process of the osteotomy site for each animal. The results showed no statistically significant difference among the three groups of animals (p>0.005). An examination with histology earlier in the healing process and the utilization of an experimental animal with a larger jaw are suggested for any further investigation that involves electrical stimulation and osseous healing in a facial osteotomy site. [source]


Subchondral bone and cartilage damage: A prospective study in older adults

ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 7 2010
Dawn Doré
Objective There is limited longitudinal evidence relating subchondral bone changes to cartilage damage and loss. The aim of this study was to describe the association between baseline tibial bone area and tibial subchondral bone mineral density (BMD) with tibial cartilage defect development and cartilage volume loss. Methods A total of 341 subjects (mean age 63 years, range 52,79 years) underwent measurement at baseline and ,2.7 years later. Tibial knee cartilage volume, cartilage defects (graded on a scale of 0,4), and bone area were determined using T1-weighted fat suppression magnetic resonance imaging. Tibial subchondral BMD was determined using dual x-ray absorptiometry. Results In multivariable analysis, baseline bone area positively predicted cartilage defect development at the medial and lateral tibial sites (odds ratio [OR] 1.6 per 1 SD increase, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.0, 2.6, and OR 2.4 per 1 SD increase, 95% CI 1.4, 4.0, respectively) and cartilage volume loss at the medial tibial site (, = ,34.9 per 1 SD increase, 95% CI ,49.8, ,20.1). In contrast, baseline subchondral BMD positively predicted cartilage defect development at the medial tibial site only (OR 1.6 per 1 SD increase, 95% CI 1.2, 2.1) and was not associated with cartilage loss. Conclusion The results of this study demonstrated that bone area predicted medial and lateral cartilage defect development and medial cartilage volume loss, while subchondral BMD predicted medial defect development but not cartilage loss. These associations were independent of each other, indicating there are multiple mechanisms by which subchondral bone changes may lead to cartilage damage. [source]


Hemeroby, urbanity and ruderality: bioindicators of disturbance and human impact

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2002
M. O. Hill
Summary 1Species vary according to whether they benefit from or are harmed by disturbance and intensive human activity. This variation can be quantified by indices of disturbance and unnaturalness. 2An urban flora was characterized by comparing quadrat data from cities with several large data sets from the countryside. Existing scales of species response to disturbance and unnaturalness, ruderality (a plant's ability to survive in disturbed conditions) and hemeroby (a measure of human impact) were contrasted with derived scales based on the number of associated annuals and aliens and with ,urbanity', defined as the proportion of urban land in the vicinity of each quadrat. 3Species presence data were available from 26 710 quadrats distributed through Great Britain, with urban sites only in central England. Satellite imagery was used to measure the proportion of urban land cover in the vicinity of each quadrat; 2595 quadrats were located in 1-km squares having at least 40% cover of urban land. 4The 20 species having highest urbanity were all alien to Britain, comprising 12 neophytes and eight archaeophytes. 5Of the 20 most frequent species in quadrats situated in 1-km squares with at least 40% urban land cover, 18 were natives. The two exceptions were Artemisia vulgaris , an archaeophyte, and Senecio squalidus , a neophyte. 6Both ruderal and hemerobic species, as usually defined, include many non-urban arable species. The hemeroby scale of Kowarik (1990 ), designed for Berlin, does not work well in Britain. 7The proportion of associated annuals (annuality) and the proportion of associated neophytes (alien richness or xenicity) can be developed into good indices. The annuality scale is very well defined because annuals tend to occur with other annuals. Plants with high annuality are mostly arable weeds. 8Urban specialists in central England are, with a few exceptions, character-species of the phytosociological classes Artemisietea , Galio-Urticetea and Stellarietea . Most of them have numerous non-urban associates and they do not form a very well defined group. They have intermediate levels of annuality combined with relatively high levels of xenicity. 9While it is possible to develop indices of hemeroby, urbanity and ruderality, these concepts are relatively complicated. Annuality and xenicity are simpler measures that can complement Ellenberg values, but definitive values for Great Britain would require additional data from southern England. [source]


Ecoregional planning in marine environments: identifying priority sites for conservation in the northern Gulf of Mexico

AQUATIC CONSERVATION: MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS, Issue 4 2001
Michael W. Beck
Abstract 1.,The overall aim of this work was to identify sites within the northern Gulf of Mexico that, if protected, would fully represent the biological diversity of the nearshore waters of this ecoregion. In this paper, we focus on the eastern subregion, northwest Florida, to illustrate the process of ecoregional planning in marine environments. 2.,The basic steps in ecoregional planning include: identification of conservation targets, i.e. species and habitats; collection of data on their ecology and distribution; determination of conservation goals for the amount of targets that must be protected; and identification of a set of sites that meets these goals for all targets. 3.,As a preliminary goal, it was determined that the set of priority sites should contain at least 20% of the current distribution of each target habitat and species. 4.,Two primary tools were used to choose a set of priority sites: a reserve selection program, SITES, and interviews and a workshop with scientists and managers. The final set of priority sites integrated information from these various sources. 5.,The goals were exceeded for all conservation targets in the priority sites. On average, 75 and 58% of the distributions of the habitat targets were contained within the priority and high priority sites, respectively. These priority and high priority sites only occupied 29 and 17% of the study area, respectively. 6.,One of the first steps in the conservation of the bays identified as priority sites is the recognition that they are integrally linked by important processes to the surrounding terrestrial and aquatic environments. Conservation in a part of these estuarine landscapes will benefit biodiversity across environments. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Litterfall of epiphytic macrolichens in Nothofagus forests of northern Patagonia, Argentina: Relation to stand age and precipitation

AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2006
MAYRA S. CALDIZ
Abstract: The objective of this study was to analyse how stand age and precipitation influence abundance and diversity of epiphytic macrolichens in southern beech Nothofagus forests, estimated by lichen litter sampling. Five sites of Nothofagus dombeyi (Mirbel) Oersted were selected in Nahuel Huapi National Park, Argentina. At each site, lichen fragments from the forest floor were collected at 12.5 m2 plots in pairs of young and mature N. dombeyi forest. Additionally, two sites with multi-aged subalpine Nothofagus pumilio (Poepp. et Endl.) Krasser forest were investigated in a similar manner. Average litterfall biomass per stand varied from less than 1 kg ha,1 in a young low-precipitation stand to a maximum of 20 kg ha,1 in a mature high-precipitation stand. In places with higher precipitation, litterfall biomass in N. dombeyi forest was considerably higher in old stands as compared with young ones. In places with less than 2000 mm of precipitation, differences in biomass were less pronounced. Old humid stands contained about twice as many taxa in the litter as old low-precipitation stands and young stands in general. Mature stands in low-precipitation sites only contained 17% of the litter biomass as compared with mature stands in high-precipitation sites. Epiphytic lichen composition changed from predominating fruticose lichens (Usnea spp. and Protousnea spp.) in low-precipitation stands to Pseudocyphellaria spp., Nephroma spp. and other foliose lichens, in the high-precipitation stands. There were no clear differences in the proportion of fruticose and foliose lichens between young and old stands. Fruticose lichens dominated litter biomass in both N. pumilio sites. [source]