59 research outputs found

    The sanitation service of seagrasses – Dependencies and implications for the estimation of avoided costs

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    Seagrasses are capable of sanitizing coastal seawaters polluted by fecal bacteria. In this work, the reduction of Enterococci concentration in the presence of a seagrasses’ assemblage (Pacific Ocean) was related to the decrease in the probability of gastroenteritis. A linear model fitted to data extracted from the literature showed a 20% reduction of this probability in the presence of these plants. Seagrass sanitation effect was estimated to allow avoiding ca. 24 million gastroenteritis cases/year, globally. Considering a global cost of gastroenteritis of ca. US372million/year,theglobalavoidedcost,assumingthatthesanitationservicewasalwayseffective,wasestimatedtobeca.US 372 million/year, the global avoided cost, assuming that the sanitation service was always effective, was estimated to be ca. US 74 million/year (2020 US).Theseagrasssanitationeffectappearsgenera/geographicdependent,andthetargetedpathogenmaychangeaswell.Thus,theglobalestimateswereroughlyadjusted,obtainingconservativefiguresofca.8millionavoidedcases/yearandca.US). The seagrass sanitation effect appears genera/geographic dependent, and the targeted pathogen may change as well. Thus, the global estimates were roughly adjusted, obtaining conservative figures of ca. 8 million avoided cases/year and ca. US 24 million/year of avoided cost. Considering the importance of this Ecosystem Service (ES) for public health and the potential global spreading of diseases driven by climate change, further research is needed to ascertain the scope of this seagrass ES worldwide

    Search for heavy neutral leptons in final states with electrons, muons, and hadronically decaying tau leptons in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV

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    International audienceA search for heavy neutral leptons (HNLs) of Majorana or Dirac type using proton-proton collision data at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV is presented. The data were collected by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb1^{-1}. Events with three charged leptons (electrons, muons, and hadronically decaying tau leptons) are selected, corresponding to HNL production in association with a charged lepton and decay of the HNL to two charged leptons and a standard model (SM) neutrino. The search is performed for HNL masses between 10 GeV and 1.5 TeV. No evidence for an HNL signal is observed in data. Upper limits at 95% confidence level are found for the squared coupling strength of the HNL to SM neutrinos, considering exclusive coupling of the HNL to a single SM neutrino generation, for both Majorana and Dirac HNLs. The limits exceed previously achieved experimental constraints for a wide range of HNL masses, and the limits on tau neutrino coupling scenarios with HNL masses above the W boson mass are presented for the first time
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