12 research outputs found
Effects of watershed land use on nitrogen concentrations and δ15 Nitrogen in groundwater
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biogeochemistry 77 (2006): 199-215, doi:10.1007/s10533-005-1036-2.Eutrophication is a major agent of change affecting freshwater, estuarine, and marine
systems. It is largely driven by transportation of nitrogen from natural and anthropogenic
sources. Research is needed to quantify this nitrogen delivery and to link the delivery to
specific land-derived sources. In this study we measured nitrogen concentrations and δ15N
values in seepage water entering three freshwater ponds and six estuaries on Cape Cod,
Massachusetts and assessed how they varied with different types of land use. Nitrate
concentrations and δ15N values in groundwater reflected land use in developed and pristine
watersheds. In particular, watersheds with larger populations delivered larger nitrate loads with
higher δ15N values to receiving waters. The enriched δ15N values confirmed nitrogen loading
model results identifying wastewater contributions from septic tanks as the major N source.
Furthermore, it was apparent that N coastal sources had a relatively larger impact on the N
loads and isotopic signatures than did inland N sources further upstream in the watersheds.
This finding suggests that management priorities could focus on coastal sources as a first
course of action. This would require management constraints on a much smaller population.This work was supported
by funds from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Sea Grant Program, from the
Cooperative Institute for Coastal and Estuarine Environmental Technology, from
Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection to Applied Science Associates,
Narragansett, RI, as well as from Palmer/McLeod and NOAA National Estuarine Research
Reserve Fellowships to Kevin Kroeger. This work is the result of research sponsored by NOAA
National Sea Grant College Program Office, Department of Commerce, under Grant No.
NA86RG0075, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Sea Grant Project No. R/M-40
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Spin effects in two-photon pair production
The two-photon mechanism for lepton pair production is investigated. It is found that for pairs produced in certain kinematical regions the process is dominated by magnetic, spin-flip currents. Anomalous e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} pairs observed in 17 Gev/c pion-proton collisions are found to be predominantly produced by this spin-flip mechanism. A comparison between {sup 4}He + {sup 4}He collisions and {sup 3}He + {sup 4}He collisions is proposed as an experimental way of distinguishing between the electric, non spin-flip mechanism and the magnetic, spin-flip mechanism. 16 refs
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Assessment of swim-up and discontinuous density gradient in sperm sex preselection for bovine embryo production
The purpose of this work was to associate the modified swim-up method with centrifugation in density gradient for the separation of X-bearing spermatozoa. Sperm viability and integrity were evaluated through the Trypan Blue/Giemsa staining method. Quality control of centrifuged spermatozoa was performed in in vitro produced embryos. The results were validated by the sex ratio of in vitro produced embryos using PCR by Y- specific sequences present in bovine male genomic DNA. After determining genetic sex of in vitro produced embryos, the results showed difference (P<0.05) in deviation of sex ratio when comparing the control group (45.2% females) with the other spermatozoa selection procedures (60.6% females) (P<0.05). The sperm selection methods are capable of selecting X-bearing spermatozoa without compromising the spermatozoa fertility (cleavage and blastocyst rates, 70% and 26%, respectively) and were considered relevant methods to be introduced in bovine in vitro produced embryo programs