11 research outputs found

    Health and social problems associated with recent Novel Psychoactive Substance (NPS) use amongst marginalised, nightlife and online users in six European countries.

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    Continued diversification and use of new psychoactive substances (NPS) across Europe remains a public health challenge. The study describes health and social consequences of recent NPS use as reported in a survey of marginalised, nightlife and online NPS users in the Netherlands, Hungary, Portugal, Ireland, Germany and Poland (n = 3023). Some respondents were unable to categorise NPS they had used. Use of ‘herbal blends’ and ‘synthetic cannabinoids obtained pure’ was most reported in Germany, Poland and Hungary, and use of ‘branded stimulants’ and ‘stimulants/empathogens/nootropics obtained pure’ was most reported in the Netherlands. Increased heart rate and palpitation, dizziness, anxiety, horror trips and headaches were most commonly reported acute side effects. Marginalised users reported substantially more acute side effects, more mid- and long-term mental and physical problems, and more social problems. Development of country-specific NPS awareness raising initiatives, health and social service needs assessments, and targeted responses are warranted

    Poetics of the Record: Robin Coste Lewis’s Voyage of the Sable Venus

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    This essay analyzes what I term “poetics of the record” in the context of black feminist experimental poetry. I argue that iterative photographic forms, premised on the confluence of particular index and general typology, shed light on poems that appropriate and reframe verbatim archival prose. Such a poetics of the record theorizes, historicizes, and politicizes language through expropriation of documentary text. Critics often read documentary poetry as a humanist effort to recover stories or give voice to lost or injured individuals, but this interpretation overlooks the nonnarrative, citational, and impersonal character of the texts themselves. Robin Coste Lewis’s Voyage of the Sable Venus is an 80-page poem in which every word is taken from museum and catalog copy pertaining to Western works of art in which a black female figure is present: it at no point allows the reader to picture a coherent subject. Rather, Lewis reframes what is already clearly visible, forcing a rereading of racialized perception itself. Against assumptions of autobiographical expression, I argue that Lewis forgoes subjectivity to focus on the formal apparatuses of visuality and record-keeping that help structure relations of race and gender

    Temperature and peat type control CO2 and CH4 production in Alaskan permafrost peats

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    Controls on the fate of ~277 Pg of soil organic carbon (C) stored in permafrost peatland soils remain poorly understood despite the potential for a significant positive feedback to climate change. Our objective was to quantify the temperature, moisture, organic matter, and microbial controls on soil organic carbon (SOC) losses following permafrost thaw in peat soils across Alaska. We compared the carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) emissions from peat samples collected at active layer and permafrost depths when incubated aerobically and anaerobically at −5, −0.5, +4, and +20 °C. Temperature had a strong, positive effect on C emissions; global warming potential (GWP) was \u3e3× larger at 20 °C than at 4 °C. Anaerobic conditions significantly reduced CO2 emissions and GWP by 47% at 20 °C but did not have a significant effect at −0.5 °C. Net anaerobic CH4 production over 30 days was 7.1 ± 2.8 ÎŒg CH4‐C gC−1 at 20 °C. Cumulative CO2 emissions were related to organic matter chemistry and best predicted by the relative abundance of polysaccharides and proteins (R2 = 0.81) in SOC. Carbon emissions (CO2‐C + CH4‐C) from the active layer depth peat ranged from 77% larger to not significantly different than permafrost depths and varied depending on the peat type and peat decomposition stage rather than thermal state. Potential SOC losses with warming depend not only on the magnitude of temperature increase and hydrology but also organic matter quality, permafrost history, and vegetation dynamics, which will ultimately determine net radiative forcing due to permafrost thaw

    Diversity and abundance of earthworms across an agricultural land-use intensity gradient

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    Understanding how communities of important soil invertebrates vary with land use may lead to the development of more sustainable land-use strategies. We assessed the abundance and species composition of earthworm communities across six replicated long-term experimental ecosystems that span a gradient in agricultural land-use intensity. The experimental systems include a conventional row-crop agricultural system, two lower-intensity row-crop systems (no-till and tilled organic input), an early successional old-field system, a 40–60 years old coniferous forest plantation, and an old-growth deciduous forest system. Earthworm populations varied among systems; they were lowest in the most intensively managed row-crop system (107 m−2) and coniferous forest (160 m−2); intermediate in the old-field (273 m−2), no-till (328 m−2) and tilled organic (344 m−2) cropping systems; and highest in the old-growth deciduous forest system (701 m−2). Juvenile Aporrectodea species were the most common earthworms encountered in intensively managed systems; other species made up a larger proportion of the community in less intensively managed systems. Earthworm community biomass and species richness also varied and were lowest in the conventional row-crop system and greatest in the old-growth forest system. These results suggest that both land-use intensity and land-use type are strong drivers of the abundance and composition of earthworm communities in agricultural ecosystems
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