25 research outputs found
Management of newly established field margins on nutrient-rich soil to reduce weed spread and seed rain into adjacent crops
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The effects of seed mix and management on the abundance of desirable and pernicious unsown species in arable buffer strip communities
Buffer strips are refuges for a variety of plants providing resources, such as pollen, nectar and seeds, for higher trophic levels, including invertebrates, mammals and birds. Margins can also harbour plant species that are potentially injurious to the adjacent arable crop (undesirable species). Sowing perennial species in non-cropped buffer strips can reduce weed incidence, but limits the abundance of annuals with the potential to support wider biodiversity (desirable species). We investigated the responses of unsown plant species present in buffer strips established with three different seed mixes managed annually with three contrasting management regimes (cutting, sward scarification and selective graminicide). Sward scarification had the strongest influence on the unsown desirable (e.g. Sonchus spp.) and unsown pernicious (e.g. Elytrigia repens) species, and was generally associated with higher cover values of these species. However, abundances of several desirable weed species, in particular Poa annua, were not promoted by scarification. The treatments of cutting and graminicide tended to have negative impacts on the unsown species, except for Cirsium vulgare, which increased with graminicide application. Differences in unsown species cover between seed mixes were minimal, although the grass-only mix was more susceptible to establishment by C. vulgare and Galium aparine than the two grass and forb mixes. Annual scarification can enable desirable annuals and sown perennials to co-exist, however, this practice can also promote pernicious species, and so is unlikely to be widely adopted as a management tool in its current form
Fermentation Enhancement of Methanogenic Archaea Consortia from an Illinois Basin Coalbed via DOL Emulsion Nutrition
An Effective Method to Detect Volatile Intermediates Generated in the Bioconversion of Coal to Methane by Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry after In-Situ Extraction Using Headspace Solid-Phase Micro-Extraction under Strict Anaerobic Conditions
Substrate interactions in dehalogenation of 1,2-dichloroethane, 1,2-dichloropropane, and 1,1,2-trichloroethane mixtures by Dehalogenimonas spp.
Taxonomic placement of Paphiopedilum rungsuriyanum (Cypripedioideae; Orchidaceae) based on morphological, cytological and molecular analyses
Performance of an anaerobic, static bed, fixed film bioreactor for chlorinated solvent treatment
Intima media thickness as a predictor of atherosclerosis in renal transplantation
Joint Meeting of the Turkish-Transplantation-Society and Eurotransplant -- JUN 25-27, 2003 -- ANKARA, TURKEYWOS: 000188758100047PubMed ID: 15013331It has been reported that an increase in carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT), a sign of early atherosclerosis, has a predictive value for future cardiovascular (CV) events. There are limited data about IMT measurements in renal transplant patients who display a high rate of CV mortality. In this study carotid artery IMT was measured by high resolution B-mode ultrasonography in 102 randomly selected RT patients to assess the relationship between IMT and CV disease and risk factors. A positive correlation was found between IMT and age, triglyceride level, and hematocrit. IMT was significantly higher among patients who were diabetic (0.68 +/- 0.27 vs 0.50 +/- 0.2) or had CV disease (0.88 +/- 0.28 vs 0.53 +/- 0.21). An increased IMT was associated with a longer duration of ESRD, higher lipid level, lower serum albumin, and presence of previous CMV disease. CV disease was more frequent among patients with increased IMT. Considering its relation to CV risk factors, it is concluded that the measurement of carotid artery IMT is an easy, reliable and non-invasive method to be used to assess atherosclerotic disease in renal transplant patients.Turkish Transplantat Soc, Eurotransplan