1,638 research outputs found

    Two Timely and Relevant Book Reviews

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    Évaluation de la capacité de rétention des métaux dissous d'un marais artificiel en utilisant le périphyton et le gastéropode Helisoma trivolvis

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    Le but de cette étude est de déterminer si le périphyton et le gastéropode pulmoné Helisoma trivolvis peuvent être utilisés pour évaluer la capacité de rétention des métaux dissous d'un marais construit. Cette étude a été menée dans un marais de la région d'Ottawa-Carleton (Ontario, Canada), qui a été construit en 1995 afin d'améliorer la qualité des eaux de ruissellement provenant d'un bassin versant à usage résidentiel et agricole. Au cours du mois de septembre 1999, des échantillons d'eau ont été prélevés, des escargots (H. trivolvis) ont été recoltés et un substrat artificiel a été utilisé pour faire croître du périphyton, à l'entrée et à la sortie d'eau du marais. En moyenne, les calculs de balance de masse indiquaient une rétention des formes dissoutes du Cu, Mn, Ni et Zn dans le marais. Cependant, les tendances observées pour les concentrations de métaux dissous et pour les concentrations dans les organismes différaient pour certains métaux. Les concentrations de Cd et Ni dans les tissus de H. trivolvis et le périphyton étaient significativement plus élevées à l'entrée qu'à la sortie. Cependant, les concentrations de Cr et Al dans les organismes n'étaient pas significativement différentes entre l'entrée et la sortie alors que celle de Mn était significativement plus élevée à la sortie du marais. Pour tous les métaux sauf le Cd et le Zn, les concentrations dans le périphyton étaient en moyenne plus elevées que celles dans les escargots. Le périphyton peut donc fournir une mesure plus conservatrice de la contamination du milieu pas les métaux. Cette étude montre l'importance de considérer, non-seulement les mesures chimiques, mais aussi les mesures biologiques, dans l'évaluation de l'efficacité d'un ouvrage de contrôle de pollution.Urban and agricultural development has had a significant impact on the water quality of rivers and lakes around the world. In the last few decades, constructed wetlands have been designed as wastewater treatment systems to prevent water quality deterioration in natural receiving waters. Constructed wetlands are built because they are considered sinks for many pollutants thereby protecting the water quality of downstream ecosystems. The treatment performance of these wetlands is generally assessed using mass balance calculations. However, the retention of metals by constructed wetlands is highly variable and the factors involved are still poorly understood. If wetlands are sinks for metals, the metal content of organisms should be lower downstream than upstream. In this context, organisms can be useful to assess the retention or transformation of metals by wetlands.The objective of this study was to determine whether periphyton and the gastropod Helisoma trivolvis could be used to evaluate the retention of dissolved metals in a constructed wetland. H. trivolvis is a freshwater pulmonate snail widespread in ponds across North America. It feeds mostly on periphyton and is more or less sedentary. Snails have been used as biomonitors because several species are metal tolerant. However, compared to snails, periphytic microorganisms may track more closely dissolved metal concentrations as they take up metals principally from the water column.This study was conducted at the Monahan Pond in Kanata, Ontario (Canada). This wetland was built in 1995 to treat run-off from an agricultural and residential watershed. Water chemistry samples, snails and periphyton grown on artificial substrata were collected at both the inlet and the outlet of the wetland in the fall of 1999. Tissue samples were digested with concentrated nitric acid and metal analyses were done by ICP-MS (Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry). During the experiment several chemical parameters differed between the inlet and the outlet. Alkalinity was significantly higher at the inflow and all major cation concentrations were higher at the inflow. The temperature was on average 3 ºC higher at the outlet. Mass balance calculations showed that the wetland was a sink for most dissolved metals. Snails and periphyton tissue metal concentrations were higher at the inflow than at the outlet for Cd and Ni. However, no significant differences were observed between inflow and outlet tissue concentrations for Cr and Al, whereas Mn was actually significantly higher at the outlet. As a result, the metal content of the organisms did not consistently reflect the dissolved metal concentrations in water. For all metals except Cd and Zn, periphyton concentrations were on average higher than snail metal concentrations. Periphyton analyses can provide a more conservative measure of metal contamination and, when artificial substrates are used, correspond to defined and known periods of exposure.This study demonstrates that constructed wetlands may lead to increased metal content of downstream organisms even if these wetlands appear to be overall sinks for dissolved metals based on mass balance calculations. It also shows the need to consider not only metal concentrations, but also biological data when assessing the performance of pollution control facilities

    Variability of Temperature and Salinity in the Middle Atlantic Bight and Gulf of Maine

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    Monitoring of the waters of the Middle Atlantic Bight and Gulf of Maine has been conducted by the MARMAP Ships of Opportunity Program since the early 1970's. Presented in this atlas are portrayals of the temporal and spatial patterns of surface and bottom temperature and surface salinity for these areas during the period 1978-1990. These patterns are shown in the form of time-space diagrams for single-year and multiyear (base period) time frames. Each base period figure shows thirteen-year (1978-1990) mean conditions, sample variance in the form of standard deviations of the measured values, and data locations. Each single-year figure displays annual conditions, sampling locations, and departures of annual conditions from the thirteen-year means, expressed as algebraic anomalies and standardized anomalies. (PDF file contains 112 pages.

    Microbiomes of Caribbean Octocorals Vary Over Time but Are Resistant to Environmental Change

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    The bacterial microbiome is an essential component of many corals, although knowledge of the microbiomes in scleractinian corals far exceeds that for octocorals. This study characterized the bacterial communities present in shallow water Caribbean gorgonian octocorals over time and space, in addition to determining the bacterial assemblages in gorgonians exposed to environmental perturbations. We found that seven shallow water Caribbean gorgonian species maintained distinct microbiomes and predominantly harbored two bacterial genera, Mycoplasma and Endozoicomonas. Representatives of these taxa accounted for over 70% of the sequences recovered, made up the three most common operational taxonomic units (OTUs), and were present in most of the gorgonian species. Gorgonian species sampled in different seasons and/or in different years, exhibited significant shifts in the abundances of these bacterial OTUs, though there were few changes to overall bacterial diversity, or to the specific OTUs present. These shifts had minimal impact on the relative abundance of inferred functional proteins within the gorgonian corals. Sequences identified as Escherichia were ubiquitous in gorgonian colonies sampled from a lagoon but not in colonies sampled from a back reef. Exposure to increased temperature and/or ultraviolet radiation (UVR) or nutrient enrichment led to few significant changes in the gorgonian coral microbiomes. While there were some shifts in the abundance of the prevalent bacteria, more commonly observed was “microbial switching” between different OTUs identified within the same bacterial genus. The relative stability of gorgonian coral bacterial microbiome may potentially explain some of the resistance and resilience of Caribbean gorgonian corals against changing environmental conditions

    An experimental facility for the study of unsteady flow in turbopumps

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    Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1989.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 81-82).by Nicolas R. Goulet.M.S

    Microbial Degradation of Cellulosic Material and Gas Generation: Implications for the Management of Low- and Intermediate-Level Radioactive Waste

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    Deep geologic repositories (DGR) in Canada are designed to contain and isolate low- and intermediate-level radioactive waste. Microbial degradation of the waste potentially produces methane, carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas. The generation of these gases increase rock cavity pressure and limit water ingress which delays the mobility of water soluble radionuclides. The objective of this study was to measure gas pressure and composition over 7 years in experiments containing cellulosic material with various starting conditions relevant to a DGR and to identify micro-organisms generating gas. For this purpose, we conducted experiments in glass bottles containing (1) wet cellulosic material, (2) wet cellulosic material with compost Maker, and (3) wet cellulosic material with compost Accelerator. Results demonstrated that compost accelerated the pressure build-up in the containers and that methane gas was produced in one experiment with compost and one experiment without compost because the pH remained neutral for the duration of the 464 days experiment. Methane was not formed in the other experiment because the pH became acidic. Once the pressure became similar in all containers after 464 days, we then monitored gas pressure and composition in glass bottle containing wet cellulosic material in (1) acidic conditions, (2) neutral conditions, and (3) with an enzyme that accelerated degradation of cellulose over 1965 days. In these experiments, acetogenic bacteria degraded cellulose and produced acetic acid, which acidity suppressed methane production. Microbial community analyses suggested a diverse community of archaea, bacteria and fungi actively degrading cellulose. DNA analyses also confirmed the presence of methanogens and acetogens in our experiments. This study suggests that methane gas will be generated in DGRs if pH remains neutral. However, our results showed that microbial degradation of cellulose not only generated gas, but also generated acidity. This finding is important as acids can limit bentonite swelling and potentially degrade cement and rock barriers, thus this requires consideration in the safety case as appropriate

    Negative Regulation of Transactivation Function but Not DNA Binding of NF-κB and AP-1 by IκBβ1 in Breast Cancer Cells

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    The transcription factor NF-κB regulates the expression of genes involved in cancer cell invasion, metastasis, angiogenesis, and resistance to chemotherapy. In normal cells NF-κB is maintained in the cytoplasm by protein-protein interaction with inhibitor IκBs. In contrast, in cancer cells a substantial amount of NF-κB is in the nucleus and constitutively activates target genes. To understand the mechanisms of constitutive NF-κB activation, we have analyzed the function of IκBα and IκBβ in breast cancer cells. In most cases, constitutive NF-κB DNA binding correlated with reduced levels of either IκBα or IκBβ isoforms. Overexpression of IκBα but not IκBβ1 resulted in reduced constitutive DNA binding of NF-κB in MDA-MB-231 cells. Unexpectedly, IκBβ1 overexpression moderately increased 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate- and interleukin-1-inducible NF-κB DNA binding. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate- and interleukin-1-induced transactivation by NF-κB, however, was lower in IκBβ1-overexpressing cells. Mutants of IκBβ1 lacking the C-terminal casein kinase II phosphorylation sites, which form a stable complex with DNA bound NF-κB without inhibiting its transactivation in other cell types, repressed the transactivation by NF-κB in MDA-MB-231 cells. Consistent with the results of transient transfections, the expression of urokinase plasminogen activator, an NF-κB target gene, was reduced in IκBβ1-overexpressing cells. These results suggest that depending on the cell type, IκBβ1 represses the expression of NF-κB-regulated genes by inhibiting either DNA binding or transactivation function of NF-κB
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