8 research outputs found
Effectiveness of Palm and Simulated Geotextiles in Reducing Run-off and Inter-rill Erosion on Medium and Steep Slopes
Palm-leaf geotextiles could be an effective and cheap soil conservation method with enormous global potential. However, there are very few data on the effectiveness of palm geotextiles in reducing soil erosion by water. This study investigates the effectiveness of two types of palm geotextiles and the effect of geotextile mesh size on infiltration, run-off and inter-rill erosion rate and soil surface roughness on a medium and steep slope. A well-defined protocol was developed to conduct laboratory experiments. Rainfall was simulated for 90 min with an intensity (I) of 45 and 67 mm h−1 on an inter-rill erosion plot, filled with an erodible sandy loam and having slope gradients (S) of 15 and 45%. Two palm-leaf geotextiles (Borassus aethiopum and Brazilian Buriti Palm) and three simulated geotextiles (polyethylene tarpaulin) with different mesh sizes (1 × 1, 5 × 5 and 12 × 12 cm) were tested on a simulated fine tilth. Calculated k values from the Horton infiltration equation ranged from 0.025 to 0.145 and decreased linearly on both slopes with geotextile cover. Geotextiles are more effective in reducing the run-off coefficient on a medium slope (15%) compared with that on a steep slope (45%), ranging from 76.4 to 17.9%. Mean b values from the mulch cover equation equalled 0.024 for a 15% slope and 0.045 for a 45% slope, indicating a higher effectiveness of geotextiles in reducing total inter-rill soil loss on gentler slopes compared with commonly used mulches. Erosion-induced soil surface roughness at the end of each experiment increased linearly with geotextile cover percentage and this increase was not significantly different between the two slope gradients. (Blackwell Publishing
Cross-talk between tight and anchoring junctions-lesson from the testis
Spermatogenesis takes place in the seminiferous tubules in adult testes such as rats, in which developing germ cells must traverse the seminiferous epithelium while spermatogonia (2n, diploid) undergo mitotic and meiotic divisions, and differentiate into elongated spermatids (1n, haploid). It is conceivable that this event involves extensive junction restructuring particularly at the blood-testis barrier (BTB, a structure that segregates the seminiferous epithelium into the basal and the adluminal compartments) that occurs at stages VII-VIII of the seminiferous epithelial cycle. As such, cross-talk between tight (TJ) and anchoring junctions [e.g., basal ectoplasmic specialization (basal ES), adherens junction (AJ), desmosome-like junction (DJ)] at the BTB must occur to coordinate the transient opening of the BTB to facilitate preleptotene spermatocyte migration. Interestingly, while there are extensively restructuring at the BTB during the epithelial cycle, the immunological barrier function of the BTB must be maintained without disruption even transiently. Recent studies using the androgen suppression and Adjudin models have shown that anchoring junction restructuring that leads to germ cell loss from the seminiferous epithelium also promotes the production of AJ (e.g., basal ES) proteins (such as N-cadherins, catenins) at the BTB site. We postulate the testis is using a similar mechanism during spermatogenesis at stage VIII of the epithelial cycle that these induced basal ES proteins, likely form a "patch" surrounding the BTB, transiently maintain the BTB integrity while TJ is "opened", such as induced by TGF-b3 or TNFa, to facilitate preleptotene spermatocyte migration. However, in other stages of the epithelial cycle other than VII and VIII when the BTB remains "closed" (for ∼10 days), anchoring junctions (e.g., AJ, DJ, and apical ES) restructuring continues to facilitate germ cell movement. Interestingly, the mechanism(s) that governs this communication between TJ and anchoring junction (e.g., basal ES and AJ) in the testis has remained obscure until recently. Herein, we provide a critical review based on the recently available data regarding the cross-talk between TJ and anchoring junction to allow simultaneous maintenance of the BTB and germ cell movement across the seminiferous epithelium. © 2008 Landes Bioscience and Springer Science+Business Media.link_to_subscribed_fulltex