8,814 research outputs found
Effect of Pyrolysis on the Removal of Antibiotic Resistance Genes and Class I Integrons from Municipal Wastewater Biosolids
Wastewater biosolids represent a significant reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). While current biosolids treatment technologies can reduce ARG levels in residual wastewater biosolids, observed removal rates vary substantially. Pyrolysis is an anoxic thermal degradation process that can be used to convert biosolids into energy rich products including py-gas and py-oil, and a beneficial soil amendment, biochar. Batch pyrolysis experiments conducted on municipal biosolids revealed that the 16S rRNA gene, the ARGs erm(B), sul1, tet(L), tet(O), and the integrase gene of class 1 integrons (intI1) were significantly reduced at pyrolysis temperatures ranging from 300â700 °C, as determined by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Pyrolysis of biosolids at 500 °C and higher resulted in approximately 6-log removal of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene. ARGs with the highest observed removals were sul1 and tet(O), which had observed reductions of 4.62 and 4.04-log, respectively. Pyrolysis reaction time had a significant impact on 16S rRNA, ARG and intI1 levels. A pyrolysis residence time of 5 minutes at 500 °C reduced all genes to below detection limits. These results demonstrate that pyrolysis could be implemented as a biosolids polishing treatment technology to substantially decrease the abundance of total bacteria (i.e., 16S rRNA), ARGs and intI1 prior to land application of municipal biosolids
Using geophysical surveys to test tracer-based storage estimates in headwater catchments
Acknowledgements The authors are grateful to Stian Bradford, Chris Gabrielli, and Julie Timms for practical and logistical assistance. The provision of transport by Iain Malcolm and Ross Glover of Marine Scotland Science was greatly appreciated. We also thank the European Research Council ERC (project GA 335910 VEWA) for funding through the VeWa project and the Leverhulme Trust for funding through PLATO (RPG-2014-016).Peer reviewedPostprin
Influence of Sulfur-Containing Diamino Acid Structure on Covalently Crosslinked Copolypeptide Hydrogels.
Biologically occurring non-canonical di-α-amino acids were converted into new di-N-carboxyanhydride (di-NCA) monomers in reasonable yields with high purity. Five different di-NCAs were separately copolymerized with tert-butyl-l-glutamate NCA to obtain covalently crosslinked copolypeptides capable of forming hydrogels with varying crosslinker density. Comparison of hydrogel properties with residue structure revealed that different di-α-amino acids were not equivalent in crosslink formation. Notably, l-cystine was found to produce significantly weaker hydrogels compared to l-homocystine, l-cystathionine, and l-lanthionine, suggesting that l-cystine may be a sub-optimal choice of di-α-amino acid for preparation of copolypeptide networks. The di-α-amino acid crosslinkers also provided different chemical stability, where disulfide crosslinks were readily degraded by reduction, and thioether crosslinks were stable against reduction. This difference in response may provide a means to fine tune the reduction sensitivity of polypeptide biomaterial networks
Triclocarban Influences Antibiotic Resistance and Alters Anaerobic Digester Microbial Community Structure
Triclocarban (TCC) is one of the most abundant organic micropollutants detected in biosolids. Lab-scale anaerobic digesters were amended with TCC at concentrations ranging from the background concentration of seed biosolids (30 mg/kg) to toxic concentrations of 850 mg/kg to determine the effect on methane production, relative abundance of antibiotic resistance genes, and microbial community structure. Additionally, the TCC addition rate was varied to determine the impacts of acclimation time. At environmentally relevant TCC concentrations (max detect = 440 mg/kg), digesters maintained function. Digesters receiving 450 mg/kg of TCC maintained function under gradual TCC addition, but volatile fatty acid concentrations increased, pH decreased, and methane production ceased when immediately fed this concentration. The concentrations of the mexB gene (encoding for a multidrug efflux pump) were higher with all concentrations of TCC compared to a control, but higher TCC concentrations did not correlate with increased mexB abundance. The relative abundance of the gene tet(L) was greater in the digesters that no longer produced methane, and no effect on the relative abundance of the class 1 integron integrase encoding gene (intI1) was observed. Illumina sequencing revealed substantial community shifts in digesters that functionally failed from increased levels of TCC. More subtle, yet significant, community shifts were observed in digesters amended with TCC levels that did not inhibit function. This research demonstrates that TCC can select for a multidrug resistance encoding gene in mixed community anaerobic environments, and this selection occurs at concentrations (30 mg/kg) that can be found in full-scale anaerobic digesters (U.S. median concentration = 22 mg/kg, mean = 39 mg/kg)
Chronic Exposure to Triclosan Sustains Microbial Community Shifts and Alters Antibiotic Resistance Gene Levels in Anaerobic Digesters
Triclosan, an antimicrobial chemical found in consumer personal care products, has been shown to stimulate antibiotic resistance in pathogenic bacteria. Although many studies focus on antibiotic resistance pertinent to medical scenarios, resistance developed in natural and engineered environments is less studied and has become an emerging concern for human health. In this study, the impacts of chronic triclosan (TCS) exposure on antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and microbial community structure were assessed in lab-scale anaerobic digesters. TCS concentrations from below detection to 2500 mg kgâ1 dry solids were amended into anaerobic digesters over 110 days and acclimated for \u3e3 solid retention time values. Four steady state TCS concentrations were chosen (30â2500 mg kgâ1). Relative abundance of mexB, a gene coding for a component of a multidrug efflux pump, was significantly higher in all TCS-amended digesters (30 mg kgâ1 or higher) relative to the control. TCS selected for bacteria carrying tet(L) and against those carrying erm(F) at concentrations which inhibited digester function; the pH decrease associated with digester failure was suspected to cause this selection. Little to no impact of TCS was observed on intI1 relative abundance. Microbial communities were also surveyed by high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Compared to the control digesters, significant shifts in community structure towards clades containing commensal and pathogenic bacteria were observed in digesters containing TCS. Based on these results, TCS should be included in studies and risk assessments that attempt to elucidate relationships between chemical stressors (e.g. antibiotics), antibiotic resistance genes, and public health
The Detectability of AGN Cavities in Cooling-Flow Clusters
Chandra X-ray Observatory has revealed X-ray cavities in many nearby cooling
flow clusters. The cavities trace feedback from the central active galactic
nulceus (AGN) on the intracluster medium (ICM), an important ingredient in
stabilizing cooling flows and in the process of galaxy formation and evolution.
But, the prevalence and duty cycle of such AGN outbursts is not well
understood. To this end, we study how the cooling is balanced by the cavity
heating for a complete sample of clusters (the Brightest 55 clusters of
galaxies, hereafter B55). In the B55, we found 33 cooling flow clusters, 20 of
which have detected X-ray bubbles in their ICM. Among the remaining 13, all
except Ophiuchus could have significant cavity power yet remain undetected in
existing images. This implies that the duty cycle of AGN outbursts with
significant heating potential in cooling flow clusters is at least 60 % and
could approach 100 %, but deeper data is required to constrain this further.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; to appear in the proceedings of "The Monsters'
Fiery Breath", Madison, Wisconsin 1-5 June 2009, Eds. Sebastian Heinz & Eric
Wilcots; added annotation to the figur
Promoting Farmer occupational safety and health (OSH) services through Extension
Received: February 13th, 2021 ; Accepted: April 24th, 2021 ; Published: April 30th, 2021 ; Correspondence: [email protected] for improving OSH in European agriculture are urgently required given the
high level of reported injuries and ill health in the sector. The agriculture sector in Europe is
enormous in scale and diverse in production systems. A dispersed labour force is deployed in the
sector, predominantly using family labour, which is self-employed. Accordingly, a large
proportion of the agricultural workforce is outside the scope of EU directives on occupational
safety and health (OSH).The aim of this paper is to examine the role and engagement of the
discipline of agricultural extension in promoting OSH in agriculture and consider methodologies
that this discipline can use most effectively to gain OSH adoption. The paper compares regulatory
and extension approaches to consider their respective roles in promoting OSH in agriculture. EU
developments related to extension and OSH are then outlined. Regarding extension engagement,
findings of a survey among extension and OSH professionals throughout Europe found that OSH
is considered an important topic and worthwhile for inclusion in extension but it indicates that
currently the level of extension programming is limited. Irish data on OSH extension
methodologies indicates that advisors consider that a range of extension approaches are available
to motivate farmers on OSH adoption with TV victim testimonials, on-farm social learning
discussion groups and on-farm demonstrations having the highest preferences. Data presented
indicates that Irish farmers expressed good satisfaction ratings with OSH extension relevance to
their farms. Overall, the study advocates giving more consideration of the role of extension in
promoting agricultural OSH
Homogeneous cooling of rough, dissipative particles: Theory and simulations
We investigate freely cooling systems of rough spheres in two and three
dimensions. Simulations using an event driven algorithm are compared with
results of an approximate kinetic theory, based on the assumption of a
generalized homogeneous cooling state. For short times , translational and
rotational energy are found to change linearly with . For large times both
energies decay like with a ratio independent of time, but not
corresponding to equipartition. Good agreement is found between theory and
simulations, as long as no clustering instability is observed. System
parameters, i.e. density, particle size, and particle mass can be absorbed in a
rescaled time, so that the decay of translational and rotational energy is
solely determined by normal restitution and surface roughness.Comment: 10 pages, 10 eps-figure
Indeterminacy, Memory, and Motion in a Simple Granular Packing
We apply two theoretical and two numerical methods to the problem of a disk
placed in a groove and subjected to gravity and a torque. Methods assuming
rigid particles are indeterminate -- certain combinations of forces cannot be
calculated, but only constrained by inequalities. In methods assuming
deformable particles, these combinations of forces are determined by the
history of the packing. Thus indeterminacy in rigid particles becomes memory in
deformable ones. Furthermore, the torque needed to rotate the particle was
calculated. Two different paths to motion were identified. In the first,
contact forces change slowly, and the indeterminacy decreases continuously to
zero, and vanishes precisely at the onset of motion, and the torque needed to
rotate the disk is independent of method and packing history. In the second
way, this torque depends on method and on the history of the packing, and the
forces jump discontinuously at the onset of motion.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys Rev
Energy flows in vibrated granular media
We study vibrated granular media, investigating each of the three components
of the energy flow: particle-particle dissipation, energy input at the
vibrating wall, and particle-wall dissipation. Energy dissipated by
interparticle collisions is well estimated by existing theories when the
granular material is dilute, and these theories are extended to include
rotational kinetic energy. When the granular material is dense, the observed
particle-particle dissipation rate decreases to as little as 2/5 of the
theoretical prediction. We observe that the rate of energy input is the weight
of the granular material times an average vibration velocity times a function
of the ratio of particle to vibration velocity. `Particle-wall' dissipation has
been neglected in all theories up to now, but can play an important role when
the granular material is dilute. The ratio between gravitational potential
energy and kinetic energy can vary by as much as a factor of 3. Previous
simulations and experiments have shown that E ~ V^delta, with delta=2 for
dilute granular material, and delta ~ 1.5 for dense granular material. We
relate this change in exponent to the departure of particle-particle
dissipation from its theoretical value.Comment: 19 pages revtex, 10 embedded eps figures, accepted by PR
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