16 research outputs found

    Organic carbon and nitrogen export from a tropical dam-impacted floodplain system

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    Tropical floodplains play an important role in organic matter transport, storage, and transformation between headwaters and oceans. However, the fluxes and quality of organic carbon (OC) and organic nitrogen (ON) in tropical river-floodplain systems are not well constrained. We explored the quantity and characteristics of dissolved and particulate organic matter (DOM and POM, respectively) in the Kafue River flowing through the Kafue Flats (Zambia), a tropical river-floodplain system in the Zambezi River basin. During the flooding season, > 80% of the Kafue River water passed through the floodplain, mobilizing large quantities of OC and ON, which resulted in a net export of 69–119 kg OC km−2 d−1 and 3.8–4.7 kg ON km−2 d−1, 80% of which was in the dissolved form. The elemental C : N ratio of ~ 20, the comparatively high δ13C values of −25‰ to −21‰, and its spectroscopic properties (excitation-emission matrices) showed that DOM in the river was mainly of terrestrial origin. Despite a threefold increase in OC loads due to inputs from the floodplain, the characteristics of the riverine DOM remained relatively constant along the sampled 410-km river reach. This suggests that floodplain DOM displayed properties similar to those of DOM leaving the upstream reservoir and implied that the DOM produced in the reservoir was relatively short-lived. In contrast, the particulate fraction was 13C-depleted (−29‰) and had a C : N ratio of ~ 8, which indicated that POM originated from phytoplankton production in the reservoir and in the floodplain, rather than from plant debris or resuspended sediments. While the upstream dam had little effect on the DOM pool, terrestrial particles were retained, and POM from algal and microbial sources was released to the river. A nitrogen mass balance over the 2200 km2 flooded area revealed an annual deficit of 15 500–22 100 t N in the Kafue Flats. The N isotope budget suggests that these N losses are balanced by intense N-fixation. Our study shows that the Kafue Flats are a significant local source of OC and ON to downstream ecosystems and illustrates how the composition of riverine OM can be altered by dams and floodplains in tropical catchments

    Cross-listing, firm-specific information, and corporate governance: evidence from Chinese A-shares and H-shares

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    Abstract not available.Shan Li, Paul Brockman, Ralf Zurbrueg

    The effectiveness of capital regulation on bank behavior in China

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    This paper examines the impact that ownership and governance structures have on how Chinese banks react to regulatory pressure. We find that the current regulatory regime induces banks to increase their capital, but its effectiveness in doing so varies based on whether the bank is listed or not, and also who is the majority shareholder. We also find that the degree of central government ownership and the political ties the chief executive officer of the bank has play an important role in the risk-taking behavior of banks. Overall, our results have a number of policy implications supporting the need to further reduce state ownership of banks in China to mitigate the prevailing moral hazard and dual-agency problems that arise from the government being both the regulator and the majority shareholder.Yishu Fu, Shih-Cheng Lee, Lei Xu, Ralf Zurbrueg

    Bleomycin-induced lung injury assessed noninvasively and in spontaneously breathing rats by proton MRI

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    PURPOSE: To apply proton magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques to assess noninvasively and in spontaneously breathing rats, structural changes following a single intratracheal administration of bleomycin (BLM). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Rats were scanned by MRI prior to BLM or vehicle administration and at six hours, 24 hours, week 1, and at weeks 2, 3, 6, and 8 after treatment. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid and histological analyses were performed at 24 hours, and at weeks 1 and 8 (histology only). RESULTS: Prominent MRI fluid signals were detected in the lungs of BLM-treated rats one week after challenge. These signals correlated with increased inflammatory parameters in BAL fluid and with marked perivascular and parenchymal infiltration with inflammatory cells in histological slices. At week 2 the MRI signals due to edema resolved, but nevertheless an increase in MRI signal intensity from the lung parenchyma was apparent. In some areas of the right lung the MRI signal intensity in the parenchyma decreased between weeks 2 and 8. These observations were in line with histology demonstrating collagen deposition and atelectasis (hallmarks of fibrosis) at week 1 and a partial recovery of the lung parenchyma at week 8. CONCLUSION: The data demonstrate the ability of proton MRI to detect BLM-induced lung fibrosis as well as the acute inflammatory response caused by the agent

    Awareness of Islmaic banking products among Muslims: The case of Australia

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    © Palgrave Macmillan Ltd.The purpose of this study is to examine the awareness of Muslim Australians of Islamic banking, particularly profit-and-loss sharing agreements. A sample of 300 Australian Muslims were surveyed utilising a short questionnaire containing specific questions relating to the willingness of respondents to purchase profit-and-loss sharing Islamic banking products. The results indicate that the majority of the respondents are interested in purchasing these products, but are not properly informed about how they function. It was common to find respondents who were keen to purchase Islamic banking products, but only if credit facilities were available. This is contrary to Islamic Shari'ah law, and suggests a lack of understanding of the principles of Islamic finance.Hussain Gulzar Rammal and Ralf Zurbrueg

    Activation of the cardiac renin-angiotensin system and increased myocardial collagen expression in human aortic valve disease

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    OBJECTIVES: We sought to determine whether the cardiac renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is activated in human aortic valve disease depending on left ventricular function, and we analyzed the concomitant regulation of the extracellular matrix components. BACKGROUND: In animal models with pressure or volume load, activation of the cardiac RAS increases fibrosis. In human aortic valve disease, the ventricular collagen protein content is increased, but only scarce data on the activation state of the cardiac RAS and its effects on collagen and fibronectin messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) are available. METHODS: In left ventricular biopsies from patients with aortic valve stenosis (AS) and aortic valve regurgitation and from control subjects, we quantitated mRNAs for angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), chymase, transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1), collagen I, collagen III and fibronectin by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Proteins were localized by immunohistochemistry; ACE activity was determined by high performance liquid chromatography; and TGF-beta protein by quantitative enzyme immunoassay. RESULTS: Protein, ACE and TGF-beta1 mRNA were significantly increased in patients with AS and AR (1.5- to 2.1-fold) and correlated with each other. The increase occurred also in patients with normal systolic function. Collagen I and III and fibronectin mRNAs were both upregulated about twofold in patients with AS and AR. In AS, collagen and fibronectin mRNA expression levels were positively correlated with left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and inversely with left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). CONCLUSIONS: In human hearts, pressure and volume overload increases cardiac ACE and TGF-beta1 in the early stages. This activation of the cardiac RAS may contribute to the observed increase in collagen I and III and fibronectin mRNA expression. The increase in extracellular matrix already exists in patients with a normal LVEF, and it increases with functional impairment

    Upregulation of myocardial estrogen receptors in human aortic stenosis

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    Estrogen receptor (ER)-mediated effects have been associated with the modulation of myocardial hypertrophy in animal models and in humans, but ER expression in the human heart and its relation to hypertrophy-mediated gene expression have not yet been analyzed. We therefore investigated sex- and disease-dependent alterations of myocardial ER expression in human aortic stenosis together with the expression of hypertrophy-related genes

    Identification with MRI of the pleura as a major site of the acute inflammatory effects induced by ovalbumin and endotoxin challenge in the airways of the rat

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    Inflammatory effects in the rat lung have been investigated, non-invasively by MRI, at early time points (3 and 6 h) after ovalbumin (OA) or endotoxin (LPS) challenges. Six hours after challenge with OA, a strong, even inflammatory signal was present around the periphery of the lung in a region corresponding to the pleura. Histological analysis confirmed the presence of marked edema associated with the pleural cavity of OA-treated animals. Lower levels of pleural edema were observed in MRI and histological evaluation of LPS-treated animals and no abnormality was observed in actively sensitized and naive, saline-treated groups. Diffuse edematous signals were detected in the lung 3 and 6 h after challenge with OA or LPS; the signal volumes were larger at both time points following OA instillation. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid analysis performed 6 h after challenge revealed increased levels of protein and greater cellular activation in OA- than in LPS-treated animals. Furthermore, increased levels of peribronchial edema were found by histology 6 h after OA. BAL fluid and histological assessments demonstrated that the inflammatory signals were due to edema and not mucus as no significant changes in BAL mucin concentrations or differences in goblet cells were identified between OA or LPS challenge and their respective vehicle groups. Our data show that MRI is able to detect, non-invasively, inflammatory signals in both the lung and the pleura in spontaneously breathing animals, highlighting its potential to study the consequences of pulmonary insults on both site
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