10 research outputs found

    Magnesium therapy improves outcome in Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis by altering pneumolysin pore formation

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    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in adults and is characterised by high lethality and substantial cognitive disabilities in survivors. Here, we study the capacity of an established therapeutic agent, magnesium, to improve survival in pneumococcal meningitis by modulating the neurological effects of the major pneumococcal pathogenic factor pneumolysin. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH We used mixed primary glial and acute brain slice cultures, pneumolysin injection in infant rats, a mouse meningitis model, and complementary approaches such as Western blot, a black lipid bilayer conductance assay and live imaging of primary glial cells. KEY RESULTS Treatment with therapeutic concentrations of magnesium chloride (500 mg/kg in animals and 2 mM in cultures) prevented pneumolysin-induced brain swelling and tissue remodelling both in brain slices and in animal models. In contrast to other divalent ions, which diminish the membrane binding of pneumolysin in non-therapeutic concentrations, magnesium delayed toxin-driven pore formation without affecting its membrane binding or the conductance profile of its pores. Finally, magnesium prolonged the survival and improved clinical condition of mice with pneumococcal meningitis in the absence of antibiotic treatment. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS Magnesium is a well-established and safe therapeutic agent that has demonstrated capacity for attenuating pneumolysin-triggered pathogenic effects on the brain. The improved animal survival and clinical condition in the meningitis model points to magnesium as a promising candidate for adjunctive treatment of pneumococcal meningitis together with antibiotic therapy

    Plant structural diversity alters sediment retention on and underneath herbaceous vegetation in a flume experiment

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    Sediment retention is a key ecosystem function provided by floodplains to filter sediments and nutrients from the river water during floods. Floodplain vegetation is an important driver of fine sediment retention. We aim to understand which structural properties of the vegetation are most important for capturing sediments. In a hydraulic flume experiment, we investigated this by disentangling sedimentation on and underneath 96 vegetation patches (40 cm x 60 cm). We planted two grass and two herb species in each patch and conducted a full-factorial manipulation of 1) vegetation density, 2) vegetation height, 3) structural diversity (small-tall vs tall-tall species combinations) and 4) leaf pubescence (based on trait information). We inundated the vegetation patches for 21 h in a flume with silt- and clay-rich water and subsequently measured the amount of accumulated sediment on the vegetation and on a fleece as ground underneath it. We quantified the sediment by washing it off the biomass and off the fleece, drying the sediment and weighting it. Our results showed that all manipulated vegetation properties combined (vegetation density and height, and the interaction of structural diversity and leaf pubescence) explained sedimentation on the vegetation (total R2 = 0.34). The sedimentation underneath the vegetation was explained by the structural diversity and the leaf pubescence (total R2 = 0.11). We further found that vegetation biomass positively affected the sedimentation on and underneath the vegetation. These findings are crucial for floodplain management strategies with the aim to increase sediment retention. Based on our findings, we can identify management strategies and target plant communities that are able to maximize a floodplain’s ability to capture sediments.</p

    Effects of plant species identity override diversity effects in explaining sedimentation within vegetation in a flume experiment

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    During floods, sediments suspended in river water deposit on floodplains. Thus, floodplains are a key to improving river water quality. Yet, the factors that determine the amount of fine sediment that deposits on floodplains are largely unknown. Plant diversity typically increases structural diversity, whereas the vegetation structure and the structural characteristics of individual species are known to influence sedimentation. We hypothesised that species diversity, in addition to species identity, may promote sediment retention. Our study aimed to disentangle the effects of species richness and species identity, via differences in vegetation structure, on sediment retention within herbaceous vegetation patches. In a flume experiment, we investigated sedimentation on 30 vegetation patches (40 × 60 cm2). We created patches with five different species-richness levels (3, 4, 6, 8, and 11 species), each replicated six times. Species were randomly selected from 14 common floodplain species. We inundated the patches with silt- and clay-rich water and measured the amount of accumulated sediment on the vegetation and on the ground underneath it. Species richness significantly increased sedimentation underneath the vegetation (R2 = 0.17). However, including species identity effects in a structural equation model, we showed that individual species' presence largely drove these effects. Alopecurus pratensis had a direct negative effect on sedimentation on the vegetation, whereas Bromus inermis and Elymus repens had indirect positive effects through an increase in total biomass (R2 = 0.42). Elymus repens had a direct negative, and Urtica dioica a direct positive effect on sedimentation underneath the vegetation (R2 = 0.38). Our results indicate that selecting the most effective species, rather than as many species as possible, may have the greatest benefits for promoting sedimentation. Overall, we conclude that floodplain management that aims to increase sediment retention should alter the vegetation structure of meadows by increasing vegetation biomass.</p

    Biodiversity conservation and climate change in the floodplain forest of Leipzig:

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    Der Leipziger Auwald ist ein streng geschützter Hartholzauenwald mit einer hohen und spezifischen Biodiversität. Diese verdankt er seiner langen Habitattradition, seinem Baumartenreichtum und seiner Nutzungsgeschichte. Flussregulierung und Deichbau in den 1930er Jahren haben das Gebiet entwässert und die notwendigen Überflutungen unterbunden. Das hat die Struktur und die Artenzusammensetzung des Waldes stark verändert. Standortfremde Ahornarten sind auf dem Vormarsch, wodurch sich die Stieleiche nicht mehr verjüngt. Die extremen Trockenjahre 2018 und 2019 haben zu einem großflächigen Absterben vor allem der Esche geführt. Ökophysiologische Untersuchungen und Jahrringanalysen zeigen, dass die Stressbelastung in 2019 stark anstieg und das System an seine Belastungsgrenze geführt hat. Um den Hartholzauenwald zu retten, soll nun eine natürliche Überflutungs- und Grundwasserdynamik wiederhergestellt werden.The floodplain forest of Leipzig is strictly protected because of its high and unique biodiversity. This exists because of its continuous forest cover, its high richness of tree species and its management history. The river regulation in the 1930s has drained the forest and has prevented flooding which has strongly altered the structure and tree species composition of the forest. Shade-casting maple species, that were historically rare, are gaining dominance which suppresses the natural regeneration of pedunculate oak. The extreme drought years of 2018 and 2019 have led to a large-scale mortality, in particular of Common ash. Eco-physiological investigations and tree ring analyses show that the stress level in 2019 rose strongly and has pushed the system to its limits. To save the unique forest, revitalisation measures that restore the hydrological dynamics of the floodplain are planned

    Topographical factors related to flooding frequency promote ecosystem multifunctionality of riparian floodplains

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    Various ecosystem functions provided by floodplains depend on a natural river activity and floodplain morphology. Therefore, anthropogenic alterations of rivers modify their flooding regimes and may affect the provisioning of numerous ecosystem functions. Restoration projects, which aim at reestablishing natural processes of floodplains, require a better understanding of the ecosystem's ability to simultaneously provide multiple functions (multifunctionality) and how this relates to the environmental template. Here we investigate the relationship between environmental drivers and ecosystem multifunctionality. We focus on 24 ecosystem functions, representing five ecosystem services provided by floodplains of the Mulde River: plant productivity, biodiversity provisioning, retention of sediments, nutrients and pollutants. These functions were measured on 74 plots located on three well preserved floodplain sites of the Mulde River. We described synergies and trade-offs between single functions using correlations and calculated quantitative measures of ecosystem multifunctionality, quantified as the number of functions provided above either 50% of maximal functioning, or 75% of maximal functioning. We then explored relations of multifunctionality with two environmental factors, which also affect the probability of flooding i.e., the hydrological distance and the distance to the water table. Although numerous functions related to sedimentation processes were positively correlated to each other, they traded off with functions related to biodiversity provisioning. This advocates the application of a holistic measure of ecosystem functioning. Multifunctionality indices decreased with an increase of both distance to the water table and hydrological distance, with effects of the distance to the water table being most strongly negative. These findings imply that ecosystem multifunctionality is highest at sites which are flooded regularly. We conclude that restoration attempts which shorten hydrological distance and distance to the water table, like removal of artificial embankments or reconstruction of side channels, may have a positive effect not only on single functions, but also on overall ecosystem multifunctionality. We also advocate the application of a multifunctionality measure to facilitate management and restoration of floodplains

    Vegetation characteristics control local sediment and nutrient retention on but not underneath vegetation in floodplain meadows

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    Sediment and nutrient retention are essential ecosystem functions that floodplains provide and that improve river water quality. During floods, the floodplain vegetation retains sediment, which settles on plant surfaces and the soil underneath plants. Both sedimentation processes require that flow velocity is reduced, which may be caused by the topographic features and the vegetation structure of the floodplain. However, the relative importance of these two drivers and their key components have rarely been both quantified. In addition to topographic factors, we expect vegetation height and density, mean leaf size and pubescence, as well as species diversity of the floodplain vegetation to increase the floodplain's capacity for sedimentation. To test this, we measured sediment and nutrients (carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus) both on the vegetation itself and on sediment traps underneath the vegetation after a flood at 24 sites along the River Mulde (Germany). Additionally, we measured biotic and topographic predictor variables. Sedimentation on the vegetation surface was positively driven by plant biomass and the height variation of the vegetation, and decreased with the hydrological distance (total R2 = 0.56). Sedimentation underneath the vegetation was not driven by any vegetation characteristics but decreased with hydrological distance (total R2 = 0.42). Carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus content in the sediment on the traps increased with the total amount of sediment (total R2 = 0.64, 0.62 and 0.84, respectively), while C, N and P on the vegetation additionally increased with hydrological distance (total R2 = 0.80, 0.79 and 0.92, respectively). This offers the potential to promote sediment and especially nutrient retention via vegetation management, such as adapted mowing. The pronounced signal of the hydrological distance to the river emphasises the importance of a laterally connected floodplain with abandoned meanders and morphological depressions. Our study improves our understanding of the locations where floodplain management has its most significant impact on sediment and nutrient retention to increase water purification processes

    Habitat use of large ungulates in northeastern Germany in relation to forest management

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    Estimating large herbivore density has been a major area of research in recent decades. Previous studies monitoring ungulate density, however, focused mostly on determining animal abundance, and did not interpret animal distribution in relation to habitat parameters. We surveyed large ungulates in the Biodiversity Exploratory Schorfheide-Chorin using faecal pellet group counts. This allowed us to explore the link between relative ungulate abundance, habitat use, and browsing damage on trees in a region with several types of forest, including unharvested and age-class beech forests, as well as age-class pine forests. Our results demonstrate that roe deer and fallow deer relative abundance is negatively correlated with large tree cover, and positively correlated with the cover of small shrubs (Rubus spec., Vaccinium spec.), and winter food supply. Habitat use of roe deer and fallow deer, as estimated by counting faecal pellet groups, revealed a preference for mature pine forests, and avoidance of deciduous forests. This differential habitat use is explained by different distributions of high quality food resources during winter. The response of deer to understory cover differed between roe deer and fallow deer at high cover percentages. The amount of browsing damage we observed on coniferous trees was not consistent with the relative deer abundance. Browsing damage was consistently higher on most deciduous trees, except for beech saplings which sustained less damage when roe deer density was low. Because roe deer is a highly selective feeder, it was reported to affect tree diversity by feeding only on trees with high nutritional value. Consequently, we propose that managing the number of all deer species by hunting is necessary to allow successful forest regeneration. Such an adjustment to deer numbers would need to account for both current tree diversity and alternative food resources. Our findings may be applicable to other forest landscapes in northeastern Germany including mature pine stands and differently harvested deciduous forests. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Species-specific and generic biomass equations for seedlings and saplings of European tree species

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    Biomass equations are a helpful tool to estimate the tree and stand biomass production and standing stock. Such estimations are of great interest for science but also of great importance for global reports on the carbon cycle and the global climate system. Even though there are various collections and generic meta-analyses available with biomass equations for mature trees, reports on biomass equations for juvenile trees (seedlings and saplings) are mainly missing. Against the background of an increasing amount of reforestation and afforestation projects and forests in young successional stages, such equations are required. In this study we have collected data from various studies on the aboveground woody biomass of 19 common tree species growing in Europe. The aim of this paper was to calculate species-specific biomass equations for the aboveground woody biomass of single trees in dependence of root-collar-diameter (RCD), height (H) and the combination of the two (RCD2 H). Next to calculating species-specific biomass equations for the species available in the dataset, we also calculated generic biomass equations for all broadleaved species and all conifer species. The biomass equations should be a contribution to the pool of published biomass equations, whereas the novelty is here that the equations were exclusively derived for young trees
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