127 research outputs found
A Sustainability Framework for Engineering Carbon Capture Soil In Transport Infrastructure
Recent research has demonstrated considerable potential for artificial soils to be designed for carbon capture. The incorporation of quarry fines enables the accumulation of atmospheric CO2 in newly formed carbonate minerals. However, the rate and trajectory of carbon accumulation has been little studied. The relative contribution of biotic (e.g. vegetation, micro-organisms) and abiotic (water, light, temperature) factors to the carbonation process is also unknown. This article presents a sustainability framework which aims to determine the multi-functionality of soils to which fines have been added not only in their role as carbon sinks but also in their role of providing additional opportunities for improvement to ecosystem services. Such frameworks are required specifically where land designed for CO2 capture must also provide other ecosystem services, such as flood mitigation and biodiversity conservation. land within linear transport infrastructure provides a case study, focusing on 238,000 ha of vegetated land associated with roadside verges in the UK. Hypothetically this area could remove 2.5 t CO2 per year from the atmosphere, equivalent to 1% 2011 total UK emissions or 2% of current transport emissions and saving an equivalent of £1.1 billion in non-traded mitigation values. roadside verges should be designed to minimize flooding onto the highway and perform other important functions such as removal of dust and suspended solids from surface waters. Vegetation on 30,000 ha of railway land also provides opportunities for carbon sequestration, but management of this vegetation is subject to similar constraints to protect the rail tracks from debris extending from autumn leaves to fallen trees
Maternal Undernutrition and Long-term Effects on Hepatic Function
Undernutrition in utero, regardless of the source, can impair proper liver development leading to long-term metabolic dysfunction. Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying how nutritional deficits during perinatal life lead to permanent alterations in hepatic gene expression will provide better therapeutic strategies to alleviate the undernourished liver in postnatal life. This chapter addresses the different experimental models of undernutrition in utero, and highlights the direct and indirect mechanisms involved leading to metabolic diseases in the liver. These include hypoxia, oxidative stress, epigenetic alterations, and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. In addition, promising perinatal nutritional and pharmaceutical interventions are highlighted which illustrate how the placidity of the developing liver can be exploited to prevent the onset of long-term metabolic disease
Effects of Protein Deficiency on Perinatal and Postnatal Health Outcomes
There are a variety of environmental insults that can occur during pregnancy which cause low birth weight and poor fetal health outcomes. One such insult is maternal malnutrition, which can be further narrowed down to a low protein diet during gestation. Studies show that perinatal protein deficiencies can impair proper organ growth and development, leading to long-term metabolic dysfunction. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that underlie how this deficiency leads to adverse developmental outcomes is essential for establishing better therapeuticstrategies that may alleviate or prevent diseases in later life. This chapter reviews how perinatal protein restriction in humans and animals leads to metabolic disease, and it identifies the mechanisms that have been elucidated, to date. These include alterations in transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms, as well as indirect means such as endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and oxidative stress. Furthermore, nutritional and pharmaceutical interventions are highlighted to illustrate that the plasticity of the underdeveloped organs during perinatal life can be exploited to prevent onset of long-term metabolic disease
Biochar: pyrogenic carbon for agricultural use: a critical review.
O biocarvão (biomassa carbonizada para uso agrícola) tem sido usado como condicionador do solo em todo o mundo, e essa tecnologia é de especial interesse para o Brasil, uma vez que tanto a ?inspiração?, que veio das Terras Pretas de Índios da Amazônia, como o fato de o Brasil ser o maior produtor mundial de carvão vegetal, com a geração de importante quantidade de resíduos na forma de finos de carvão e diversas biomassas residuais, principalmente da agroindústria, como bagaço de cana, resíduos das indústrias de madeira, papel e celulose, biocombustíveis, lodo de esgoto etc. Na última década, diversos estudos com biocarvão têm sido realizados e atualmente uma vasta literatura e excelentes revisões estão disponíveis. Objetivou-se aqui não fazer uma revisão bibliográfica exaustiva, mas sim uma revisão crítica para apontar alguns destaques na pesquisa sobre biochar. Para isso, foram selecionados alguns temaschave considerados críticos e relevantes e fez-se um ?condensado? da literatura pertinente, mais para orientar as pesquisas e tendências do que um mero olhar para o passad
Enhanced wheat yield by biochar addition under different mineral fertilization levels
Climate change and global warming have worldwide
adverse consequences. Biochar production and its use in
agriculture can play a key role in climate change mitigation
and help improve the quality and management of waste materials
coming from agriculture and forestry. Biochar is a carbonaceous
material obtained from thermal decomposition of
residual biomass at relatively low temperature and under
oxygen limited conditions (pyrolysis). Biochar is currently a
subject of active research worldwide because it can constitute
a viable option for sustainable agriculture due to its potential
as a long-term sink for carbon in soil and benefits for crops.
However, to date, the results of research studies on biochar
effects on crop production show great variability, depending
on the biochar type and experimental conditions. Therefore, it
is important to identify the beneficial aspects of biochar addition
to soil on crop yield in order to promote the adoption of
this practice in agriculture. In this study, the effects of two
types of biochar from agricultural wastes typical of Southern
Spain: wheat straw and olive tree pruning, combined with
different mineral fertilization levels on the growth and yield
of wheat (Triticum durum L. cv. Vitron) were evaluated.
Durum wheat was pot-grown for 2 months in a growth chamber
on a soil collected from an agricultural field near Córdoba,
Southern Spain. Soil properties and plant growth variables
were studied in order to assess the agronomic efficiency of
biochar. Our results show that biochar addition to a nutrientpoor,
slightly acidic loamy sand soil had little effect on wheat
yield in the absence of mineral fertilization. However, at the
highest mineral fertilizer rate, addition of biochar led to about
20–30 % increase in grain yield compared with the use of the
mineral fertilizer alone. Both biochars acted as a source of
available P, which led to beneficial effects on crop production.
In contrast, the addition of biochar resulted in decreases in
available N and Mn. A maximum reduction in plant nutrient
concentration of 25 and 80% compared to nonbiochar-treated
soils for N and Mn, respectively, was detected. This fact was
related to the own nature of biochar: low available nitrogen
content, high adsorption capacity, and low mineralization rate
for N; and alkaline pH and high carbonate content for Mn. Our
results indicate that biochar-based soil management strategies
can enhance wheat production with the environmental benefits
of global warming mitigation. This can contribute positively
to the viability and benefits of agricultural production
systems. However, the nutrient–biochar interactions should
receive special attention due to the great variability in the
properties of biochar-type materials
Effects of Acacia seyal and biochar on soil properties and sorghum yield in agroforestry systems in South Sudan
We studied the effects of Acacia seyal Del. intercropping and biochar soil amendment on soil physico-chemical properties and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.) yields in a two-year field experiment conducted on a silt loam site near Renk in South Sudan. A split-plot design with three replications was used. The main factor was tree-cropping system (dense acacia + sorghum, scattered acacia + sorghum, and sole sorghum) and biochar (0 and 10 Mg ha(-1)) was the subplot factor. The two acacia systems had lower soil pH, N and higher C/N ratios compared to the sole sorghum system. Biochar significantly increased soil C, exchangeable K+ contents, field capacity and available water content, but reduced soil exchangeable Ca2+ and effective CEC, and had no effect on soil pH. Acacia intercropping significantly reduced sorghum grain yields while biochar had no significant effect on sorghum yields. The land equivalent ratio (LER) for sorghum yield was 0.3 for both acacia systems in 2011, with or without biochar, but increased in 2012 to 0.6 for the scattered acacia system when combined with biochar. The reduction in sorghum yields by the A. seyal trees was probably due to a combination of competition for water and nutrients and shading. The lack of a yield response to biochar maybe due to insufficient time or too low a dosage. Further research is needed to test for the effects of tree intercropping and biochar and their interactions on soil properties and crop yields in drylands.Peer reviewe
Fossil fuels in a trillion tonne world.
The useful energy services and energy density value of fossil carbon fuels could be retained for longer timescales into the future if their combustion is balanced by CO2 recapture and storage. We assess the global balance between fossil carbon supply and the sufficiency (size) and capability (technology, security) of candidate carbon stores. A hierarchy of value for extraction-to-storage pairings is proposed, which is augmented by classification of CO2 containment as temporary (100,000 yr). Using temporary stores is inefficient and defers an intergenerational problem. Permanent storage capacity is adequate to technically match current fossil fuel reserves. However, rates of storage creation cannot balance current and expected rates of fossil fuel extraction and CO2 consequences. Extraction of conventional natural gas is uniquely holistic because it creates the capacity to re-inject an equivalent tonnage of carbon for storage into the same reservoir and can re-use gas-extraction infrastructure for storage. By contrast, balancing the extraction of coal, oil, biomass and unconventional fossil fuels requires the engineering and validation of additional carbon storage. Such storage is, so far, unproven in sufficiency
Changes in Soil Organic Carbon Fractions in Response to Cover Crops in an Orange Orchard
Characteristics and mechanisms of nickel adsorption on biochars produced from wheat straw pellets and rice husk
<em>CASPER</em>: A modelling framework to link mineral carbonation with the turnover of organic matter in soil
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