8 research outputs found
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Nitrogen Pollution Is Linked to US Listed Species Declines
Nitrogen (N) pollution is increasingly recognized as a threat to biodiversity. However, our understanding of how N is affecting vulnerable species across taxa and broad spatial scales is limited. We surveyed approximately 1400 species in the continental United States listed as candidate, threatened, or endangered under the US Endangered Species Act (ESA) to assess the extent of recognized N-pollution effects on biodiversity in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. We found 78 federally listed species recognized as affected by N pollution. To illustrate the complexity of tracing N impacts on listed species, we describe an interdisciplinary case study that addressed the threat of N pollution to California Bay Area serpentine grasslands. We demonstrate that N pollution has affected threatened species via multiple pathways and argue that existing legal and policy regulations can be applied to address the biodiversity consequences of N pollution in conjunction with scientific evidence tracing N impact pathways
Recommended from our members
Nitrogen Pollution Is Linked to US Listed Species Declines
Nitrogen (N) pollution is increasingly recognized as a threat to biodiversity. However, our understanding of how N is affecting vulnerable species across taxa and broad spatial scales is limited. We surveyed approximately 1400 species in the continental United States listed as candidate, threatened, or endangered under the US Endangered Species Act (ESA) to assess the extent of recognized N-pollution effects on biodiversity in both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. We found 78 federally listed species recognized as affected by N pollution. To illustrate the complexity of tracing N impacts on listed species, we describe an interdisciplinary case study that addressed the threat of N pollution to California Bay Area serpentine grasslands. We demonstrate that N pollution has affected threatened species via multiple pathways and argue that existing legal and policy regulations can be applied to address the biodiversity consequences of N pollution in conjunction with scientific evidence tracing N impact pathways
Alginate: Pharmaceutical and Medical Applications
Due to their outstanding properties in terms of mild gelation conditions
and simple functionalization, biocompatibility, low toxicity, biodegradability,
non-antigenicity and chelating ability, as well as relatively low cost, alginates have
been widely used in a variety of biomedical applications including tissue engineering
and drug delivery systems. Smart alginate hydrogels for on-demand drug release in
response to environmental stimuli and 3D bioprinting will play an important role in
the future. These and the introduction of appropriate cell interactive features will be
crucial for many tissue engineering applications. The focus of the present chapter is
to highlight the great potential of the alginates as biomaterial for biomedical applications
and to discuss the role that alginate-based materials are likely to play in
biomedical applications in the future.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio