46 research outputs found

    Recent land cover and use changes in Miombo woodlands of eastern Tanzania

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    Forest and wood land ecosystems in Tanzania occupy more than 45% of the land area, more than two thirds of which made up of the Miombo woodland. The main form of land use in the Miombo region has long been shifting and small-scale sedentary cultivation. The lack of infrastructure and prevalence of deadly diseases such as malaria and trypanosiomiasis have long limited extensive clearance for cultivation, livestock farming and settlements. However, due to positives changes in the socio-economical, political and technological setup in miombo region, the types and intensity of land use are now changing. This paper discusses preliminary results from a study conducted with the aim of contributing to the understanding of dynamics of land cover and use changes in miombo woodlands of eastern Tanzania. The study area comprises four villages around the “Kitulangalo Forest Reserve”, 140 km west of Dar es Salaam on either side of the Morogoro-Dar es Salaam highway. Landsat MSS satellite images of July 1975, Landsat TM satellite images of July 2000 were used to assess land cover changes between 1975 and 2000. Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA), questionnaire survey and checklists for key informants were the major methods used for collecting socio-economic data. The land cover/use class of woodland with scattered cultivation has recorded the highest percentage of change between July 1975 and July 2000. While all other classes have registered positive changes, only the closed woodland class has had negative change meaning that this class has been decreasing in favour of other land cover/use classes. Recent land cover and use changes are drastic in the study area. These changes havebeen triggered largely by varied factors including mainly increased population density and subsequent economic activities. Economicactivities including charcoal business, shifting cultivation, opening up of improved highway and pastoralism in the study area have greatly contributed to deforestation and woodland degradation. In light of these findings, there is need for:(1) Adequate land use planning and survey of village lands so as to avoid exacerbation of land use conflict and environmental degradation in the study area.(2) Agrarian reforms to eliminate open access regimes to natural resources.(3) Enforcement of fiscal policies related to the extraction of natural resource products such as timber and charcoal so as toreduce pressure on woodlands.Keywords: land use – cover change – Kitulangalo – miombo woodland

    The periodicity of phytoplankton in Lake Constance (Bodensee) in comparison to other deep lakes of central Europe

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    Phytoplankton periodicity has been fairly regular during the years 1979 to 1982 in Lake Constance. Algal mass growth starts with the vernal onset of stratification; Cryptophyceae and small centric diatoms are the dominant algae of the spring bloom. In June grazing by zooplankton leads to a lsquoclear-water phasersquo dominated by Cryptophyceae. Algal summer growth starts under nutrient-saturated conditions with a dominance of Cryptomonas spp. and Pandorina morum. Depletion of soluble reactive phosphorus is followed by a dominance of pennate and filamentous centric diatoms, which are replaced by Ceratium hirundinella when dissolved silicate becomes depleted. Under calm conditions there is a diverse late-summer plankton dominated by Cyanophyceae and Dinobryon spp.; more turbulent conditions and silicon resupply enable a second summer diatom growth phase in August. The autumnal development leads from a Mougeotia — desmid assemblage to a diatom plankton in late autumn and winter. Inter-lake comparison of algal seasonality includes in ascending order of P-richness Königsee, Attersee, Walensee, Lake Lucerne, Lago Maggiore, Ammersee, Lake Zürich, Lake Geneva, Lake Constance. The oligotrophic lakes have one or two annual maxima of biomass; after the vernal maximum there is a slowly developing summer depression and sometimes a second maximum in autumn. The more eutrophic lakes have an additional maximum in summer. The number of floristically determined successional stages increases with increasing eutrophy, from three in Königsee and Attersee to eight in Lake Geneva and Lake Constance

    Pretreatment with ibuprofen augments circulating tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-6, and elastase during acute endotoxinemia

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    Plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha), interleukin-1 (IL-1), and interleukin-6 (IL-6) were monitored after intravenous administration of Escherichia coli endotoxin with or without ibuprofen pretreatment to healthy volunteers. Intravenous endotoxin (n = 7) resulted in elevated plasma TNF alpha concentrations with maximal levels at 90 min (369 +/- 44 pg/ml, P less than .001 vs. saline controls, n = 7). The rise in TNF-alpha was followed by a rise in plasma IL-6 (27 +/- 12.8 ng/ml), peaking 30-90 min thereafter. Pretreatment with ibuprofen (n = 6) caused a significant augmentation and temporal shift in cytokine elaboration with maximal TNF alpha levels (627 +/- 136 pg/ml) at 120 min and IL-6 peaks (113 +/- 66 ng/ml) at 180 min. In ibuprofen-treated volunteers, the additional increase in TNF alpha was paralleled by increased levels of circulating elastase. In vitro experiments suggest a causal relationship between these events. Thus, the cyclooxygenase inhibitor ibuprofen blunts the clinical response to endotoxin but augments circulating cytokine levels and leukocyte degranulation

    Effects of endotoxin on leucine and glucose kinetics in man : contribution of prostaglandin E2 assessed by a cyclooxygenase inhibitor

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    The effects of endotoxin (E) administration on whole body protein and glucose metabolism were studied in normal volunteers. Injection of 4 ng/kg Escherichia coli E iv resulted in a relative increase in leucine flux (1-13C-leucine infusion technique) compared to controls [+0.12 +/- 0.10 vs. -0.45 +/- 0.23 mumol/kg.min after 360 min, P = 0.028, analysis of variance (ANOVA)], indicating increased proteolysis. Nonoxidative leucine flux was higher after E than after saline administration (0.08 +/- 0.11 vs. -0.47 +/- 0.18 mumol/kg.min, P = 0.007, ANOVA), suggesting increased amino acid incorporation into proteins. E caused a transient decrease of plasma glucose concentration (by 0.5 +/- 0.1 mmol/L after 150 min; P textless 0.004 vs. saline controls) due to a relative increase in disappearance compared to appearance of glucose (6,6 D2-glucose infusion technique). These alterations were associated with increases in plasma concentrations of ACTH, beta-lipoprotein (beta-LPH), GH, cortisol, epinephrine, free fatty acid, beta-hydroxybutyrate, and decreases of plasma insulin. Pretreatment with ibuprofen, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, blunted the effects of E on whole body leucine flux (P textless 0.05 vs. E) and on nonoxidative leucine flux (P textless 0.05 vs. E) but enhanced the E-induced decrease of plasma glucose concentration (P textless 0.004 vs. E), due to a relative increase in glucose disappearance compared to appearance (P = 0.02). The increases in counterregulatory hormones (ACTH, beta-LPH, GH, cortisol, epinephrine) were also attenuated by ibuprofen. Thus, acute endotoxinemia results in a redistribution of whole body proteins due to an increase in both protein breakdown and amino acid incorporation into proteins and in decreased plasma glucose concentrations. The ibuprofen data suggested that these effects of E on leucine kinetics, but not on glucose metabolism, were prostaglandin E2-mediated

    Induction of plasma inhibitors of interleukin 1 and TNF-alpha activity by endotoxin administration to normal humans

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    Several naturally occurring inhibitors of interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) have been demonstrated both in serum and urine of febrile patients. These factors are considered to be part of a regulatory system counteracting potential deleterious effects of the cytokines. We have assayed plasma samples of volunteers who received a bolus intravenous injection of either 4 ng/kg body wt of Escherichia coli endotoxin (n = 6) or 0.9% saline (n = 4) for the presence of IL-1 and TNF-alpha inhibitory activity. Plasma obtained 3 h after endotoxin injection inhibited IL-1-induced PGE2 release from fibroblasts by 57% (P less than 0.001 vs. baseline and saline controls, respectively). Maximal IL-1 inhibitory capacity coincided with fever and tended to disappear with declining body temperature. Normal plasma was found to inhibit TNF-alpha-induced PGE2 release by 20-35%. This inhibitory effect increased to 50-60% in plasma obtained during endotoxinemia. Maximal TNF-alpha inhibitory capacity became detectable when circulating TNF-alpha levels peaked at 120 min after the injection of endotoxin. Our data demonstrate that both IL-1 and TNF-alpha inhibitory activity can be induced experimentally by intravenous endotoxin administration to humans and that their appearance coincides with fever and circulating TNF-alpha levels

    Effect of acute acidosis and alkalosis on leucine kinetics in man

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    The effects of acute pH changes on whole body leucine kinetics (1-13C-leucine infusion technique) were determined in normal subjects. Plasma insulin, glucagon, and growth hormone concentrations were kept constant by somatostatin and replacement infusions of the three hormones. When acidosis was produced by ingestion of NH4Cl (4 mmol kg-1 p.os; n = 8) arterialized pH decreased within 3 h from 7.39 +/- 0.01 to 7.31 +/- 0.01 (P less than 0.001) and leucine plasma appearance increased by 0.13 +/- 0.04 mumol kg-1 min-1 (P less than 0.02); in contrast, when alkalosis was produced by intravenous infusion of 4 mmol kg-1 NaHCO3 (n = 7, pH 7.47 +/- 0.01), leucine plasma appearance decreased by -0.09 +/- 0.04 mumol kg-1 min-1 (P less than 0.01 vs. acidosis). Whole body leucine flux also increased during acidosis compared to alkalosis (P less than 0.05), suggesting an increase in whole body protein breakdown during acidosis. Apparent leucine oxidation increased during acidosis compared to alkalosis (P = 0.05). Net forearm leucine exchange remained unaffected by acute pH changes. Plasma FFA concentrations decreased during acidosis by -107 +/- 67 mumol l-1 (P less than 0.05) and plasma glucose increased by 1.90 +/- 0.25 mmol l-1 (P less than 0.02); in contrast, alkalosis resulted in an increase in plasma FFA by 83 +/- 40 mumol l-1 (P less than 0.02; P less than 0.01 vs. acidosis), suggesting an increase in lipolysis; plasma glucose decreased compared to acidosis (P less than 0.01). The data demonstrate that acute metabolic acidosis and alkalosis, as they occur in clinical conditions, influence protein breakdown, and in the opposite direction, lipolysis
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