88,040 results
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2. DYNAMICS OF THE BACTERIOPLANKTON STATE IN THE SHCHUCHIY BAY OF LAKE LADOGA AFTER THE CLOSURE OF THE PRIOZERSKY PULP AND PAPER MILL
- Author
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L. L. Kapustina, G. G. Mitrukova, and E. A. Kurashov
- Subjects
Hydrology ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,Closure (topology) ,Paper mill ,Bacterioplankton ,engineering.material ,engineering ,Environmental science ,business ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Bay ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Introduction. The Shchuchiy Bay is located in the western part of the skerry area of Lake Ladoga near the town of Priozersk. For almost 20 years, the bay has experienced an anthropogenic impact from the ingress of untreated wastewater from the Priozersk Pulp and Paper Mill (PPM). Systematic microbiological studies of the Shchuchiy Bay ecosystem were started in the middle of the 1970s by the Institute of Limnology of the Russian Academy of Sciences and continued after the PPM closure in 1986. Materials and methods. The ecosystem of the bay was studied in detail during the growing season of 2013–2014; periodic studies were carried out in 2015–2018. Retrospective data were also used for the analysis. Water samples were taken at four stations from the surface horizon. The following microbiological indicators were determined: the abundance of bacterioplankton and the percentages of various morphological types of bacterial cells. Results and discussion. A comparison of the quantitative level of development of the bacterial community in the bay in different periods showed a gradual decrease in the abundance of bacterioplankton as the anthropogenic impact weakened after the closure of the Priozersky PPM from 12.40 million cells ml–1 in 1987 to an average value of 2.62±1.03 million cells ml–1 in 2013–2018. A positive correlation was found between the concentration of bacteria and water temperature. The percentage of rod-shaped microorganisms in the water of the bay also decreased as the anthropogenic impact weakened from 73.4 % in 1987 to 53.1±7.6 % in 2013–2018, which indicated an improvement in water quality. Conclusion. A stable decrease in the abundance of bacteria from the level characteristic of highly polluted and eutrophic water bodies to the level characteristic of mesotrophic and mesotrophic-eutrophic water bodies is a reliable criterion for the restoration of the ecosystem of the Shchuchiy Bay to the state characteristic of similar bays of Lake Ladoga.
- Published
- 2021
3. Study of Succession Processes on Frozen Lignin-containing Sediments of OAO 'Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill' and Soils Obtained on the Basis thereof
- Author
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A.S. Shatrova
- Subjects
Ecology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Pollution - Abstract
The dynamics and efficiency of the use of frozen lignin-containing deposits of the pulp and paper industry and soils obtained on the basis thereof for the intensified reclamation succession of disturbed lands were analyzed. It was proved that over a four-year experimental period, an active process of self-overgrowing occurs with a change and an increase in the species diversity of phytocenoses with the stabilization of chemical and agrochemical composition of dumps of frozen lignin-containing sediments and soils as per the norme of GOST 54534-2011 “Resource saving. Sewage sludge. Requirements for disturbed lands for reclamation”.
- Published
- 2023
4. Share of mechanical-biological installation of waste processing (mbp) in the level of recycling and preparation for re-use of paper, metals, plastics, and glass achieved by municipalities
- Author
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Anna Krysztopik, Izabela Anna Tałałaj, and Paweł Biedka
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Ecology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - Abstract
The article aims to determine the share of mechanical-biological installation of waste processing (MBP) in the levels of recycling and preparation for the reuse of paper, metals, plastics, and glass (PMPG) achieved by municipalities. Two MBP installations were taken for the analysis - with the highest and the lowest share of municipalities in the Podlaskie Voivodship (Poland), which reached the recycling level required in 2019. In order to determine the share of MBP installations in the level of recycling achieved by communes, the share of the mass of recycled PMPG waste segregated from mixed municipal waste was calculated: in the total mass of generated PMPG waste and in the total mass of recycled PMPG waste from the municipal waste stream. On the basis of the conducted analyses, it should be stated that the MBP installation may have an impact on the achievement by municipalities of the recycling level required by law.
- Published
- 2023
5. Vegetation composition and assessment of phytotoxicity in a paper mill dumpsite
- Author
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Nabanita Bhattacharyya, Priyanka Bora, Nandita Paul, and Payal Das
- Subjects
Ecology ,business.industry ,Environmental engineering ,food and beverages ,Environmental science ,Paper mill ,Vegetation composition ,Phytotoxicity ,Plant Science ,business ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The solid waste dumpsites of pulp and paper industries are prone to be turned into degraded lands due to the loss of vegetation cover. Such sites often possess drought, salinity and pH stresses as well as heavy metal contamination. Restoration of top soil by creating vegetation cover has proved to be the most sustainable approach to check land degradation. Therefore, to find some stress-tolerant species capable of creating vegetation cover in paper mill dumpsites, a vegetation composition study was conducted in a paper mill dumpsite. A total of seven plant species viz., Calotropis gigantea (L.) Dryand., Chromolaena odorata (L.) R.M. King & H. Rob, Mikania scandens (L.) Willd., R. communis L., Rotheca serrata (L.) Steane & Mabb., Senna sophera (L.) Roxb. and Solanum myriacanthum Dunal were found. To correlate the existence of these plants with stress condition of soil, the level of phytotoxicity in the dumpsite was assessed by studying seed germination status, proline accumulation, leaf relative water content (RWC), leaf pH, total chlorophyll content and ascorbic acid level of Ricinus communis as bioassay indices. The significantly lower percentage of seed germination in dumpsite soil, compared to control, revealed the phytotoxic nature of the soil of the dumpsite. The significantly higher level of proline, RWC, total chlorophyll and ascorbic acid in plant leaves from dumpsites than from the control soils indicated considerable stress in the dumpsite. Soil physicochemical and nutrient status analyses substantiated with the bioassay results. Despite apparent phytotoxicity, the presence of certain plant species in the dumpsite indicated their inherent stress tolerance capability to be prospected.
- Published
- 2021
6. Use of Lignin-Containing Waste of the Pulp and Paper Industry in Obtaining Lign-Epoxy Composite Materials
- Author
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A.E. Zhulanova
- Subjects
Ecology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Pollution - Abstract
The possibility of processing lignosulfonates to obtain composite materials using ED-20 epoxy resin as a binder was considered. It was shown that powdered lignosulfonates (PLS) play the role of a hardener for epoxy resins and reduce the toxicity of polyethylenepolyamine (PEPA), which is widely used as an industrial hardener, by 50–68 %. The article assesses the possibility of using PLC as a hardener and filler composition. The optimal composition of lignoepoxy compounds was revealed: ED-20 – 60–70 % by weight; PLS – 30–40 % by weight; PEPA – 6–7 % by weight. Biotesting proved that the resulting material does not have toxic properties. It was discovered that these compositions have longterm biostability while maintaining physical and mechanical properties. It was concluded that it is expedient to process powdered lignosulfonates to obtain lignoepoxy compositions suitable as building material and alternatives to wood chip and wood fiber materials.
- Published
- 2023
7. Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances in Toilet Paper and the Impact on Wastewater Systems
- Author
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Jake T. Thompson, Boting Chen, John A. Bowden, and Timothy G. Townsend
- Subjects
Ecology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Environmental Chemistry ,Pollution ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Water Science and Technology - Published
- 2023
8. The Use of Frozen Colloidal Sediments of Sludge-Lignin of OJSC 'Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill' as Soil
- Author
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A.V. Bogdanov, G.G. Popova, A.S. Shatrova, and K.V. Fedotov
- Subjects
0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,engineering.material ,complex mixtures ,050601 international relations ,Colloid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Lignin ,021108 energy ,Ecology ,Precipitation (chemistry) ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,05 social sciences ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,food and beverages ,Paper mill ,Pulp and paper industry ,Pollution ,0506 political science ,Slurry ,engineering ,Soil fertility ,business ,Sludge - Abstract
A series of industrial experimental tests on the freeze treatment of colloidal sludge lignin precipitates was carried out under natural conditions. Changes in the physical and chemical properties of the precipitates were studied. It is established that three fractions are formed following the freeze treatment of colloidal sludge lignin precipitates, including demineralized water (up to 25 %), mineralized water (up to 15 %) and a restructured colloidal precipitate (up to 60 %). The total volume of the precipitate is shown to decrease to 40 %. Freezing precipitation of colloidal lignin slurry of "the Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill" leads to a decrease in toxicity from the third to the fifth class of danger. On the basis of frozen sediments, the lignin sludge of OJSC Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill with the addition of other waste from the Baikal region, a fertile soil was obtained that corresponds to GOST R 54651-2011 "Organic fertilizers on the basis of sewage sludge. Specifications".
- Published
- 2020
9. MULTI-ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ABOVE-SLUDGE WATERS IN THE ACCUMULATION CELLS OF BAYKALSK PULP AND PAPER MILL FOR TERRITORY REMEDIATION STRATEGY CHOOSING
- Author
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Yu. A. Dambinov, E. P. Chebykin, and A. N. Suturin
- Subjects
Ecology ,business.industry ,Environmental remediation ,Pulp (paper) ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Paper mill ,engineering.material ,business ,Pulp and paper industry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Multi element ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Introduction. Pulp and paper enterprises accumulate large volumes of industrial waste buried in special accumulation cells. In order to choose a technology for treating above-sludge waters, we need to monitor their composition, which depends on the history of cells’ filling and their subsequent use. Methods. In the course of the study, we applied inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Results. We determined the content of 72 chemical elements in above-sludge water of 11 cells at Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill and 4 open water flows near industrial waste landfills, and performed a cluster analysis of the sample composition. As a result, we revealed the peculiarities of water composition, related to the history of cell filling and subsequent pilot experiments. It has been found that the cells with non-disturbed sediments have cleaner water. Out of 16 chemical elements subject to limitation (Na, Al, P, S, Cl, K, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Sr, Mo, Cd, Pb), 11 elements exceed the limits established for wastewater discharged into water bodies within the ecological zones of the Baikal Natural Territory. Each cell is characterized by its own set of elements exceeding maximum allowable concentrations (MAC) and by the extent of such excess. Conclusion. Pilot experiments with cell sediments (joint grouting, drying, dewatering in press-filters) result in the disturbance of the “water/sediment” balance and increase the concentrations of most elements in above-sludge waters. The maximum amounts of elements (6–7) exceeding the MAC values are observed in water in the cells with disturbed sediments, water in the zone of ash slurry discharge, ash and sludge-lignin cells with industrial and household waste. When choosing a technology and procedures for treating above-sludge waters, it is necessary to take into account the specifics of their composition. Using the polluted water flow running into Lake Baikal during catastrophic floods in the summer of 2019 as an example, we show that it is possible to use multi-element ICP-MS analysis to search for sources of pollution from industrial facilities.
- Published
- 2020
10. Remediation of the Solzan Industrial Waste Landfill at the Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill (BPPM)
- Author
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Yu. A. Dambinov, A. N. Suturin, E. P. Chebykin, V.V. Mal’nik, N.N. Kulikova, E.L. Dambinova, and A.I. Goncharov
- Subjects
Ecology ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Environmental remediation ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Paper mill ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,engineering.material ,Pulp and paper industry ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Pollution ,Industrial waste ,0403 veterinary science ,engineering ,Environmental science ,business - Abstract
The main environmental risks in the area of landfills are considered, all aspects of their technological reclamation using waste from the Baikal PPM are discussed. The data on the creation of soil and grounds using lignin-destroying microbiological preparations are presented. The final stage of the remediation of the Solzan landfill is the creation of cadastral maps 8, 9, 10 modern forest nurseries on the site, protected by flood and mudflow protection structures.
- Published
- 2021
11. Practical Implementation of Measures to Preserve Aquatic Biological Resources in the Pulp and Paper Industry: Results and their Application
- Author
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I.I. Studenov and A.M. Tortsev
- Subjects
Ecology ,Pulp (paper) ,Paper production ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,engineering.material ,Aquatic biota ,01 natural sciences ,Pollution ,Zooplankton ,Ecological monitoring ,020401 chemical engineering ,Environmental protection ,Phytoplankton ,engineering ,Environmental science ,0204 chemical engineering ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The aim of the study is to analyze the results of ecological monitoring of the aquatic biota of the river. Vychegda and their practical use on the example of water-intensive pulp and paper production. The availability of the results of our own studies of the actual values of the monthly biomasses of phytoplankton and zooplankton made it possible to assess the difference between the use of actual and literary data. According to actual data, the damage from the death of phytoplankton is 4.5 times lower, and of zooplankton – 97 times lower, compared with the results of calculations using literature data.
- Published
- 2020
12. BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT OF WASTE PAPER RECYCLING PLANT WASTEWATER
- Author
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Ju. A. Feofanov
- Subjects
Ecology ,Waste management ,Wastewater ,food and beverages ,Environmental science ,Waste paper ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Introduction. Among characteristic features of waste paper recycling plant wastewater, the following can be distinguished: significant fluctuations in consumption and composition, high content of undissolved and dissolved substances (in particular, starch, fiber, dispersed thermoplastic and other substances). Local wastewater treatment can reduce the concentration of undissolved and — partially — dissolved contaminants. Besides, it makes it possible to reuse valuable substances and treated water in production. However, a significant amount of dissolved contaminants is dumped by factories at off-site biological treatment plants. In this case, bioreactors with suspended activated sludge (aeration tanks) as well as bioreactors with attached biomass are used for wastewater treatment. Methods. The purpose of the study was to determine the consumption and composition of wastewater discharged by waste paper recycling plants, as well as the technological parameters and performance of biological treatment facilities, including a moving bed biofilm reactor and aeration tanks. In-process control over the operation of treatment plants was carried out by means of instrumental measurements and laboratory analyses conducted according to standard methods. Results. The article examines the results of the operation of biological wastewater treatment facilities used to treat wastewater from a paper mill, where different grades of waste paper are used as raw materials. The main characteristics of biological wastewater treatment facilities’ operation have been identified. Relationships between the oxidation capacity and the load in terms of organic pollution have been obtained for a bioreactor with a moving bed (1st stage) and aeration tanks (2nd stage of biological wastewater treatment). Measures have been proposed to improve the performance of existing treatment plants.
- Published
- 2020
13. When food fights back: Cebid primate strategies of larval paper wasp predation and the high‐energy yield of high‐risk foraging
- Author
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Adrian A. Barnett, Anita I. Stone, Peter Shaw, Beatriz Ronchi‐Teles, Tereza dos Santos‐Barnett, Natalia C. Pimenta, Natalia M. Kinap, Wilson R. Spironello, Aparecida Bitencourt, Gemma Penhorwood, Rebecca N. Umeed, Tadeu G. de Oliveira, Bruna M. Bezerra, Sarah A. Boyle, Caroline Ross, and John W. Wenzel
- Subjects
Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2023
14. The Waste Paper Management in Educational Institutes and Improvement in Quality of Handmade Papers
- Author
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Jasmeet Kalra, Vijay Kumar, and Shipra Gupta
- Subjects
Environmental Engineering ,Ecology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Development - Abstract
This manuscript investigates the waste paper management (WPM) of an educational Institute and aware the people about the importance of waste paper management and recycling of waste papers by multidimensional approach. The research assessed two multi long term plans, considering all recycling settings feasible for educational scenario. To complete that purpose, support for the collection of waste papers, final disposal and environmental and financial impact assessment concerning transportation is required. Results suggest that the quality of handmade papers is improved by doping some external materials in cellulose of waste papers. In this manuscript, flour of wheat is mixed in waste paper cellulose. The analysis of handmade paper is done by a photometric test. It is found that at some percentages of doping of flour in waste paper pulp, the reflection properties of the paper is increased and surface of paper become smooth and hard. At some other percentages of doping, the papers are shown absorption properties.
- Published
- 2022
15. The fauna of aquatic invertebrates in the river impacted by wastewaters from the pulp and paper industry (Komi Republic)
- Author
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Olga N. Kononova, Olga Loskutova, Elena Fefilova, and Maria Baturina
- Subjects
River ecosystem ,QH301-705.5 ,Fauna ,Rotifera ,Copepoda ,pulp and paper industry ,Ecology & Environmental sciences ,Animalia ,Biology (General) ,Oligochaeta ,Vychegda River ,Ephemeroptera ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Aquatic biology ,Invertebrate ,Ecology ,Trichoptera ,Aquatic ecosystem ,fungi ,Species diversity ,Plankton ,benthos and plankton invertebrates ,Cladocera ,Data Paper (Biosciences) ,Europe ,Geography ,Biogeography ,Plecoptera ,Benthic zone ,Zoology & Animal Biology ,sampling event ,Komi Republic ,Bioindicator ,wastewaters - Abstract
Invertebrates are important elements of aquatic ecosystems and play a crucial role in the transformation of matter and energy in continental water bodies. Communities of aquatic invertebrates are characterised by high sensitivity to pollution by nutrients and toxic substances and acidification of water bodies; they serve as good bioindicators of the quality of the aquatic environment and impacts on hydroecosystems. All hydrobionts participate in the processes of self-purification of water bodies. The presented dataset provides information on the aquatic invertebrate community of a large northern river. During 2018-2020, we collected data on changes in the quantitative indicators of the development of benthic and planktonic communities, as well as the species diversity of their fauna. The dataset combines information about the occurrence and abundance of benthic and planktonic invertebrates and summarises data of aquatic invertebrate species found in the Vychegda River in the zone of influence from the pulp and paper mill. The presented dataset is part of a monitoring programme of the river ecosystems in the production area of Mondi Syktyvkar JSC (the European North-East of Russia, Komi Republic). The dataset describes the structure of benthic invertebrate and plankton communities in the Northern Dvina River Basin. The data on the finding and abundance of large taxa of aquatic invertebrates and species of some groups: Oligochaeta, Cladocera, Copepoda, Rotifera, Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera are presented. In total, the resource includes 8720 findings of invertebrates, of which 6041 are for zoobenthos organisms and 2679 for zooplankton organisms.
- Published
- 2021
16. Integrating biochemical and behavioral approaches to develop a bait to manage the invasive yellow paper wasp Polistes versicolor (Hymenoptera, Vespidae) in the Galápagos Islands
- Author
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Mariana Bulgarella, Alejandro E. Mieles, Jacqueline Rodríguez, Yesenia Campaña, Georgia M. Richardson, Robert A. Keyzers, Charlotte E. Causton, and Philip J. Lester
- Subjects
Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Uncategorized - Abstract
It is estimated that more than 500 species of insects have been introduced to the Galápagos Islands via human activities. One of these insect invaders is the yellow paper wasp, Polistes versicolor (Olivier) (Hymenoptera: Vespidae), a social wasp native to continental South America. In Galápagos, these wasps are voracious predators of insect larvae, compete with native species for insect prey or for floral resources and are a human nuisance. Wasp suppression methods currently in use are inefficient and attract non-target species, calling for the development of species-specific attractants that can be used in baits to lure and kill wasps. To evaluate the potential for using wasp semiochemicals in baits, we determined the biochemical composition of the head, thorax, Dufour’s and venom glands of P. versicolor foragers via gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Male and female wasps were tested for behavioral responses to body segment extracts from both sexes. Female body extracts consistently elicited more behavioral responses in both male and female wasps than male extracts. Females reacted to female head, thorax and abdomen (the Dufour’s and venom glands are located in the abdomen) extracts, whereas males reacted significantly to female head and thorax extracts. One male body extract, the head, elicited two significant behaviors: female wasps groomed more often, and males touched the filter paper more often compared to the blank control. Head extracts consistently changed the behavior of female and male wasps and, together with female thorax extracts, have potential as species-specific lures for yellow paper wasps. Heads were mainly composed of hydrocarbon lipids and oleamide, a ligand for odorant-binding proteins. The thorax consisted of fatty aldehydes, long-chain alkanes and fatty amide lipids. Field trials of blends of these compounds in high wasp density areas of Galápagos are the next step to confirm if any of these compounds are attractive to P. versicolor.
- Published
- 2022
17. Stone Scissors Paper. A Trilogy of Papers
- Author
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Leah Salter, Lisen Kebbe, and Gail Simon
- Subjects
EcoSystemic Return ,community action ,Therapeutics. Psychotherapy ,agential cuts ,extractivism ,ecology ,RC475-489 ,limestone - Abstract
This is a trilogy of papers about land and people and the ecology they create together. Leah lives on the coast in South Wales. Lisen lives on the island of Gotland in Sweden. Gail lives in Yorkshire in the north of England. What connects us and our writings is the land, its history, its place in industry and what we do and don’t see. The cuts in the land reflect the cuts in our minds, unnegotiated edits in our stories, and disconnects in political discourses. This trilogy of papers documents some of these cuts and joins. We speak about the land we walk on and the stories told about it. We point to scars in the landscape and ask how they connect with those in the lungs and on the wrist. The landscape of the present holds clues about its past and its future. And the timescapes in the writings evoke a necessity to connect time and place, human and non-human colonising and liberatory methods and live with a maddening, flickering lenticularity (Pillow, 2019).
- Published
- 2021
18. Lignocement Compositions Based on Lignin-Containing Waste of Pulp a Paper Industry
- Author
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A.E. Zhulanova and I.S. Glushankova
- Subjects
Ecology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Pollution - Abstract
Studies were carried out to experimentally substantiate the production of cement composite building materials based on liquid lignosulfonates (LCL). The chemical composition, physicochemical and physico-mechanical properties of liquid lignosulfonates and high-alumina cement have been studied. The method of mathematical planning of the experiment and modeling established the optimal composition of the composition. It has been established and substantiated that when obtaining lignocement compositions, the interaction of lignosulfonate with the components of aluminous cement occurs, which is accompanied by an increase in the hydrophobicity of the obtained compositions and, accordingly, a decrease in the water absorption capacity of the samples. It is shown that the obtained lignocement compositions have a lower density in comparison with foam blocks, i.e. the developed method makes it possible to obtain a lighter building material with high strength characteristics and moisture resistance.
- Published
- 2022
19. Disaster Solid Waste Management: A review paper
- Author
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Gayatri Sharma1 and Anu Sharma
- Subjects
Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Disaster waste management is one of the most cynical tasks associated with recovery after any disaster.The waste can overcome existing solid waste management facilities and influence on other emergencyresponse and recovery activities. If poorly managed, the waste can have significant public health and theenvironment impact and can affect the overall recovery process. This paper presents a system outline ofdisaster waste management based on existing literature. The literature does not specifically address theeffect of organisational structures, existing legislation and funding mechanisms on disaster wastemanagement programmes, nor does it decently cover the social effect of disaster waste managementprogrammes. It is realised that the argument presented in this paper, and the literature gaps identified, willform a basis for future full-scale research on disaster waste management. Successively research will leadto better preparedness and response to disaster waste management problems.
- Published
- 2022
20. Determining Antibody Retention in Hemolyzed, Bacterially Contaminated, and Nobuto Filter Paper-Derived Serum Utilizing Two Brucella abortus Fluorescence Polarization Assays
- Author
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Timothy J. Robinson, William H. Edwards, and Jessica Jennings-Gaines
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Ecology ,biology ,Filter paper ,Deer ,Brucella abortus ,Brucella ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Brucellosis ,Hemolysis ,Specimen Handling ,Serology ,Titer ,Rumen ,Fluorescence Polarization Immunoassay ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Animals ,Antibody ,Serostatus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We evaluated hemolyzed, bacterially contaminated, and Nobuto filter paper-derived serum, collected from 50 Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelson) in 2017 and 2019, divided into eight treatments to determine antibody retention. Serum was analyzed on Brucella abortus-specific fluorescence polarization assay utilizing plates and tubes. Reference titers and serostatus were compared to serum held at 22 C for 4, 8, 12, and 16 d; frozen clotted blood; blood with 2% and 10% elk rumen content (held for 8 d at 22 C); and serum eluted from Nobuto filter paper. Using Cohen's kappa test of agreement, plate assay serostatus agreement was substantial or outstanding in all treatments. Serostatus agreement was outstanding in all treatments utilizing tubes. The mean change in score (treatment minus reference) showed significant negative bias in serosuspect or seropositive animals in the frozen, 2% rumen, and 10% rumen treatments on the plate assay, and the day 16 and 10% rumen treatments on the tube assay, that could ultimately result in an animal being misclassified into a serosuspect or seronegative category. Serum eluted from Nobuto filter paper produced inconsistent results and is not recommended as an alternative to serum derived from blood. Although the potential for misclassification of animals with low titers exists, analyzing hemolyzed and bacterially contaminated serum from Brucella abortus nonendemic areas can increase sample size and the potential to detect seropositive animals.
- Published
- 2021
21. Nitrogen mineralization and microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen in response to co-application of biochar and paper mill biosolids
- Author
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Hani Antoun, Antoine Karam, Mervin St. Luce, Eric Manirakiza, Chantal Hamel, and Noura Ziadi
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Ecology ,Biosolids ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,food and beverages ,Soil Science ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Paper mill ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Mineralization (soil science) ,complex mixtures ,01 natural sciences ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Nitrogen ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,Biochar ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Organic matter ,business ,Nitrogen cycle ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Adding biochar to paper mill biosolids (PB) amendments may affect PB mineralization rate and nitrogen (N) availability. The objective of this 224-day incubation study was to evaluate the effect of amending two PB types varying in carbon (C)/N ratio (PB1, C/N = 24; and PB2, C/N = 13) with three rates (0%, 2%, and 5%) of pine (Pinus strobus L.) biochar produced at 700 °C on the dynamics of total C, total N, mineral N, N mineralization rate, and microbial biomass C (MBC) and N (MBN) in two agricultural soils (Kamouraska clay and St-Antoine sandy-loam). Two reference treatments were also included, namely, mineral fertilization and unamended soil. Total soil C concentration remained stable over the incubation period, whereas a decrease in total soil N was observed in both soils. In comparison with the unamended soil, the application of PB significantly increased total N, NH4-N, NO3-N, net mineralized N, applied N mineralization rate, and MBC in both soils. In comparison with the application of PB alone, biochar addition increased total C and MBC but decreased NH4-N, NO3-N, net N mineralization, and applied N mineralization rate in both soils. The co-application of biochar and PB1 resulted in the sequestration of mineral N released, which was more pronounced in the Kamouraska clay soil. The co-application of biochar and PB2 resulted in moderate release of mineral N. This study showed that the co-application of biochar and PB can benefit agricultural soils by improving NO3-N retention in agroecosystems while increasing organic matter and promoting microbial biomass.
- Published
- 2019
22. Hydrothermal Carbonization of Paper Mill ETP Sludge and Assessing its Potential Application in Agriculture
- Author
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K. Blessy Monica, E. Parameswari, V. Davamani, K. Sivakumar, and P. Kalaiselvi
- Subjects
Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Effluent Treatment Plant Sludge (ETPS) from pulp and paper mill is produced in larger quantities and its disposal has the major problem faced by the industries. The conversion of paper mill sludge into hydrochar through the process of Hydro Thermal Carbonization (HTC) has wider opportunities in agriculture. This study explored the optimization processes which influence the preparation of hydrochar from ETPS through the approaches of Response Surface Methodology (RSM). The optimized temperature and time were 220 °C and 4 hours, respectively for hydrochar production based on higher carbon and nitrogen content. The hydrochar and ETPS was characterized using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), Brunauer Emmett Teller (BET) surface area and Fourier Transform Infra-Red Spectroscopy (FTIR) for its structural morphology. Based on the optimized parameters, the hydrochar was produced and used in the pot culture experiment to study the impact of the hydrochar on bhendi (Abelmoschus esculentus) crop growth. Different concentrations of hydrochar were applied as basal in the pot. The treatment with 4% hydrochar germinated first show the good shoot and root length and 11% increase in germination percentage and 22% increase in vigour index when compared with control due to its higher nutritives which is on par with the results of 5% hydrochar.
- Published
- 2022
23. Eco-friendly approach toward preparation of plantable paper like material from organic sugarcane Bagasse waste
- Author
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Minakshi Bhattacharjee, Susanta Mog, Nabin Soren, and Deep Prakash Parasar
- Subjects
Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Present research work focused on sugarcane bagasse powder having potential cellulose source which can be used in pulp and paper industries. Ecological concerns have increased the need for nonwood pulp as a low cost raw material for paper making. This also led to the development of alternative pulping technologies that are eco-friendly. Cellulose pulp from the generated agro based waste is collected from the street vendors and chemically prepared in the laboratory and used in paper making. The optimal cooking time and dose of pulp by moist weight found were 180 minutes & 150 g of pulp per frame, respectively. To improve the quality and the shelf life of paper we incorporated sucrose in the sugarcane pulp. Sucrose acts as a natural preservative. To study the effect of sucrose as preservative we prepared a solution of sucrose and distilled water in 1:4 ratio. The solution is then mixed with sugarcane bagasse in 5:250, 10:250, 15:250 and 20:250 and observed the OD of the mixture on 20th and 27th day. By using this pulp we developed a paper with incorporated artificial seeds within it, so that after use of this paper rather than discarding the paper simply sowing it in garden soil a plant will grow from it and generate a means of eco initiatives. This plant able paper is developed by handmade process without using any harmful chemicals and can be made using everyday use material. Anyone can use this method and make the paper. The paper obtained from this process is found to be of good quality and durable and can be used for preparation of commercial Kraftâs of different purposes like greetings card, packaging etc., and can generate new way of a revenue.
- Published
- 2022
24. Landslides in Central Asia: a review of papers published in 2000–2020 with a particular focus on the importance of GIS and remote sensing techniques
- Author
-
Sayidjakhon Khasanov, Mukhiddin Juliev, Umidkhon Uzbekov, Ilhomjon Aslanov, Inobat Agzamova, Nasiba Normatova, Sohib Islamov, Giyosiddin Goziev, Sevarakhon Khodjaeva, and Nabijon Holov
- Subjects
Urban Studies ,Ecology ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Landslides are among the major environmental hazards with large-scale socio-economic and environmental impacts that jeopardize socio-economic wellbeing in mountainous regions. Landslides are due to the interaction of several complex factors such as local or regional geology, geomorphology, topography, and seismic motions. The goal of this study is to review published articles on causes and effects of landslides in Central Asia throughout 2000–2020. In line with this goal, we have collected (using Scopus database), reviewed, and analyzed 79 papers published during 2000–2020. Our results revealed an increasing number of landslide studies in Central Asia during the period under investigation, with authors from Belgium dominating in the published outcomes (28% of total), followed by authors from Central-Asian countries. After then, the paper analyses the mostly applied models and frequently identified driving conditions and triggers of landsliding, such as aspect, altitude, soil types, precipitation, earthquakes and human interventions. Geographic information system (GIS) and remote sensing (RS) had not commonly been used in the papers between 2000 and 2010, and they have progressively been applied in landslide studies in Central Asia in the last decade. According to our analysis, geotechnical, geophysical and statistical methods were preferably used for the landslide studies in Central Asia.
- Published
- 2021
25. The Evolution of Eusociality: Insights From Comparing Two Indian Paper Wasp Species
- Author
-
Sruthi Unnikrishnan and Raghavendra Gadagkar
- Subjects
Ecology ,Insect Science ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Eusocial species live in colonies with a reproductive division of labour into fertile reproductive castes and sterile non-reproductive castes, an overlap of generations and cooperative brood care. A further distinction can be usefully made between primitively eusocial species which do not have morphological caste differentiation and highly eusocial species which do. Ropalidia marginata is a tropical primitively eusocial wasp that has been extensively studied, especially compared to other tropical social wasps. R. marginata has several distinct traits, such as a docile queen, well-developed age polyethism, and decentralized work regulation, which makes it different from other primitively eusocial wasps and reminiscent of highly eusocial species. since tropical wasps, especially those belonging to the genus Ropalidia have been poorly studied, we cannot be sure whether R. marginata is unique or its traits are more common among tropical Ropalidia species. to begin to overcome this problem, we have extended our research to the congeneric and sympatric Ropalidia cyathiformis. Here, we compare and contrast what we now know about these two species, especially concerning their reproductive and non-reproductive division of labour. We find that R. cyathiformis, unlike R. marginata, has a behaviourally dominant queen, weak and rigid age polyethism, likely uses behavioural dominance to regulate worker reproduction and individual workers self-regulate their own non-reproductive activities. We, therefore, conclude that R. marginata is indeed unique and argue that R. marginata is intermediate between primitively and highly eusocial wasps.
- Published
- 2023
26. Bram Büscher: The Truth about Nature: Environmentalism in the Era of Post-truth Politics and Platform Capitalism. University of California Press, Oakland. 2021. ISBN: 978-0-520-37145-3 (Paper), ISBN: 978-0-520-37144-6 (Cloth); ISBN: 978-0-520-97615-3 (epub); xiv + 230 Pages, Index
- Author
-
Michael Kleinod
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Ecology ,Anthropology ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) - Abstract
This article reviews Bram Büscher’s book The Truth about Nature: Environmentalism in the Era of Post-truth Politics and Platform Capitalism (2021).
- Published
- 2023
27. Glazed tiles produced using paper sludge, glass cullet and a natural red clay: an experimental study
- Author
-
Erika Furlani and Stefano Maschio
- Subjects
Glass recycling ,Materials science ,Ecology ,paper sludge ,business.industry ,Kiln ,glazed tiles ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Glaze ,Metallurgy ,Glass cullet ,Sintering ,Paper mill ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Pollution ,Glass cullet, glazed tiles, paper sludge ,Substrate (building) ,Computers in Earth Sciences ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Waste Management and Disposal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The paper describes the production, in single fast firing, of tiles containing 30 wt% of a natural red clay and a mixture of 42 wt% of paper mill sludge and 28 wt% of glass cullet which were coated with a commercial ‘matt white’ glaze. Fired materials have been characterized as a function of the top temperature (1090 or 1140 °C) reached at the top of the fast sintering process made by an industrial roller kiln. It has been observed that tiles fired at 1090 °C display the best overall performances because the matt glaze well covers the substrate, thus ensuring that the mechanical and physical properties of the tiles conform to the official standard.
- Published
- 2018
28. Use of Blood-soaked Cellulose Filter Paper for Measuring Carbon and Nitrogen Stable Isotopes
- Author
-
Megan Templeton, Randall S. Wells, J. Margaret Castellini, Todd M. O'Hara, Kimberlee B. Beckmen, and James Berner
- Subjects
Paper ,Nitrogen ,040301 veterinary sciences ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Animals, Wild ,Sulfides ,010501 environmental sciences ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,0403 veterinary science ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ethylamines ,Animals ,Cellulose ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Whole blood ,Carbon Isotopes ,Chromatography ,Nitrogen Isotopes ,Ecology ,Filter paper ,Stable isotope ratio ,Deer ,Sampling (statistics) ,Ruminants ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Contamination ,Carbon ,Bottle-Nosed Dolphin ,Blood ,chemistry - Abstract
We explored the use of filter paper soaked in whole blood for measuring carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) stable isotopes, often used in feeding ecology or diet studies, to better understand drivers of exposure to contaminants. Our results showed no statistically or biologically relevant differences in C and N stable isotope measures between our gold standard (whole blood with anticoagulant) and eluates from processed, blood-soaked filter paper. Our data supported the effectiveness of using filter paper for assessing C and N stable isotopes in blood to address feeding ecology and other uses. The ease of sampling and processing should allow blood-soaked filter paper to be used in sampling of live (e.g., captured, stranded) and lethally taken (e.g., hunter-killed) wild vertebrates.
- Published
- 2018
29. The native and exotic prey community of two invasive paper wasps (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) in New Zealand as determined by DNA barcoding
- Author
-
Matthew W. F. Howse, Rose A. McGruddy, Antoine Felden, James W. Baty, John Haywood, and Philip J. Lester
- Subjects
Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Social wasps are invasive in many regions around the world. In their new communities, introduced predators such as these wasps may be beneficial as consumers of exotic pests, but they will also consume native species. Here, we examined the diet of the exotic European paper wasp (Polistes dominula) and the closely related congener, Polistes chinensis, in a region of New Zealand where they co-occur. DNA barcoding was used to analyse their diet. The diet of both wasp species was largely Lepidopteran but other orders such as Hemiptera, Diptera and Coleoptera were also represented. Our analysis showed substantial site-to-site variation in diet. The two wasps differed significantly in their prey, although these differences appear to be driven by taxa identified from a small number of DNA reads in a small number of samples. Native and introduced fauna were represented in the diets of both wasps and included important agricultural pests. Of the 92 prey taxa able to be identified to species level, 81 were identified as exotic or introduced to New Zealand. The remaining 11 were species native to New Zealand. However, our estimates suggest over 50% of the prey DNA in the wasp diet is derived from native species. These wasps are abundant in some coastal and urban habitats, where they are likely to consume pest species as well as native species of conservation importance. The ecosystem services or costs and benefits provided by these invasive species are likely to be contingent on the prey communities and habitats they occupy.
- Published
- 2022
30. Sesuvium portulacastrum mitigates salinity induced by irrigation with paper and pulp mill effluent
- Author
-
J Ezra John, P. Thangavel, M. Maheswari, G Balasubramanian, T Kalaiselvi, E Kokiladevi, and A Ramesh
- Subjects
Ecology ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Computers in Earth Sciences ,Pollution ,Waste Management and Disposal - Published
- 2022
31. Ecological impact and spread of an invasive paper wasp in New Zealand (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
- Author
-
Matthew Howse
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Polistes chinensis ,Geography ,biology ,Habitat ,Range (biology) ,Ecology ,Biosecurity ,Introduced species ,biology.organism_classification ,Polistes dominula ,Invasive species - Abstract
Social wasps are considered among the most successful and impactful invasive species in the world. One species, Polistes dominula has spread from its native Mediterranean range to every continent except Antarctica. This wasp reached New Zealand in the last decade where it has established in the north of the South Island, however, reports of its presence are increasing throughout the country. Due to its recent arrival in New Zealand, little is known about where this species is likely to establish or what impacts it may have on local insect communities. In this thesis, I conducted two studies to investigate these questions, providing valuable information that may inform future management of this invasive species. In chapter 2, I used two bioclimatic modelling methods to predict areas of suitable habitat across four regions in the southern hemisphere. These models were informed by global temperature and precipitation data as well as global distribution occurrence data of P. dominula. These data were used to estimate conditions most highly correlated with the presence of this wasp. The models identified large areas across the target regions that were climatically suitable for the establishment of P. dominula. Many of these areas are not known to currently contain populations of this species, representing habitat potentially vulnerable to further invasion by P. dominula. Areas across South America, South Africa and Australia were predicted to be climatically suitable. In New Zealand, much of the North Island and eastern parts of the South Island were predicted to be suitable habitat for this wasp. These results suggest that P. dominula could potentially establish across more of the country and expand its invaded range. Information provided by these models may guide conservation and biosecurity management by highlighting key areas where prevention and mitigation should be prioritized. In chapter 3, I used molecular diet analysis to investigate the range of prey being utilised by P. dominula in New Zealand. Using DNA barcoding, larval gut contents of P. dominula and another closely related species, Polistes chinensis, were analysed to identify what species were present in the diet of both wasps. Butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera) were found to be the most highly represented order in both species’ diets. True bugs (Hemiptera) and flies (Diptera) were also abundant. Both wasps were shown to consume a range of native and introduced species including a number of agricultural pests. P. dominula was found to utilise a wider range of prey than P. chinensis. This more diverse prey range, combined with known differences in nesting behaviour, suggest that P. dominula may represent a more significant threat to invertebrate diversity than the already well-established P. chinensis. These results may inform conservation and biosecurity managers on which species are most at risk where this new invasive wasp becomes established. This thesis provides insights into the potential impacts of a new invasive species to New Zealand. Both chapters represent the first time that these methods have been used to study P. dominula. This work highlights the need for continued monitoring of wasp populations throughout New Zealand, especially in regions highlighted as vulnerable to P. dominula establishment. We also suggest the need to prioritise the conservation of ‘at-risk’ species in coastal and human-altered habitats. Increased public engagement through the citizen-science initiatives should be encouraged while more research into management and control methods is recommended.
- Published
- 2021
32. Regional variation in wood discoloration in paper birch trees
- Author
-
Julie Barrette, Isabelle Auger, Guillaume Giroud, Filip Havreljuk, and Emmanuel Duchateau
- Subjects
Global and Planetary Change ,Geography ,Marsh ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Regional variation ,Forestry - Abstract
Wood discoloration was investigated in 721 paper birch (Betula papyrifera Marsh.) trees from 146 sites across the managed forest of Quebec, Canada. Discoloration was present at breast height in 85% of trees, but its impact was limited in terms of tree basal area and volume, with proportions of 6.4% and 3.6%, respectively. These two measures were strongly correlated. Discoloration changed wood appearance but had no effect on microfibril angle and modulus of elasticity. Discolored wood was nevertheless denser, probably due to the accumulation of colored extractives. Predictive models were also developed and applied to 415 711 paper birch trees from 51 689 inventory plots across the province to study regional variation. Higher proportions of discolored basal area were obtained in the southwestern areas of the province where the climate is warmer and drier. In these areas, paper birch trees are larger and, likely, support bigger branches which can cause larger columns of discoloration when broken. Lower proportions were found in eastern regions where snowfall is more abundant. Smaller, more flexible branches in trees growing in these areas could explain this result. This study confirms the feasibility of large-scale mapping of wood discoloration in standing trees based on forest inventory and climate data.
- Published
- 2021
33. Queen succession conflict in the paper wasp Polistes dominula is mitigated by age-based convention
- Author
-
Alessandro Cini, Seirian Sumner, Benjamin A. Taylor, Max Reuter, and Rita Cervo
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Paper wasp ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Aggression ,Ecology ,Inheritance (genetic algorithm) ,Ecological succession ,biology.organism_classification ,CONTEST ,Polistes dominula ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Convention ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Polistes ,medicine.symptom ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Reproduction in cooperative animal groups is often dominated by one or a few individuals, with the remaining group members relegated to nonreproductive helping roles. This reproductive skew can evolve if helpers receive fitness benefits such as potential future inheritance of the breeding position, but the mechanisms by which inheritance is determined are not well resolved. Polistes paper wasps form highly reproductively skewed groups and inheritance of the breeding position is likely to play a key role in the maintenance of this social structure, making them excellent models for the processes by which simple societies are maintained. Reproductive succession is thought to be determined via an age-based convention in some Polistes species, but there is also evidence for contest-based succession systems in which the replacement queen uses physical aggression to overpower and thereby subordinate her nestmates. Here, we provide evidence that queen succession in colonies of the European paper wasp Polistes dominula is determined via convention rather than contest, with little disruption to the colony’s social functioning. We use queen removal experiments and fine-scale behavioral analyses to confirm that age is a strong predictor of succession, and that behavioral responses to queen removal are restricted to the oldest individuals rather than being experienced equally across the group. We provide the most comprehensive and detailed experimental analysis on the dynamics of breeder succession in a cooperatively breeding invertebrate to date, thereby shedding light on the mechanisms by which animal societies are able to maintain cohesion in the face of within-group conflict.
- Published
- 2020
34. Contrasting effects of dispersal network heterogeneity on ecosystem stability in rock-paper-scissors games
- Author
-
Guanming Guo, Zeyu Zhang, Helin Zhang, Daniel Bearup, and Jinbao Liao
- Subjects
Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Intransitive competition, typically represented by the classic rock-paper-scissors game, provides an endogenous mechanism promoting species coexistence. As well known, species dispersal and interaction in nature might occur on complex patch networks, with species interacting in diverse ways. However, the effects of different interaction modes, combined with spatial heterogeneity in patch connectivities, have not been well integrated into our general understanding of how stable coexistence emerges in cyclic competition. We thus incorporate network heterogeneity into the classic rock-paper-scissors game, in order to compare ecosystem stability under two typical modes of interaction: species compete to fill empty sites, and species seize each other’s colony sites. On lattice-structured regular networks, the two interaction modes produce similar stability patterns through forming conspecific clusters to reduce interspecific competition. However, for heterogeneous networks, the interaction modes have contrasting effects on ecosystem stability. Specifically, if species compete for colony sites, increasing network heterogeneity stabilizes competitive dynamics. When species compete to fill empty sites, an increase in network heterogeneity leads to larger population fluctuations and therefore a higher risk of stochastic extinctions, in stark contrast to current knowledge. Our findings strongly suggest that particular attention should be devoted to testing which mode of interaction is more appropriate for modeling a given system.
- Published
- 2022
35. Forty years of invasion research: more papers, more collaboration...bigger impact?
- Author
-
Sara E. Campbell and Daniel Simberloff
- Subjects
citations ,Ecology ,Insect Science ,Ecological Modeling ,biological invasions ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Plant Science ,scientific publication ,Aquatic Science ,coauthorship ,Bibiometrics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,collaboration - Abstract
Scientific research has become increasingly collaborative. We systematically reviewed invasion science literature published between 1980 and 2020 and catalogued in Clarivate Analytics Web of Science to examine patterns of authorship and the relationship between co-authorship and annual citation rates. This study analysed 27,234 publications across 1,218 journals and demonstrated that, as the number of publications in invasion science has exponentially increased, the number of authors publishing per year and the average number of authors per paper have also increased. The rising number of authors per paper coincides with a marked decline of single-authored publications; approximately 92% of publications in this dataset were multi-authored, with single-authored papers comprising less than 4% of all papers published in 2020. The increase in multi-authored papers is likely driven by multiple factors, including the widespread perception that collaboration increases scientific quality. The number of authors is positively correlated with perceived research impact; papers with two or more authors produce research that is more frequently cited compared to single-authored papers, and papers with five or more authors have annual citation rates almost double that of single-authored papers. The complexity, context-dependence and urgency of biological invasions contributed to the rise of the highly collaborative field of modern invasion science.
- Published
- 2022
36. Method and Device of Pyrolytic Processing of Pulp and Paper Industry’ Waste into High-Quality Synthesis Gas
- Author
-
V.A. Lavrenov, V.M. Zaitchenko, and K. O. Krysanova
- Subjects
Materials science ,Ecology ,Moisture ,Tar ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Raw material ,Pulp and paper industry ,Pollution ,Pilot plant ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Heat of combustion ,Charcoal ,Pyrolysis ,Water content - Abstract
Paper presents the results of the experimental investigations of the pulp and paper industry’ wood waste processing method into high-quality synthesis gas. The main characteristics of feedstock (moisture and ash content, elemental composition, higher and lower heating values, volatile matter and fixed carbon content) and synthesis gas (yield, chemical composition, heating value and tar content) in dependence of the processing parameters are described. Processing is carried out by the two-stage pyrolytic conversion method, combining pyrolysis and subsequent high-temperature cracking of volatiles in the charcoal fixed bed. The principal scheme and results of the thermotechnical characteristics calculation of the pilot plant capacity of 300 kg/h of raw material (mechanical mixture of wood chips and bark with a moisture content of 48 %) are presented. The obtained results confirm the high efficiency of the method as applied to the processing of this type of waste.
- Published
- 2018
37. Associative Learning of Food Odors by the European Paper Wasp, Polistes dominula Christ (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
- Author
-
Dane Elmquist and Peter J. Landolt
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Wasps ,Zoology ,Hymenoptera ,Biology ,Polistes dominula ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Random Allocation ,Animals ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Paper wasp ,Ecology ,Vespidae ,Chemotaxis ,Association Learning ,biology.organism_classification ,Attraction ,Associative learning ,010602 entomology ,Odor ,Food ,Insect Science ,Odorants ,Female ,Polistes - Abstract
We investigated associative learning of food odors by the European paper wasp Polistes dominula Christ (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) because of consistent low rates of attraction to food materials in laboratory assays. We hypothesized that wasps in nature exhibit nonspecific food-finding behavior until locating a suitable food, and then respond more strongly and specifically to odors associated with that food reward. Female P. dominula workers exhibited higher rates of attraction in a flight tunnel to piped odors of fermented fruit purees following previous experience with that puree, compared to wasps with no prior experience with the fermented fruits. Attraction behavior included upwind-oriented flight and casting within the odor plume, indicative of chemoanemotaxis. Synthetic chemicals representative of volatiles P. dominula may encounter in nature while foraging was also tested. Similar increases in attraction responses occurred following feeding experience with a sugar solution that included either 3-methyl-1-butanol or pear ester, but not eugenol. These experimental results support the hypothesis of associative learning of food odors in P. dominula. We discuss the ecological relevance of our results and suggest an alternative approach to trap paper wasps in pest situations utilizing learned chemical attractants.
- Published
- 2018
38. Evolution of research topics on the Tibetan Plateau environment and ecology from 2000 to 2020: a paper mining
- Author
-
Keke Chang, Junyu Tao, Cheng Fang, Jian Li, Wenwu Zhou, Xutong Wang, Beibei Yan, Dan Zeng, and Guanyi Chen
- Subjects
China ,Ecology ,Climate Change ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Review Article ,General Medicine ,Environment ,Tibet ,Bibliometric ,Pollution ,Lakes ,Germany ,Tibetan Plateau ,Environmental Chemistry ,Hotspots - Abstract
The Tibetan Plateau works as an important environmental and ecological barrier for the Asian continent. The researches on Tibetan environment and ecology are becoming extensive, but there is no systematic summary of research hotspots and trends in this field. Here, we analyzed 9180 publications retrieved from the WOS and CNKI during 2000 ~ 2020. The characteristics of publication, keywords with a 5-year interval and co-occurrence analysis were carried out so as to reveal the evolution and development trends of topics. The results show that articles increase dramatically since 2012. Except for common concerns like evolution, climate change, and precipitation, diversity was been studied more by Chinese scholars, while the USA, Germany, UK, and Australia researchers focused more on adaptability, basin western Tibet, lake, barley, and ore-related themes, respectively. Besides, China closely collaborated with the USA, Australia, and Germany in topics of evolution, climate change and degradation, precipitation, and diversity. The institutions located in Chinese different economic regions focused on different research keywords, such as vegetation, growth, trace elements, and geochemistry. The CAS contributed the most articles with 4254, showed advantages both in quantity and quality. Few articles were published by researchers affiliated to Free University of Berlin but with higher citations. It is the only one institute outside of China in the top 20. Main research hotspots include climate change, geology, and diversity. In future researches, ecological management and rehabilitation of mining area and tailings ponds, waste disposal, and changes of soil and water quality are worthy of attention and funding.
- Published
- 2022
39. Greenhouse gas emissions following land application of pulp and paper mill sludge on a clay loam soil
- Author
-
Patrick Faubert, Sylvie Bouchard, Maxime C. Paré, Claude Villeneuve, Noura Ziadi, Pascal Tremblay, Martin H. Chantigny, Philippe Rochette, Normand Bertrand, Catherine Lemay-Bélisle, and Simon Durocher
- Subjects
Ecology ,business.industry ,Crop yield ,food and beverages ,Sowing ,Paper mill ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,010501 environmental sciences ,engineering.material ,equipment and supplies ,01 natural sciences ,Agronomy ,Loam ,Soil water ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,engineering ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Fertilizer ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Organic fertilizer ,Water content ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Pulp and paper mill sludge (PPMS) is applied on agricultural soils as an organic fertilizer. Although it is well accepted that land application of PPMS has benefits for soils and crops, information on PPMS-induced soil N2O emissions is still limited. We assessed the effect of substituting mineral N fertilizer for PPMS on soil N2O emissions after a single application at planting on a clay loam cropped to wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) over two snow-free seasons in eastern Canada. Fertilization treatments consisted of 0, 25, 50, 75, and 100% of crop N requirements derived from N supplied by PPMS, the remaining N being supplied as urea-N. Soil CO2 and CH4 emissions were also measured and not affected by the fertilizer addition; a slight CH4 oxidation occurred. Area-based N2O emissions from PPMS fertilization (4.4 to 12.1 kg N2O-N ha−1) were similar or higher than from urea alone (3.4 and 6.2 kg N2O-N ha−1). Although crop yields were not affected by the type of fertilizer, yield-based N2O emissions, N uptake efficiency and N surplus (applied N minus aboveground N uptake in crop biomass) indicated that N availability from the mineral fertilizer was higher than from PPMS for the wheat crop. However, treatments with PPMS had fertilizer-induced N2O emission factors (FIEF, applied N lost as N2O-N; 0.8 to 3.1%) similar to urea alone (−0.3 and 4.5%). Although substituting urea-N with PPMS in agricultural fields might reduce N2O emissions under moderate soil moisture conditions, PPMS land application produced greater N2O emissions under high soil moisture conditions. Further research on a variety of agricultural practices is needed before concluding that including PPMS in the fertilization plan could result in a global GHG abatement as compared to mineral fertilizers under the cool climate of eastern Canada.
- Published
- 2017
40. Quality of the sticky rice paper affected by carboxymethyl cellulose supplementation
- Author
-
Nguyen Phuoc Minh
- Subjects
Ecology ,Plant Science ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Rice paper or wrapper was a common product in Asian cuisine. This product was usually processed from starch-based materials like wheat flour, rice flour, mung bean flour, cassava starch, and other ingredients. The mechanical attributes of rice paper greatly contributed to the customer's acceptance. In Vietnam, rice flour was used as the main material for rice paper making. Rice flour had poor resistance to shear force and low elastic gel-forming capability; therefore, reinforcement of mechanical properties was very important. Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), a polysaccharide with numerous functional properties, was used in the food industry to improve the physical strength of starch-based films. This research evaluated the incorporation of CMC in different proportions (0-2%) on the moisture content, strained intensity, elongation at disrupting, and fracture hardness of the edible glutinous rice paper. Results showed that CMC supplementation increased moisture content and strained intensity while decreasing elongation at disrupting and fracture hardness. 1.5% CMC was adequate to intensify the mechanical attributes of the edible sticky rice paper.
- Published
- 2022
41. Faunal diversity of paper wasp species and oriental hornet from tehsil Killa Saifullah of Zhob division, Pakistan
- Author
-
Farah Naz
- Subjects
Paper wasp ,Oriental hornet ,Geography ,biology ,Ecology ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Division (horticulture) ,Business and International Management ,biology.organism_classification ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common - Published
- 2020
42. A reflection on four impactful Ambio papers: The biotic perspective
- Author
-
Angela Wulff and Anne D. Bjorkman
- Subjects
Coral reefs ,Climate Change ,Oceans and Seas ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Climate change ,Arctic ecology ,Environmental Chemistry ,Hot spots ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Arctic Regions ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,Global warming ,Environmental resource management ,Temperature ,General Medicine ,Coral reef ,Alpine areas ,Arctic ,Perspective ,business ,Theme (narrative) - Abstract
Climate change represents one of the most pressing societal and scientific challenges of our time. While much of the current research on climate change focuses on future prediction, some of the strongest signals of warming can already be seen in Arctic and alpine areas, where temperatures are rising faster than the global average, and in the oceans, where the combination of rising temperatures and acidification due to increased CO2 concentrations has had catastrophic consequences for sensitive marine organisms inhabiting coral reefs. The scientific papers highlighted as part of this anniversary issue represent some of the most impactful advances in our understanding of the consequences of anthropogenic climate change. Here, we reflect on the legacy of these papers from the biotic perspective.
- Published
- 2021
43. Use of the Accumulated Waste of the Pulp and Paper Industry as a Component Raw Material for the Production of Cements
- Subjects
Cement ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Paper mill ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Raw material ,engineering.material ,Pulp and paper industry ,complex mixtures ,Pollution ,Incineration ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Sulfate ,business - Abstract
The problem of using the accumulated waste of the pulp and paper industry as a component raw material for the production of commodity products, namely cements, is considered. The investigated wastes are colloidal sludge-lignin sediments accumulated during the period of operation of Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill (Irkutsk Region) and Selenginskiy Central Control Center (the Republic of Buryatia). Experiments have been carried out on the production of sulfate-containing cement from the ash of sludge-lignin incineration. During the research of the developed mixture it was revealed that the obtained sample is corrosion-resistant in the sulfate medium, and also corresponds to cement of the M400 grade.
- Published
- 2017
44. The unlikely fate of a term paper
- Author
-
Frank Wania
- Subjects
Anniversaries and Special Events ,Term paper ,History ,Ecology ,Behind the Paper ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental ethics ,General Medicine ,Environmental Monitoring ,Theme (narrative) - Published
- 2021
45. Assessing economic impacts of internet adoption through reduced pulp and paper demand
- Author
-
Craig M.T. Johnston, Patrick Withey, and Thomas O. Ochuodho
- Subjects
040101 forestry ,Computable general equilibrium ,Global and Planetary Change ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Natural resource economics ,Pulp (paper) ,Forestry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,visual_art ,Newsprint ,engineering ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Economics ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,The Internet ,Economic impact analysis ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
We use a dynamic, global computable general equilibrium (CGE) model to capture the economic impacts of internet adoption, modeled through reduced demand in the newsprint and printing and writing paper (pulp and paper) industries. Global newsprint consumption is estimated to fall dramatically by 2030. We rely on estimates from another study that captures the change in global pulp and paper consumption using the global forest products model (GFPM), based on two scenarios: (i) full per capita internet adoption by 2100 and (ii) more rapid full internet adoption by 2050. We incorporate reductions in pulpwood consumption into a global multiregional dynamic CGE model to estimate economy-wide impacts in Canadian provinces, the United States, and the rest of the world. Results indicated that the year 2050 internet adoption scenario would result in a reduction in cumulative discounted gross domestic product (GDP) by as much as 17% in some regions of Canada, reduce GDP by 5.8% in the United States, and increase GDP by 3.3% in the rest of the world from 2006 to 2030. These findings highlight the costs of internet adoption, leaving net benefit analysis of adoption to future work.
- Published
- 2017
46. Regional productivity convergence: An analysis of the pulp and paper industries in U.S., Canada, Finland, and Sweden
- Author
-
Jean-Thomas Bernard and Jakir Hussain
- Subjects
Ecology ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous) ,Forestry ,International trade ,engineering.material ,Agricultural economics ,0502 economics and business ,engineering ,Economics ,050207 economics ,business ,National data ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
In this paper we investigate the presence of productivity convergence in eight regional pulp and paper industries of U.S. and Canada over the period of 1971–2005. Expectation of productivity convergence in the pulp and paper industries of Canadian provinces and of the states of its southern neighbour is high since they are trading partners with fairly high level of exchanges in both pulp and paper products. Moreover, they share a common production technology that changed very little over the last century. We supplement the North-American regional data with national data for two Nordic countries, Finland and Sweden, which provides a scope to compare the productivity performances of four leading players in global pulp and paper industry. We find evidence in favour of the catch-up hypothesis among the regional pulp and paper industries of U.S. and Canada in our sample. The growth performance is at the advantage of Canadian provinces relative to their U.S. counterparts. The two Nordic countries, that had the lowest productivity levels in 1971, erased most of the gap and in some cases moved ahead of their North-American counterparts.
- Published
- 2017
47. The Canada–United States productivity puzzle: regional evidence of the pulp and paper industry, 1971–2005
- Author
-
Jean-Thomas Bernard and Jakir Hussain
- Subjects
040101 forestry ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,05 social sciences ,Forestry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Pulp and paper industry ,Geography ,Productivity gap ,0502 economics and business ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,050207 economics ,Productivity ,Total factor productivity - Abstract
We analyze the total factor productivity (TFP) of the pulp and paper industry in three Canadian provinces (British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec) and in three United States (US) states that are contiguously located south of the border (Washington, Illinois, and Maine) over the period of 1971 to 2005. We find that the industry in the three Canadian provinces had much higher TFP growth rates in the era following the Free-Trade Agreement (FTA) signed in 1988. In terms of productivity level, this relative TFP surge allowed the industry in Ontario and British Columbia to move ahead of Illinois and Washington, respectively; however, Quebec trailed further Maine, which is the overall leader in the sample. Our results in this particular case reveal that the Canadian pulp and paper industry did not contribute to the overall Canada–US productivity gap.
- Published
- 2017
48. Review Paper on Surface Water-Quality Assessment of Chitravati River after the Establishment of Check-Dam in Puttaparthi, Andhra Pradesh
- Author
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Kalathur Mohan Ganesh, Sai Sathish Ramamurthy, Tanu Jindal, Kartikeya Shukla, and Neebir Banerjee
- Subjects
Small town ,Ecology ,Ephemeral key ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,010501 environmental sciences ,Key features ,01 natural sciences ,Pollution ,River water ,Geography ,Surface water quality ,Water quality ,Water pollution ,Water resource management ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Check dam - Abstract
Puttaparthi is a birthplace of Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba and is a small town situated in the district of Anantapur, in Andhra Pradesh. Chitravathi River is the main water-body in Puttaparthi. The river remained dry for many years. Only in the recent years, rainfall events fed water to the river. Last year in 2019 a check-dam was also constructed in Puttaparthi due to which the river water has been stagnant. This review paper aims to assess the surface water quality of the Chitravati River in Puttaparthi after the establishment of the check-dam. In this regard, literature reviews were performed and the paragraphs in the literature reviews were arranged as per three major themes, which are: 1. check-dams, 2. water-quality assessment and monitoring, and 3. non-perennial river systems. By examining these three themes through the literature reviews, key inferences were made. For instance, it can be understood that the check-dam in Puttaparthi is an important water-storage structure, which is likely to have both positive and negative impacts upon the nearby region. Secondly, in order to examine water-bodies like the Chitravati River in Puttaparthi, we have to perform water quality assessment and monitoring. To perform water quality assessment and monitoring for the Chitravati River in Puttaparthi; we have to use important tools like the Water Quality Index (WQI), Water Pollution Index (WPI), and Water Poverty Index (WPI). Thirdly, non-perennial river systems such as intermittent rivers, ephemeral rivers and their key features have been stressed upon by several readings. These are river systems where a river ceases to flow for some months or for several yearas. The Chitravati River in Puttaparthi can be appropriately classified as a non-perennial river system and as an intermittent river. Finally, this review paper concludes through a personal reflection, which stresses upon studying the Chitravati River in Puttaparthi and how the literature reviews will help in this regard.
- Published
- 2020
49. COMMENTS ON 'STRATIGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF SHALLOW-WATER BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA FROM THE LOWER CRETACEOUS TAFT FORMATION, CENTRAL IRAN (YAZD BLOCK), WITH EVIDENCE FOR THE IMPORTANCE OF HIATUSES' BY GHEIASVAND, M. ET AL. [ANNALES DE PALÉONTOLOGIE, 2020, 154 (3), 102399] AND RELATED PAPERS
- Author
-
Felix Schlagintweit
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Atmospheric Science ,Ecology ,biology ,Distribution (number theory) ,Stratigraphy ,Paleontology ,Geology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Cretaceous ,Foraminifera ,Waves and shallow water ,Benthic zone ,Block (telecommunications) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Gheiasvand et al. (2020) use the two larger benthic foraminifera species Simplorbitolina manasi Ciry & Rat and Mesorbitolina parva (Douglass) (Orbitolinidae) as upper Aptian “potential index fossils” for parts of the Taft Formation in Central Iran. This age assignment is accompanied by changes to well-established orbitolinid biozona-tions (e.g. occurrence of Praeorbitolina in the late Aptian) with far-reaching implications. These data were also used in a later “multidisciplinary study” (Gheiasvand et al., 2021) for isotopic correlations (e.g., location of OAE`s), delimitation of palaeobiogeographic faunal provinces and related migration patterns. It is shown herein that the taxa identified as S. manasi and M. parva belong to Iraqia simplex Henson and Palorbitolina lenticularis (Blumenbach) respectively documenting a lower and not an upper Aptian age. This revised age and the different taxononomic inventory do not question all results obtained by Gheiasvand et al. (2020, 2021), but provide a revised basis interpretation.
- Published
- 2021
50. A Novel Method for Sampling and Long-Term Monitoring of Microbes That Uses Stickers of Plain Paper
- Author
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Susanne Fister, Dagmar Schoder, Patrick Mester, Anna Kristina Witte, Martin Bobal, and Peter Rossmanith
- Subjects
Paper ,Computer science ,Pooling ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Specimen Handling ,03 medical and health sciences ,Listeria monocytogenes ,Recovery rate ,Methods ,medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Ecology ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Sampling (statistics) ,Food safety ,Sampling system ,Long term monitoring ,Food Microbiology ,Food processing ,Biochemical engineering ,business ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Detection of pathogens is crucial in food production areas. While it is well established, swabbing as a state-of-the-art sampling method offers several drawbacks with respect to yield, standardization, overall handling, and long-term monitoring. This led us to develop and evaluate a method that is easier to use at a lower cost and that should be at least as sensitive. After evaluating sundry promising materials, we tested text-marking paper stickers for their suitability to take up and release Listeria monocytogenes with their nonsticky paper side over a 14-day time period using quantitative PCR. The recovery rate was similar to that in previous studies using conventional swabs, and we also confirmed the feasibility of pooling besides resilience to cleansing and disinfection. In a proof-of-concept experiment that sampled several locations, such as door handles, the occurrences of L. monocytogenes and Escherichia coli were determined. The results suggest that the presented sticker system might offer a promising cost-effective alternative sampling system with improved handling characteristics. IMPORTANCE As a ubiquitous bacterium, Listeria monocytogenes has a propensity to enter food production areas inadvertently via fomites such as door handles and switches. While the bacterium might not be in direct contact with the food products, knowing the microbial status of the surroundings is essential for risk assessment. Our investigation into a novel quantitative PCR (qPCR)-based sampling system with the highest sensitivity and ability to monitor over long periods of time, yet based on paper, proved to be cost-effective and reasonably convenient to handle.
- Published
- 2019
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