62 results on '"Bell Jn"'
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2. Highlights from the 7th International Family Nursing Conference: editor's note.
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Bell JN
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- 2005
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3. PLASMAPHERESIS AND IMMUNOSTIMULATION
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P.D.J. Holland, Bell Jn, R.D Thornes, and O. Browne
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,MEDLINE ,Neoplasms therapy ,Plasmapheresis ,General Medicine ,Immunotherapy ,business ,Dermatology - Published
- 1976
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4. TRANSFER FACTOR IN HODGKIN'S DISEASE
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Braeman J, R.D Thornes, O. Browne, and Bell Jn
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hodgkin s ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Disease ,business - Published
- 1975
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5. SARS-CoV-2 infection and recovery in children: Distinct T cell responses in MIS-C compared to COVID-19.
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Rybkina K, Bell JN, Bradley MC, Wohlbold T, Scafuro M, Meng W, Korenberg RC, Davis-Porada J, Anderson BR, Weller RJ, Milner JD, Moscona A, Porotto M, Luning Prak ET, Pethe K, Connors TJ, and Farber DL
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, SARS-CoV-2, Inflammation, Severity of Illness Index, COVID-19
- Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 infection for most children results in mild or minimal symptoms, though in rare cases severe disease can develop, including a multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) with myocarditis. Here, we present longitudinal profiling of immune responses during acute disease and following recovery in children who developed MIS-C, relative to children who experienced more typical symptoms of COVID-19. T cells in acute MIS-C exhibited transient signatures of activation, inflammation, and tissue residency which correlated with cardiac disease severity, while T cells in acute COVID-19 upregulated markers of follicular helper T cells for promoting antibody production. The resultant memory immune response in recovery showed increased frequencies of virus-specific memory T cells with pro-inflammatory functions in children with prior MIS-C compared to COVID-19 while both cohorts generated comparable antibody responses. Together our results reveal distinct effector and memory T cell responses in pediatric SARS-CoV-2 infection delineated by clinical syndrome, and a potential role for tissue-derived T cells in the immune pathology of systemic disease., (© 2023 Rybkina et al.)
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- 2023
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6. Inhibiting Human Parainfluenza Virus Infection by Preactivating the Cell Entry Mechanism.
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Bottom-Tanzer SF, Rybkina K, Bell JN, Alabi CA, Mathieu C, Lu M, Biswas S, Vasquez M, Porotto M, Melero JA, Más V, and Moscona A
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- Animals, Antibodies, Monoclonal immunology, Antibodies, Monoclonal isolation & purification, Antibodies, Viral immunology, Antibodies, Viral isolation & purification, Antiviral Agents chemical synthesis, Cell Line, Chlorocebus aethiops, Humans, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Viral Fusion Proteins chemistry, Viral Fusion Proteins immunology, Viral Plaque Assay, Antiviral Agents pharmacology, HN Protein metabolism, Parainfluenza Virus 3, Human drug effects, Parainfluenza Virus 3, Human physiology, Viral Fusion Proteins metabolism, Virus Internalization drug effects
- Abstract
Paramyxoviruses, specifically, the childhood pathogen human parainfluenza virus type 3, are internalized into host cells following fusion between the viral and target cell membranes. The receptor binding protein, hemagglutinin (HA)-neuraminidase (HN), and the fusion protein (F) facilitate viral fusion and entry into the cell through a coordinated process involving HN activation by receptor binding, which triggers conformational changes in the F protein to activate it to reach its fusion-competent state. Interfering with this process through premature activation of the F protein has been shown to be an effective antiviral strategy in vitro. Conformational changes in the F protein leading to adoption of the postfusion form of the protein-prior to receptor engagement of HN at the host cell membrane-render the virus noninfectious. We previously identified a small compound (CSC11) that implements this antiviral strategy through an interaction with HN, causing HN to activate F in an untimely process. To assess the functionality of such compounds, it is necessary to verify that the postfusion state of F has been achieved. As demonstrated by Melero and colleagues, soluble forms of the recombinant postfusion pneumovirus F proteins and of their six helix bundle (6HB) motifs can be used to generate postfusion-specific antibodies. We produced novel anti-HPIV3 F conformation-specific antibodies that can be used to assess the functionality of compounds designed to induce F activation. In this study, using systematic chemical modifications of CSC11, we synthesized a more potent derivative of this compound, CM9. Much like CSC11, CM9 causes premature triggering of the F protein through an interaction with HN prior to receptor engagement, thereby preventing fusion and subsequent infection. In addition to validating the potency of CM9 using plaque reduction, fusion inhibition, and binding avidity assays, we confirmed the transition to a postfusion conformation of F in the presence of CM9 using our novel anti-HPIV3 conformation-specific antibodies. We present both CM9 and these newly characterized postfusion antibodies as novel tools to explore and develop antiviral approaches. In turn, these advances in both our molecular toolset and our understanding of HN-F interaction will support development of more-effective antivirals. Combining the findings described here with our recently described physiologically relevant ex vivo system, we have the potential to inform the development of therapeutics to block viral infection. IMPORTANCE Paramyxoviruses, including human parainfluenza virus type 3, are internalized into host cells by fusion between viral and target cell membranes. The receptor binding protein, hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN), and the fusion protein (F) facilitate viral fusion and entry into cells through a process involving HN activation by receptor binding, which triggers conformational changes in F to activate it to reach its fusion-competent state. Interfering with this process through premature activation of the F protein may be an effective antiviral strategy in vitro We identified and optimized small compounds that implement this antiviral strategy through an interaction with HN, causing HN to activate F in an untimely fashion. To address that mechanism, we produced novel anti-HPIV3 F conformation-specific antibodies that can be used to assess the functionality of compounds designed to induce F activation. Both the novel antiviral compounds that we present and these newly characterized postfusion antibodies are novel tools for the exploration and development of antiviral approaches., (Copyright © 2019 Bottom-Tanzer et al.)
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- 2019
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7. Influence of agro-ecosystem modeling approach on the greenhouse gas profiles of wheat-derived biopolymer products.
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Guo M, Li C, Bell JN, and Murphy RJ
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- Air Pollution analysis, Ammonia analysis, Carbon Dioxide analysis, Climate Change, Computer Simulation, Denitrification, Nitric Oxide analysis, Nitrous Oxide analysis, Seasons, Uncertainty, Agriculture, Biopolymers chemistry, Ecosystem, Gases analysis, Greenhouse Effect, Models, Chemical, Triticum chemistry
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An approach is presented to include a wider range of factors involved in the nitrogen and carbon cycles in agro-ecosystems than is typical of many Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs) of agriculture-based products. This use results from the process-oriented Denitrification-Decomposition (DNDC, modified version) model. Here we evaluate the effects of using site-specific N(2)O emissions derived from the DNDC model rather than the values derived from the commonly used Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Tier 1 empirical model on the results of whole life cycle greenhouse gas (GHG) profiles for wheat-based biopolymer products. Statistical methods were also used to analyze the quality of the DNDC and IPCC outputs and to characterize the uncertainty in the GHG results. The results confirm that the GHG profiles of the wheat-derived biopolymer products are sensitive to how the agricultural system is modeled and uncertainty analyses indicate that DNDC is preferred over the IPCC Tier 1 approach for site-specific LCAs. The former allows inclusion of a wider range of important site-specific agricultural parameters in the LCA, provides for improved quality in the LCA data, and permits better calibration of uncertainty in the LCA inventory.
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- 2012
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8. Effects of vehicle exhaust emissions on urban wild plant species.
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Bell JN, Honour SL, and Power SA
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- Air Pollutants analysis, Air Pollution statistics & numerical data, Biodiversity, Environmental Monitoring, Nitric Oxide analysis, Nitric Oxide toxicity, Nitrogen Dioxide analysis, Nitrogen Dioxide toxicity, Plant Development, Plants classification, Vehicle Emissions analysis, Air Pollutants toxicity, Cities, Plants drug effects, Vehicle Emissions toxicity
- Abstract
Very few investigations have examined the direct impacts of vehicle exhausts on plants and attempted to separate out the key pollutants responsible for observed effects. This paper describes a multi-phase investigation into this topic, using 12 herbaceous species typical of urban areas and representing different functional groups. Fumigations were conducted in solardomes with diesel exhaust pollutants at concentrations designed to simulate those close to a major highway in inner London. A wide range of effects were detected, including growth stimulation and inhibition, changes in gas exchange and premature leaf senescence. This was complemented by controlled fumigations with NO, NO(2) and their mixture, as well as a transect study away from a busy inner London road. All evidence suggested that NO(x) was the key phytotoxic component of exhaust emissions, and highlights the potential for detrimental effects of vehicle emissions on urban ecosystems., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2011
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9. Open Air Laboratories (OPAL): a community-driven research programme.
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Davies L, Bell JN, Bone J, Head M, Hill L, Howard C, Hobbs SJ, Jones DT, Power SA, Rose N, Ryder C, Seed L, Stevens G, Toumi R, Voulvoulis N, and White PC
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- Biodiversity, England, Environmental Pollutants analysis, Environmental Pollution statistics & numerical data, Humans, Community Participation, Environmental Monitoring methods, Government Programs
- Abstract
OPAL is an English national programme that takes scientists into the community to investigate environmental issues. Biological monitoring plays a pivotal role covering topics of: i) soil and earthworms; ii) air, lichens and tar spot on sycamore; iii) water and aquatic invertebrates; iv) biodiversity and hedgerows; v) climate, clouds and thermal comfort. Each survey has been developed by an inter-disciplinary team and tested by voluntary, statutory and community sectors. Data are submitted via the web and instantly mapped. Preliminary results are presented, together with a discussion on data quality and uncertainty. Communities also investigate local pollution issues, ranging from nitrogen deposition on heathlands to traffic emissions on roadside vegetation. Over 200,000 people have participated so far, including over 1000 schools and 1000 voluntary groups. Benefits include a substantial, growing database on biodiversity and habitat condition, much from previously unsampled sites particularly in urban areas, and a more engaged public., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2011
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10. Climate change health assessment: a novel approach for Alaska Native communities.
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Brubaker MY, Bell JN, Berner JE, and Warren JA
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- Alaska, Health Surveys, Humans, Climate Change, Health Status, Inuit
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Objectives: Develop a process for assessing climate change impacts on public health that identifies climate-health vulnerabilities and mechanisms and encourages adaptation., Study Design: Multi-stakeholder, participatory, qualitative research., Methods: A Climate Change Health Assessment (CCHA) was developed that involved 4 steps: (1) scoping to describe local conditions and engage stakeholders; (2) surveying to collect descriptive and quantitative data; (3) analysis to evaluate the data; and (4) planning to communicate findings and explore appropriate actions with community members. The health effects related to extreme weather, thinning ice, erosion, flooding, thawing permafrost and changing conditions of water and food resources were considered., Results: The CCHA process was developed and performed in north-west Arctic villages. Refinement of the process took place in Point Hope, a coastal Inupiat village that practices whaling and a variety of other traditional subsistence harvest practices. Local observers identified climate change impacts that resulted in damaged health infrastructure, compromised food and water security and increased risk of injury. Priority health issues included thawing traditional ice cellars, diminished quality of the community water source and increased safety issues related to sea ice change. The CCHA increased awareness about health vulnerability and encouraged informed planning and decision-making., Conclusion: A community-scale assessment process guided by observation-based data can identify climate health impacts, raise awareness and encourage adaptive actions, thereby improving the response capacity of communities vulnerable to climate change.
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- 2011
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11. The impact of tropospheric ozone pollution on trial plot winter wheat yields in Great Britain - an econometric approach.
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Kaliakatsou E, Bell JN, Thirtle C, Rose D, and Power SA
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- Air Pollutants economics, Biomass, Ozone economics, Triticum economics, United Kingdom, Air Pollutants pharmacology, Air Pollution economics, Ozone pharmacology, Triticum drug effects, Triticum growth & development
- Abstract
Numerous experiments have demonstrated reductions in the yields of cereal crops due to tropospheric O(3), with losses of up to 25%. However, the only British econometric study on O(3) impacts on winter wheat yields, found that a 10% increase in AOT40 would decrease yields by only 0.23%. An attempt is made here to reconcile these observations by developing AOT40 maps for Great Britain and matching levels with a large number of standardised trial plot wheat yields from many sites over a 13-year period. Panel estimates (repeated measures on the same plots with time) show a 0.54% decrease in yields and it is hypothesised that plant breeders may have inadvertently selected for O(3) tolerance in wheat. Some support for this is provided by fumigations of cultivars of differing introduction dates. A case is made for the use of econometric as well as experimental studies in prediction of air pollution induced crop loss., (Copyright 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2010
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12. Responses of herbaceous plants to urban air pollution: effects on growth, phenology and leaf surface characteristics.
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Honour SL, Bell JN, Ashenden TW, Cape JN, and Power SA
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- Cities, Ecology methods, Plant Leaves anatomy & histology, Plant Leaves growth & development, Plant Transpiration, Plants anatomy & histology, Air Pollutants toxicity, Nitrogen Oxides toxicity, Plant Development, Vehicle Emissions toxicity
- Abstract
Vehicle exhaust emissions are a dominant feature of urban environments and are widely believed to have detrimental effects on plants. The effects of diesel exhaust emissions on 12 herbaceous species were studied with respect to growth, flower development, leaf senescence and leaf surface wax characteristics. A diesel generator was used to produce concentrations of nitrogen oxides (NO(x)) representative of urban conditions, in solardome chambers. Annual mean NO(x) concentrations ranged from 77 nl l(-l) to 98 nl l(-1), with NO:NO(2) ratios of 1.4-2.2, providing a good experimental simulation of polluted roadside environments. Pollutant exposure resulted in species-specific changes in growth and phenology, with a consistent trend for accelerated senescence and delayed flowering. Leaf surface characteristics were also affected; contact angle measurements indicated changes in surface wax structure following pollutant exposure. The study demonstrated clearly the potential for realistic levels of vehicle exhaust pollution to have direct adverse effects on urban vegetation.
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- 2009
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13. Calculating human exposure to endocrine disrupting pesticides via agricultural and non-agricultural exposure routes.
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McKinlay R, Plant JA, Bell JN, and Voulvoulis N
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- Agriculture, Humans, Endocrine Disruptors, Environmental Exposure, Environmental Pollutants, Models, Theoretical, Pesticides
- Abstract
Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs) are of increasing concern because of their potential impacts on the environment, wildlife and human health. Pesticides and some pesticide metabolites are an important group of EDC, and exposure to them is a poorly quantified source of human and environmental exposure to such chemicals generally. Models for estimating human exposure to Endocrine Disrupting (ED) pesticides are an important risk management tool. Probabilistic models are now being used in addition to deterministic ones in all areas of risk assessment. These can provide more realistic exposure estimates, because they are better able to deal with variation and uncertainty more effectively and better inform risk management decisions. Deterministic models are still used and are of great value where exposure data are scarce. Models or groups of models that provide holistic human ED pesticide exposure estimates are required if the risk posed to humans by ED pesticides is to be better assessed. Much more research is needed to quantify different exposure routes such as exposure from agricultural spray drift and the medical use of pesticides to develop such models. Most available probabilistic models of human exposure were developed in the USA and require modification for use elsewhere. In particular, datasets equivalent to those used to create and apply the American models are required. This paper examines the known routes of human pesticide exposure with particular reference to ED pesticides and their quantification as unlike pesticides generally, many ED pesticides are harmful at very low doses, especially if exposure occurs during sensitive stages of development, producing effects that may not manifest for many years or that affect descendants via epigenetic changes. It also summarises available deterministic and probabilistic models commonly used to calculate human exposure. The main requirement if such models are to be used in the UK is more quantitative data on the sources and pathways of human ED pesticide exposure.
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- 2008
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14. Tricyclic antidepressant immunoassays may reflect quetiapine adherence.
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Cerullo MA, Albertz AA, Bell JN, Anthenelli RM, and Delbello MP
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- Adolescent, Fructose therapeutic use, Humans, Immunoassay, Quetiapine Fumarate, Topiramate, Antidepressive Agents, Tricyclic therapeutic use, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Bipolar Disorder drug therapy, Bipolar Disorder epidemiology, Dibenzothiazepines therapeutic use, Fructose analogs & derivatives, Marijuana Abuse epidemiology, Patient Compliance statistics & numerical data
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- 2008
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15. Endocrine disrupting pesticides: implications for risk assessment.
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McKinlay R, Plant JA, Bell JN, and Voulvoulis N
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- Animals, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Humans, Receptors, Cell Surface metabolism, Risk Assessment, Endocrine Disruptors toxicity, Pesticides toxicity
- Abstract
Endocrine disrupting (ED) chemicals are compounds that alter the normal functioning of the endocrine system, potentially causing disease or deformity in organisms and their offspring. Pesticides are used widely to kill unwanted organisms in crops, public areas, homes and gardens and medicinally to kill parasites. Many are proven or suspected to be EDs. Ancient physiological similarities between different vertebrate groups suggest that disorders observed in wildlife may indicate risks to humans. This makes accurate risk assessment and effective legislation difficult. In this paper, the hazardous properties of pesticides which are known to have ED properties are reviewed in order to assess the implications for risk assessment. As well as data on sources of exposure in the United Kingdom (UK) an assessment of the evidence on the health effects of ED pesticides is also included. In total, 127 have been identified from the literature and their effects and modes of action are listed in this paper. Using the UK as a case study, the types and quantities of pesticides used, and their methods of application are assessed, along with their potential pathways to humans. In the UK reliable data are available only for agricultural use, so non-agricultural routes of pesticide exposure have been poorly quantified. The exposure of people resident in or visiting rural areas could also have been grossly under-estimated. Material links between ED pesticide use and specific illnesses or deformities are complicated by the multifactorial nature of disease, which can be affected by factors such as diet. Despite these difficulties, a large body of evidence has accumulated linking specific conditions to ED pesticides in wildlife and humans. A more precautionary approach to the use of ED pesticides, especially for non-essential purposes is proposed.
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- 2008
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16. Phytotoxic risk assessment of ambient air pollution on agricultural crops in Selangor State, Malaysia.
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Ishii S, Bell JN, and Marshall FM
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- Air Movements, Air Pollutants toxicity, Environmental Exposure, Environmental Monitoring methods, Malaysia, Nitrogen Dioxide toxicity, Oxidants, Photochemical toxicity, Ozone toxicity, Risk Assessment methods, Sulfur Dioxide toxicity, Air Pollution adverse effects, Crops, Agricultural growth & development, Industrial Waste
- Abstract
The phytotoxic risk of ambient air pollution to local vegetation was assessed in Selangor State, Malaysia. The AOT40 value was calculated by means of the continuously monitored daily maximum concentration and the local diurnal pattern of O3. Together with minor risks associated with the levels of NO2 and SO2, the study found that the monthly AOT40 values in these peri-urban sites were consistently over 1.0 ppm.h, which is well in exceedance of the given European critical level. Linking the O3 level to actual agricultural crop production in Selangor State also indicated that the extent of yield losses could have ranged from 1.6 to 5.0% (by weight) in 2000. Despite a number of uncertainties, the study showed a simple but useful methodological framework for phytotoxic risk assessment with a limited data set, which could contribute to appropriate policy discussion and countermeasures in countries under similar conditions.
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- 2007
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17. China steps up its efforts in research and development to combat environmental pollution.
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Zhu YG, Wang L, Wang ZJ, Christie P, and Bell JN
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- China, Government Programs economics, Environmental Pollution prevention & control, Research economics
- Published
- 2007
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18. Effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (Glomus caledonium) on the accumulation and metabolism of atrazine in maize (Zea mays L.) and atrazine dissipation in soil.
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Huang H, Zhang S, Shan XQ, Chen BD, Zhu YG, and Bell JN
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- Atrazine analogs & derivatives, Atrazine analysis, Atrazine metabolism, Biomass, Plant Roots metabolism, Plant Shoots metabolism, Soil Pollutants analysis, Triazines analysis, Atrazine pharmacokinetics, Herbicides analysis, Mycorrhizae metabolism, Soil analysis, Zea mays metabolism
- Abstract
Effects of an arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus (Glomus caledonium) on accumulation and metabolism of atrazine in maize grown in soil contaminated with different concentrations of atrazine were investigated in a series of pot experiments. Roots of mycorrhizal plants accumulated more atrazine than non-mycorrhizal roots. In contrast, atrazine accumulation in shoot decreased in mycorrhizal compared with non-mycorrhizal plants. No atrazine derivatives were detected in the soil, either with or without mycorrhizal colonization. However, atrazine metabolites, deethylatrazine (DEA) and deisopropylatrazine (DIA), were detected in plant roots and the AM colonization enhanced the metabolism. After plant harvest atrazine concentrations decreased markedly in the soils compared to the initial concentrations. The decreases were the most in rhizosphere soil and then near-rhizosphere soil and the least in bulk soil. Mycorrhizal treatment enhanced atrazine dissipation in the near-rhizosphere and bulk soils irrespective of atrazine application rates.
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- 2007
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19. Lichen and bryophyte distribution on oak in London in relation to air pollution and bark acidity.
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Larsen RS, Bell JN, James PW, Chimonides PJ, Rumsey FJ, Tremper A, and Purvis OW
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- Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring methods, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, London, Nitrogen Oxides analysis, Air Pollution adverse effects, Bryophyta physiology, Lichens physiology, Plant Bark physiology, Quercus parasitology
- Abstract
Epiphytic lichen and bryophyte distribution and frequency were investigated on the trunks of 145 young oak trees throughout London and surrounding counties, and compared with pollution levels and bark pH. Sixty-four lichen and four bryophyte species were recorded. Three major zones were identified: (i) two central regions with a few lichens, bryophytes absent; (ii) a surrounding region with a more diverse flora including a high cover of nitrophyte lichens; and (iii) an outer region, characterised by species absent from central London, including acidophytes. Nineteen species were correlated with nitrogen oxides and 16 with bark pH, suggesting that transport-related pollution and bark acidity influence lichen and bryophyte distribution in London today. Lichens and bryophytes are responding to factors that influence human and environmental health in London. Biomonitoring therefore has a practical role to assess the effects of measures to improve London's air quality.
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- 2007
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20. Diversity and sensitivity of epiphytes to oxides of nitrogen in London.
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Davies L, Bates JW, Bell JN, James PW, and Purvis OW
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- Biodiversity, Bryophyta physiology, Environmental Monitoring methods, Fungi physiology, London, Nitric Oxide toxicity, Nitrogen Dioxide toxicity, Particulate Matter toxicity, Rain, Temperature, Trees parasitology, Urbanization, Air Pollutants toxicity, Lichens physiology, Nitrogen Oxides toxicity
- Abstract
This study investigated the distribution and diversity of epiphytes in London in relation to NO(x) using fine-scale atmospheric dispersion modelling. The survey recorded over 3000 epiphytes from 334 trees (Fraxinus excelsior) representing 74 lichen, 14 moss, 7 fungal and 3 algal species. There was a significant inverse relationship between diversity and NO(x). Diversity declined where NO(x) exceeded 70 microg m(-3) and NO2 exceeded 40 microg m(-3), suggesting a phytotoxic effect. However, there was a significant positive relationship between NO(x) and lichen abundance due to the ubiquitous distribution of pollution tolerant species, mainly associated with eutrophication. A scale of lichen sensitivity to NO(x) has been derived.
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- 2007
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21. Ecological lessons from the Chernobyl accident.
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Bell JN and Shaw G
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- Animals, Crops, Agricultural, Ecology, Forecasting, Geological Phenomena, Geology, Humans, Iodine Radioisotopes, Sheep, United Kingdom, Cesium Radioisotopes, Chernobyl Nuclear Accident, Food Contamination, Radioactive, Radioactive Fallout, Soil Pollutants, Radioactive
- Abstract
The Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986 not only caused serious ecological problems in both the Ukraine and Belarus, which continue to the present day, but also contaminated a large part of the higher latitudes of the northern hemisphere. In this paper an overview is given of the latter problems in upland UK, where ecological problems still remain some 17 years after initial contamination. Following deposition of radiocaesium and radioiodine in May 1986, measurements of radioactivity in grass and soil indicated a rapidly declining problem as the radioiodine decayed and the radiocaesium became immobilised by attachment to clay particles. However, these studies, as well as the advice received by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, were based on lowland agricultural soils, with high clay and low organic matter contents. The behaviour of radiocaesium in upland UK turned out to be dominated by high and persistent levels of mobility and bioavailability. This resulted in the free passage of radiocaesium through the food chain and into sheep. Consequently the Ministry banned the sale and movement of sheep over large areas of upland Britain, with bans remaining on some farms to the present day. Present day predictions suggest that these bans will continue in some cases for some years to come. The causes of radiocaesium mobility in upland areas have subsequently been the subject of intense investigation centred around vegetation and, in particular, soil characteristics. Soil types were identified which were particularly vulnerable in this respect and, where these coincided with high levels of deposition, sheep bans tended to be imposed. While much of the earlier work suggested that a low clay content was the main reason for continuing mobility, a very high organic matter content is now also believed to play a major role, this being a characteristic of wet and acidic upland UK soils. The overall message from this affair is the importance of a fundamental understanding of biogeochemical pathways in different ecosystems when attempting to predict the impacts of large-scale contamination.
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- 2005
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22. Radionuclide transport above a near-surface water table: IV. Soil migration and crop uptake of chlorine-36 and technetium-99, 1990 to 1993.
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Shaw G, Wadey P, and Bell JN
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- Biological Availability, Environmental Monitoring, Plant Roots, Tissue Distribution, Chlorine analysis, Chlorine pharmacokinetics, Radioisotopes analysis, Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics, Soil Pollutants, Radioactive analysis, Soil Pollutants, Radioactive pharmacokinetics, Technetium analysis, Technetium pharmacokinetics, Tritium chemistry, Water Pollutants, Radioactive analysis, Water Pollutants, Radioactive pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Vertical distributions of (36)Cl and (99)Tc are presented from deep and shallow lysimeters above artificially controlled water tables for a 4-yr experiment from 1990 to 1993. Activity concentration profiles were all measured in late summer when a winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Pastiche) crop was harvested. After harvest, activity concentrations in different organs of the crop were determined and crop uptake quantified as both an inventory ratio (IR) and a transfer factor (TF(w)), weighted to account for differential root and radionuclide distributions within the soil profile. Vertical distributions of radionuclides, crop roots within the soil, and IR and TF(w) values were each subjected to analysis of variance to estimate the individual and combined effects of soil depth and the year of the experiment on the results obtained. Chlorine-36 and (99)Tc exhibited highly significant variations in activity concentrations with soil depth and from year to year, indicating considerable physical mobility of both radionuclides. Soil-to-plant transfer was also high for both radionuclides compared with data obtained for gamma-emitting radionuclides. The IR values indicated that up to 40% of (36)Cl was incorporated in the crop's tissues at harvest, compared with a maximum of less than 1% for the less mobile gamma-emitting radionuclides. On the basis of the TF(w) values determined, (36)Cl uptake by winter wheat exceeded (99)Tc uptake, indicating that (36)Cl is highly bioavailable. Factors controlling the migration and bioavailability of both (36)Cl and (99)Tc in soils are discussed.
- Published
- 2004
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23. The deposition and translocation of methyl iodide by crops.
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Collins CD, Gravett AE, and Bell JN
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- Metabolic Clearance Rate, Radiation Dosage, Species Specificity, Air Pollutants, Radioactive pharmacokinetics, Crops, Agricultural metabolism, Food Contamination, Radioactive analysis, Hydrocarbons, Iodinated pharmacokinetics, Iodine Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics, Plant Structures metabolism, Radiometry methods
- Abstract
Organic forms of radioactive iodine are released during routine and accidental releases from the nuclear industry. Methyl iodide is often the predominant species in these releases. This paper describes the results of a study to determine the deposition, allocation, and loss of radioiodine after crops of bean, carrot, and cabbage were exposed to CH3 125I. The deposition velocity ranged from 0.14-7.10 x 10(-4) cm s(-1), which is in line with previous studies. Translocation of radioiodine away from the leaves to other crop components was observed post exposure. The partition of radioiodine was to those crop components growing most actively at the time of exposure. This finding contradicts some previous studies and will have implications for dose assessments. Losses of radioiodine were only observed as a consequence of leaf fall. The consequences of these findings for the modeling the movement of radioiodine in crops following the deposition of methyl iodide are discussed.
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- 2004
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24. Effects of host plant exposure to cadmium on mycorrhizal infection and soluble carbohydrate levels of Pinus sylvestris seedlings.
- Author
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Kim CG, Power SA, and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Biomass, Carbohydrates analysis, Pinus sylvestris growth & development, Pinus sylvestris microbiology, Plant Roots metabolism, Seedlings drug effects, Seedlings growth & development, Cadmium toxicity, Mycorrhizae drug effects, Pinus sylvestris drug effects, Soil Pollutants toxicity
- Abstract
In a Cd-contaminated environment, not only mature trees but also their seeds and young seedlings can be exposed to Cd. Cadmium taken up by young seedlings may influence mycorrhizal infection, which might in turn influence resistance to Cd toxicity. In order to eliminate soil-mediated responses of mycorrhizal infection to Cd, Pinus sylvestris seedlings were exposed to Cd prior to fungal inoculation and replanted to clean substrates with fungal inoculum. Cadmium pretreatment reduced the proportion of living mycorrhizal short roots of seedlings inoculated with Paxillus involutus. However, no such effect was observed for seedlings inoculated with Suillus bovinus and Rhizopogon subcaerulescens. Therefore, infection by P. involutus appeared to be affected by Cd taken up by seedlings. Overall stem length and biomass of the seedlings were reduced by Cd pretreatment. Infection by S. bovinus and R. subcaerulescens increased stem length and biomass of the seedlings. Root soluble carbohydrate concentrations were lower in mycorrhizal seedlings than non-mycorrhizal seedlings.
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- 2004
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25. Effects of cadmium on growth and glucose utilisation of ectomycorrhizal fungi in vitro.
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Kim CG, Power SA, and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Basidiomycota drug effects, Basidiomycota growth & development, Basidiomycota metabolism, Mycorrhizae growth & development, Mycorrhizae metabolism, Cadmium pharmacology, Glucose metabolism, Mycorrhizae drug effects
- Abstract
Effects of Cd on growth and glucose utilisation of Paxillus involutus, Rhizopogon subcaerulescens and Suillus bovinus were investigated in vitro in liquid culture. S. bovinus was the species most sensitive to Cd in terms of dry matter production and P. involutus was less sensitive than R. subcaerulescens. Greater production of hyphae of P. involutus than the other fungi appeared to confer some degree of Cd resistance, possibly by binding Cd onto cell walls. Growth of the three fungi was increased by glucose addition. While Cd significantly reduced dry matter production of the fungi, there were no significant differences in glucose consumption caused by Cd treatment. This suggests that the use of glucose might have been diverted to detoxification and/or repair mechanisms. Further studies on respiration rates and energy metabolites of these fungi under Cd exposure are needed in order to clarify the results of the present study.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The volatilisation and sorption of (129)I in coniferous forest, grassland and frozen soils.
- Author
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Bostock AC, Shaw G, and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring, Freezing, Half-Life, Humic Substances, Iodine Radioisotopes analysis, Iodine Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics, Poaceae, Trees, Volatilization, Radioactive Waste, Soil, Tracheophyta
- Abstract
129I is a potentially important radionuclide in safety assessments of proposed deep geological radioactive waste repositories due to its radiotoxicity, high mobility and long physical half-life (15.7 million years). In soils, iodine is present both in an inorganic form and in organohalide complexes, some of which are volatile under natural environmental conditions. This study has examined volatilisation, sorption and the effect of freezing on sorption and loss of (125)I (physical half-life 60.2 days), as a surrogate for (129)I, within coniferous forest and grassland soils. The results do not suggest that volatilisation from these soils is a significant pathway for the transport of (129)I. Strong and specific sorption of iodine to humic substances has been demonstrated, which is reduced at freezing temperatures. It is hypothesised that rapid sorption to soil humic substances can significantly reduce volatilisation rates. The effect of freezing conditions on iodine extractability from soils suggests a microbially mediated sorption process.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Effect of air pollution on peri-urban agriculture: a case study.
- Author
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Agrawal M, Singh B, Rajput M, Marshall F, and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Beta vulgaris, Biomass, Fabaceae, Humans, India, Nitrogen Dioxide analysis, Ozone analysis, Plant Leaves chemistry, Sulfur Dioxide analysis, Triticum, Air Pollutants analysis, Crops, Agricultural, Environmental Monitoring methods, Urbanization
- Abstract
Peri-urban agriculture is vital for the urban populations of many developing countries. Increases in both industrialization and urbanization, and associated air pollution threaten urban food production and its quality. Six hour mean concentrations were monitored for SO(2), NO(2) and O(3) and plant responses were measured in terms of physiological characteristics, pigment, biomass and yield. Parameter reductions in mung bean (Vigna radiata), palak (Beta vulgaris), wheat (Triticum aestivum) and mustard (Brassica compestris) grown within the urban fringes of Varanasi, India correlated directly with the gaseous pollutants levels. The magnitude of response involved all three gaseous pollutants at peri-urban sites; O(3) had more influence at a rural site. The study concluded that air pollution in Varanasi could negatively influence crop yield.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Habitat management: a tool to modify ecosystem impacts of nitrogen deposition?
- Author
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Power SA, Barker CG, Allchin EA, Ashmore MR, and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Atmosphere chemistry, Biomass, Calluna physiology, Climate, England, Models, Biological, Poaceae physiology, Soil analysis, Time Factors, Ecosystem, Nitrogen metabolism
- Abstract
Atmospheric nitrogen deposition has been shown to affect both the structure and the function of heathland ecosystems. Heathlands are semi-natural habitats and, as such, undergo regular management by mowing or burning. Different forms of management remove more or less nutrients from the system, so habitat management has the potential to mitigate some of the effects of atmospheric deposition. Data from a dynamic vegetation model and two field experiments are presented. The first involves nitrogen addition following different forms of habitat management. The second tests the use of habitat management to promote heathland recovery after a reduction in nitrogen deposition. Both modelling and experimental approaches suggest that plant and microbial response to nitrogen is affected by management. Shoot growth and rates of decomposition were lowest in plots managed using more intensive techniques, including mowing with litter removal and a high temperature burn. Field data also indicate that ecosystem recovery from prolonged elevated inputs of nitrogen may take many years, or even decades, even after the removal of plant and litter nitrogen stores which accompanies the more intensive forms of habitat management.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Radionuclide transport above a near-surface water table: III. Soil migration and crop uptake of three gamma-emitting radionuclides, 1990 to 1993.
- Author
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Wadey P, Shaw G, and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Biological Availability, Cesium Radioisotopes analysis, Cobalt Radioisotopes analysis, Plant Roots chemistry, Sodium Radioisotopes analysis, Soil Pollutants, Radioactive analysis, Tissue Distribution, Water Pollutants, Radioactive analysis, Cesium Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics, Cobalt Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics, Sodium Radioisotopes pharmacokinetics, Soil Pollutants, Radioactive pharmacokinetics, Triticum, Water Pollutants, Radioactive pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
This paper summarizes the vertical distributions of 22Na, 137Cs, and 60Co above controlled water tables in deep and shallow lysimeters during a four-year experiment. The activity concentration profiles were all determined at the time of harvest of a winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Pastiche) crop. Activity concentrations in different crop tissues were determined and crop uptake expressed as both an inventory ratio (IR) and a transfer factor (TFw), weighted to account for root and radionuclide distributions within the soil profile. Experimental variates were subjected to analysis of variance to determine the single and combined effects of the soil depth and the year of the experiment on the results obtained. Each radionuclide showed significant variations in activity concentration with soil depth, but the significance of these variations from year to year was dependent on radionuclide. A distinction in the behavior of weakly sorbed (22Na) and more highly sorbed (137Cs and 60Co) radionuclides was observed. The former exhibited significant variations in its distribution in the soil profile from year-to-year whereas the latter did not. Relatively high TF, values for 22Na were maintained throughout the experiment, whereas for 137Cs and 60Co, the highest TFw values were recorded in 1990 followed by a significant decline in 1991, with TFw remaining low in 1992 and 1993. The TFw values were, in general, significantly higher for deep lysimeters than for shallow lysimeters. This is thought to provide evidence of enhanced radionuclide absorption by the relatively small fraction of roots in the vicinity of the deeper water table.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Experimental studies on the deposition to crops of radioactive gases released from gas-cooled reactors--III. Carbon-14 dioxide.
- Author
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Collins CD and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Carbon Dioxide metabolism, Carbon Radioisotopes metabolism, Fumigation, Plants metabolism
- Abstract
Experimental studies were performed under controlled environmental conditions to determine the deposition and subsequent allocation of carbon-14, following a short-term fumigation of major British crops with 14CO2. The deposition velocities varied between 0.075 and 1.32 cm3 g-1 s-1 and 0.0008 and 0.157 cm s-1 on weight and area bases, respectively. The primary sites of deposition were leaves, although other organs, e.g. ears and pods, were increasingly important as the crops developed. Activity was allocated post-deposition to those crop components actively growing at the time of deposition. The allocation was generally completed 24 h after fumigation, the exceptions to this being those crops where reproductive organs developed after the fumigation. A single exponential function was the best fit for the loss of activity from the crops. The data are discussed in the context of modelling carbon-14 contamination of crops following radioactive discharges.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Benzene accumulation in horticultural crops.
- Author
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Collins CD, Bell JN, and Crews C
- Subjects
- Benzene analysis, Cucumis sativus chemistry, Fruit chemistry, Plant Leaves, Rosales chemistry, Time Factors, Benzene pharmacokinetics, Cucumis sativus metabolism, Fruit metabolism, Rosales metabolism
- Abstract
In this study apple, blackberry and cucumber crops were exposed to elevated levels of benzene under controlled conditions. Benzene was retained in fruits of all crops, but only accumulated in leaves of blackberries and apples. The retention by cucumber fruits is suggested to result from the longer pathway for the desorption of benzene as a consequence of their increased tissue depth compared to leaves. The process of accumulation in blackberry and apple leaves is unknown. The ingestion of benzene via the food-chain pathway on the basis of this study is concluded not to be significant.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Fertile hybrids in two genera of wallabies: Petrogale and Thylogale.
- Author
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Close RL and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Wild, Australia, Behavior, Animal, Crosses, Genetic, Ecosystem, Female, Gene Transfer Techniques, Karyotyping, Macropodidae physiology, Male, Species Specificity, Spermatocytes physiology, Fertility genetics, Hybridization, Genetic, Macropodidae genetics
- Abstract
Breeding trials between karyotypically distinct species of Petrogale produced a number of hybrids and backcross hybrids of which some of the females were fertile. The only fertile male hybrid resulted from parents currently considered to be conspecific, but with different karyotypes. To investigate the possibility that hybridizations occur in other genera, we examined three Thylogale species, two of which, T. thetis and T. stigmatica, are sympatric over parts of their range in eastern coastal Australia, while the third, T. billardierii, is now found only in Tasmania. Female hybrids of T. thetis (female) x T. stigmatica (male) were fertile when mated with T. stigmatica, but in male hybrids the testes and seminiferous tubules failed to reach full-blood size and the tubules contained only primary spermatocytes. In contrast, the T. stigmatica (female) x T. thetis (male) crosses failed to produce hybrids. However, the only female backcross hybrid to produce young to date mated with a T. thetis. Female T. billardierii have not produced young with either T. thetis or T. stigmatica males and T. billardierii males could only be caged with conspecifics. Presumably behavioral barriers prevent regular gene flow in the wild, but in unusual conditions of habitat change (such as after fire or forest degradation) occasional gene transfers could be expected.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Spermatogenesis and synaptonemal complexes of hybrid Petrogale (Marsupialia).
- Author
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Close RL, Bell JN, Dollin AE, and Harding HR
- Subjects
- Animals, Crosses, Genetic, Epididymis cytology, Female, Fertility genetics, Hybridization, Genetic, Male, Marsupialia genetics, Sex Chromosomes, Testis physiology, Testis ultrastructure, Marsupialia physiology, Spermatogenesis physiology, Synaptonemal Complex physiology
- Abstract
Fertility, synaptonemal complexes (SCs) and spermiogenesis were examined in hybrids bred from four chromosomally different species of rock wallaby. Each of the four male hybrids had different forms of chromosomal heterozygosity (i.e., a trivalent, a quadrivalent, a pentavalent, and a trivalent plus two centric shifts). Testes and seminiferous tubules of each hybrid were smaller than those of full-bloods, and no hybrid produced young when paired with parous females. The degree of chromosomal heterozygosity in the hybrids was associated with the degrees of asynapsis, XY-autosome associations, and disruption of spermatogenesis. In only one hybrid were all stages of spermiogenesis commonly seen, and in this animal, sperm abnormalities were common. SC formation was consistent with that expected from the G-banded karyotypes, except that in one hybrid the chromosomes involved in the presumed centric shifts did not pair as expected but instead formed heteropycnotic masses. In addition, the studies demonstrated the links between the nonpairing X and Y chromosome and revealed an array of patterns of abnormalities at the ultrastructural level in spermiogenesis of hybrid marsupials.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Loss of particulate contaminants from plant canopies under wet and dry conditions.
- Author
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Kinnersley RP, Shaw G, Bell JN, Minski MJ, and Goddard AJ
- Abstract
There is a requirement for data describing the loss with time of particulate contamination from plant canopies. Measurements were made of the loss rates of monodispersed silica spheres (three sizes, with Mass Median Aerodynamic Diameters (MMADs) 1.9, 5.3 and 8.4 microm) from wheat (Triticum aestivum) and broad bean (Vicia faba) canopies. The spheres were labelled with tracers detectable by Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA). Canopies were contaminated under realistic turbulence conditions in a wind tunnel, then removed to sheltered and exposed field sites or to a glasshouse containing a rain simulator. Samples were taken periodically, and the level of contamination per plant determined by INAA. Statistical analysis of the resulting data suggested an offset exponential loss model, with a residue of deposit that is not lost over time. Loss half-lives in the order of 1-2 days were obtained for an exposed wheat crop and 3-4 days for a partially sheltered wheat crop, with permanent residues of initial deposit for the exposed crop of 4-8%, and for the partially sheltered crop of 22-52%. A broad bean crop under glasshouse conditions showed loss half-lives of 0.5-1.5 days with residues of 22-26% initial contamination. A double exponential loss model also fitted the data well in some cases, and it is possible that a slow loss of the residual deposit occurs, being masked by noise in the current data set.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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35. Earthworms and radionuclides, with experimental investigations on the uptake and exchangeability of radiocaesium.
- Author
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Brown SL and Bell JN
- Abstract
The potential influence of earthworm activity on the mobility of radionuclides in soils and their subsequent availability for uptake by plants and transfer to higher trophic levels is briefly reviewed. The accumulation of caesium by the earthworm Aporrectodea longa from soil and from plant litter was investigated in laboratory experiments, as was the effect of reworking (through burrowing and ingestion) soil and soil with added organic material, on the extractability of caesium (ammonium acetate extraction). Soil was spiked with (134)Cs, organic matter with (137)Cs. In soil-fed worms, most of the radioactivity measured was eliminated with the gut contents; 5-25% of the ingested radioactivity was retained or assimilated. Loss of caesium from soil-fed worms followed a two component curve, with an initial rapid loss due to gut clearance (half-life of loss (Tb1/2) of about 0.2-0.6 days) and a slower loss of assimilated caesium (Tb1/2 of 15-26 days). Loss rates of assimilated caesium from worms fed on fragmented apple leaves were found to have half-lives of 18-54 days. Assimilation of caesium from apple leaves was higher than from soil, ranging from 55-100% of the activity measured before gut clearance. Dry weight transfer factors (concentration in worm tissue/concentration in substrate) for worms cleared of their gut contents were similar for the two substrates 0.04 and 0.04 for two loss experiments with worms fed on radioactive soil, and 0.03 and 0.05 for worms fed on apple leaves. After three months of reworking soil and soil/organic mixtures, A. longa was found to have no measurable effect on the extractable fraction of caesium. If earthworms have any subtle effects they were masked by changes in availability that occurred when the spiked soil and organic substrates were mixed together. Only about half of the extractable fraction in soil was recovered when soil was mixed with organic material suggesting that some of the labile fraction in soil had become complexed with organic material. This exchange occurred in substrate mixtures with and without worms. The limitation of chemical extraction procedures is discussed and suggestions for further work are presented.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Air pollution and its impacts on wheat yield in the Pakistan Punjab.
- Author
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Wahid A, Maggs R, Shamsi SR, Bell JN, and Ashmore MR
- Abstract
A study using open-top chambers ventilated with ambient or charcoal-filtered air in the vicinity of Lahore, Pakistan, has demonstrated a reduction of 46.7% and 34.8% in the grain yield for two cultivars of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). The 6-h daily mean O(3) concentrations were 25-45 nl litre(-1) and on the basis of experience in North America and Europe, reductions in yield in the present study are substantially greater than might be predicted. The reasons for this discrepancy are discussed, together with implications for the suitability of a simple, relatively cheap, open-top chamber system for developing-country studies on the effects of air pollution on crops.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Effects of air pollution on rice yield in the Pakistan Punjab.
- Author
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Wahid A, Maggs R, Shamsi SR, Bell JN, and Ashmore MR
- Abstract
A study using open-top chambers ventilated with ambient or charcoal filtered air in the vicinity of Lahore, Pakistan demonstrated reductions of 42% and 37% in the grain yield of two cultivars of rice (Oryza sativa L.). This yield reduction was primarily due to the reduction in mean panicle number per plant, although significant effects of filtration on 1000 grain weight and the number of filled grains per panicle were also detected. The 6-h daily mean O(3) concentrations were only 10-20 nl litre(-1) during the monsoon season, but increased to 30-55 nl litre(-1) later in the growing season, while the mean NO(2) concentration during the experiment was 12 nl litre(-1). On the basis of experience in North America and Japan, the reductions in yield in the present study are substantially greater than might be predicted. The reasons for this discrepancy are discussed, together with the implications for effects on rice yield in other regions of south and south-east Asia.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Tolerance to SO2, NO2 and their mixture in Plantago major L. populations.
- Author
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Taylor HJ and Bell JN
- Abstract
The possible evolution of tolerance to NO2, alone or in combination with SO2 was investigated in three populations of Plantago major L., originating from Hyde Park in central London (polluted site), Ascot (clean site) and The Netherlands. Screening for sensitivity to the pollutants was carried out by means of chronic fumigations with NO2 or NO2 plus SO2 and acute fumigations with SO2, NO2 or their mixture. The Hyde Park population showed smaller growth reductions induced by the pollutant mixture, than did the other populations. In contrast no differential response in terms of foliar injury was observed after an acute fumigation with SO2+ NO2, but the Hyde Park population was the most sensitive to NO2 alone. The results indicate that selection for tolerance to SO2 does not confer tolerance to NO2 alone or the pollutant mixture.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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39. Air pollution and agricultural aphid pests. II chamber filtration experiments.
- Author
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Houlden G, McNeill S, Craske A, and Bell JN
- Abstract
The responses of four major aphid pest species feeding on three major crops were studied in a series of experimental chambers on the roof of Imperial College in South Kensington, London. The experimental chambers were continually circulated with air which had been subjected to a variety of filtration treatments. In the first series of experiments there were three chambers subject to ambient air, charcoal-filtered air, and charcoal plus 'Purafil'-filtered air; in the subsequent experiments there were four chambers, a charcoal plus 'Purafil' plus charcoal treatment being added. These treatments provided a range of concentrations and mixtures of the ambient gases present at the site. The growth rate of aphids was measured both during filtration and post-filtration, the plants being exposed from sowing for either 42 or 84 days. In all cases there were significant effects on aphid performance which seemed to be most strongly linked to absolute and relative NO concentrations. The pattern of responses by the aphids accorded extremely well with those observed in closed-chamber fumigation experiments with stimulation of performance in relatively polluted air in all cases except Acyrthosiphon pisum (Harris) feeding on Vicia faba L. where the opposite effect was recorded.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Biosynthesis of the Phytoalexin Pisatin : Isoflavone Reduction and Further Metabolism of the Product Sophorol by Extracts of Pisum sativum.
- Author
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Preisig CL, Bell JN, Sun Y, Hrazdina G, Matthews DE, and Vanetten HD
- Abstract
NADPH-dependent reduction of 2',7-dihydroxy-4',5'-methylenedioxyisoflavone to the isoflavanone sophorol, a proposed intermediate step in pisatin biosynthesis, was detected in extracts of Pisum sativum. This isoflavone reductase activity was inducible by treatment of pea seedlings with CuCl(2). The timing of induction coincided with that of the 6a-hydroxymaackiain 3-O-methyltransferase, which catalyzes the terminal biosynthetic step. Neither enzyme was light inducible. Further NADPH-dependent metabolism of sophorol by extracts of Cucl(2)-treated seedlings was also observed; three products were radiolabeled when [(3)H]sophorol was the substrate, one of which is tentatively identified as maackiain.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Speech naturalness ratings of treated stutterers.
- Author
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Runyan CM, Bell JN, and Prosek RA
- Subjects
- Humans, Speech, Stuttering therapy
- Abstract
This investigation compared the speech naturalness ratings of perceptually fluent speech samples produced by nonstutterers and stutterers who had been treated in six different therapy programs. The treated stutterers were then divided into two groups based on ease of identification using stutterer/nonstutterers judgments. The fluent speech of one group of stutterers was easily recognized as being produced by stutterers. The second group produced fluent speech that was difficult to distinguish from that used by normal talkers. Finally, pretreatment severity ratings (i.e., mild, moderate, and severe) were compared with posttreatment naturalness scores. Results indicated that a statistically significant difference existed between the naturalness ratings of the nonstutterers and the treated stutterers. Also, a significant difference was found between the naturalness ratings of the easy-to-identify stutterers. Finally, no difference was found in the posttreatment naturalness ratings of stutterers rated as mild, moderate, and severe before treatment.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Epiphyte recolonization of oaks along a gradient of air pollution in South-East England, 1979-1990.
- Author
-
Bates JW, Bell JN, and Farmer AM
- Abstract
The abundances of epiphytes on free-standing oaks (Quercus robur) along a transect extending approximately 70 km SSW from Central London were redetermined annually from 1979 to 1990. During this period SO(2) levels in inner London fell to between one-quarter and one-seventh of levels occurring in the 1960s. The sample trees were also scored annually using Hawksworth and Rose's (1970) scale for predicting SO(2) levels from the epiphytes present. Little evidence was obtained for epiphyte recolinization of oaks at sites within the built-up area. At Epsom Common, on the urban fringe, cover of the pollution-tolerant lichen Lecanora conizaeoides fell, and in the inner suburbs, at Putney Heath, L. conizaeoides and Lepraria incana increased, while the alga Desmococcus viridis declined at this site. These changes might be due to a contraction inwards of zones of peak abundance of L. conizaeoides and D. viridis with decreasing SO(2) levels. However, it is also possible that the changes at Putney Heath resulted from scrub clearance activities and alteration to the microclimate. The cover of the moderately SO(2) tolerant foliose lichen Hypogymnia physodes remained low and static at Putney Heath during the 12-year period. Possible reasons for the poor recolinization of London's oaks by epiphytes are discussed. Particular emphasis is given to the highly acidic bark of oak in the London area (pH2.9-4.0) in comparison with other tree species and with oaks in unpolluted regions.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Air pollution and agricultural aphid pests. I: Fumigation experiments with SO2 and NO2.
- Author
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Houlden G, McNeil S, Aminu-Kano M, and Bell JN
- Abstract
A wide range of aphid/host-crop systems was surveyed by means of fumigation experiments in closed chambers for sensitivity to SO(2) and NO(2) at a concentration of 100 nl litre(-1). Aphid performance was measured by the mean relative growth rate (MRGR) of individual aphids. In all cases, except for Acrythosiphon pisum (Harris) on Vicia fabaL., there were increases in the MRGR of the aphids feeding on fumigated plants as compared to clean air controls, both during and post fumigation. The increases in MRGR ranged from 6 to 75%, with the majority falling between 25 and 40%. A. pisum on V. faba showed a consistent negative response, with decreases in MRGR between -9 and -12%. The changes in aohid MRGR were not due to direct effects, as no significant differences in MRGR were observed between fumigated and clean air chambers when aphids were fed on artificial diet sachets during fumigation.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Chitinase cDNA cloning and mRNA induction by fungal elicitor, wounding, and infection.
- Author
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Hedrick SA, Bell JN, Boller T, and Lamb CJ
- Abstract
Chitinase, which catalyzes the hydrolysis of beta-1,4 N-acetylglucosamine linkages of the fungal cell wall polymer chitin, is a component of the inducible defenses of plants. We show that chitinase synthesis is stimulated in bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) cell suspension cultures treated with fungal cell wall elicitors and in hypocotyls in response to infection with the fungus Colletotrichum lindemuthianum. Chitinase cDNA clones were isolated by antibody screening of a lambdagt11 cDNA library containing sequences complementary to poly A(+) RNA from elicited cells. The identity of these clones was confirmed by nucleotide sequence analysis and comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence with that determined for the amino-terminal sequence of bean chitinase. Elicitor causes a very rapid activation of chitinase transcription with a 10-fold stimulation after 5 minutes and 30-fold increase within 20 minutes. This leads to a marked, transient accumulation of chitinase transcripts with maximum levels 2 hours after elicitor treatment, concomitant with the phase of rapid enzyme synthesis. Chitinase transcripts also markedly accumulate in wounded and infected hypocotyls. Chitinase cDNA sequences hybridize to several genomic fragments suggesting there are several chitinase genes in the bean genome.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Co-ordinated synthesis of phytoalexin biosynthetic enzymes in biologically-stressed cells of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.).
- Author
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Cramer CL, Bell JN, Ryder TB, Bailey JA, Schuch W, Bolwell GP, Robbins MP, Dixon RA, and Lamb CJ
- Abstract
Changes in the rates of synthesis of three enzymes of phenyl-propanoid biosynthesis in Phaseolus vulgaris L. (dwarf French bean) have been investigated by immunoprecipitation of [S]methionine-labeled enzyme subunits with mono-specific antisera. Elicitor causes marked, rapid but transient co-ordinated increases in the rate of synthesis of phenyl-alanine ammonia-lyase, chalcone synthase and chalcone isomerase concomitant with the phase of rapid increase in enzyme activity at the onset of accumulation of phenyl-propanoid-derived phytoalexin antibiotics in suspension cultures of P. vulgaris. Co-ordinate induction of enzyme synthesis is also observed in hypocotyl tissue during race:cultivar-specific interactions with Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, causal agent of anthracnose. In an incompatible interaction (host resistant) there are early increases apparently localized to the initial site of infection prior to the onset of phytoalexin accumulation and expression of hypersensitive resistance. In contrast, in a compatible interaction (host susceptible) there is no induction of synthesis in the early stages of infection, but a delayed widespread response at the onset of lesion formation associated with attempted lesion limitation. It is concluded that expression of the phytoalexin defense response in biologically stressed cells of P. vulgaris characteristically involves co-ordinate induction of synthesis of phytoalexin biosynthetic enzymes.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Crop growth along a gradient of ambient air pollution.
- Author
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Ashmore MR, Bell JN, and Mimmack A
- Abstract
An experiment, designed to elucidate the relative importance of SO2, NO2, O3, and other environmental factors in influencing the performance of four cultivars of Trifolium pratense L. and Hordeum vulgare L., was performed by growing plants in situ along a transect from central London into the surrounding countryside. A multiple regression analysis provided evidence of significant effects of SO2, NO2, and, to a lesser extent, O3, on vegetative and reproductive growth parameters, although these differed according to pollutant, cultivar, species, and the parameter concerned. The significance of these findings for the impact of ambient air pollution on the growth of crops in the more polluted rural areas of western Europe is suggested by the fact that mean SO2, NO2, and O3 concentrations in the experimental area are less than 0.020 (39.2 microg/m3), 0.025 (47.75 microg/m3), and 0.030 ppm (58.8 microg/m3), respectively. The value of the technique is discussed with respect to other studies on the effects of low levels of air pollution on crops.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Urinary tract infection in a peripheral paediatric unit.
- Author
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McDonagh B and Bell JN
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Chronic Disease, Female, Hospital Units, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Ireland, Male, Pediatrics, Pyelonephritis diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Urinary Calculi diagnostic imaging, Urinary Tract Infections diagnosis, Vesico-Ureteral Reflux diagnostic imaging, Urinary Tract Infections epidemiology
- Published
- 1981
48. Accumulation of hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein mRNAs in response to fungal elicitor and infection.
- Author
-
Showalter AM, Bell JN, Cramer CL, Bailey JA, Varner JE, and Lamb CJ
- Abstract
Hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) are important structural components of plant cell walls and also accumulate in response to infection as an apparent defense mechanism. Accumulation of HRGP mRNA in biologically stressed bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) cells was monitored by blot hybridization with (32)P-labeled tomato genomic HRGP sequences. Elicitor treatment of suspension-cultured cells caused a marked increase in hybridizable HRGP mRNA. The response was less rapid but more prolonged than that observed for mRNAs encoding enzymes of phytoalexin biosynthesis. HRGP mRNA also accumulated during race:cultivar-specific interactions between bean hypocotyls and the partially biotrophic fungus Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, the causal agent of anthracnose. In an incompatible interaction (host resistant) there was an early increase in HRGP mRNA correlated with expression of hypersensitive resistance; whereas, in a compatible interaction (host susceptible), marked accumulation of HRGP mRNA occurred as a delayed response at the onset of lesion formation. In both interactions, mRNA accumulation was observed in uninfected cells distant from the site of fungal inoculation, indicating intercellular transmission of an elicitation signal.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Elicitor rapidly induces chalcone synthase mRNA in Phaseolus vulgaris cells at the onset of the phytoalexin defense response.
- Author
-
Ryder TB, Cramer CL, Bell JN, Robbins MP, Dixon RA, and Lamb CJ
- Abstract
DNAs complementary to poly(A)(+) RNA present in elicitor-treated cells of Phaseolus vulgaris L. were inserted into pBR325 and used to transform Escherichia coli strain JA221. A clone was identified that contained sequences complementary to mRNA encoding chalcone synthase, a regulatory enzyme of phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, which catalyzes the first reaction of a branch pathway specific to flavonoid and isoflavonoid biosynthesis. Rapid, marked but transient increases in chalcone synthase mRNA in response to elicitor treatment were observed by RNA blot hybridization with (32)P-labeled chalcone synthase cDNA sequences. Induction of chalcone synthase mRNA governs the rate of enzyme synthesis throughout the phase of rapid increase in enzyme activity at the onset of accumulation of isoflavonoid-derived phytoalexins. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that elicitor causes a rapid transient stimulation of transcription of chalcone synthase gene(s) as an early event in the expression of the phytoalexin defense response.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Clinical application of the I.B.M. cell separator.
- Author
-
Bell JN, Reen D, and O'Dwyer M
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Blood Platelets, Blood Transfusion, Cell Separation methods, Humans, Infant, Leukemia, Lymphoid therapy, Leukocytes, Male, Plasmapheresis, Cell Separation instrumentation
- Published
- 1975
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