96 results on '"P. B. Hamilton"'
Search Results
2. New scanning electron microscopic evidence of valve features for Fallacia pygmaea (Kuetzing) Stickle & Mann (Bacillariophyceae)
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M. Poulin and P. B. Hamilton
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Plant Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2021
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3. Algal scavenging of mercury in preindustrial Arctic lakes
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Peter M. Outridge, P. B. Hamilton, Gary A. Stern, and Hamed Sanei
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chemistry ,Arctic ,Environmental chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Environmental science ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Scavenging ,Mercury (element) - Abstract
The geochemical speciation of total mercury (THg) was examined in pre-1800 Arctic lake sediments to improve understanding of the factors controlling “natural baseline” THg. Solid-phase binding forms of THg were determined by sequential extraction of dated cores from three lakes in different ecozones (barren tundra, grassy tundra, and boreal forest). Sediment organic matter (OM) was mostly of algal origin. Mercury was highly concentrated in the sediment OM fraction (OM-Hg), comprising 60–87% of THg, while OM (as total organic carbon) constituted only 0.6–13% of sediment dry weight (DW). OM-Hg concentrations were equivalent to 159 ± 13 to 776 ± 215 ng Hg g−1 DW in algal OM and were enriched 2–39 times compared to sediment THg, indicating that even small changes in algal OM inputs could significantly alter THg. OM-Hg explained 76–96% of the variation in THg concentrations over many centuries. Concentrations of S2 carbon (an algal productivity proxy) and OM-Hg were significantly correlated in two lakes but not in the boreal forest lake possibly because of OM remineralization in its deep water column. Fluxes of S2 carbon, OM-Hg, and THg were highly correlated in the barren tundra lake but could not be calculated for the other lakes. The results overall indicate that high algal Hg concentrations due to scavenging of available Hg controlled OM-Hg flux to sediments, thus driving changes in THg concentrations and fluxes. These findings improve our understanding of the long-term stability of baseline THg in northern lakes under a changing climate, including in the modern era.
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- 2019
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4. SPATIAL, SEASONAL AND INTER-ANNUAL VARIABILITY IN ENVIRONMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS AND PHYTOPLANKTON STANDING STOCK OF THE TEMPERATE, LOWLAND RIDEAU RIVER, ONTARIO, CANADA
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M. Poulin, P. B. Hamilton, and Isabelle Lavoie
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Hydrology ,Watershed ,biology ,Introduced species ,Plankton ,biology.organism_classification ,Phytoplankton ,Temperate climate ,Zebra mussel ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Eutrophication ,Stock (geology) ,General Environmental Science ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Chlorophyll-a, biomass and living unit concentrations were monitored across the Rideau River over a three-year period. The results show that a continuum of changing physical, biological and chemical conditions altered the phytoplankton standing stock of the Rideau River. From year to year, weather conditions and anthropogenic impacts like discharge control had a clear effect on the phytoplankton community. The year 2000, with poorer growing conditions and higher flow regime, had a significantly lower phytoplankton standing stock across all the stations. Based on hydrological characteristics, the Rideau River was divided into four distinct reaches, and ANOVAs show a clear reach effect on phytoplankton standing stock. The invasive zebra mussel consistently reduced the phytoplankton standing stock downstream from the main invasion zone over the three years, although there were differences between years. The non-native zebra mussel further altered the phosphorus–phytoplankton standing stock relationship. Nutrients, ions and metals were not clearly correlated to standing stock in this three-year study, although the significant effect of the four reaches suggested that environmental characteristics other than hydrological conditions may have an influence. Phytoplankton development downstream followed a polynomial model. However, unlike the stages of development characterizing many river continuum models, the pattern observed in the present study was affected by zebra mussels followed by anthropogenic impacts of discharge control and eutrophication. This and other studies on the Rideau River highlight the significance of scale (spatial and temporal) and metrics selected when evaluating environmental impacts and developing watershed models. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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- 2011
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5. Mercury–organic matter relationships in pre-pollution sediments of thermokarst lakes from the Mackenzie River Delta, Canada: the role of depositional environment
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P. B. Hamilton, Peter M. Outridge, A. Dallimore, and Hamed Sanei
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,geography ,River delta ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Aquatic ecosystem ,Tundra ,Macrophyte ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Water column ,Oceanography ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Organic matter ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
This study investigates the influence of organic matter (OM) on the historical variations of Hg in sediments from two closely-situated Canadian Arctic lakes, prior to the advent of Hg pollution inputs. Because of variable landscape evolution in the Mackenzie River Delta over the past 1–3 millennia, the lakes provide distinctly different histories of OM sources, types, and degree of aquatic productivity (i.e., depositional environments). They also differ significantly in their pre-1900 Hg concentration profiles. When labile, kerogen-like carbon (“S2”) from aquatic sources (diatoms and other unicellular algae) increased between 750 and 1900 A.D. in the more productive lake (Nesbitt), Hg concentrations also increased by ca. 50%. In contrast, S2 carbon concentrations in the nearby organic-poor lake (Big Lake) were several-times lower than in Nesbitt and decreased over the past millennium, while Hg concentrations showed no trend probably reflecting the stable input of clastic material from tundra soils. The contrast between lakes suggests that OM derived from unicellular algae is more effective at scavenging Hg than OM from terrestrial plants or aquatic macrophytes, possibly because of a higher content of labile, sulphur-rich compounds, high particle surface area and its dispersion throughout the water column. The results indicate that, in the absence of anthropogenic Hg inputs, increasing phytoplankton productivity and Hg scavenging alone can lead to significant increases in the Hg content of lake sediments. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that increasing lake productivity because of climate warming during the twentieth century has confounded the interpretation of recently increasing Hg levels in northern lake sediments as being unequivocally due to anthropogenic Hg deposition. This study also suggests that sedimentary TOC by itself is a poor and sometimes misleading indicator of possible changes in the source and quality of OM in aquatic systems, which can have a major impact on Hg concentrations in sediments.
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- 2010
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6. Evidence for Control of Mercury Accumulation Rates in Canadian High Arctic Lake Sediments by Variations of Aquatic Primary Productivity
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P. B. Hamilton, Sanei Lh, Gary A. Stern, Peter M. Outridge, and Fariborz Goodarzi
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Pollution ,Canada ,Geologic Sediments ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Limnology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Fresh Water ,Algae ,Environmental Chemistry ,Radiometry ,Ecosystem ,media_common ,biology ,Arctic Regions ,Ecology ,Global warming ,Biogeochemistry ,Global change ,Mercury ,General Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,Carbon ,Mercury (element) ,Lead ,Arctic ,chemistry ,Regression Analysis ,Environmental science ,geographic locations ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Climate warming in the 20th Century has had profound effects on the limnology of High Arctic lakes, including substantial increases in autochthonous primary productivity (APP). Here, we report organic carbon and Hg core profiles from two lakes which support the hypothesis that 20th Century increases in sedimentary Hg at these latitudes were largely driven by APP increases, via Hg scavenging by algae and/or suspended detrital algal matter. Hydrocarbons quantitatively released by thermal cracking of algal-derived organic matter ("S2" carbon) were used to reconstruct past APP. Variation of S2 flux accounted for 87-91% of the variance in total Hg flux in the study lakes since 1854. Mercury and S2 carbon were also associated during the pre-Industrial Period, co-varying by as much as 30% during past warm/cool periods. As a test of the hypothesis, predicted values for 20th Century [Hg] were derived from pre-1900 Hg-S2 relationships. Measured 20th Century [Hg] was on average only 6-11% higher than that predicted in one lake, and 33% higher in the other. S2-normalization of [Hg] in the latter lake suggested that 78% of the average increase in 20th Century [Hg] could be explained by scavenging. These findings suggest that the atmospheric contribution of long-range anthropogenic Hg to High Arctic lakes may have been overestimated by several-fold because of this climate-driven process, and was responsible for no more than 22% of the 20th Century [Hg] increase in the study lakes.
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- 2007
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7. Periphyton biomass and composition of British Columbia salmonid rivers in relation to nutrient and discharge levels
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M. Kingsley, F. R. Pick, and P. B. Hamilton
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Nutrient ,chemistry ,Phosphorus ,Environmental chemistry ,Biomass ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Environmental science ,Current velocity ,Composition (visual arts) ,Periphyton ,Nitrogen - Abstract
(2006). Periphyton biomass and composition of British Columbia salmonid rivers in relation to nutrient and discharge levels. SIL Proceedings, 1922-2010: Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 1389-1398.
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- 2006
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8. Trace metal profiles in the varved sediment of an Arctic lake
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W.L. Lockhart, P. B. Hamilton, Jeanne B. Percival, Gary A. Stern, Roger McNeely, and Peter M. Outridge
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Hydrology ,Varve ,Arctic ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Geochemistry ,Sediment ,Trace metal ,Geology ,Deposition (geology) - Abstract
Varved (annually-laminated) sediments offer a rare and physically undisturbed archive of past trace metal deposition and limnological conditions. Here, a high-resolution 1,300 year record of metal accumulation is presented from a varved lake sediment on Devon Island in the Canadian High Arctic. Down-core concentration profiles of Cd, Cu and Zn were positively correlated (P
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- 2005
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9. Modern and historical fluxes of halogenated organic contaminants to a lake in the Canadian arctic, as determined from annually laminated sediment cores
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E. Braekevelt, Gary A. Stern, Terry F. Bidleman, Gregg T. Tomy, Bruno Rosenberg, W.L. Lockhart, Peter M. Outridge, Paul A. Helm, P. B. Hamilton, R. McNeeley, P Wilkinson, and Michael G. Ikonomou
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Greenhouse Effect ,Canada ,Geologic Sediments ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Environmental Engineering ,Climate ,Polybrominated Biphenyls ,Chlordane ,Toxaphene ,Bacteria, Anaerobic ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Polybrominated diphenyl ethers ,Water column ,Water Supply ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Environmental Chemistry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Scavenging ,Benzofurans ,Hydrology ,Arctic Regions ,Phenyl Ethers ,Eukaryota ,Sediment ,Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated ,Sedimentation ,Pollution ,Pentachlorophenol ,Biodegradation, Environmental ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Environmental science ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Two annually laminated cores collected from Lake DV09 on Devon Island in May 1999 were dated using 210Pb and 137Cs, and analyzed for a variety of halogenated organic contaminants (HOCs), including polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), organochlorine pesticides, short-chain polychlorinated n-alkanes (sPCAs), polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs). Dry weight HOC concentrations in Lake DV09 sediments were generally similar to other remote Arctic lakes. Maximum HOC fluxes often agreed well with production maxima, although many compound groups exhibited maxima at or near the sediment surface, much later than peak production. The lower than expected HOC concentrations in older sediment slices may be due to anaerobic degradation and possibly to dilution resulting from a temporary increase in sedimentation rate observed between the mid-1960s and 1970s. Indeed, temporal trends were more readily apparent for those compound classes when anaerobic metabolites were also analyzed, such as for DDT and toxaphene. However, it is postulated here for the first time that the maximum or increasing HOC surface fluxes observed for many of the major compound classes in DV09 sediments may be influenced by climate variation and the resulting increase in algal primary productivity which could drive an increasing rate of HOC scavenging from the water column. Both the fraction (F(TC)) and enantiomer fraction (EF) of trans-chlordane (TC) decreased significantly between 1957 and 1997, suggesting that recent inputs to the lake are from weathered chlordane sources. PCDD/Fs showed a change in sources from pentachlorophenol (PeCP) in the 1950s and 1960s to combustion sources into the 1990s. Improvements in combustion technology may be responsible for the reducing the proportion of TCDF relative to OCDD in the most recent slice.
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- 2005
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10. Freshwater diatom biogeography in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago
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P. B. Hamilton, Giselle Bouchard, and Konrad Gajewski
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,biology ,Biogeography ,Limnology ,biology.organism_classification ,Diatom ,Arctic ,Abundance (ecology) ,Canonical correspondence analysis ,Archipelago ,Species richness ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Aim Document the biogeographical distributions of diatoms in the Canadian Arctic in relation to environmental factors. Location The Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Methods Diatoms were extracted from lake sediments and treated using standard methods. Rarefaction-estimated species richness, diatom concentrations (valves cc−1), and diatom abundance were mapped using a Geographic Information System. The physical and chemical parameters of the lakes were measured. Results A total of 326 taxa from 63 genera were found in 62 lakes of the study area. Up to 85 and as low as eight taxa were identified in any one lake, and rarefaction-estimated species richness correlated with lake size. Nearby lakes could have greatly different diatom assemblages. Many taxa showed limited distributions. Response surfaces and ordination techniques indicate that a large number of taxa prefer colder regions of the Arctic while the abundance of others was influenced by lake water chemical parameters such as TKN and SiO2. Main conclusions Although many taxa were common and found across the study area, diatom assemblages showed regional differences in the Arctic. Some taxa were not found in either the northern or southern parts of the Archipelago and others were restricted to particular regions. Newly delineated genera showed interpretable geographical patterns and could be related to environmental factors, suggesting that this more natural grouping may enhance our understanding of diatom ecology. Geographical, physical, and chemical factors are needed to explain diatom distributions in the Arctic.
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- 2004
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11. A diatom-based Holocene palaeoenvironmental record from a mid-arctic lake on Boothia Peninsula, Nunavut, Canada
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M. LeBlanc, Konrad Gajewski, and P. B. Hamilton
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010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,biology ,Environmental change ,Paleontology ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,Diatom ,Oceanography ,Arctic ,law ,Peninsula ,Paleoclimatology ,Radiocarbon dating ,Holocene ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Chronology - Abstract
A 485 cm sediment core from a lake unoffcially called JR01, Boothia Peninsula, Nunavut, Canada, yielded a high-resolution diatom record documenting environmental change in the mid-arctic. Five radiocarbon dates provided the chronology. Changes in diatom composition and sediment character istics indicated distinct shifts in the Holocene climate. A more diverse and productive diatom flora implies warmer temperatures in the middle Holocene. A subsequent complete shift in diatom composition to a predominantly Fragilaria sensu lato flora and a reduction in diversity and production suggests cooler climates in this region after 4600cal. BP. Smaller-scale climatic fluctuations, such as the‘Little Ice Age’ (LIA, 600–150 cal. BP) and the‘Mediaeval Warm Period’ (MWP, 1150–600 cal. BP), caused shifts in the diatom flora and production. Subtle shifts in floristic diversity within the LIA may reflect climatic variability at a century scale. A gradual shift to a more diverse and productive flora in the last 150 years suggests a response to the recent warming trend.
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- 2004
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12. Reactivation of a Trypanosoma cruzi Infection in a Rhesus Monkey (Macaca mulatta) Experimentally Infected with SIV
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Franz-Josef Kaup, Kerstin Mätz-Rensing, Nicole Stolte, E. Kunz, and P. B. Hamilton
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Chagas Cardiomyopathy ,Male ,Chagas disease ,Myocarditis ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,030231 tropical medicine ,Simian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,medicine.disease_cause ,Macaque ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fatal Outcome ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,biology.animal ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Chagas Disease ,Immunodeficiency ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Monkey Diseases ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Macaca mulatta ,Virology ,Chronic infection ,Trypanosoma ,Simian Immunodeficiency Virus - Abstract
Trypanosoma cruzi-like flagellates were incidentally noted in blood smears of a routinely monitored rhesus monkey experimentally infected with the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). Immunodeficiency in the course of the SIV infection reactivated a chronic infection of Chagas' disease that had been unnoticed when the macaque was imported to Europe. The animal developed no specific clinical symptoms of American trypanosomiasis, but histologically a chagasic myocarditis was detected. Analysis of the small subunit rRNA gene of the trypanosome identified the protozoan as T. cruzi.
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- 2002
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13. Diacetoxyscirpenol production by Fusarium sambucinum strain KF 735 on solid and liquid media
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D. Latus-Ziętkiewicz, Juliusz Perkowski, J. CheŁkowski, and P. B. Hamilton
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Strain (chemistry) ,Chemistry ,Fusarium sambucinum ,Liquid medium ,Triticale ,Toxicology ,Microbiology ,Solid medium ,Diacetoxyscirpenol ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Horticulture ,Agronomy ,BARLEY GRAIN ,Dry rot ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The yield of diacetoxyscirpenol (DAS) production by F. sambucinum strain No KF 735, isolated from potato tuber with dry rot symptoms, cultured on solid media and on liquid medium, has been examined. The amount of DAS produced within 28 days at 25°C in the cultures grown on solid media (wheat, rye, rice, oats, corn, barley, triticale and malt) reached 238mg/kg±9 to 789±16mg/kg (mean ± standard error; n=3), on potato cubes −55±3mg/kg and on the potato extract −147±5mg/dcm3. The best substracts for crystalline compound production were malt and barley grain.
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- 2013
14. Comment on Climate change and mercury accumulation in Canadian High and Subarctic lakes
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Peter M. Outridge, Fariborz Goodarzi, Hamed Sanei, Michael Evan Goodsite, Gary A. Stern, P. B. Hamilton, Robie W. Macdonald, and Jesse Carrie
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Oceanography ,chemistry ,Climate Change ,Environmental Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Environmental science ,Climate change ,Fresh Water ,General Chemistry ,Mercury ,Subarctic climate ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Mercury (element) - Published
- 2011
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15. Duration of renal ischemia required in dogs to produce damage of lethal degree
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R A, PHILLIPS and P B, HAMILTON
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Dogs ,Ischemia ,Animals ,Kidney Diseases ,Kidney ,Cardiovascular System - Published
- 2010
16. Hemoglobin solutions suitable for intravenous administration
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P B, HAMILTON and L E, FARR
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Solutions ,Hemoglobins ,Humans ,Administration, Intravenous - Published
- 2010
17. The effects of the volatile aldehydes formed on the accuracy of the manometric ninhydrin-carbon dioxide method in analysis of certain alpha-amino acids
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P B, HAMILTON and D D, VAN SLYKE
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Aldehydes ,Ninhydrin ,Amino Acids ,Carbon Dioxide - Published
- 2010
18. AMERICANARUM DIATOMARUM EXSICCATA: CANA, VOUCHER SLIDES FROM EIGHT ACIDIC LAKES IN NORTHEASTERN NORTH AMERICA
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P. B. Hamilton, M. Poulin, D. F. Chariest, and M. Angell
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biology ,Range (biology) ,Ecology ,Alkalinity ,Environmental factor ,Sediment ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,Geography ,Taxon ,Algae ,Paleobotany ,medicine ,Water quality - Abstract
Ninety-eight slides from eight lakes in the Adirondack Mountains of the northeastern United States have been distributed as an exsiccata to 16 museums and collections around the world. The slides were prepared from sediment cores representing microfloras dating from 1830 to 1983. Lake size varies from small ponds (1.0 ha) to large lakes (520.5 ha). Present pH levels range from 4.26 to 7.05, with all the lakes having low to negative alkalinity levels. A total of 279 taxa have been identified, with 80 unknowns catalogued and photographed. to 1983. Lake size varies from small ponds (1.0 ha) to large lakes (520.5 ha). Present pH levels range from 4.26 to 7.05, with all the lakes having low to negative alkalinity levels. A total of 279 taxa have been identified, with 80 unknowns catalogued and photographed…The most common taxa are Asterionella ralfsii var. americana Korner, Anomoeoneis serians var. brachysira (Breb. ex Rabenh.) Hust. (= Brachysira brebissonii Ross), Tabellaria flocculosa (Roth) Kutz. strains I...
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- 1992
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19. 4 beta, 15-Diacetoxyscirpenol induces cytotoxicity and alterations in phagocytic and Fc-receptor expression functions in chicken macrophages in vitro
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M. A. Brundage, P. B. Hamilton, and Muquarrab A. Qureshi
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Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,Male ,Cell Survival ,Phagocytosis ,Immunology ,Fc receptor ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Receptors, Fc ,Biology ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Diacetoxyscirpenol ,Microbiology ,Andrology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Macrophage ,Animals ,Cytotoxicity ,Opsonin ,Pharmacology ,Toxin ,Macrophages ,General Medicine ,Mycotoxins ,In vitro ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,Trichothecenes ,Chickens - Abstract
4 beta, 15 Diacetoxyscirpenol (DAS) mycotoxin produced by Fusarium species was tested for detrimental effects on macrophage viability, phagocytosis, and Fc-receptor expression. Sephadex-elicited chicken abdominal cells were harvested to establish adherent macrophage monolayers on glass coverslips. Coverslips were then assigned randomly to treatment groups (0, 12.5 and 25 micrograms/mL DAS). Macrophage monolayers were exposed to treatments for 1 h, washed, and tested for various functional endpoints. Treatment with DAS resulted in decreased viability of macrophages (90.8% vs 81.5% vs 70.4% viable in the 0, 12.5 and 25 micrograms treatments, respectively) and decreased the percentage of macrophages phagocytizing sheep erythrocytes (81.6% vs 53.1% vs 46.0%. DAS also caused a decrease in the mean number of opsonized cells engulfed per phagocytic macrophage (5.7 vs 3.7 vs 2.9). A similar trend was observed using unopsonized sheep erythrocytes (15.4% vs 7.6% vs 5.5% phagocytic macrophages and 0.29 vs 0.11 vs 0.08 erythrocytes engulfed per macrophage). The incidence of Fc-receptor positive macrophages determined by sheep erythrocyte rosetting was also decreased in DAS-treated macrophages as compared to the control (49.2% vs 32.7% vs 24.2%). The findings of this study demonstrate that DAS exposure causes a suppression in macrophage phagocytic function and therefore may alter the first line of immunological defense in chickens.
- Published
- 1998
20. Preliminary diatom analysis of selected samples from Lake Abitibi and Glacial Lake Ojibway, Ontario and Quebec
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JJ Veillette, P B Hamilton, and C L Prévost
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Oceanography ,Diatom ,biology ,Glacial lake ,biology.organism_classification ,Geology - Published
- 1995
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21. A training program to improve milk production in the developing Chinese dairy industry.
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R. D. Bush, J. K. House, B. Hamilton, and P. C. Wynn
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The Chinese government has been concerned about the inability of Holstein heifers imported from Australia to perform to their genetic potential. Therefore, the Australian government initiated an extension program to address the nutritional, environmental and health management of these animals. This involved developing appropriate resources and providing on-site training at workshops in four Chinese provinces (Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia, Hebei and Heilongjiang) that have been the major recipients of Australian cattle and together account for 65% of China's dairy herd. Training resources were developed in the form of a comprehensive reference manual, a set of 12 applied fact sheets and an interactive DVD. Training has been delivered to over 285 key dairy extension workers and farmers from across China, with over 90% of participants giving a positive appraisal for all workshop sessions. The growth of dairy farming in China is likely to be the key driver of continued demand for dairy heifers from Australia and associated support for training, which must now be the initiative of the Chinese government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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22. Phylogenetic analysis of freshwater fish trypanosomes from Europe using ssu rRNA gene sequences and random amplification of polymorphic DNA.
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W. C. GIBSON, J. LOM, H. PECKOV, V. R. FERRIS, and P. B. HAMILTON
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- 2005
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23. Survey of aflatoxicosis in farm animals
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P B Hamilton, R B Smith, and J M Griffin
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Aflatoxin ,Swine ,Animal feed ,Cattle Diseases ,Biology ,Zea mays ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Poultry ,Foodborne Diseases ,Animal science ,Aflatoxins ,North Carolina ,medicine ,Animals ,Annual variation ,Diagnostic laboratory ,Poultry Diseases ,Swine Diseases ,Ecology ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Mean value ,food and beverages ,Seasonality ,medicine.disease ,Animal Feed ,Animals, Domestic ,Cattle ,Seasons ,Research Article ,Food Science ,Biotechnology ,Bile ductule - Abstract
Over a 22-month period, 278 submissions of farm animals were made to the North Carolina Diagnostic Laboratory for suspected aflatoxicosis, and 94 cases were confirmed on the basis of finding aflatoxin in the feed and the occurrence of bile ductule proliferation. There was an annual variation in the incidence of aflatoxicosis, as well as a seasonal variation: the peak incidence occurred in the winter, and the minimum incidence occurred during the summer. The annual increase coincided with the corn harvest. All confirmed cases occurred on farms that raised and stored their own corn, and 88% were in swine. The cases were geographically localized in the eastern section of North Carolina (94% of the total cases) where 82% of the swine and 79% of the corn are produced. Mean concentration of aflatoxin in feed samples from the confirmed cases was 3,890 mug/kg, and the mean value for corn used in making the feed was 5,180 mug/kg. Only aflatoxin B1 was found in the samples. These data were interpreted to mean that the incidence and severity of aflatoxicosis is greater than previously suspected, that poor on-farm storage of corn is a primary contributing factor, that aflatoxin formation continues during and after the milling process, and that mycotoxicoses other than aflatoxicosis may cause equal or greater problems.
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- 1976
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24. A computerized system for storage and statistical analysis of clinical amino acid data
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P B Hamilton, D M Schoengold, D J Miner, and R H deFiore
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education.field_of_study ,Information retrieval ,Computer science ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Population ,Bioinformatics ,Minicomputer ,law.invention ,law ,Computerized system ,Statistical analysis ,education ,Core Storage - Abstract
We have developed a system of computer programs to expedite analyses of amino acid data obtained in a clinical environment. The system contains a program for building and maintaining libraries of chromatogram data, and a program for retrieval of data on the basis of any of its associated biographical characteristics. Several programs have been written that work with data drawn from the libraries. They provide for easy presentation, manipulation, or statistical analysis of the data. Included are comparison of population means and variances and intra-population correlation analyses. A minicomputer that has 12K of core storage is adequate for use with the system.
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- 1976
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25. Factors Affecting the Spatial Distribution of Diatoms on the Surface Sediments of Three Precambrian Shield Lakes
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W. A. Glooschenko, J. C. Earle, P. B. Hamilton, and Hamish C. Duthie
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Sediment ,Wetland ,Aquatic Science ,Structural basin ,biology.organism_classification ,Spatial distribution ,Spatial heterogeneity ,Precambrian ,Oceanography ,Diatom ,Sedimentary rock ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Geology - Abstract
Spatial heterogeneity in species composition of surface sediment diatom assemblages was examined in three Precambrian Shield lakes of different water chemistry and basin morphometry. The study revealed that one sample cannot adequately represent the "average" diatom flora of a lake. The results of cluster analysis, multivariate analysis of variance, and analysis of covariance indicated that the lakes exhibited different patterns of spatial heterogeneity in their sedimentary diatom assemblages. In the morphometrically simple Plastic Lake the amount of variability was substantially lower than in the other lakes. In the morphometrically more complex Blue Chalk Lake and Chub Lake there was considerably more variability; however, very little of the variability could be attributed to depth or basin shape. The variability in surface diatom assemblages was markedly higher in Chub Lake, probably as a result of the influx of diatoms from the wetlands surrounding the lake. Despite a significant amount of heterogeneity in sediment diatom composition within each lake, between-lake differences were sufficiently high to suggest that comparisons between lakes based on sedimentary diatom remains are probably valid if sampling sites are selected following prescribed criteria.
- Published
- 1988
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26. Evaluation of Penicillic Acid for Toxicity in Broiler Chickens
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P. B. Hamilton, W. E. Huff, and Alex Ciegler
- Subjects
Male ,Aflatoxin ,animal structures ,Chemical Phenomena ,Body Weight ,Broiler ,food and beverages ,Proventriculus ,General Medicine ,Feed conversion ratio ,Toxicology ,Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Penicillic acid ,Toxicity ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food science ,Mycotoxin ,Gizzard ,Caproates ,Chickens ,Penicillic Acid - Abstract
Penicillic acid is a mycotoxin produced by various fungi. It may occur in high concentrations in corn and can also be produced concomitantly with other mycotoxins in poultry feed. This mycotoxin was evaluated for its toxicity in broiler chickens by feeding graded concentrations (0, 100, 200, and 400 microgram/g of diet) to 4 groups of 10 birds per treatment. No significant (P greater than .05) effects were measured on growth rate, feed conversion, relative size of pancreas, spleen, liver, heart, bursa, or kidney or on hemoglobin, packed cell volume, liver lipid, plasma protein, or glucose. The only significant effects were a slight reduction in the size of the proventriculus and gizzard at dose levels of 200 and 400 microgram/g. Neither the salt nor lactone forms of penicillic acid had any detectable effect. The acute oral LD50 for the sodium salt form was 92 +/- 9 mg/kg. These data suggest that penicillic acid by itself has little toxicity (less than 1% of that of aflatoxin) in chickens.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Impairment of phagocytosis by heterophils from chickens during ochratoxicosis
- Author
-
C F Chang and P B Hamilton
- Subjects
Ochratoxin A ,Blood Bactericidal Activity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neutrophils ,Microgram ,Phagocytosis ,Enterobacter ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Poultry Diseases ,Ecology ,biology ,Broiler ,biology.organism_classification ,Ochratoxins ,In vitro ,Diet ,Chemotaxis, Leukocyte ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Chickens ,Bacteria ,Research Article ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The effect of graded concentrations of dietary ochratoxin A (0, O.5, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, and 8.0 microgram/g of diet) on the in vitro phagocytic, locomotory, and bactericidal capacities of heterophils from broiler chickens was investigated. Both the percentage and the mean phagocytic activities were decreased significantly (P less than 0.05) at 4.0 and 8.0 microgram/g. Both directed and undirected locomotion of heterophila was impaired significantly at the same concentrations. A crossover experiment revealed that the reduced percentage of phagocytosis was associated with the heterophil itself and not with a serum factor such as complement. Heterophila from birds that consumed 4.0 microgram/g were not impaired in ability to kill engulfed bacteria.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Aflatoxin Effects in White Leghorn Chickens Selected for Response to Sheep Erythrocyte Antigen
- Author
-
P. B. Hamilton, E. A. Dunnington, C. O. Ubosi, and Paul B. Siegel
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Aflatoxin ,Population ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Sheep red blood cell ,Biology ,Body weight ,Feed conversion ratio ,White (mutation) ,Animal science ,Antigen ,Erythrocyte antigen ,Animal Science and Zoology ,education - Abstract
Chickens from lines selectively bred for high and low antibody response to sheep red blood cell antigen and reciprocal crosses between them were fed diets containing 0, 1, 2, 3, and 6 micrograms of total aflatoxin/g diet from 2 to 42 days of age. Low-line birds, although larger, did not differ from the high-line birds in feed consumption, feed conversion, surface, or cloacal temperatures. Differences between crosses and parental lines varied according to the particular trait. Responses to dietary aflatoxin were similar regardless of population. Aflatoxin depressed body weight, feed consumption, and feed conversion at 14 days and subsequent ages with the effect on body weight and feed consumption occurring at lower levels than that noted for feed conversion. Although aflatoxin did not alter cloacal temperatures, there were progressive decreases in surface temperatures at 2 micrograms/g and higher.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Aflatoxin Effects in White Leghorn Chicken s Selected for Response to Sheep Erythrocyte Antigen
- Author
-
P. B. Hamilton, W. B. Gross, Marion Ehrich, Paul B. Siegel, and C. O. Ubosi
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Aflatoxin ,animal structures ,White Leghorn Chicken ,Lymphocyte ,Population ,Spleen ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Serology ,Andrology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Antigen ,Immunology ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,education ,Mycotoxin - Abstract
Aflatoxin was fed to chickens from lines selected for high and low antibody response to sheep erythrocyte (SRBC) antigen and reciprocal crosses between the two lines. Differences were found among populations for liver, bursa, and thymus weight and antibody production to SRBC but not for spleen weight or heterophil lymphocyte ratios. Dietary aflatoxin depressed absolute and relative weights of bursae and thymi and absolute weights of livers and spleens. Relative to body weight, however, liver and spleen weights increased. There was a large decrease in liver metabolism and a dramatic increase in heterophil .lymphocyte ratios when 5700 ppb of alfatoxin was fed, but no alteration in antibody production to SRBC antigen was detected. Population by response to aflatoxin interactions were not significant for any of the traits measured except bursa and spleen weights, suggesting a general response to this mycotoxin among lines of chickens known to be immunologically different.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Simultaneous occurrence of deoxynivalenol, zearalenone, and aflatoxin in 1982 scabby wheat from the midwestern United States
- Author
-
Winston M. Hagler, P B Hamilton, and K Tyczkowska
- Subjects
Aflatoxin ,Food Contamination ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Crop ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Aflatoxins ,medicine ,Mycotoxin ,Zearalenone ,Triticum ,Ecology ,Chemistry ,Toxin ,Nebraska ,Resorcinols ,Kansas ,Contamination ,Agronomy ,Trichothecenes ,Sesquiterpenes ,Food Analysis ,Research Article ,Food Science ,Biotechnology ,Food contaminant - Abstract
Thirty-three samples of wheat of the 1982 crop year from Kansas and Nebraska were analyzed for deoxynivalenol, T-2 toxin, zearalenone, and aflatoxin. Deoxynivalenol was identified in 31 of 33 samples, zearalenone was identified in 3 of 33 samples, and aflatoxin B1 was identified in 23 of 31 samples. One 1982 wheat sample from Illinois and one from Texas were also contaminated with deoxynivalenol at 1,200 and 600 ng/g, respectively. None of the samples contained detectable T-2 toxin. The mean concentration of deoxynivalenol was 1,782 +/- 262 ng/g, and the concentrations of aflatoxin B1 ranged from 0.8 to 17.0 ng/g, with a mean of 3.37 +/- 0.7. Zearalenone concentrations of the three positive samples were 35, 90, and 115 ng/g. However, density segregation of two other samples which tested negative yielded light fractions, comprising less than 2% of the samples, contaminated at 230 and 254 ng of zearalenone per g; calculated zearalenone concentrations for these two samples were below the limit of detection of the method. The high frequency of aflatoxin B1 and deoxynivalenol in wheat from the 1982 crop is unprecedented, as is the simultaneous contamination of some samples with deoxynivalenol, zearalenone, and aflatoxin B1.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. SOME PROPERTIES OF THE CYTOCHROME OXIDASE OF PENICILLIUM CHRYSOGENUM
- Author
-
Charles J. Sih, S. G. Knight, and P. B. Hamilton
- Subjects
biology ,Penicillium ,Articles ,Penicillium chrysogenum ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Electron Transport Complex IV ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Cytochrome c oxidase ,Oxidoreductases ,Molecular Biology - Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Severe Oral Lesions in Chickens Caused by Ingestion of Dietary Fusariotoxin T-2
- Author
-
B. A. Weeks, H. R. Burmeister, R. D. Wyatt, and P. B. Hamilton
- Subjects
Male ,Fusarium ,Animal feed ,Staphylococcus ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Zea mays ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Staphylococcus epidermidis ,Escherichia coli ,medicine ,Animals ,Ingestion ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Mycotoxin ,Poultry Diseases ,Food Microbiology and Toxicology ,Analysis of Variance ,Bacteriological Techniques ,Mouth ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Inoculation ,Body Weight ,Fungi ,General Medicine ,Mycotoxins ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Animal Feed ,Disease Models, Animal ,chemistry ,Food Microbiology ,Mouth Diseases ,Chickens ,Infiltration (medical) - Abstract
Fusariotoxin T-2 is a mycotoxin produced by Fusarium tricinctum which was implicated in moldy corn toxicosis of farm animals. Graded concentrations of dietary fusariotoxin T-2 (0, 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 μg/g, respectively) were given to groups of 40 chickens. Raised yellowish-white lesions on the mouth parts were produced by all concentrations, and the size of the lesions was dose-related. The growth rate was reduced significantly ( P < 0.05) by concentrations of 4, 8, and 16 μg/g. The mouth fluid of the affected birds contained greatly increased numbers of bacteria, including Staphylococcus epidermidis and Escherichia coli , which proved avirulent when inoculated into scarified tissue of control birds. Microscopy examinations of the lesions revealed a fibrinous surface layer, intermediate layers containing invaginations filled with rods and cocci, and a heavy infiltration of the underlying tissues with granular leukocytes. These data suggest that the role of fusariotoxin T-2 in field cases of moldy corn toxicosis should be reinvestigated since oral lesions were not mentioned in the original descriptions of the disease. However, the lesions bear some features of those characteristic of the third or septic angina stage of alimentary toxic aleukia, a nutritional toxicosis of humans produced by eating grains infested with F. tricinctum .
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Ion Exchange Chromatography of Amino Acids. Semiautomatic Method of Operation with Cationic Exchange Resin Columns
- Author
-
P. B. Hamilton and R. A. Anderson
- Subjects
Cationic exchange ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Aqueous normal-phase chromatography ,Anion-exchange chromatography ,Chemistry ,Hydrophilic interaction chromatography ,Ion chromatography ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,Amino acid - Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Mouse Toxicity of Fungi of Tobacco
- Author
-
R. E. Welty, P. B. Hamilton, and G. B. Lucas
- Subjects
medicine.medical_treatment ,Intraperitoneal injection ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Microbiology ,Toxicology ,Nicotine ,Mice ,Ecology and Taxonomy ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tobacco ,medicine ,Animals ,Bioassay ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Mycotoxin ,Aspergillus ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Plant Extracts ,General Medicine ,Mycotoxins ,biology.organism_classification ,Alternaria ,Plants, Toxic ,chemistry ,Penicillium ,Toxicity ,Biological Assay ,Female ,Mitosporic Fungi ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A bioassay for fungal toxins based on the intraperitoneal injection of test materials into mice was used to screen 976 cultures isolated from tobacco and grown in a high-protein baby cereal and also to determine whether samples of tobacco damaged by fungi are more toxic than samples of apparently sound tobacco. Of 236 fungal isolates from noncured tobacco, 79% were lethal when homogenized cultures of these isolates were tested. Forty-nine per cent of 740 fungi isolated from cured tobacco were lethal. Of the genera from which 30 or more isolates were tested, Epicoccum, Alternaria , and Penicillium had the highest percentage of toxic isolates from non-cured tobacco, whereas Epicoccum, Aspergillus , and Alternaria had the highest percentage from cured tobacco. Samples of tobacco naturally infected with brown spot, caused by Alternaria tenuis , did not have a significantly different LD 50 value after 48 hr than comparable disease-free samples. However, animals which died from doses near the LD 50 dose of tobacco infected with Alternaria generally died in 24 to 48 hr with signs associated with a depressant rather than a stimulant, such as nicotine, which caused death in 15 to 30 min. These signs were duplicated by injecting homogenized pure cultures of Alternaria . These studies, although inconclusive with regard to the effects of fungal contaminants on the quality or usability of tobacco, have developed evidence that suggests the advisability of a study on smoke or smoke condensates from moldy and nonmoldy tobacco.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. EFFECT OF 20, 60 AND 120 MINUTES OF RENAL ISCHEMIA ON GLOMERULAR AND TUBULAR FUNCTION
- Author
-
P. B. Hamilton and R. A. Phillips
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Renal ischemia ,business.industry ,Physiology (medical) ,Renal physiology ,Kidney Glomerulus ,Urology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Kidney ,business ,Function (biology) ,Filtration fraction - Published
- 1948
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Microbiological Metabolism of Naphthyridines
- Author
-
G. P. Peruzzotti, P. B. Hamilton, D. Rosi, and E. D. Nielson
- Subjects
General Immunology and Microbiology ,Ascomycota ,Nalidixic acid ,Stereochemistry ,Metabolite ,Substituent ,General Medicine ,Metabolism ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Paper chromatography ,chemistry ,Biotransformation ,Biochemistry ,Penicillium ,medicine ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Penicillium adametzi and seven other species convert nalidixic acid, 1,4-dihydro-1-ethyl-7-methyl-4-oxo-1,8-naphthyridine-3-carboxylic acid, to 1,4-dihydro-1-ethyl-7-hydroxymethyl-4-oxo-1,8-naphthyridine-3-carboxylic acid. Forty-seven other species from six orders of fungi seem to achieve the same conversion as judged by chromatographic and spectral evidence. Under special conditions, P. adametzi also produces a second metabolite which was identified as the corresponding 7-carboxylic acid. The metabolic attack on the ring substituent is identical with the pathway previously established with humans. No evidence was obtained for metabolic attack on the naphthyridine nucleus itself.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Ion Exchange Chromatography of Amino Acids. A Single Column, High Resolving, Fully Automatic Procedure
- Author
-
P. B. Hamilton
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Aqueous normal-phase chromatography ,Chemistry ,Hydrophilic interaction chromatography ,Fully automatic ,Ion chromatography ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Column (data store) ,Analytical Chemistry ,Amino acid - Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Carbon Compounds in Apollo 12 Lunar Samples
- Author
-
Charles M. Drew, P. B. Hamilton, Harold C. Urey, Ward M. Scott, Vincent E. Modzeleski, Joseph Thomas, Ward R, Bartholomew Nagy, Mohammad Ma, Lois Anne Nagy, and J. E. Modzeleski
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Multidisciplinary ,Materials science ,biology ,Ion chromatography ,Analytical chemistry ,Apollo ,Mineralogy ,biology.organism_classification ,Mass spectrometry ,chemistry ,Lunar soil ,Compounds of carbon ,Gas chromatography ,Chemical composition ,Pyrolysis - Abstract
Carbon compounds in Apollo 12 lunar fines and core samples, using pyrolysis, mass spectrometry, ion exchange chromatography and optical and electron microscopy
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Decreased Plasma Carotenoids During Aflatoxicosis
- Author
-
H T, Tung and P B, Hamilton
- Subjects
Meat ,Aflatoxins ,Pigmentation ,Animals ,Food Contamination ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Poultry Products ,Animal Feed ,Carotenoids ,Chickens - Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Ion Exchange Chromatography of Amino Acids
- Author
-
P. B. Hamilton
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,chemistry ,Aqueous normal-phase chromatography ,Anion-exchange chromatography ,Hydrophilic interaction chromatography ,Ion chromatography ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,Amino acid - Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Preparation of scirpentriol and triacetoxyscirpenol in good yield from cultures of Fusarium sambucinum NRRL 13495
- Author
-
P B Hamilton and K E Richardson
- Subjects
Fusarium ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Recrystallization (geology) ,Ethyl acetate ,Acetates ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hydrolysis ,Chromatography ,Ecology ,biology ,Silica gel ,Mycotoxins ,biology.organism_classification ,Hexane ,T-2 Toxin ,chemistry ,Yield (chemistry) ,Fermentation ,Chromatography, Thin Layer ,Sesquiterpenes ,Research Article ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Crude extracts of filtrates of cultures of Fusarium sambucinum NRRL 13495 were acetylated or hydrolyzed. After chromatography on cartridge columns of silica gel and recrystallization three times from mixtures of ethyl acetate and hexane, 3,4,15-triacetoxyscirpenol (435 +/- 10 mg/liter of filtrate; mean +/- standard error [n = 3]) and the parent alcohol scirpentriol were isolated (261 +/- 29 mg/liter of filtrate; mean +/- standard error [n = 3]) in 68 and 53% yield for a 130- and 14-fold improvement, respectively, over prior reports.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Preparation of 4,15-diacetoxyscirpenol from cultures of Fusarium sambucinum NRRL 13495
- Author
-
K E Richardson and P B Hamilton
- Subjects
Fusarium ,Chromatography ,Ecology ,Silica gel ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Ethyl acetate ,Acetates ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Diacetoxyscirpenol ,law.invention ,Hexane ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,law ,Yield (chemistry) ,Chromatography, Thin Layer ,Crystallization ,Trichothecenes ,Sesquiterpenes ,Research Article ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Filtrates of Fusarium sambucinum NRRL 13495 grown in a stagnant culture for 9 days contained up to 458 +/- 60 (mean +/- standard error; n = 3) mg of 4,15-diacetoxyscirpenol per liter depending on culture conditions. Extraction with ethyl acetate, chromatography on a column of silica gel, and crystallization from mixtures of ethyl acetate and hexane provided pure material in 96% yield.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Potentialities of an inexpensive computer system for analysis of clinical amino acid data: forecast and speculation
- Author
-
P B Hamilton, R H deFiore, D M Schoengold, and D J Miner
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,chemistry ,Computer science ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,MEDLINE ,Computational biology ,Speculation ,Amino acid - Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Inhibition of the glycogen phosphorylase system during ochratoxicosis in chickens
- Author
-
M F Warren and P B Hamilton
- Subjects
Ochratoxin A ,Glycogenolysis ,Ecology ,food and beverages ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Adenosine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glycogen phosphorylase ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,medicine ,Glycogen storage disease ,Protein kinase A ,Phosphorylase kinase ,Ochratoxin ,Food Science ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Graded doses of ochratoxin A incorporated into the diet (0, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, and 8.0 micrograms/g) of broiler chickens significantly (P < 0.05) inhibited activity of protein kinase, the initiator enzyme of the glycogen phosphorylase system, in the livers at all dose levels. Only the highest dose, 8.0 micrograms/g, significantly reduced the total activity of phosphorylase kinase, which is activated by protein kinase. The total activity of phosphorylase, which is activated by phosphorylase kinase, was unaltered by ochratoxin A at any level. Additon of ochratoxin A to liver extracts control birds inhibited protein kinase but not phosphorylase kinase. When added to extracts of livers from control birds, cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate stimulated protein kinase but not phosphorylase kinase. The cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate had no effect when added to extracts from birds fed ochratoxin A. These results suggest that ochratoxin A affects primarily the cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate-dependent protein kinase which initiates the enzymatic cascade leading to glycogenolysis. Furthermore, these results conform an earlier assignment on morphological criteria of the glycogenosis of ochratoxicosis as a type X glycogen storage disease.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Influence of degree of acetylation of scirpenol mycotoxins on feed refusal by chickens
- Author
-
A A, Ademoyero and P B, Hamilton
- Subjects
Male ,Fusarium ,Animals ,Acetylation ,Food Contamination ,Feeding Behavior ,Mycotoxins ,Trichothecenes ,Animal Feed ,Chickens ,Sesquiterpenes - Abstract
The refusal by young chickens of feed containing graded levels (0, 1.25, 2.5, 5.0, 10.0, 20.0, and 40.0 micrograms/g of diet) of the Fusarium mycotoxins scirpentriol (STO), monoacetoxyscirpenol (MAS), diacetoxyscirpenol (DAS), and triacetoxyscirpenol (TAS) was tested in a defined experimental model. The order of activity as measured by minimum effective dose was DAS greater than MAS = STO greater than TAS whereas the order measured by percentage refusal at 10, 20, and 40 micrograms/g was MAS greater than DAS greater than STO greater than TAS. These results imply that feed refusal associated with corn and feed infested with Fusarium sps. might be a multiple toxicosis because the scirpenols, which are not tested for routinely, can occur together naturally.
- Published
- 1989
46. Contamination of distilled water, HCl, and NH4OH with amino acids, proteins, and bacteria
- Author
-
P B, Hamilton and T T, Myoda
- Subjects
Quaternary Ammonium Compounds ,Pseudomonas ,Water ,Hydrochloric Acid ,Amino Acids ,Drug Contamination ,Water Microbiology - Published
- 1974
47. Chemotaxis of polymorphonuclear neutrophilic leukocytes by mannan-enriched preparations of Candida albicans
- Author
-
B A, Weeks, M R, Escobar, P B, Hamilton, and V M, Fueston
- Subjects
Mannans ,Chemotaxis, Leukocyte ,Cytoplasm ,Kinetics ,Species Specificity ,Cell Wall ,Neutrophils ,Polysaccharides ,Candida albicans ,Animals ,Humans ,Cells, Cultured - Published
- 1976
48. Intestinl fragility during ochratoxicosis and aflatoxicosis in broiler chickens
- Author
-
P B Hamilton and M F Warren
- Subjects
Male ,Aflatoxin ,Microgram ,Biology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Ochratoxins ,Microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Aflatoxins ,medicine ,Animals ,Large intestine ,Intestine, Large ,Mycotoxin ,Ochratoxin ,Ecology ,Hatching ,Broiler ,food and beverages ,Organ Size ,Lipids ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Collagen ,Chickens ,Food Science ,Biotechnology ,Research Article - Abstract
Graded concentrations of dietary ochratoxin (0, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, and 8.0 microgram/g) and aflatoxin (0, 0.625, 1.25, 2.5, 5.0, and 10.0 microgram/g) were fed to broiler chicks from hatching to 3 weeks of age. The breaking strength of the large intestines was decreased significantly (P < 0.05) by ochratoxin (2, 4, and 8 microgram/g), but not by aflatoxin. This fragility was accompanied by an increase in the weight of the large intestine relative to body weight of birds fed ochratoxin (4.0 and 8.0 microgram/g), whereas aflatoxin had no significant (P < 0.05) effect on this parameter. Lipid content of the large intestine was decreased significantly (P < 0.05) by aflatoxin (10.0 microgram/g) and increased by ochratoxin (8.0 microgram/g). Microscopic examination of cross sections of large intestines stained for collagen gave the impression of a great decrease in collagen content of birds fed ochratoxin, but not aflatoxin. The radial length of the collagenous longitudinal folds of the large intestine was decreased significantly (P < 0.05) by ochratoxin (2.0, 4.0, and 8.0 microgram/g). These observations, plus a field case characterized by intestinal ruptures causing carcass condemnations on the processing line and by the occurrence of aflatoxin and ochratoxin in the chicken feed, suggest a novel way in which mycotoxins cause economic loss to agriculture.
- Published
- 1980
49. Aflatoxin effects in white Leghorn chickens selected for response to sheep erythrocyte antigen. 1. Body weight, feed conversion, and temperature responses
- Author
-
C O, Ubosi, P B, Hamilton, E A, Dunnington, and P B, Siegel
- Subjects
Male ,Analysis of Variance ,Erythrocytes ,Sheep ,Body Weight ,Body Temperature ,Eating ,Aflatoxins ,Antibody Formation ,Animals ,Female ,Energy Metabolism ,Skin Temperature ,Chickens ,Crosses, Genetic - Abstract
Chickens from lines selectively bred for high and low antibody response to sheep red blood cell antigen and reciprocal crosses between them were fed diets containing 0, 1, 2, 3, and 6 micrograms of total aflatoxin/g diet from 2 to 42 days of age. Low-line birds, although larger, did not differ from the high-line birds in feed consumption, feed conversion, surface, or cloacal temperatures. Differences between crosses and parental lines varied according to the particular trait. Responses to dietary aflatoxin were similar regardless of population. Aflatoxin depressed body weight, feed consumption, and feed conversion at 14 days and subsequent ages with the effect on body weight and feed consumption occurring at lower levels than that noted for feed conversion. Although aflatoxin did not alter cloacal temperatures, there were progressive decreases in surface temperatures at 2 micrograms/g and higher.
- Published
- 1985
50. The thrombocyte as the primary circulating phagocyte in chickens
- Author
-
C F, Chang and P B, Hamilton
- Subjects
Blood Platelets ,Leukocyte Count ,Phagocytosis ,Animals ,Female ,Chickens - Published
- 1979
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