55 results on '"Parsons CT"'
Search Results
2. Editorial: Phosphorus along the soil-freshwater-ocean continuum
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Cade-Menun, BJ, Duhamel, S, Dodd, Rosalind, Lønborg, C, Parsons, CT, and Taylor, WD
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3. Co-precipitation of iron and silicon: Reaction kinetics, elemental ratios and the influence of phosphorus.
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Huang L, Parsons CT, Slowinski S, and Van Cappellen P
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- Phosphorus chemistry, Oxidation-Reduction, Water, Ferrous Compounds chemistry, Iron chemistry, Silicon
- Abstract
A sufficient supply of dissolved silicon (DSi) relative to dissolved phosphorus (DP) may decrease the likelihood of harmful algal blooms in eutrophic waters. Oxidative precipitation of Fe(II) at oxic-anoxic interfaces may contribute to the immobilization of DSi, thereby exerting control over the DSi availability in the overlying water. Nevertheless, the efficacy of DSi immobilization in this context remains to be precisely determined. To investigate the behavior of DSi during Fe(II) oxidation, anoxic solutions containing mixtures of aqueous Fe(II), DSi, and dissolved phosphorus (DP) were exposed to dissolved oxygen (DO) in the batch system. The experimental data, combined with kinetic reaction modeling, indicate that DSi removal during Fe(II) oxidation occurs via two pathways. At the beginning of the experiments, the oxidation of Fe(II)-DSi complexes induces the fast removal of DSi. Upon complete oxidation of Fe(II), further DSi removal is due to adsorption to surface sites of the Fe(III) oxyhydroxides. The presence of DP effectively competes with DSi via both of these pathways during the initial and later stages of the experiments, with as a result more limited removal of DSi during Fe(II) oxidation. Overall, we conclude that at near neutral pH the oxidation of Fe(II) has considerable capacity to immobilize DSi, where the rapid homogeneous oxidation of Fe(II)-DSi results in greater DSi removal compared to surface adsorption. Elevated DP concentration, however, effectively outcompetes DSi in co-precipitation interactions, potentially contributing to enhanced DSi availability within aquatic systems., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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4. Modeling multi-year phosphorus dynamics in a bioretention cell: Phosphorus partitioning, accumulation, and export.
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Zhou B, Shafii M, Parsons CT, Passeport E, Rezanezhad F, Lisogorsky A, and Van Cappellen P
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- Rain, Soil, Adsorption, Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Ecosystem
- Abstract
Phosphorus (P) export from urban areas via stormwater runoff contributes to eutrophication of downstream aquatic ecosystems. Bioretention cells are a Low Impact Development (LID) technology promoted as a green solution to attenuate urban peak flow discharge, as well as the export of excess nutrients and other contaminants. Despite their rapidly growing implementation worldwide, a predictive understanding of the efficiency of bioretention cells in reducing urban P loadings remains limited. Here, we present a reaction-transport model to simulate the fate and transport of P in a bioretention cell facility in the greater Toronto metropolitan area. The model incorporates a representation of the biogeochemical reaction network that controls P cycling within the cell. We used the model as a diagnostic tool to determine the relative importance of processes immobilizing P in the bioretention cell. The model predictions were compared to multi-year observational data on 1) the outflow loads of total P (TP) and soluble reactive P (SRP) during the 2012-2017 period, 2) TP depth profiles collected at 4 time points during the 2012-2019 period, and 3) sequential chemical P extractions performed on core samples from the filter media layer obtained in 2019. Results indicate that exfiltration to underlying native soil was principally responsible for decreasing the surface water discharge from the bioretention cell (63 % runoff reduction). From 2012 to 2017, the cumulative outflow export loads of TP and SRP only accounted for 1 % and 2 % of the corresponding inflow loads, respectively, hence demonstrating the extremely high P reduction efficiency of this bioretention cell. Accumulation in the filter media layer was the predominant mechanism responsible for the reduction in P outflow loading (57 % retention of TP inflow load) followed by plant uptake (21 % TP retention). Of the P retained within the filter media layer, 48 % occurred in stable, 41 % in potentially mobilizable, and 11 % in easily mobilizable forms. There were no signs that the P retention capacity of the bioretention cell was approaching saturation after 7 years of operation. The reactive transport modeling approach developed here can in principle be transferred and adapted to fit other bioretention cell designs and hydrological regimes to estimate P surface loading reductions at a range of temporal scales, from a single precipitation event to long-term (i.e., multi-year) operation., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Crown Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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5. Periphyton Phosphorus Uptake in Response to Dynamic Concentrations in Streams: Assimilation and Changes to Intracellular Speciation.
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Pearce NJT, Parsons CT, Pomfret SM, and Yates AG
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- Ecosystem, Phosphorus chemistry, Biomass, Rivers chemistry, Periphyton
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Effective modeling and management of phosphorus (P) losses from landscapes to receiving waterbodies requires an adequate understanding of P retention and remobilization along the terrestrial-aquatic continuum. Within aquatic ecosystems, the stream periphyton can transiently store bioavailable P through uptake and incorporation into biomass during subscouring and baseflow conditions. However, the capacity of stream periphyton to respond to dynamic P concentrations, which are ubiquitous in streams, is largely unknown. Our study used artificial streams to impose short periods (48 h) of high SRP concentration on stream periphyton acclimated to P scarcity. We examined periphyton P content and speciation through nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to elucidate the intracellular storage and transformation of P taken up across a gradient of transiently elevated SRP availabilities. Our study demonstrates that the stream periphyton not only takes up significant quantities of P following a 48-h high P pulse but also sustains supplemental growth over extended periods of time (10 days), following the reestablishment of P scarcity by efficiently assimilating P stored as polyphosphates into functional biomass (i.e., phospho-monoesters and phospho-diesters). Although P uptake and intracellular storage approached an upper limit across the experimentally imposed SRP pulse gradient, our findings demonstrate the previously underappreciated extent to which the periphyton can modulate the timing and magnitude of P delivery from streams. Further elucidating these intricacies in the transient storage potential of periphyton highlights opportunities to enhance the predictive capacity of watershed nutrient models and potentially improve watershed P management.
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- 2023
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6. What do we know about the psychosocial issues associated with cancer during pregnancy? A scoping review and gap analysis.
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Harris J, Ream E, Armes J, Gibson F, Marcu A, Parsons CT, Robinson A, Varghese S, and Poole K
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- Infant, Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Medical Oncology, Databases, Factual, Disease Progression, Family, Breast Neoplasms
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Objectives: There is a global increase in the number of women diagnosed with cancer during their pregnancy and a nascent evidence base to guide their supportive care. The purposes of this study were to (1) map research on the psychosocial issues affecting women and their partners on diagnosis and treatment for cancer during pregnancy; (2) determine available supportive care or educational interventions; and (3) identify knowledge gaps for future research and development., Design: Scoping review., Search Strategy: Six databases were searched (Scopus, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Medline, Intermid, Maternal and Infant Health) to retrieve primary research (January 1995 to November 2021) investigating women and/or their partner's decision-making and their psychosocial outcomes during and after pregnancy., Data Extraction and Synthesis: Sociodemographic, gestational and disease characteristics of participants and psychosocial issues identified were extracted. Leventhal's self-regulatory model of illness provided a framework for mapping study findings enabling evidence synthesis and gap analysis., Results: Twelve studies were included, conducted in eight countries in six continents. Most women (70% of 217) were diagnosed with breast cancer during pregnancy. Reporting of sociodemographic, psychiatric, obstetric and oncological characteristics that are important in assessing psychosocial outcomes was inconsistent. None of the studies had a longitudinal design and no supportive care or educational interventions were identified. The gap analysis highlighted the lack of evidence about pathways to diagnosis, impact of late effects and how internal/social resources may affect outcomes., Conclusions: Research has focused on women with gestational breast cancer. Little is known about those diagnosed with other cancers. We encourage future study designs to capture data on sociodemographic, obstetric, oncological and psychiatric characteristics and adopt a longitudinal approach to explore the longer term psychosocial impact on women and their families. Future research should include outcomes that are meaningful for women (and their partners) and draw on international collaboration to accelerate progress in this field., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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7. Amorphous silica dissolution kinetics in freshwater environments: Effects of Fe 2+ and other solution compositional controls.
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Huang L, Parsons CT, Slowinski S, and Van Cappellen P
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- Silicon, Solubility, Fresh Water, Water metabolism, Oxygen metabolism, Silicon Dioxide chemistry, Diatoms metabolism
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The availability of dissolved silicon (DSi) exerts an important control on phytoplankton communities in freshwater environments: DSi limitation can shift species dominance to non-siliceous algae and increase the likelihood of harmful algal blooms. The availability of DSi in the water column in turn depends on the dissolution kinetics of amorphous silica (ASi), including diatoms frustules and phytoliths. Here, batch dissolution experiments conducted with diatom frustules from three diatom species and synthetic Aerosil OX 50 confirmed the previously reported non-linear dependence of ASi dissolution rate on the degree of undersaturation of the aqueous solution. At least two first-order dissolution rate constants are therefore required to describe the dissolution kinetics at high (typically, ≥0.55) and low (typically, <0.55) degrees of undersaturation. Our results further showed aqueous ferrous ion (Fe
2+ ), which is ubiquitous in anoxic waters, strongly inhibited ASi dissolution. The inhibition is attributed to the preferential binding of Fe2+ to Q2 groups (i.e., surface silicate groups bonded to the silica lattice via two bridging oxygen) which stabilizes the silica surface. However, further increasing the aqueous Fe2+ concentration likely catalyzes the detachment of Q3 groups (i.e., silicate groups bonded to the silica lattice via three bridging oxygen) from the surface. Overall, our study illustrates the manyfold effects the aqueous solution composition, notably the inhibition effect of Fe2+ under anoxic conditions, has on ASi dissolution. The results help to explain the controversial redox dependence of DSi internal loading from sediments, which is vital to quantitatively understanding silicon (Si) cycling in freshwater systems., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Crown Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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8. Salinization as a driver of eutrophication symptoms in an urban lake (Lake Wilcox, Ontario, Canada).
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Radosavljevic J, Slowinski S, Shafii M, Akbarzadeh Z, Rezanezhad F, Parsons CT, Withers W, and Van Cappellen P
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- Eutrophication, Humans, Nitrogen analysis, Ontario, Phosphorus analysis, Water Quality, Environmental Monitoring, Lakes
- Abstract
Lake Wilcox (LW), a shallow kettle lake located in southern Ontario, has experienced multiple phases of land use change associated with human settlement and residential development in its watershed since the early 1900s. Urban growth has coincided with water quality deterioration, including the occurrence of algal blooms and depletion of dissolved oxygen (DO) in the water column. We analyzed 22 years of water chemistry, land use, and climate data (1996-2018) using principal component analysis (PCA) and multiple linear regression (MLR) to identify the contributions of climate, urbanization, and nutrient loading to the changes in water chemistry. Variations in water column stratification, phosphorus (P) speciation, and chl-a (as a proxy for algal abundance) explain 76 % of the observed temporal trends of the four main PCA components derived from water chemistry data. MLR results further imply that the intensity of stratification, quantified by the Brunt-Väisälä frequency, is a major predictor of the changes in water quality. Other important factors explaining the variations in nitrogen (N) and P speciation, and the DO concentrations, are watershed imperviousness and lake chloride concentrations that, in turn, are closely correlated. We conclude that the observed in-lake water quality trends over the past two decades are linked to urbanization via increased salinization associated with expanding impervious land cover, rather than increasing external P loading. The rising salinity promotes water column stratification, which reduces the oxygenation of the hypolimnion and enhances internal P loading to the water column. Thus, stricter controls on the application and runoff of de-icing salt should be considered as part of managing eutrophication symptoms in lakes of cold climate regions., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Crown Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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9. Impacts of Dam Age on Lifetime Productivity of Angus Replacement Beef Females.
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Wellnitz KR, Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Boss DL, Wyffels SA, DelCurto T, and Van Emon ML
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Comprehensive cow-calf production data was utilized to evaluate the impact of dam age on lifetime productivity of Angus replacement beef females. Cows used in this study were commercial Angus replacement females born between 2006 and 2020, ranging in age from 1 to 14-yr of age (n = 3568). To determine the impact of dam age on lifetime productivity, cows were classified by age groups, specifically 2-, 3-, 4-, 5-, 6/7-, and 8-yrs old and older. The 8-yr and older group consisted of females that were up to 14-yr of age. Cow BW at breeding exhibited a cow age × dam age interaction (p < 0.01). Cows at 5-yrs of age from 2-yr old dams weighed less at breeding than cows at 5-yrs of age from 3-, 4-, 5- and 8-years and older dams, with cows at 5-yr of age from 6/7-yr old dams being intermediate. The probability of remaining in the herd at the age of 5 was significant for dam age (p = 0.05) averaging 69.41%, but after further delineation, no significant impacts of dam age were observed. Productivity as a measure of total pounds of calf weaned through 5-yrs displayed a dam age effect (p = 0.01) with cows from 8-yrs or older dams weaning more total pounds of calf, than cows from 3-yr-old dams. In summary, the impact of dam age on lifetime productivity indicates that dam age can impact future productivity of their offspring.
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- 2022
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10. Impacts of Heifer Post-Weaning Intake Classification on Performance Measurements of Lactating and Non-Lactating Two-, Five-, and Eight-Year-Old Angus Beef Females.
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Wellnitz KR, Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Boss DL, Wyffels SA, DelCurto T, and Van Emon ML
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Heifer post-weaning intake classification was utilized to evaluate subsequent intake and performance measurements of 2-, 5-, and 8-year-old lactating and non-lactating Angus females. For both studies, heifers were categorized based on voluntary feed intake (expressed as g/kg BW) as either low (<−0.50 SD from the mean), average (±0.50 SD from the mean), or high (>0.50 SD from the mean) within one year. Intake and production data of pregnant, non-lactating (n = 59; Study 1) and lactating, non-pregnant (n = 54; Study 2) females were evaluated. Heifer post-weaning voluntary feed intake was calculated over 80 test days post-weaning using GrowSafe feed intake units. Cow body-weight (BW) for non-lactating cows showed a tendency for age × intake interaction (p = 0.10), with older cows weighing more than younger cows. Milk production expressed as kilograms and g/kg BW of the cow had an age × intake (p < 0.001) effect. Two-year-old cows with low- and average-intake classifications had greater milk production (p < 0.001) and milk produced expressed as g/kg BW (p < 0.001) than 2-year-old cows with high-intake classifications. Additionally, 5-year-old cows with average and high-intake classifications had greater milk production (p < 0.001) and g/kg BW (p < 0.001) compared to 5-year-old cows classified as low-intake. In summary, heifer post-weaning intake classification had minor impacts on performance measurements in the three age classes of beef females at two different production levels.
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- 2022
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11. Influence of Heifer Post-Weaning Voluntary Feed Intake Classification on Lifetime Productivity in Black Angus Beef Females.
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Wellnitz KR, Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Boss DL, Wyffels SA, DelCurto T, and Van Emon ML
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This study evaluated heifer post-weaning voluntary feed intake (g/kg BW) classification on performance and reproductive measures, as well as impacts on lifetime productivity of 519 commercial Angus beef females. Heifer post-weaning voluntary feed intake (g/kg BW) was calculated over 80 test days following weaning using GrowSafe units. Heifers were categorized based on voluntary feed intake (g/kg BW) as either low (<−0.50 SD from the mean), average (±0.50 SD from the mean), or high (>0.50 SD from the mean) within year. Cow body weight (BW) and body condition score (BCS) at breeding displayed an age effect (p < 0.001), with 2- and 3-year-old cows having lighter BW and lower BCS than 4-yr-old and older cows. Cow BW at weaning showed significance for age and intake (p < 0.001) with younger cows being lighter than older cows, while low intake classified females had greater BW at weaning compared to average and high intake females. Additionally, calf 205-d weights and calf weaning weights (p < 0.01) were significant for age with calves born from older cows weighing more than younger cows. Weaning weight ratio displayed a linear increase with increasing intake classification (p < 0.01). Heifer yearling BW was significant for intake (p < 0.01) with low and average intake heifer classifications having greater heifer yearling BW than cows that had high intake classification as a heifer. Age and intake classification did not impact (p ≥ 0.22) pregnancy status or AI conception. In summary, heifer post-weaning feed intake classification had only minor impacts compared to age effects on lifetime productivity of Angus beef females.
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- 2022
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12. Agricultural phosphorus surplus trajectories for Ontario, Canada (1961-2016), and erosional export risk.
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Van Staden TL, Van Meter KJ, Basu NB, Parsons CT, Akbarzadeh Z, and Van Cappellen P
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- Agriculture methods, Canada, Humans, Lakes, Ontario, Rivers, Environmental Monitoring, Phosphorus analysis
- Abstract
Management strategies aimed at reducing nutrient enrichment of surface waters may be hampered by nutrient legacies that have accumulated in the landscape. Here, we apply the Net Anthropogenic Phosphorus Input (NAPI) model to reconstruct the historical phosphorus (P) input trajectories for the province of Ontario, which encompasses the Canadian portion of the drainage basin of the Laurentian Great Lakes (LGL). NAPI considers P inputs from detergent, human and livestock waste, fertilizer inputs, and P outputs by crop uptake. During the entire time period considered, from 1961 to 2016, Ontario experienced positive annual NAPI values. Despite a generally downward NAPI trend since the late 1970s, the lower LGL, especially Lake Erie, continue to be plagued by algal blooms. When comparing NAPI results and river monitoring data for the period 2003 to 2013, P discharged by Canadian rivers into Lake Erie only accounts for 12.5% of the NAPI supplied to the watersheds' agricultural areas. Thus, over 85% of the agricultural NAPI is retained in the watersheds where it contributes to a growing P legacy, primarily as soil P. The slow release of legacy P therefore represents a long-term risk to the recovery of the lake. To help mitigate this risk, we present a methodology to spatially map out the source areas with the greatest potential of erosional export of legacy soil P to surface waters. These areas should be prioritized in soil conservation efforts., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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13. Diurnal Ruminal pH and Temperature Patterns of Steers Fed Corn or Barley-Based Finishing Diets.
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DelCurto-Wyffels HM, Dafoe JM, Parsons CT, Boss DL, DelCurto T, Wyffels SA, Van Emon ML, and Bowman JGP
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This study evaluated the effects of corn or barley finishing diets on ruminal pH and temperature and their relationship to feed intake events using continuous reticulorumen monitoring of feedlot steers. Average daily ruminal pH and temperature were not impacted ( p ≥ 0.17) by diet. However, diet did affect daily variation of ruminal pH and temperature ( p < 0.01). Average hourly ruminal pH displayed a diet by hour post-feeding interaction ( p < 0.01), where barley-fed steers had greater ( p < 0.01) ruminal pH than corn-fed steers at 0, 1, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 and 23 h post feeding, but had lower ( p ≤ 0.05) ruminal pH than corn-fed steers at 6, 7, and 8 h post-feeding. Variation in ruminal pH hour post-feeding also displayed a diet by hour post-feeding interaction ( p < 0.01), where barley-fed steers had greater ( p ≤ 0.03) variation in ruminal pH at hours 1-17 post-feeding but did not differ ( p ≥ 0.16) at 0, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 and 23 h post-feeding. Additionally, average hourly ruminal temperature exhibited a diet by hour post-feeding interaction ( p < 0.01). In summary, basal grain interacted with time post-feeding influencing ruminal pH and temperature in feedlot steers.
- Published
- 2021
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14. Influence of Residual Feed Intake and Cow Age on Dry Matter Intake Post-Weaning and Peak Lactation of Black Angus Cows.
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Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Wyffels SA, DelCurto T, and Boss DL
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We evaluated heifer post-weaning residual feed intake (RFI) classification and cow age on dry matter intake (DMI) at two stages of production. Fifty-nine non-lactating, pregnant, (Study 1) and fifty-four lactating, non-pregnant (Study 2) commercial black Angus beef cows were grouped by age and RFI. Free-choice, hay pellets were fed in a GrowSafe feeding system. In Study 1, cow DMI (kg/d) and intake rate (g/min) displayed a cow age effect ( p < 0.01) with an increase in DMI and intake rate with increasing cow age. In Study 2, cow DMI (kg/d) and intake rate (g/min) displayed a cow age effect ( p < 0.02) with an increase in DMI and intake rate with increasing cow age. Milk production displayed a cow age × RFI interaction ( p < 0.01) where both 5-6-year-old and 8-9-year-old low RFI cows produced more milk than high RFI cows. For both studies, intake and intake behavior were not influenced by RFI ( p ≥ 0.16) or cow age × RFI interaction ( p ≥ 0.21). In summary, heifer's post-weaning RFI had minimal effects on beef cattle DMI or intake behavior, however, some differences were observed in milk production.
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- 2021
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15. The Influence of Residual Feed Intake and Cow Age on Beef Cattle Performance, Supplement Intake, Resource Use, and Grazing Behavior on Winter Mixed-Grass Rangelands.
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Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Wyffels SA, DelCurto T, and Boss DL
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The objectives of this study were to evaluate the influence of RFI and cow age on the supplement intake and grazing behavior of beef cattle. Average daily supplement intake (kg/cow/d) displayed an RFI × cow age interaction ( p < 0.01), with a linear increase in average daily supplement intake with increasing RFI of 3-year-old cows ( p < 0.01). Average daily supplement intake (g ∙ kg BW
-1 ∙ d-1 ) displayed an RFI × cow age interaction ( p < 0.01), with a quadratic effect on supplement intake of 3-year-old cows ( p = 0.01). Cow age displayed a quadratic effect on variation of supplement intake ( p < 0.01), where 1-year-old cows had a greater CV of supplement intake than all other cow ages ( p < 0.01). Distance traveled displayed a cow age × RFI interaction ( p = 0.02), where high-RFI 5-year-old cows traveled further per day than low 5-year-old RFI cows. The probability of grazing site selection was influenced by cow age ( p ≤ 0.03). In summary, heifer post-weaning RFI had minimal effects on beef cattle performance, grazing behavior, or resource utilization; however, cow age impacted both grazing behavior and resource use.- Published
- 2021
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16. The Influence of Environmental Conditions on Intake Behavior and Activity by Feedlot Steers Fed Corn or Barley-Based Diets.
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DelCurto-Wyffels HM, Dafoe JM, Parsons CT, Boss DL, DelCurto T, Wyffels SA, Van Emon ML, and Bowman JGP
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This study evaluated the influence of diet and environmental conditions on intake behavior and activity of feedlot steers. Feedlot rations used were comprised of a main concentrate: (1) corn or (2) barley. A GrowSafe system measured individual animal intake and behavior and HOBO accelerometers measured steer standing time. An Onset weather station collected on site weather data. Steer daily intake displayed a diet by temperature class interaction ( p ≤ 0.05). Relative temperature change had no effect on variation in intake ( p = 0.60); however, diet influenced variation of intake ( p < 0.01), where corn-fed steers had a greater coefficient of variation (CV) than barley-fed steers (21.89 ± 1.46 vs. 18.72 ± 1.46%). Time spent eating (min d
-1 ) and eating rate (g min-1 ) both displayed a diet by temperature class interaction ( p ≤ 0.05). Diet did not affect steer lying activity ( p ≥ 0.12), however, time spent lying (min d-1 ) and frequency of lying bouts (bouts d-1 ) increased on relatively cold days while the duration of lying bouts (min bout-1 ; p < 0.01) decreased. Short-term environmental temperature changes interacted with diet influencing feedlot beef cattle intake behavior; however, they did not interact with basal diet in respect to steer activity.- Published
- 2021
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17. Impacts of heifer postweaning residual feed intake classification on reproductive and performance measurements of first-, second-, and third-parity Angus beef females.
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Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Wyffels SA, Van Emon M, DelCurto T, and Boss DL
- Abstract
This study evaluated heifer postweaning residual feed intake ( RFI ) classification on reproductive and performance measurements of first-, second-, and third-parity Angus beef females. We analyzed the annual, as well as, cumulative production of 347 Angus females from birth through weaning of their third calf. Heifer postweaning RFI was calculated as the actual dry matter intake minus the predicted dry matter intake based on the average daily gain of the contemporary group on an annual basis. Heifers were categorized based on RFI as either low (< -0.50 SD from mean), average (± 0.50 SD from mean), or high (> +0.50 SD from the mean) within year. There was no RFI × Parity interaction ( P ≥ 0.14) observed for all production/reproduction traits except for conception rates ( P = 0.02). Julian birth date of cows was influenced by RFI classification ( P < 0.01) and displayed a quadratic ( P = 0.02) effect with high RFI cows being born earlier in the calving season than average RFI cows (71.2 vs. 75.3 d), but did not differ from low RFI cows (74.0 vs. 75.3 d). Cow birth weight, weaning weight, as well as all other cow weight and body condition measurements were not influenced by RFI classification ( P ≥ 0.14). As expected, there was a linear increase in cow body weight at weaning with increasing parity ( P < 0.01). Cow RFI classification had no influence on progeny weaning weight, birth date, calving interval, or postpartum interval ( P ≥ 0.15). Calf birth weights displayed a quadratic parity effect ( P < 0.01) with first calf heifers having calves with lower birth weights than second- and third-parity calves. Calf 205-d adjusted weaning weights displayed a quadratic effect ( P = 0.01) with first calf heifers weaning lighter calves than second- and third-parity cows. Weaning weight ratio displayed a linear decrease with increasing parity ( P < 0.01). Cow conception probability displayed a linear tendency for pregnancy 2 ( P = 0.09), and a quadratic tendency for pregnancy 4 ( P = 0.07) as a function of RFI classification, but no effects were observed for pregnancy 1 and 3. Cow artificial insemination conception rates differed by year of pregnancy ( P < 0.01), but not RFI classification ( P = 0.81). In summary, heifer postweaning RFI classification had minimal effects on beef cattle production and reproductive efficiency., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science.)
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- 2021
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18. Corn versus Barley in Finishing Diets: Effect on Steer Performance and Feeding Behavior.
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DelCurto-Wyffels HM, Dafoe JM, Parsons CT, Boss DL, DelCurto T, Wyffels SA, Van Emon ML, and Bowman JGP
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This study evaluated the effects of barley and corn finishing rations on feedlot performance and behavior of steers. Feedlot rations in this study were comprised of a main concentrate of either corn or barley. Steers were fed in a GrowSafe system to measure individual animal intake and behavior. Weight gain, average daily gain (ADG), and gain:feed were measured for each steer. Feeding behavior including time spent eating (min/day), visits per day, time per visit (min), eating rate (g/min), intake (kg/day), and intake per visit (g) were measured for each individual. Corn-fed steers had greater ADG ( p < 0.01) and heavier hot carcass weights (HCW; p < 0.01). In addition, corn fed steers had a higher yield grade than barley fed steers ( p < 0.01). No treatment effects ( p ≥ 0.11) were observed for time spent eating, visits per day, time per visit, eating rate, intake g/kg body weight, or intake per visit. Although corn-fed steers had a greater ADG and HCW than barley-fed steers, they tended to consume more feed ( p = 0.06). Depending on the difference of costs associated with feeding corn or barley, barley could be a potential high-quality feed source in beef cattle finishing rations.
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- 2021
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19. Effect of corn or barley in feedlot diets on steer performance and feeding behavior.
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DelCurto Wyffels HM, Dafoe JM, Parsons CT, Boss DL, DelCurto T, Wyffels SA, Van Emon ML, and Bowman JGP
- Published
- 2020
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20. The influence of RFI classification and cow age on body weight and body condition change, supplement intake, and grazing behavior of beef cattle winter grazing mixed-grass rangelands.
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Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Wyffels SA, Van Emon M, DelCurto T, and Boss DL
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- 2020
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21. Techniques to estimate colostrum quality and the effects of cow age and prepartum supplement intake levels on colostrum quality and serum IgG levels.
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Dafoe JM, Wyffels SA, Parsons CT, Carter BH, DelCurto T, and Boss DL
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- 2020
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22. The influence of age and winter environment on Rumax Bovibox and Bovibox HM supplement intake behavior of winter grazing beef cattle on mixed-grass rangelands.
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Wyffels SA, Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Boss DL, McClain TP, Carter BH, and DelCurto T
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- 2020
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23. Phosphorus binding to soil organic matter via ternary complexes with calcium.
- Author
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Audette Y, Smith DS, Parsons CT, Chen W, Rezanezhad F, and Van Cappellen P
- Subjects
- Anions, Calcium, Dietary, Cations, Humic Substances analysis, Minerals, Soil chemistry, Soil Pollutants chemistry, Calcium chemistry, Phosphorus analysis, Soil Pollutants analysis
- Abstract
Soil organic matter (SOM) is known to exert a major control on the mobility and bioavailability of cationic nutrients. However, the role of SOM in the fate of anionic nutrients, especially phosphorus (P), is less well characterized. The objectives of this study were to (1) compare the formation of binary complexes of calcium (Ca) with humic acids (HA) extracted from two contrasting soils, and (2) determine if binary HA-Ca complexes could incorporate P by forming ternary HA-Ca-P complexes. The Ca binding capacities of the HA extracted from an agricultural organic soil (AOS) and a pristine riparian soil (RS) were measured via potentiometric titrations; the formation of ternary complexes was analyzed by size fractionation using MWCO tubes. Proton and Ca binding capacities of RS-HA were higher than AOS-HA, and pH had a weaker effect on Ca binding to RS-HA. These differences are consistent with lower proportions of aromatic groups, and a higher proportion of alkyl groups derived from
13 C NMR spectroscopy. Together, the NMR, titration and MWCO data indicate that Ca binds to RS-HA through monodentate complexes and electrostatic attraction that are capable of binding P producing ternary complexes. In contrast, at pH 8.5 Ca forms bidentate complexes with AOS-HA, which do not provide bridging positions to incorporate P. Overall, our results imply that the formation of HA-Ca and HA-Ca-P complexes depend on the structure of the HA, and that complexation to HA may play an important role in the fate of P in terrestrial and aquatic environments., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The influence of age and environmental conditions on supplement intake by beef cattle winter grazing northern mixed-grass rangelands.
- Author
-
Wyffels SA, Dafoe JM, Parsons CT, Boss DL, DelCurto T, and Bowman JGP
- Subjects
- Animals, Diet veterinary, Dietary Supplements, Ecosystem, Female, Poaceae, Aging, Animal Feed analysis, Animal Husbandry, Cattle physiology, Seasons, Weather
- Abstract
This study evaluated the influence of cow age and temperature adjusted for wind chill (Twindchill) on supplement intake behavior of beef cattle winter grazing northern mixed grass prairie rangelands. A commercial herd of 272 (year 1) and 302 (year 2) bred cows (Angus, Simmental × Angus) ranging in age from 1- to 12-yr-old grazed a 329-ha rangeland pasture (~1.5 ha animal unit month- 1) from November to January. Cows were grouped into seven age classes (1 yr old, 2 yr old, 3 yr old, 4 yr old, 5 yr old, 6 yr old, and ≥ 7 yr old) and were provided free-choice access to a 30% CP self-fed canola meal-based pelleted supplement with 25% salt to limit intake. The target daily intake was 0.91 kg cow- 1 d- 1. Supplement was provided in a SmartFeed Pro self-feeder system to measure individual animal supplement intake and behavior. An Onset HOBO U30-NRC Weather Station was placed near the supplement feeders to collect weather data for the entirety of the grazing period. Average daily supplement intake and the coefficient variation in supplement intake displayed a Twindchill × cow age × year interaction (P ≤ 0.02). There was a negative linear effect of age on supplement intake (kg cow- 1 d- 1) for days with below average Twindchill conditions in both years (P < 0.01). There was also negative linear effect of age on supplement intake (g kg of BW- 1 d- 1) at average Twindchill in year 1 and below average Twindchill in year 2 (P < 0.01). Cow age had a quadratic effect on supplement intake for days with below average Twindchill in year 1 (P = 0.02); however, this was a curvilinear response where yearlings and 2-yr-olds consumed more supplement per kilogram of BW than other age cattle (P < 0.01). Cow age had positive linear effects on variation in supplement intake at below average Twindchill conditions in both years (P < 0.01). Daily visits to the supplement feeders displayed a Twindchill × cow age interaction (P < 0.01), where there was a linear decrease in visits with increasing age at below average Twindchill conditions (P < 0.01). In summary, both cow age and the winter environmental conditions interacted to influence animal supplement intake behavior and, as a result, nutrient delivery efficacy in winter grazing beef cattle., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. An evaluation of the relationship between supplement intake behavior, performance, and grazing behavior by beef cattle grazing northern mixed-grass rangelands.
- Author
-
Wyffels SA, McClain TP, Dafoe JM, Parsons CT, Boss DL, and Delcurto T
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Impacts of heifer postweaning residual feed intake classification on reproductive and performance measurements of first, second, and third parity Angus beef females.
- Author
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Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Wyffels SA, DelCurto T, and Boss DL
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Access roads impact enzyme activities in boreal forested peatlands.
- Author
-
Saraswati S, Parsons CT, and Strack M
- Abstract
We investigated the impacts of resource access roads on soil enzyme activities in contrasting forested boreal peatlands (bog and fen). In August 2016, a total of 72 peat samples were collected from twelve 20 m long transects perpendicular to access roads, with a further six samples collected from undisturbed reference areas. Sampling locations represent a range in three variables associated with roads: 1) side of the road (upstream/downstream), 2) distance to a culvert (longitudinal; <2 and >20 m), and 3) distance from the road (lateral; 2, 6, and 20 m). Phenol oxidase and hydrolase (glucosidase, sulfatase, xylosidase, glucosaminidase, and phosphatase) enzyme activities were determined for each sample, in addition to water table depth, phenolic concentration, pH, and peat temperature. The average hydrolase activities in the fen were ~four times higher than in the bog. At the bog, the water table depth, phenolic concentration, pH and the activities of phenol oxidase, sulfatase, glucosidase, xylosidase and glucosaminidase were all significantly influenced by one or more road associated factors. The highest enzyme activities in the bog occurred on the downstream side of the road at plots located far from the culvert. In contrast, the flow of water in the fen was not perpendicular to the road. Consequently, no significant variations in water table depth, phenolic concentration, pH or enzyme activity were found with respect to road associated factors. Results indicate that road crossings in boreal peatlands can indirectly alter enzyme activities, likely as part of a causal chain following changes to hydrology and redox conditions. Two of six investigated enzymes had significantly higher activities in the road disturbed areas compared to undisturbed areas, suggesting ultimately that roads may enhance organic matter decomposition rates. However, adequate hydrologic connections through culverts and road construction parallel to the water flow can minimize the road-induced impacts., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The influence of beef cow weaning weight ratio and cow size on feed intake behavior, milk production, and milk composition.
- Author
-
Williams AR, Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Boss DL, Bowman JGP, and DelCurto T
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The influence of age and environmental conditions on supplement intake and behavior of winter grazing beef cattle on mixed-grass rangelands.
- Author
-
Wyffels SA, Williams AR, Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Boss DL, DelCurto T, Davis NG, and Bowman JGP
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The influence of beef cow weaning weight ratio and cow size on winter grazing and supplement intake behavior.
- Author
-
Williams AR, Wyffels SA, Parsons CT, Dafoe JM, Boss DL, Bowman JGP, Davis NG, and DelCurto T
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Isolation and characterization of atypical Listeria monocytogenes associated with a canine urinary tract infection.
- Author
-
Palerme JS, Pan PC, Parsons CT, Kathariou S, Ward TJ, and Jacob ME
- Subjects
- Animals, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Diagnosis, Differential, Dog Diseases microbiology, Dogs, Listeriosis complications, Listeriosis microbiology, Male, Urinary Tract Infections complications, Urinary Tract Infections microbiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 veterinary, Dog Diseases diagnosis, Listeria monocytogenes isolation & purification, Listeriosis veterinary, Urinary Tract Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Listeria monocytogenes, a well-described cause of encephalitis and abortion in ruminants and of food-borne illness in humans, is rarely associated with disease in companion animals. A case of urinary tract infection associated with an atypical, weakly hemolytic L. monocytogenes strain is described in a diabetic dog. The serotype of the L. monocytogenes isolate was determined to be 1/2a (3a), with the multilocus genotyping pattern 2.72_1/2a. A nucleotide substitution (Gly145Asp) was detected at residue 145 in the promoter prfA region. This residue is within the critical helix-turn-helix motif of PrfA. The source of the L. monocytogenes strain remains unknown, and the dog recovered after a 4-week course of cephalexin (30 mg/kg orally twice daily)., (© 2016 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Listeria monocytogenes septicemia in an immunocompromised dog.
- Author
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Pritchard JC, Jacob ME, Ward TJ, Parsons CT, Kathariou S, and Wood MW
- Abstract
An 11-year-old, male castrated, Boston Terrier was presented to the North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine Small Animal Emergency Service with a 2-day history of progressive ataxia, left-sided head tilt, and anorexia. The dog had previously been diagnosed with chronic lymphoid leukemia and suspected immune-mediated destruction of his bone marrow precursor cells, possibly due to therapy with immunosuppressive dosages of prednisone and azathioprine. During the physical examination, abnormal findings included an increased body temperature and horizontal nystagmus. Diagnostic investigations included a computed tomography (CT) scan, which confirmed bilateral otitis media, and a blood culture, which was positive for Listeria monocytogenes serotype 4b (epidemic clone 1). Upon treatment with ampicillin/sulbactam, enrofloxacin, and minocycline, the dog became normothermic and the neurologic signs improved. L monocytogenes serotype 4b (epidemic clone 1) has been associated with outbreaks of human listeriosis originating from food contamination. Although rare case reports of Listeria spp. infection in dogs exist, an actual infection with the epidemic clone 1 strain has never before been reported in a dog. It should be included in the differential diagnoses in immunocompromised dogs with clinical signs of septicemia., (© 2016 American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Global phosphorus retention by river damming.
- Author
-
Maavara T, Parsons CT, Ridenour C, Stojanovic S, Dürr HH, Powley HR, and Van Cappellen P
- Subjects
- Eutrophication, Monte Carlo Method, Phosphorus analysis, Rivers chemistry
- Abstract
More than 70,000 large dams have been built worldwide. With growing water stress and demand for energy, this number will continue to increase in the foreseeable future. Damming greatly modifies the ecological functioning of river systems. In particular, dam reservoirs sequester nutrient elements and, hence, reduce downstream transfer of nutrients to floodplains, lakes, wetlands, and coastal marine environments. Here, we quantify the global impact of dams on the riverine fluxes and speciation of the limiting nutrient phosphorus (P), using a mechanistic modeling approach that accounts for the in-reservoir biogeochemical transformations of P. According to the model calculations, the mass of total P (TP) trapped in reservoirs nearly doubled between 1970 and 2000, reaching 42 Gmol y(-1), or 12% of the global river TP load in 2000. Because of the current surge in dam building, we project that by 2030, about 17% of the global river TP load will be sequestered in reservoir sediments. The largest projected increases in TP and reactive P (RP) retention by damming will take place in Asia and South America, especially in the Yangtze, Mekong, and Amazon drainage basins. Despite the large P retention capacity of reservoirs, the export of RP from watersheds will continue to grow unless additional measures are taken to curb anthropogenic P emissions.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. On-off mobilization of contaminants in soils during redox oscillations.
- Author
-
Couture RM, Charlet L, Markelova E, Madé B, and Parsons CT
- Subjects
- Carbon chemistry, Ecology, Oxidation-Reduction, Metals, Heavy analysis, Soil chemistry, Soil Pollutants analysis
- Abstract
Near-surface biogeochemical systems can oscillate between oxic and anoxic conditions. Under such periodic changes many redox-sensitive inorganic contaminants undergo speciation, mobility and toxicity changes. We investigated the changes to chromium (Cr), arsenic (As), selenium (Se), antimony (Sb) and uranium (U) mobility during a series of laboratory experiments where argillaceous substrates were subjected to successive cycles of oxidizing and reducing conditions. The EH oscillated between -320 and +470 mV, induced via both abiotic and microbial forcings. Chemically induced cycles of oxidation and reduction were achieved via a combination of gas (N2:CO2 vs compressed air) and carbon (ethanol) addition, to stimulate the metabolism of a natively present microbial community. The contaminants were added either alone or as contaminant mixtures. Results show clear on-off switch mobility behavior for both major elements such as carbon (C), iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) and for contaminants. Mn, Fe, and As were mobilized under anoxic conditions, whereas Sb, Se, and U were mobilized under oxic conditions. While As, Sb, and U were reversibly sorbed, Se and Cr were irreversibly sequestered via reductive precipitation. When present in aqueous solutions at high concentrations, Cr(VI) prevented the reduction of Mn and Fe, and inhibited the mobilization of elements with lower EH(o). To improve remediation strategies for multiple contaminants in redox-dynamic environments, we propose a mixed kinetic-equilibrium biogeochemical model that can be forced by oscillating boundary conditions and that uses literature rates and constants to capture the key processes responsible for the mobilization of contaminants in soils.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The impact of oscillating redox conditions: arsenic immobilisation in contaminated calcareous floodplain soils.
- Author
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Parsons CT, Couture RM, Omoregie EO, Bardelli F, Greneche JM, Roman-Ross G, and Charlet L
- Subjects
- Arsenic analysis, Bioreactors, Calcium Carbonate analysis, Calcium Carbonate chemistry, Oxidation-Reduction, Soil Pollutants analysis, Arsenic chemistry, Floods, Soil chemistry, Soil Pollutants chemistry
- Abstract
Arsenic contamination of floodplain soils is extensive and additional fresh arsenic inputs to the pedosphere from human activities are ongoing. We investigate the cumulative effects of repetitive soil redox cycles, which occur naturally during flooding and draining, on a calcareous fluvisol, the native microbial community and arsenic mobility following a simulated contamination event. We show through bioreactor experiments, spectroscopic techniques and modelling that repetitive redox cycling can decrease arsenic mobility during reducing conditions by up to 45%. Phylogenetic and functional analyses of the microbial community indicate that iron cycling is a key driver of observed changes to solution chemistry. We discuss probable mechanisms responsible for the arsenic immobilisation observed in-situ. The proposed mechanisms include, decreased heterotrophic iron reduction due to the depletion of labile particulate organic matter (POM), increases to the proportion of co-precipitated vs. aqueous or sorbed arsenic with α-FeOOH/Fe(OH)3 and potential precipitation of amorphous ferric arsenate., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Achievements of the last 100 years.
- Author
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Parsons CT
- Subjects
- Bacteriology history, History, 20th Century, Humans, United Kingdom, Naval Medicine history
- Published
- 1999
37. Influence of the chemical nature of side chain at beta 108 of hemoglobin A on the modulation of the oxygen affinity by chloride ions. Low oxygen affinity variants of human hemoglobin expressed in transgenic pigs: hemoglobins Presbyterian and Yoshizuka.
- Author
-
O'Donnell JK, Birch P, Parsons CT, White SP, Okabe J, Martin MJ, Adams C, Sundarapandiyan K, Manjula BN, and Acharya AS
- Subjects
- Allosteric Regulation, Animals, Animals, Genetically Modified, Base Sequence, Binding Sites, Computer Simulation, DNA Primers chemistry, Humans, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Protein Conformation, Structure-Activity Relationship, Swine, Chlorides chemistry, Globins chemistry, Hemoglobin A chemistry, Oxyhemoglobins chemistry
- Abstract
Hemoglobin A (HbA) and two low oxygen affinity variants of HbA, HbPresbyterian and HbYoshizuka, were produced in transgenic pigs and purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange chromatography. These two variants contain either lysine (HbPresbyterian) or aspartic acid (HbYoshizuka) instead of the normal asparagine residue at position beta 108 in HbA. Transgenic pigs expressed these variants at a level up to 11% and were healthy. Both HbPresbyterian and HbYoshizuka exhibited low O2 affinity (P50 of 21.2 and 18.9, respectively, compared with control HbA value of 11.8 in 0.1 M NaCl, pH 7.5) and retained normal cooperativity with Hill coefficients of 2.9 and 2.5, respectively. HbPresbyterian exhibited Bohr effect comparable with HbA. In contrast, HbYoshizuka had a diminished response to changes in pH. Thus the structural basis of reduced O2 affinity of these variants appears to be distinct: the consequence of mutation at beta 108 is a function of the chemical nature of the side chain. This is further confirmed by the sensitivity of the O2 affinity of the variants to the presence of Cl-. The O2 affinity of HbYoshizuka is insensitive to changes in Cl- concentration, whereas the O2 affinity of HbPresbyterian exhibited a pronounced and dramatic chloride effect. In fact, P50 of HbPresbyterian was identical to that of HbA at very low Cl- concentrations, and the P50 increased to >40 at 0.5 M Cl-. The chloride effect was completely abolished when HbPresbyterian was stabilized at the 2,3-diphosphoglycerate pocket by interdimeric cross-linking. Molecular modeling studies demonstrate that in HbPresbyterian, Cl- can bridge the epsilon-amino group of Lys beta 108 with either the guanidino group of Arg beta 104 or the epsilon-amino group of Lys alpha 99, resulting in the stabilization of the "T" structure. The utility of these low O2 affinity hemoglobins as cell-free oxygen carriers is discussed.
- Published
- 1994
38. Production of functional human hemoglobin in transgenic swine.
- Author
-
Swanson ME, Martin MJ, O'Donnell JK, Hoover K, Lago W, Huntress V, Parsons CT, Pinkert CA, Pilder S, and Logan JS
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Genetically Modified, Chromatography, DEAE-Cellulose, Globins biosynthesis, Hemoglobins genetics, Hemoglobins isolation & purification, Humans, Microinjections, Oxygen metabolism, Swine, Zygote physiology, Chromosome Mapping, Hemoglobins biosynthesis
- Abstract
A construct containing the locus control region (LCR) from the human beta globin locus together with two copies of the human alpha 1 gene and a single copy of the human beta A gene was used to obtain three transgenic pigs. The transgenic pigs are healthy, not anemic, and grow at a rate comparable to non-transgenic littermates. All animals expressed the human genes. However, alpha globin was consistently expressed at higher levels than beta globin. Isolation of the human hemoglobin from both porcine hemoglobin and other non-hemoglobin proteins was accomplished by ion exchange chromatography. The purified porcine derived human hemoglobin exhibited an oxygen affinity similar to that of human derived human hemoglobin.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Haslar Museum.
- Author
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Parsons CT
- Subjects
- England, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Museums history, Naval Medicine history
- Published
- 1985
40. Royal Naval Sick Quarters Kelly Castle.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Subjects
- History, 20th Century, Medical Staff, Hospital, Scotland, Hospitals, Military history, Hospitals, Public history
- Published
- 1989
41. The English of Medical Writers.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1916
42. Poor-Law Infirmaries and Voluntary Hospitals.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1913
43. London's Institutional Medical Relief: Proposals for Its Reform.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1918
44. The Asylums Board and Sick Children: Inhumanity or Progress?
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1913
45. Wandsworth Guardians and Administrative Reform.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1913
46. The Present and Future of the Poor-Law Infirmary.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1913
47. Article 10 of the Poor-Law Orders.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1914
48. A Simple Means of Making Carbon Dioxide Snow.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1914
49. The Scheme of the British Medical Association.-II.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1918
50. Hospital Branch of the Poor-Law Medical Service.
- Author
-
Parsons CT
- Published
- 1913
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