Publications by authors named "Anh T Q Nguyen"

Arsenic (As) turnover in rice paddy agro-ecosystems has received much attention because As can enter the food chain through its accumulation in rice, thereby affecting human health. Returning straw to soil is a common practice to retain nutrients for soil and crops, but it also cycles As within the rice paddy field ecosystems. However, there is still a lack of detailed understanding of the fate of As in rice straw, and how or to what extent it is recycled back into the soil environment.

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The sorption of antibiotics on soil minerals and their cotransport have been widely studied for the past few years; however, these processes in concentrated salt solutions (estuary-like conditions) are not fully understood. This study aims to determine the possible sorption of oxytetracycline (OTC) on various natural and synthesized microsized minerals (including haematite, goethite, kaolinite, bentonite, lateritic, kaolinitic and illitic soil clays) under conditions mimicking pure, fresh, brackish and sea waters. The sorption of OTC was found to decrease in surface charge (herein zeta potential), hence altering the colloidal properties of the materials used.

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The mobilization of arsenic (As) in paddy soil has received much attention because it might accelerate the transfer of As from soil to rice. This study aims to elucidate whether earthworms can mobilize As through their casts. Cast samples were collected from 23 different paddy fields in the Red River delta.

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On-site open burning is a common practice for handling rice straw, but its negative impacts, e.g., biomass loss and air pollution, are largely debated worldwide.

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Forested coastal wetlands are globally important systems sequestering carbon and intercepting nitrogen pollution from nutrient-rich river systems. Coastal wetlands that have suffered extensive disturbance are the target of comprehensive restoration efforts. Accurate assessment of restoration success requires detailed mechanistic understanding of wetland soil biogeochemical functioning across restoration chrono-sequences, which remains poorly understood for these sparsely investigated systems.

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Phytoliths, silica structures derived from plant residues in silicon (Si)-accumulating plant species, have recently been recognized as a sink and source of nutrients and a hosting phase for carbon sequestration in soil. While the solubility of phytoliths in relation to their respective nature and solution chemistry has been intensively studied, the combined effects of CO and temperature, two highly variable parameters in soil, have not been fully understood. We hypothesized that changes in CO and temperature may affect the dissolution rate, thereby resizing the soil phytolith pool.

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Fine-sized biochars and clay minerals co-present in various circumstances, e.g., agricultural land and water treatment.

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Rice production helps feed at least half of the world's population but generates approximately one billion tonnes of straw residue per annum. On-site open burning of rice straw after harvesting is common in recent times because there has been less demand for rice straw to use as fuel and fodder. Due to health and climate change concerns, open burning, which results in biomass losses, smog and emissions of green house gases, e.

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We now have at our disposal several nonsteroidal immunosuppressive and anti-inflammatory agents that may be used in addition to or instead of corticosteroids to treat ocular diseases. This article discusses some of the nonsteroidal immunosuppressive and anti-inflammatory agents available to the ophthalmologist.

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