Publications by authors named "Daoming Wu"

The environmental risks of migration of heavy metals (HMs) following applications of sewage sludge (SS) to forest soils are garnering increased attention. Plant litter at the forest floor may modify HM migration pathways through impacts on soil aggregates and water/soil erosion; however, HM migration responses to plant litter are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of plant litter cover on HMs migration, and water and soil erosion following the application of SS to subtropical forest soils.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * This study investigated how slope affects the movement of heavy metals from sewage sludge through surface runoff and sediments during rainfall events.
  • * Results showed that steeper slopes (up to 25°) significantly increased heavy metal loss through sediments and surface runoff, indicating higher pollution risks, particularly from cadmium (Cd).
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Mangrove reforestation using introduced species is essential for restoring ecosystem functions, but its impact on microbial processes like methane, nitrogen, and sulfur cycling isn't fully understood.
  • A study analyzed the microbiomes of native and introduced mangrove species, showing that introduced species have a larger average genome size and functional diversity but lower capabilities for processes related to methane and nitrogen cycling.
  • Environmental factors like salinity and ammonium significantly influence the functional profiles of these microbiomes, highlighting the evolutionary and environmental factors affecting ecosystem functions, which is crucial for future mangrove reforestation efforts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The purpose of this study was to improve diagnostic and therapeutic standards by examining the clinical features, treatment, and prognosis of fetal meconium peritonitis (FMP), as well as the diagnostic efficacy of ultrasound for FMP.

Methods: The clinical data of 41 infants and pregnant women diagnosed with meconium peritonitis (MP) and treated at the Fujian Maternal and Child Health Hospital from January 2013 to January 2020 were analyzed retrospectively. Clinical data, imaging data, complications, treatment strategies, pregnancy outcomes, neonatal prognoses, and follow-up outcomes were all analyzed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Woodland utilization is a promising disposal method for sewage sludge (SS). However, the potential risk of heavy metals (HMs) transport with runoff must be considered. Among the various factors influencing HMs loss, SS application methods (Holing application, HA; Broadcasting and mixing application, BM; Broadcasting application, BA) are likely to cause significant effects by altering soil erosion and soil aggregates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Limited data from China, aim to investigate the incidence and the risk fctors of lymph node metastases in the prostatic anterior fat pad (PAFP).

Material And Methods: Patients underwent radical prostatectomy (RP) were enrolled between March 2020 to December 2022 at a single institution. Separate pathological analysis of PAFP was performed within this area.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heavy metals (HMs)-induced iron (Fe) deficiency severely inhibits plant growth and thus hampers phytoremediation and revegetation in HMs-contaminated soil. We conducted a 12-month pot experiment to investigate the effects and mechanisms of co-planting on altering plant HM-induced Fe deficiency. The landscape tree Ilex rotunda was co-planted with Ficus microcarpa and Talipariti tiliaceum in sludge-amended soil.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To investigate the application value of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) in ultrasound-guided lauromacrogol injections in patients with cesarean scar pregnancies (CSP).

Methods: A total of 31 patients diagnosed with CSP, who underwent an ultrasound-guided lauromacrogol injection + curettage in our hospital between February 2019 and December 2020 and had a complete recovery confirmed by a postoperative ultrasound review and serum β-human chorionic gonadotropin (β-hCG) assay, were enrolled as the study subjects. According to the volume of intraoperative blood loss and the duration of postoperative vaginal bleeding, the patients were divided into two groups, with 19 in the significantly effective group (Group A) and 12 in the effective group (Group B).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The utilization of sewage sludge in forests is an important way of recycling. However, the effect of sewage sludge application on woody plant root growth has been rarely reported. The effects of surface application and mixed application of sewage sludge (mass ratio in 10%) on the dynamics in root morphology of a fast-growing tree species (), soil pH, electric conductivity, and heavy metal content of roots in different soil layers were analyzed by a rhizobox experiment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recycling sewage sludge (SS) to soil potentially causes soil heavy metal (HM) pollution and plant phytotoxicity. Biochar plays an important role in alleviating HM phytotoxicity, and responses vary with the feedstocks and usage of biochar. However, the effect of plant adaptability on biochar-mediated alleviation is poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

, an important fast-growing economic tree species in China, has the advantages of strong adaptability, high-biomass, and high bioconcentration of heavy metals. Sewage sludge contains a great deal of nutrients and heavy metals. Planting with sewage sludge can achieve the goals of sewage sludge remediation as well as resources production of .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The wastes such as sewage sludge (SS) can be used to amend soil of abandoned rare-earth mine land (ARL). The energy plant could be used as a pioneer tree species in the ARL. In a pot experiment to address the responses of growth and element uptake of , three treatments were established: adding SS to the soil of ARL (T), adding SS and bagasse to the soil of ARL (T), adding SS, bagasse and passivator to the soil of ARL (T), with the untreated soil of the ARL as the control (CK).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recycling sewage sludge (SS) as a soil amendment potentially causes soil heavy metals (HMs) contamination. This study investigated the potential roles of landscape plants co-planting in SS-amended soil remediation. Three landscape trees Mangifera persiciforma, Bischofia javanica, and Neolamarckia cadamba (NC), and three ground cover plants Dianella ensifolia, Syngonium podophyllum, and Schefflera odorata (SO) were selected for the tree-ground cover co-planting.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Root system is essential for plants to absorb water and nutrients. The root related traits are complex quantitative traits and regulated by genetic control. Here, we used two association mapping panels to perform a genome-wide association study (GWAS) on seven root related traits in Brassica napus at the seedling stage and obtained 27 SNP loci significantly associated with the phenotypes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Landscape plants have great potentials in heavy metals (HMs) removal as sewage sludge compost (SSC) is increasingly used in urban forestry. We hypothesize that woody plants might perform better in HMs phytoremediation because they have greater biomass and deeper roots than herbaceous plants. We tested the differences in growth responses and HMs phytoremediation among several herbaceous and woody species growing under different SSC concentrations through pot experiments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Improving soil fertility is a critical component of abandoned rare-earth mine land (ARL) revegetation. To study the effects of sewage sludge (SS), earthworms, and Jatropha curcas in ARL revegetation, SS (40% in mass ratio) and earthworms (0, 40, 60, and 80 individual adult Eisenia fetida kg) were applied to abandoned rare-earth mine land soil (ARLS) and then J. curcas was grown in a potting experiment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The handling of sewage sludge (SS) and urban plant litter (UPL) has become an important concern. Immobilizing heavy metals (HMs) is regarded as a necessary process for recycling SS in agriculture and forestry. Here, HM removal and HM phytotoxicity in SS during vermicomposting with different additive UPLs was investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Branch number is an important trait in plant architecture that can influence crop yield and quality in Brassica napus. Here, we detected the QTLs responsible for branch number in a DH population and its reconstructed F population over two years. Further, a GWAS research on branch number was performed using a panel of 327 accessions with 33186 genomic SNPs from the 60 K Brassica Illumina® Infinium SNP array.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Application of sewage sludge compost (SSC) as a fertilizer on landscaping provides a potential way for the effective disposal of sludge. However, the response of landscape trees to SSC application and the impacts of heavy metals from SSC on soil are poorly understood. We conducted a pot experiment to investigate the effects of SSC addition on Mangifera persiciforma growth and quantified its uptake of heavy metals from SSC by setting five treatments with mass ratios of SSC to lateritic soil as 0%:100% (CK), 15%:85% (S15), 30%:70% (S30), 60%:40% (S60), and 100%:0% (S100).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

WRKY transcription factors play important roles in responses to environmental stress stimuli. Using a genome-wide domain analysis, we identified 287 WRKY genes with 343 WRKY domains in the sequenced genome of Brassica napus, 139 in the A sub-genome and 148 in the C sub-genome. These genes were classified into eight groups based on phylogenetic analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aluminium (Al) sequestration is required for internal detoxification of Al in plant cells. In this study, it was found that the rice OsPIN2 overexpression line (OX1) had significantly reduced Al content in its cell wall and increased Al concentration in cell sap only in rice root tips relative to the wild-type (WT). In comparison with WT, OX1 reduced morin staining of cytosolic Al, enhanced FM 4-64 staining of membrane vesicular trafficking in root tip sections (0-1mm), and showed morin-FM 4-64 fluorescence overlap.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Al-induced cell rigidity is one of the symptoms of Al toxicity, but the mechanism by which plants tolerate this toxicity is still unclear. In this study, we found that overexpression of OsPIN2, an auxin transporter gene, could alleviate Al-induced cell rigidity in rice root apices. A freeze-thawing experiment showed that the Al-treated roots of wild-type (WT) plants had more damage in the epidermal and outer cortex cells than that found in lines overexpressing OsPIN2 (OXs), and the freeze-disrupt coefficient was 2-fold higher in the former than in the latter.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Silicate (Si) can enhance plant resistance or tolerance to the toxicity of heavy metals. However, it remains unclear whether Si can ameliorate lead (Pb) toxicity in banana (Musa xparadisiaca) roots. In this study, treatment with 800 mg kg(-1) Pb decreased both the shoot and root weight of banana seedlings.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF