Sulfate (SO) is an essential anion in drinking water and a vital macronutrient for plant growth. However, elevated sulfate levels can impact ecosystem or human health and could be an important indicator of acid rock drainage or pollution. Therefore, monitoring SO sources and transport is important for water quality assessments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA shift in policy to intensive agricultural production and land management often leads to excessive fertilizer application and accelerated erosion with consequent detrimental effects to water bodies. We investigated the impact of that shift by quantifying the spatial and temporal change in sediment sources and associated total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) pollutants output loads in an intensive agricultural catchment in North China across one year (November 2021-November 2022). We describe the implications of this work for intensive agriculture elsewhere in China and other countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFertilizers increase agricultural productivity and farmers' income. However, intensive agriculture frequently overuses fertilizers, which in turn can contaminate surface and groundwater. In this study, hydrochemical and multi-isotope (δN, δO and δO) data have been combined to identify nitrate pollution sources in Ghana's Densu River Basin, trace the Nitrogen (N) biogeochemical processes in the basin and apportion the contribution of each pollution source.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant uptake of toxins and their translocation to edible plant parts are important processes in the transfer of contaminants into the food chain. Atropine, a highly toxic muscarine receptor antagonist produced by Solanacea species, is found in all plant tissues and can enter the soil and hence be available for uptake by crops. The absorption of atropine and/or its transformation products from soil by wheat (Triticum aestivum var Kronjet) and its distribution to shoots was investigated by growing wheat in soil spiked with unlabeled or (14)C-labeled atropine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShort hot and dry spells before, or during, silking have an inordinately large effect on maize (Zea mays L.; corn) grain yield. New high yielding genotypes could be developed if the mechanism of yield loss were more fully understood and new assays developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA super-high-yielding rice (Oryza sativa L.) cultivar, Takanari, and a traditional japonica rice cultivar, Nakateshinsenbon, were grown under field conditions to compare partitioning of C-labelled photosynthate to different plant organs during the period of reproductive development. The flag leaf and the two leaves immediately below it on the main culm were exposed individually to CO and the movement of the heavy carbon isotope to grains, hull, panicle branches and vegetative parts of plant was assessed.
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