Publications by authors named "Shou-Biao Zhou"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study examined how nitrogen and phosphorus levels affect biodiesel production from the algae Scenedesmus obliquus, using glucose for carbon, finding that phosphorus boosts biodiesel output even when nitrogen is low.
  • - S. obliquus was grown in soybean wastewater, achieving impressive removal rates for carbon oxygen demand (72%), total nitrogen (95%), and total phosphorus (54%) after 8 days.
  • - The research showed a notable increase in fatty acid productivity (99.3 mg·L·d), outperforming previous glucose-based methods, indicating that managing nitrogen and phosphorus stages can enhance biodiesel production while treating wastewater sustainably.
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, a new narrowly endemic species of , is described and illustrated from the Huangshan Mountains of Eastern China. A description of is presented along with illustrations, photographs and diagnostic differences between the new species and its putative close allies.

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This study examined the selenium (Se) and cadmium (Cd) uptake by rice from soil and analyzed the relationship between Se and Cd in naturally occurred Se-rich paddy fields with a high geological background of Cd. Significant correlations were observed between soil Se and plant biomass Se, but not between soil Cd and plant biomass Cd. High concentrations of Cd were detected in rice plants and particularly in rice grains, suggesting potential health risks to human.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to develop microsatellite markers in the Taxaceae family to explore their genetic diversity, phylogeography, and population structure.
  • Sixteen primer sets were created using advanced sequencing techniques and bioinformatics, showing success across various related species.
  • The findings suggest that these microsatellite markers are valuable tools for future molecular ecology research and can be applied throughout the Taxaceae genus.
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The limestone karst area of South China is a major biodiversity hotspot of global terrestrial biomes. During extensive field work on the Guangxi limestone formations, two unknown species of Gesneriaceae were collected. After conducting a comprehensive study of the literature and herbarium specimens, and are recognized as two species new to science, and described and illustrated here.

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The field experiment was developed for simulating the residues, transformation and degradation in soil-vegetable system of Roxarsone contained in organic fertilizer. Under the treatment, the yield of Brassica chinensis decreased in low Roxarsone concentration with a decline by 15% to 32% compared with the control group; there had an accumulating role of vegetables to arsenic, and the root was the main part; total content of arsenic in the soil was positively correlated with the dose of the applied Roxarsone; total arsenic in soil first increased and then decreased with the planting time prolonged and peaked at 12.94 mg x kg(-1), while the level of inorganic arsenic in the soil stabilized after 30 d, which accounting for 66.

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In the suburbs of Shanghai, selected five large farms and surface water, feed, soil and vegetable samples were collected, and then total and inorganic arsenic were detected to survey the current arsenic level of the livestock farms in Shanghai suburban, as well as the usage situation of organic arsenic as feed additives. The results showed that the total arsenic content in water samples ranged from 0. 00 microgL-1 to 23.

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A pot experiment with heavy metals- contaminated black soil from Heilongjiang Province, alluvial soil from Henan Province, and paddy soil from Zhejiang Province was conducted to study the effects of intercropping Sedum plumbizincicola in wheat growth season under wheat (Triticum aestivum) - rice (Oryza sativa) rotation on the growth of the crops and their heavy metals uptake, aimed to explore the feasibility of simultaneous grain production and heavy metals-contaminated soil phytoremediation in main food crop production areas of this country. Comparing with monoculture T. aestivum, intercropping S.

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With water culture and by using differential centrifugation technique and sequential extraction, the subcellular distribution and chemical forms of Cd and Zn in the root, stem and leaf of Sedum jinianum were studied. In treatment 10 micromol Cd x L(-1), most of Cd in S. jinianum was in the soluble fraction of cell; while in treatment 100 miromol Cd x L(-1), the Cd in root was mainly deposited on cell wall, the Cd in stem was mainly on cell wall and in soluble fraction, and over 90% of Cd in leaf were in soluble fraction.

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