Publications by authors named "Tingna Liu"

The long-term physicochemical responses of aeolian sandy soil aggregates to different crop rotation patterns are poorly understood. Here, we collected soil samples from the 0 to 20 cm tillage layer of continuous maize crop and alfalfa-maize rotation plots situated on the edge of the Zhangye Oasis, Northwest China. These samples were analyzed to quantify the influence of both cropping patterns on the structure, carbon content, and nitrogen content of aeolian sandy soils.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Environmental exposure to graphene oxide (GO) is likely to happen due to the use and disposal of these materials. Although GO-induced ecological toxicity has been evaluated before by using aquatic models such as zebrafish, previous studies typically focused on the short-term toxicity, whereas this study aimed to investigate the long-term toxicity. To this end, we exposed zebrafish to GO for 6 months, and used RNA-sequencing to reveal the changes of signaling pathways.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Soil aggregates are the material basis of soil structure and important carriers of nutrients. Long-term application of organic and inorganic fertilizers can affect the composition of soil aggregates to varying degrees, which in turn affects the distribution and storage of soil nutrients. We report the results of a 15-year long-term field-based test of aeolian sandy soil and used the wet sieve method to analyze the stability of water-stable aggregates, as well as the distribution characteristics of nutrients in different particle size aggregates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

How the bacterial community structure and potential metabolic functions will change after revegetation in arid desert ecosystems is still unknown. We used high-throughput pyrosequencing to explore changes in soil bacterial diversity, structure and metabolic pathways, and the key driving factors along a chronosequence of 46-year Haloxylon ammodendron revegetation in an oasis-desert ecotone in the northwestern China. Our results indicated that establishment of H.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

PM (particulate matter less than 2.5 μm in diameter) is considered as a harmful carcinogen. Determining the precise relationship between the chemical constituents of PM in the air and cancer progression could aid the treatment of environment related disease and establishing risk reduction strategies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The characteristics and sources of organic carbon (OC) and elemental carbon (EC) in PM(2.5) in 2006-2007 as well as their impact on the formation of heavy haze in Shanghai were investigated. Daily average concentrations of OC and EC ranged from 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF