Besides the dominant species in plants-Tl(I), noticeable amounts of Tl(III) (about 10% of total Tl content) were found in extracts of plants cultivated in the presence of tailing sediments, which are the main source of anthropogenic thallium already present in the environment. It is an important step of gaining knowledge about the detoxification mechanisms developed by Sinapis alba. This plant species is highly tolerant to Tl and it is able to cumulate high amounts of Tl and transport it into the above-ground organs. For more adequate estimation of accumulating abilities of S. alba, the elements' bioavailability was taken into consideration. The obtained bioconcentration factors of Cd (AF=0.6) and Zn (AF=1-2) were significantly lower than of Tl (AF=100-200). The biomass production was similar to the biomass of control cultivation. The results were based on ICP MS measurements of total elements' content and HPLC ICP MS for speciation analysis. The quality of obtained results was evaluated based on the intermethod comparison with voltammetry as a reference method. Comparison of data obtained using ICP MS and electrochemical methods (after a proper chemical treatment) was also used for indication of Tl(III) presence and for proving that Tl(I) was not transferred into Tl(III) during analytical procedures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.talanta.2012.02.042 | DOI Listing |
Plant Biol (Stuttg)
December 2024
Laboratory of Entomology, Plant Sciences, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Plants can sustain various degrees of damage or compensate for tissue loss by regrowth without significant fitness costs. This tolerance to insect herbivory depends on the plant's developmental stage during which the damage is inflicted and on how much tissue is removed. Plant fitness correlates, that is, biomass and germination of seeds, were determined at different ontogenetic stages, vegetative, budding, or flowering stages of three annual brassicaceous species exposed to feeding by Pieris brassicae caterpillars at different intensities.
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December 2024
Medical Physics Department, M. Smoluchowski Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland.
Currently, global consumption of vegetable oils for food purposes exceeds 200 million tons per year. Hazardous waste frying oil has become a fully valuable, environmentally friendly raw material with a wide range of industrial applications. Solid materials based on waste cooking oil (WCO) are becoming increasingly popular due to their easy production technology, availability of raw material, and low cost.
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November 2024
Department of Sustainable Crop Production (DI.PRO.VE.S.), Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Piacenza, Italy.
Currently, fungicides are widely used to control grapevine foliar diseases. This study explored the possibility of decreasing the use of fungicides to control these diseases using cover crops in the inter-row of vineyards. In small-scale experiments, we found that cover crops (namely horseradish ) were able to (i) reduce the numbers of airborne conidia of (originating from an inoculum source above the soil) escaping the cover canopy by >85% with respect to the base soil and (ii) reduce the number of raindrops impacting the soil by 46%-74%, depending on the cover crop height and rain-originated splash droplets that escaped from the ground by 75%-95%, which reduced splash-borne inoculum.
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November 2024
Crop, Soil, and Environmental Management Program, School of Agricultural Sciences, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL, 62901, USA.
Polymers (Basel)
October 2024
Institute of Chemistry, University of Miskolc, 3515 Miskolc-Egyetemváros, Hungary.
Activated carbon (AC) and biochar (BC) are porous materials with large surface areas and widely used in environmental and industrial applications. In this study, different types of AC and BC samples were produced from sp. by a chemical activation and pyrolysis process and compared to commercial activated carbon samples.
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