Driven by eutrophic conditions, AM (algal mat) proliferation is now ubiquitous in coastal areas generating significant ecological and economic impacts. The need to mitigate negative effects has prompted the exploration of removal methods, but neither the success nor the impacts on intertidal mudflats have been assessed. Limited success using a specially-adapted vessel, prompted a shift to manual removal by hand-rake at two UK (Portsmouth and Poole) and two French study sites (Brittany and Normandy). Significant reductions in AM biomass and percentage cover were only observed at one site (Portsmouth), in contrast to significant temporal effects throughout the 180 days at each site. Significant effects of removal on the benthos and birds were also limited to an increase in organic content at Brittany and a reduction in macrofaunal abundance at Poole but with all sites dominated by temporal effects. To assess if AM removal can be used to ameliorate excess nitrogen (N) we calculated the amount of N that could be removed from a site and its potential cost-effectiveness (price of N credit after subtraction of removal costs) within an NTS (Nutrient Trading Scheme). N export by AM removal is influenced by site and season, for example, 66 kg N ha yr (winter) to 95 kg N ha yr (summer) at Poole. N removal rates from some sites (Poole, all seasons; Brittany, autumn) are comparable to other Nature-Based Solutions (NBSs) such as clam aquaculture. However, a single annual AM harvest at these sites yields lower N removal rates compared to seaweed, mussel, and oyster aquaculture. Using a global mean N credit price, the removals at Poole and Portsmouth have medium/high cost-effectiveness across all seasons, potentially generating up to half a million pounds of N credits, which could be increased if post-harvesting value-chains were maximised e.g. biofuel production. Although, implementation at scale could rapidly reduce the many impacts of AMs and contribute to the blue-green bioeconomy revolution, to improve water quality, AM removal must be framed within a multifaceted management process.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2025.117747 | DOI Listing |
Resource competition among flowers is expected to influence variation in seed output within inflorescences, but the extent to which flower position affects competitive interactions is still incompletely understood. To investigate position effects on seed output in the perennial, monoecious macrophyte Sagittaria trifolia, we compared components of seed production (fruit set, seed number per fruit, and seed size) in control inflorescences to that in inflorescences from which half of the female flowers were experimentally removed, either from basal positions, from upper positions, or from across the inflorescence. Basal and upper flower removal reduced total seed output per inflorescence, while the throughout removal treatment maintained a seed yield comparable to the control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDermatol Reports
February 2025
Division of Regenerative and Oncological Dermatological Surgery, Modena University Hospital.
In patients with epidermolysis bullosa (EB), surgery may be required to remove squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the hands or to correct pseudo-syndactyly. Dermal substitutes may represent a suitable tool to promote the healing of surgical wounds in EB. We review our experience with a collagen-elastin dermal matrix to promote surgical wound healing due to hand surgery to correct pseudo-syndactyly or SCC resection in patients affected by EB.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia
March 2025
Departamento de Neurologia e Neurocirurgia, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp), São Paulo, Brazil.
The immune system is crucial for the correct brain development, and recent findings also point toward central control of immune response. As the immune system is not fully developed at birth, the early years become an important window for infections and for the development of epilepsy. Both central and even peripheral inflammation may impact brain function, promoting opening of the blood-brain/blood and cerebrospinal barriers and allowing entry of immune cells and cytokines, which in turn may affect neuron function and connections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImportance: Exercise intervention studies have shown benefits for patients with lung cancer undergoing surgery, yet most interventions to date have been resource intensive and have followed a one-size-fits-all approach.
Objective: To determine whether a personalized, clinic-aligned perioperative exercise program with remote monitoring and instructions can improve physical function and fatigue among patients undergoing surgery for lung cancer.
Design, Setting, And Participants: The Precision-Exercise-Prescription (PEP) randomized clinical trial is a single-center phase 3 trial.
J Hand Surg Am
March 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Østfold Hospital Trust, Grålum, Norway.
Purpose: Current knowledge of complication rates after volar plating of distal radius fractures mainly relies on studies of low to moderate numbers and various implants. This study sought to find the incidence of complications leading to reoperation in a sample of distal radius fractures treated with one specific volar locking plate (VLP).
Methods: We retrospectively evaluated 1,597 distal radius fractures in 1,564 patients operated with a VLP from January 2011 to December 2017 for complications leading to a reoperation.
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