خيارات البحث
النتائج 121 - 130 من 240
[Domestic and industrial organic loads]
1994
Saad, M.A.H. | Amuzu, A.T. | Biney, C. | Calamari, D. | Imevbore, A.M. | Naeve, H. | Ochumba, P.B.O.
[Review of heavy metals]
1994
Biney, C. | Amuzu, A.T. | Calamari, D. | Kaba, N. | Mbome, I.L. | Naeve, H. | Ochumba, P.B.O. | Osibanjo, O. | Radegonde, V. | Saad, M.A.H.
Air pollution and climate change
1994
Wellburn, Alan
Air pollution is an issue of enormous importance throughout the world. In recent years there have been changes in our perception of problems associated with air pollution, with new threats being identified and remaining problems becoming worse. Air Pollution and Climate Change, second edition, adopts a unique approach to the problem of air pollution, concentrating on the mechanisms of action of air pollutants and acid rain on biological tissues. This new edition retains relevant and revised information from the first edition and includes much fresh material on important aspects of climate change. The chapters are arranged in three parts, beginning with an outline of the physical events that create and modify pollutants, followed by a detailed consideration of the impact of pollution on plant and animal life forms. Key new topics in this edition include global warming, stratospheric ozone depletion, reduced air pollutants such as ammonia and volatile sulphides, and atmospheric lead and radon. The text focuses on the effects of pollutants on flora and fauna directly and on a global scale, as many problems now affect the global system upon which the biosphere depends. Fully illustrated, this is a key text for undergraduate and postgraduate students of biology, toxicology, environmental sciences and physical geography. It will also prove an excellent resource for administrators, consultants and legislators handling environmentally sensitive topics who need to know more about the biological consequences of atmospheric pollution.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Contaminants in seawater around England and Wales: results from monitoring surveys, 1990-1992
1994
Law, R.J. | Waldock, M.J. | Allchin, C.R. | Laslett, R.E. | Bailey, K.J. (Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Directorate of Fisheries Research, Fisheries Laboratory, Burnham on Crouch, Essex CM0 8HA (United Kingdom))
Persistent organochlorine residues in sediments from the Chukchi Sea, Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska
1994
Iwata, H. | Tanabe, S. | Aramoto, M. | Sakai, N. | Tatsukawa, R. (Department of Life Environment Conservation, Ehime University, Tarumi 3-5-7, Matsuyama 790 (Japan))
The large-scale flux of nutrients from land to water and the eutrophication of lakes and marine waters
1994
Forsberg, C. (Institute of Limnology, Uppsala University, Norbyvag. 20, 752 36, Uppsala (Sweden))
Pollution in livestock production systems
1994
Ap Dewi, I (Ioan)
(Effects of air pollution on forest ecosystems - a system-analytical attempt from the view of ecological genetics)
1994
Degen, B. | Scholz, F.
Effects and control of long-range transboundary air pollution. Report prepared within the framework of the Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution
1994
Riparian forest buffer system research at the Coastal Plain Experiment Station, Tifton, GA النص الكامل
1994
Hubbard, R.K. | Lowrance, R.R.
Recent attention has focused on riparian forest buffer systems for filtering sediment, nutrients, and pesticides entering from upslope agricultural fields. Studies in a variety of physiographic areas have shown that concentrations of sediment and agrichemicals are reduced after passage through a riparian forest. The mechanisms involved are both physical and biological, including deposition, uptake by vegetation, and loss by microbiological processes such as denitrification. Current research by USDA-ARS and University of Georgia scientists at Tifton, GA is focusing on managing riparian forest buffer systems to alleviate agricultural impacts on the environment. The underlying concept for this research is that agricultural impact on streams is best protected by a riparian forest buffer system consisting of three zones. In consecutive upslope order from the stream these zones are (1) a narrow band of permanent trees (5-10 m wide) immediately adjacent to the stream channel which provides streambank stabilization, organic debris input to streams, and shading of streams, (2) a forest management zone where maximum biomass production is stressed and frees can be harvested, and (3) a grass buffer strip up to 10 m wide to provide control of coarse sediment and to spread overland flow. Several ongoing projects at Tifton, GA are focusing on using riparian forest buffer systems as filters. A forest management project is testing the effects of different management practices on surface and ground water quality. This project includes three different forest management practices: mature forest, selectively thinned forest, and clearcut. In a different study a natural wetland is being restored by planting frees. The effectiveness of this wetland on filtering nutrients from dairy wastes which are being applied upslope is being evaluated. At this same site, a pesticide study is being conducted on the side opposite to where dairy wastes are applied. An overland flow-riparian buffer system using swine lagoon waste is evaluating the effectiveness of different vegetative treatments and lengths of buffer zones on filtering of nutrients. In this study three vegetative treatments are compared: (1) 10 m grass buffer and 20 m riparian forest, (2) 20 m grass buffer and 10 m riparian forest, (3) 10 m grass buffer and 20 m of the recommended wetland species maidencane. Waste is applied at the upper end of each plot at either a high or low rate, and then allowed to flow downslope. The three zone riparian forest buffer system is being used for the Riparian Ecosystem Management Model (REMM). This model, which is currently under development at Tifton, GA, is a computer simulation model designed to reduce soil and water degradation by aiding farmers and land use managers in decision making regarding how best to utilize their riparian buffer system. Both information currently being collected in field studies and development of the REMM are innovative farm-level and forestry technologies to protect soil and water resources.
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