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Farming for food and water security Texto completo
2012
Lichtfouse, Eric | Agronomy for Sustainable Development (ASD) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) | Agroécologie [Dijon] ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université de Bourgogne (UB)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement
International audience | Chapters: 1) Public goods and farming. 2) Pesticides and sustainable agriculture. 3) Nitrogen use efficiency by annual and perennial crops. 4) Microalgae for bioremediation of distillery effluent. 5) No-till direct seeding for energy-saving rice production in China. 6) Agricultural water poverty index for a sustainable world. 7) Participatory rural appraisal to solve irrigation issues. 8) Bioavailability of soil P for plant nutrition. 9) Animal manure for smallholder agriculture in South Africa. 10) Vermicompost and soil quality.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Farming for Food and Water Security Texto completo
2012
Chapters: 1) Public goods and farming. 2) Pesticides and sustainable agriculture. 3) Nitrogen use efficiency by annual and perennial crops. 4) Microalgae for bioremediation of distillery effluent. 5) No-till direct seeding for energy-saving rice production in China. 6) Agricultural water poverty index for a sustainable world. 7) Participatory rural appraisal to solve irrigation issues. 8) Bioavailability of soil P for plant nutrition. 9) Animal manure for smallholder agriculture in South Africa. 10) Vermicompost and soil quality.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Farming for Food and Water Security Texto completo
2012
Lichtfouse , Eric (ed.) (INRA , Dijon (France). UMR 1347 Agroécologie)
Chapters: 1) Public goods and farming. 2) Pesticides and sustainable agriculture. 3) Nitrogen use efficiency by annual and perennial crops. 4) Microalgae for bioremediation of distillery effluent. 5) No-till direct seeding for energy-saving rice production in China. 6) Agricultural water poverty index for a sustainable world. 7) Participatory rural appraisal to solve irrigation issues. 8) Bioavailability of soil P for plant nutrition. 9) Animal manure for smallholder agriculture in South Africa. 10) Vermicompost and soil quality.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]El agua en la alimentación animal
1996
Busetti, M.R.
Water and food intakes of Canadian Holstein-Friesian cows in Ghana
1983
Kabuga, J.D. | Alhassan, W.S. (Dep. Animal Science, Univ. Science and Technology, Kumasi (Ghana))
The effect of food or water deprivation on paracetamol pharmacokinetics in calves Texto completo
2003
Janus, K. | Grochowina, B. | Antoszek, J. | Suszycki, S. | Muszczynski, Z.
This study investigated the effect of food or water deprivation on the pharmacokinetics of paracetamol in 30 Holstein-Friesian preruminant calves (10 controls, 10 food withheld and 10 water-deprived) aged 24–25 days. Control calves were given paracetamol at 24–25 days and again at 28–29 days of age. In the food withheld and water-deprived calves paracetamol studies were performed before and after 4 days of food or water deprivation. In the control group there were no significant differences in pharmacokinetic parameters for paracetamol in 24–25 and 28–29-day-old calves. Witholding food for 4 days was associated with an increase in the mean residence time (MRT) of paracetamol (P < 0.01). When food was withheld total body clearance (ClB) of paracetamol was significantly decreased (P < 0.05). The volume of distribution (V(ss)) was not significantly altered. Similarly, water deprivation was associated with a significant increase in MRT and significant decrease in ClB of paracetamol (P < 0.01). The V(ss) was not significantly altered. Food or water deprivation also influenced the formation of major metabolites (glucuronide and sulphate) of paracetamol. It is concluded that food or water deprivation may impair the elimination drugs that undergo metabolism by UDP-glucuronyltransferase and sulphotransferase in cattle.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Revealing the bilateral dependencies and policy implication of food production of Japan and China: From the perspective of Food-Energy-Water nexus Texto completo
2019
Ju, Yiyi
The world food price crisis in 2007/08 has aroused worldwide attention to the global food price volatility and food self-sufficiency issues. This paper modelled the entire environment of food production and transaction from a holistic view by a Food-Energy-Water (FEW) nexus in order to reveal the hidden connections related to the food self-sufficiency issue, including the interdependencies of food production with its restraining factors (hybrid energy, hybrid water), other production sectors, and international exchanges. This paper mapped all direct and indirect flows in the FEW nexus and projected a potential Emission Trading Scheme (ETS) to figure out the impacts of policies on FEW nexus flows, nexus robustness, total input of all sectors, and household expenditures in Japan and China. The results show that the pattern of food-related extraction flows was more imbalanced than the pattern of hybrid energy flows, due to the high dependence of Japan on the food supply of China (16.11% of total food-related extractions). An ETS may increase Japan’s total household expenditure on imported goods from China in the fields of sugar refining (1.3096%), processing vegetable oils and fats (0.1164%), processing of meat cattle (0.1010%), as well as slightly decrease the system robustness of the total nexus.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Growth temperature of four Campylobacter jejuni strains influences their subsequent survival in food and water Texto completo
2006
Duffy, L. | Dykes, G.A.
To determine if Campylobacter jejuni grown at 37 and 42 °C have different abilities to survive on beef and chicken, and in water. Beef, chicken and water were separately inoculated with four Camp. jejuni (two poultry and two beef) strains grown at 37 or 42 °C. The matrices were stored at ~4 °C and Camp. jejuni numbers were monitored over time by plate counts. On beef there was a greater decrease in number for two strains (P < 0·05; ~0·7 and 1·3 log CFU cm⁻²) grown at 37 °C as compared with 42 °C. By contrast on chicken there was a decrease in numbers for two strains (P < 0·05; ~1·3 and 1 log CFU g⁻¹) grown at 42 °C as compared with 37 °C. In water there was a greater decrease in numbers for all strains (P < 0·05; ~3-5·3 log CFU ml⁻¹) grown at 42 °C as compared with 37 °C. Growth temperature influences the survival of Camp. jejuni on food and in water. Campylobacter jejuni survival studies need to consider growth temperature to avoid erroneous results. Campylobacter jejuni grown at 37 °C, the body temperature of humans and cattle, may represent a greater public health risk in water than those grown at 42 °C, the body temperature of poultry.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Temporal dynamics of arsenic uptake and distribution: food and water risks in the Bengal basin Texto completo
2020
Pullyottum Kavil, Sarath | Ghosh, Devanita | Pašić, Indira | Routh, Joyanto
Contaminated food chain is a serious contender for arsenic (As) uptake around the globe. In Nadia, West Bengal, we trace possible means of transfer of As from multiple sources reaching different trophic levels, and associated seasonal variability leading to chronic As uptake. This work considers possible sources-pathways of As transfer through food chain in rural community. Arsenic concentration in groundwater, soil, rice, and vegetable-samples collected detected in different harvest seasons of 2014 and 2016. Arsenic level in shallow groundwater samples ranged from 0.1 to 354 µg/L, with 75% of the sites above the prescribed limit by WHO (10 µg/L) during the boro harvest season. High soil As content (∼20.6 mg/kg), resulted in accumulation of As in food crops. A positive correlation in As conc. with increase over period in all sites indicating gradual As accumulation in topsoil. Unpolished rice samples showed high As content (∼1.75 mg/kg), polishing reduced 80% of As. Among vegetables, the plant family Poaceae with high irrigation requirements and Solanaceae retaining high moisture, have the highest levels of As. Contaminated animal fodder (Poaceae) and turf water for cattle are shown to contaminate milk (0.06 to 0.24 µg/L) and behoves strategies, practices to minimize As exposure.
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