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Small-scale constructed wetlands for onsite treatment of household wastewater in Belgium 全文
2006
Xanthoulis, Dimitri | Fonder, N. | Wauthelet, M.
peer reviewed
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]The ecology of transportation
2006
Davenport, J. (John) | Davenport, Julia L.
Human transport by land, sea and air has increased exponentially through time in intensity, paralleling rises in population, prosperity and rates of technological change. Transport has considerable ecological effects, many of them detrimental to environmental sustainability. This volume brings together international experts from a variety of disciplines to review the ecological effects and their causes in terms of road, rail, ship and aircraft transport. The contributors have different attitudes and agendas. Some are ecologists, some planners, others social scientists. Focus ranges from identification of threats and amelioration of damaging effects through to future design of transport systems to minimize environmental degradation. Some chapters consider restricted areas of the globe; others the globe itself. Views encompass deep pessimism and cautious optimism. Uniquely, the volume considers transport effects in all environments. This is the first book that attempts to discuss the relationship between human transport and all ecosystems. It appeals not only to the specialist environmentalist by picking out novel topics, but also to anyone involved in transport issues as it tackles the issues from an historical perspective, encompassing the past, present and future of the effects of human transport.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]The Fernow watershed acidification study
2006
Adams, Mary Beth | DeWalle, David R. | Hom, John Lun
Focus on water pollution research
2006
Livingston, James V.
Variability of The Cadmium Content In HypericumSpecies Collected In Eastern Austria 全文
2006
Chizzola, R. | Lukas, B.
In Hypericumspecies some specimens have been found to display higher levels of the toxic heavy metal Cd than the proposed guide value of 0.5mgkg. Plant and soil samples from various regions in Eastern Austria were collected to study the variability in the Cd content of the herbs and relate it to selected soil properties and soil micronutrient contents. The soils contained between 0.01 and 0.44mgkg-¹Cd in the dry soil. Altogether about 7% of the collected plant samples exceeded 0.5mgkg-¹Cd of dry shoots, the proposed guide value for the drug Herba Hyperici. Plants low in Cd were found on sites in the Alpenvorland, the Hainburger Berge, the Eastern Viennese Basin and the Northern Limestone Alps where the levels did not exceed 0.3mgkg-¹Cd of dry shoots. Higher Cd levels in the plants were present in material from the Waldviertel, the Southern Wienerwald and the Semmering region where often bioaccumulation factors for Cd above 1 could be calculated. In these regions the soil pH and carbonate content was somewhat lower than in other regions whereas the soil organic carbon varied greatly. In the Waldviertel some plants from a field were somewhat higher in Cd than nearby plants from the natural vegetation. In a regression analysis, the soil pH, soil organic carbon and soil Cd content were the main factors influencing Cd accumulation in the plant shoots.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Quantifying Fine-Sediment Sources in Primary and Selectively Logged Rainforest Catchments Using Geochemical Tracers 全文
2006
Blake, W. H | Walsh, R. P. D | Sayer, A. M | Bidin, K
Detailed information on post-logging sediment dynamics in tropical catchments is required for modelling downstream impacts on communities and ecosystems. Sediment tracing methods, which are potentially useful in extending to the large catchment scale and longer time scales, are tested in primary and selectively logged rainforest catchments of Sabah, Borneo. Selected nutrient (P and N) and trace metal (Ni and Zn) concentrations are shown to discriminate surface, shallow subsurface and deep subsurface sediment sources. Analysis of channel-stored fine-sediment samples and use of an unmixing model allow the relative importance of these vertical sediment sources to be estimated and erosion processes to be inferred for catchments of contrasting size.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Chemometric analysis of hydro-chemical data of an alluvial river - a case study 全文
2006
Singh, K.P. | Malik, A. | Singh, V.K.
Hydrochemistry of an alluvial river was investigated employing the chemometric techniques such as cluster analysis (CA), principal component analysis (PCA), discriminant analysis (DA) and partial least square (PLS) with a view to extract information about the variables responsible for spatial and temporal variations in river hydrochemistry and water quality, the hidden factors explaining the structure of the hydro-chemical database of the river, factors/processes influencing the river hydro-chemistry. Analysis of spearman's correlation coefficient revealed non-significant correlation of the pollution indicator (BOD, COD, SO₄, F, NH₄-N, NO₃-N) variables with season and significant correlation with site, indicating contribution of the site-specific anthropogenic sources in the catchments. Spatial CA clustered the monitoring sites (10nos.) into three groups of relatively non-polluted sites, moderately polluted sites, and highly polluted sites. Temporal CA differentiated among the samples of monsoon and non-monsoon months. PCA rendered considerable data reduction, in terms of eight parameters explaining about 71% of the total variance and evolved six PCs. PCA grouped samples belonging to different seasons and sites distinctly correlating them with natural and anthropogenic variables. Temporal and spatial DA rendered 97 and 92% correct assignations of the samples, respectively, and revealed that temperature, pH, BOD, DO, alkalinity and Ca are the most significant variables to discriminate between the different seasons and account for most of the expected temporal variations in hydrochemistry of the river, whereas, hardness, DO, BOD, COD, Ca and Mg were the most significant discriminating variables in space. Spatial and temporal groupings of the samples were successfully achieved through PLS modeling. PLS showed that the summer season samples are dominated by PO₄, TDS, F, K, COD, BOD, Na, Cl, hardness and alkalinity, whereas, samples of winter season by DO, pH, NH₄-N and coliforms. Furthermore, PLS indicated site-specific dominance of anthropogenic contaminants suggesting for their pollution sources in the corresponding catchments of these sites.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Determination of Volatile Organic Compounds in Indoor Air of Buildings in Nuclear Power Plants, Taiwan 全文
2006
Hsieh, Ling-Ling | Zhang, Zhizhong | Sree, Usha | Lo, Jiunn-Guang
This study investigates the composition and concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in air-conditioned office space and low-level waste (LLW) repository sites of nuclear power plants located in Taiwan. Air samples were collected in the office space and technical rooms of administration buildings of the three nuclear power plants and in LLW repository site using canisters. Thirty-six toxic organic compounds including aromatics, CFCs and chlorinated hydrocarbons were identified and quantified using gas chromatograph/mass spectrometer (GC/MS). The results indicated that the concentrations of most determined species were similar to that in urban areas; however, the air at the LLW building contained abundant trichlorotrifluoroethane (CFC-113), trichloroethylene, toluene, 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene and CFC-12 in concentrations markedly higher than the background levels. Only toluene and 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene were detected with low concentrations in the air of LLW repository site. In addition, comparison of the ambient air concentration at several major industries and urban atmosphere revealed that the nuclear power plants emitted and/or leaked higher concentration of chlorinated hydrocarbons among them.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Morphology and Solutes Content of Atmospheric Particles in an Urban and a Natural Area of São Paulo State, Brazil 全文
2006
Bourotte, C. | Forti, M.C. | Melfi, A.J. | Lucas, Y.
The objectives of this work were to characterize and compare the chemical composition of the water-soluble fraction of the PM₁₀ particles (Dp < 10μm) in two sites: one inside the Metropolitan Area of São Paulo (MASP) and another, 250km apart, inside the State Park of Serra do Mar (CUNHA) part of the Atlantic Forest Reserve, both located in São Paulo State, Brazil. The atmospheric particles were collected during dry and wet season. The morphologic parameters of the particles were characterized for the different size fractions of the collected material. In the aqueous extract of the particulate fine fraction the major ions (Na⁺, K⁺, Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺, Cl-, NO₃ -, NH₄ ⁺, SO₄ ²-) and trace elements (Al, Mn, Fe, Pb, Cd, Zn, Ti, Ni, Cu, Co, Ba) were determined. The morphological characteristics of the particles collected within the MASP are typical of polluted environment while in CUNHA there is no evidence of this type of contribution. Regarding the solute concentrations it was observed that the most abundant major ions and trace elements were K⁺, Ca²⁺, Na⁺, Cl- and Pb, for CUNHA and NO₃ -, SO₄ ²-, NH₄ ⁺ and Mn, Ni, Pb, Co, Cd and Ba for MASP. These differences are associated with the different sources of the particles. In the urban area they are predominantly of pollution origin, mainly from vehicle emissions, and road dust suspension, while in the State Park they are mainly of biogenic, terrigenous and oceanic origins. For these reasons the CUNHA region can be considered to be a regional reference site for studies concerning eventual disturbances in the Cunha background site, derived from transported pollution.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Zinc Toxicity Thresholds for Reclamation Forb Species 全文
2006
Paschke, M.W. | Perry, L.G. | Redente, E.F.
Zinc toxicity thresholds for reclamation plants are largely unknown. As a result, ecological risk assessments often rely on toxicity thresholds for agronomic species, which may differ from those of restoration species. Our objective was to provide Zn toxicity thresholds for forb species that are commonly used in reclamation activities. We used a greenhouse screening study where seedlings of yarrow (Achillea millefolium L.), Bigelow's tansyaster (Machaeranthera bigelovii (Gray) Greene var. bigelovii), blue flax (Linum perenne L. var. Appar), alfalfa (Medicago sativa L. var. Ladak), Palmer's penstemon (Penstemon palmeri Gray), and Rocky Mountain penstemon (Penstemon strictus Benth. var. Bandera) were grown in sand culture and exposed to increasing concentrations of Zn. Lethal concentrations (LC50 - substrate Zn concentration resulting in 50% mortality), effective concentrations (EC50 - substrate Zn concentration resulting in 50% biomass reduction), and phytotoxicity thresholds (PT50 - tissue Zn concentration resulting in 50% biomass reduction) were then determined. Phytotoxicity thresholds and effective concentrations for these reclamation species were relatively consistent between species. Our estimates of PT50-shoot for these species range from 1258 to 3214 mg Zn kg-¹ . Measures of EC50-plant for these restoration forbs ranged from 82 to 214 mg Zn L-¹ . These thresholds might be more useful for risk assessors working on reclamation sites than those based on non-reclamation species that are widely used.
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