Search results for "SOI"

showing 10 items of 4823 documents

Determining short-term changes in the hydraulic properties of a sandy-loam soil by a three-run infiltration experiment

2020

Soil structure-dependent parameters can vary rapidly as a consequence of perturbing events such as intense rainfall. Investigating their short-term changes is therefore essential to understand the general behaviour of a porous medium. The aim of this study is to gain insight into the effects of wetting, perturbation and recovery processes through different sequences of Beerkan infiltration experiments performed on a sandy-loam soil. Two different three-run infiltration experiments (LHL and LLL) were carried out by pouring water at low (L, non-perturbing) and high (H, perturbing) heights above the soil surface and at short time intervals (hours, days). The results demonstrate that the propos…

Beerkan runInfiltration (hydrology)soil structure recoverymechanical disturbanceLoam0208 environmental biotechnologySettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliEnvironmental scienceSoil science02 engineering and technologysoil hydrodynamic parameter020801 environmental engineeringWater Science and TechnologyHydrological Sciences Journal
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Water transmission properties of a sandy-loam soil estimated with Beerkan runs differing by the infiltration time criterion

2021

Abstract The Beerkan method consists of a ponded infiltration experiment from a single ring inserted a small depth into the soil. Fixed, small volumes of water are repeatedly poured into the ring to maintain a quasi-zero head on the soil surface. According to the standard Beerkan infiltration run, a new water volume is poured on the infiltration surface when the previously applied volume has completely infiltrated and the soil surface is entirely exposed to air (ta criterion). However, water could also be applied when the soil exposition to air begins (to criterion) or half the soil surface is exposed to air (tm criterion). The effect of the infiltration time criterion on determination of t…

Beerkan runMacropore0208 environmental biotechnologySoil water transmission propertieSoil scienceContext (language use)04 agricultural and veterinary sciences02 engineering and technology020801 environmental engineeringPermeability (earth sciences)Infiltration (hydrology)Hydraulic conductivityLoamSoil water040103 agronomy & agricultureSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-Forestali0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceInfiltration time criterionBEST methodologyPondingJournal of Hydrology and Hydromechanics
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Avoidance of Cu- and Zn-contaminated soil by three ecologically different earthworm species

2005

Earthworm avoidance response to soils contaminated with harmful substances has been proposed as a potential tool for assessing soil toxicity with low test effort. In the present study, the objective was to find out whether three ecologically different earthworm species, Aporrectodea tuberculata (Eisen), Lumbricus rubellus (Hoffmeister), and Dendrobaena octaedra (Savigny), avoid soils simultaneously spiked with Cu and Zn. In addition, metal-contaminated field soil taken close to a Cu-Ni smelter was tested with A. tuberculata using a two-section avoidance lest procedure. All three earthworm species clearly avoided Cu/Zn contaminated soil but differently: D. octaedra was the most sensitive spe…

Behavior AnimalbiologyEcologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisEarthwormPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineAvoidance responseContaminationbiology.organism_classificationLumbricus rubellusRisk AssessmentPollutionSoil contaminationZincSpecies SpecificityOligochaetaEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterAnimalsSoil PollutantsEcotoxicologyOligochaetaCopperEcotoxicology and Environmental Safety
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The status of the species Beijerinckia fluminensis Dobereiner and Ruschel 1958. Request for an Opinion.

2011

In a previous article [Oggerin M., Arahal, D. R., Rubio, V. & Marin, I. (2009). Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 59, 2323–2328], it has been shown that strain Beijerinckia fluminensis UQM 1685T and its derived equivalent B. fluminensis CIP 106281T do not conform to the description of the type strain of Beijerinckia fluminensis Döbereiner and Ruschel 1958. Indeed, both strains were identified as members of the species Rhizobium radiobacter and exhibited marked phenotypic and genotypic differences with members of the genus Beijerinckia. It was concluded that both strains, and any other equivalents derived from them, do not descend from the nomenclatural type. Since then, our attempts to find old…

BeijerinckiaDNA Bacterialfood.ingredientGenotypeEcologyMolecular Sequence DataGeneral MedicineSequence Analysis DNABiologyMicrobiologyfoodGenus BeijerinckiaBeijerinckiaceaeRNA Ribosomal 16SBotanyTaxonomy (biology)Beijerinckia fluminensisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBrazilPhylogenySoil MicrobiologyInternational journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology
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Photocatalytic oxidation mechanism of benzonitrile in aqueous suspensions of titanium dioxide

2007

Abstract The photocatalytic oxidation of benzonitrile was carried out in aqueous suspensions (pH 11) of commercial polycrystalline TiO 2 (Merck and Degussa P25) irradiated by ultraviolet light. The rate of decomposition was dependent on the concentration of benzonitrile and followed a pseudo-first order kinetics. The complete mineralization of a 0.70 mM benzonitrile solution was achieved in ca. 8 h by using TiO 2 Degussa P25, whereas the substrate was only partially mineralized even after 14 h of irradiation in the presence of TiO 2 Merck. The final oxidation products were carbonate and nitrate. The appearance and the evolution of organic and inorganic intermediate species were also investi…

Benzonitrilechemistry.chemical_compoundAqueous solutionchemistryTitanium dioxideUltraviolet lightPhotocatalysisSubstrate (chemistry)General ChemistryMineralization (soil science)PhotochemistryCatalysisCatalysisCatalysis Today
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Collembolan communities in deciduous forests of different origin in Finland

2006

The aim of the study was to compare the collembolan communities in anthropogenous birch stands of different origin with each other and with natural forests at the same latitude. Nine sites were investigated: three birch stands (Betula pendula) planted ca. 30 years prior to the study after clear-cutting of spruce stands, three birch stands planted ca. 30 years earlier on arable soil that had been under cultivation until reforestation, and three natural deciduous forests. These were sampled in August and October 1998, and microarthropods were extracted, counted and identified. Thirty years after reforestation, the collembolan communities of “Birch after Spruce” and “Birch after Field” differe…

BetulaceaeEcologybiologyEcologySoil biologyCommunity structureSoil ScienceReforestationSpecies diversitybiology.organism_classificationAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)GeographySoil structureDeciduousBetula pendulaApplied Soil Ecology
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Relationship between soil microarthropod species diversity and plant growth does not change when the system is disturbed

2002

Soil microarthropods influence vital ecosystem processes, such as decomposition and nutrient mineralisation. There is evidence, however, that proper functioning of ecosystems does not require the presence of all its constituent species, and therefore some species can be regarded as functionally redundant. It has been proposed that species redundancy can act as an insurance against unfavourable conditions, and that functionally redundant species may become important when a system has faced a disturbance (the “insurance hypothesis”). We conducted a laboratory microcosm experiment with coniferous forest soil and a seedling of silver birch (Betula pendula). A gradient of microarthropod diversit…

BetulaceaeNutrientEcologySoil biologyCommunity structurefood and beveragesSpecies diversityEcosystemSpecies richnessBiologyMicrocosmbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOikos
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Bibliometric analysis of European publications between 2001 and 2016 on concentrations of selected elements in mushrooms.

2020

This article presents a bibliometric study of 200 European publications released between 2001 and 2016, about the contamination of mushrooms by selected elements. The analysis includes figures on the type of analyte, its concentration, the species of fungi, and its country of origin. In the literature review, 492 species of mushrooms (wild-growing and cultured) found in 26 European countries and their concentration of 74 associated elements were analysed. The papers, which dealt mainly with the heavy metal (Cd, Cu, Fe, Pb, and Zn) concentrations of mushrooms, primarily came from Turkey, Poland, Spain, and the Czech Republic. More than 50% of the publications provided data about edible mushr…

Bibliometric analysisTurkeyMushroomsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisFungal contaminationReview ArticleReview010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesToxicologyHuman health0404 agricultural biotechnologyBibliometric analysisMetals HeavyEnvironmental ChemistryHumansSoil Pollutants0105 earth and related environmental sciencesCzech RepublicEuropean researchHeavy metals04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral Medicine040401 food sciencePollutionEuropeGeographyHeavy metalsBibliometricsSpainPolandAgaricalesEnvironmental MonitoringEnvironmental science and pollution research international
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Towards Service-oriented 5G: Virtualizing the Networks for Everything-as-a-Service

2018

It is widely acknowledged that the forthcoming 5G architecture will be highly heterogeneous and deployed with a high degree of density. These changes over the current 4G bring many challenges on how to achieve an efficient operation from the network management perspective. In this article, we introduce a revolutionary vision of the future 5G wireless networks, in which the network is no longer limited by hardware or even software. Specifically, by the idea of virtualizing the wireless networks, which has recently gained increasing attention, we introduce the Everything-as-a-Service (XaaS) taxonomy to light the way towards designing the service-oriented wireless networks. The concepts, chall…

Big Datawireless networksNetworking and Internet Architecture (cs.NI)FOS: Computer and information sciencesvirtualisointisoftware5G-tekniikkawireless network virtualizationEverything-as-a-servicevirtualizationComputer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture5G technologyvirtualisation5G mobile communicationhardwarelcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineeringeverything-as-a-servicecomputer architecturelcsh:TK1-99715Glangattomat verkot
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Cropland and grassland management

2014

According to the latest National Inventory, the Italian agricultural sector is a source of GHGs with 34.5 Mt of CO2 eq in 2009, corresponding to 7 % of the total emissions (excluding LULUCF). In particular, more than half (19.1 Mt of CO2 eq) are N2O emissions from soils. Although the national methodology is in accordance with Tier 1 and 2 approaches proposed by the IPCC (2006), still empirical emission factors are used to assess the emission from fertilizer (e.g. 0.0125 kg N2O–N kg−1 N from synthetic fertilizers). Disaggregated data at sub-national level, including models and inventory measurement systems required by higher order methods (i.e. Tier 3), are not available in Italy so far and …

Bilancio del carboniobusiness.industryAgroforestrySimulation modelingEddy covarianceGreenhouse gas inventoryContext (language use)AgricultureSoil carbonSoil carbonGHG balanceModellingAgricolturaSuoloAgricultureGreenhouse gasEnvironmental scienceLand use land-use change and forestryModellisticabusinessWater resource managementSettore AGR/02 - AGRONOMIA E COLTIVAZIONI ERBACEE
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