ABSTRACT
We tested how sediment trapping by hydroelectric dams affects tropical estuaries by comparing two dammed and two undammed rivers on Mexico's Pacific coast. We found that dams demonstrably affected the stability and productivity of the estuaries. The two rivers dammed for hydroelectricity had a rapid coastal recession (between 7.9 and 21.5 ha year-1) in what should otherwise be an accretional coastline. The economic consequences of this dam-induced coastal erosion include loss of habitat for fisheries, loss of coastal protection, release of carbon sequestered in coastal sediments, loss of biodiversity, and the decline of estuarine livelihoods. We estimate that the cost of the environmental damages a dam can cause in the lower part of basin almost doubles the purported benefits of emission reductions from hydroelectric generation.
ABSTRACT
Germ tube specific fractions of the dimorphic pathogenic fungus Candida albicans were fractionated according to their ability to link to fibrinogen. These fibrinogen binding factors were used as immunogens to prepare monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) with BALB/c mice. Among the resulting mAbs, one (mAb 3D9.3) was shown by indirect immunofluorescence to be specific to the surface of the mycelial phase of the C. albicans species. No labelling of the cell wall of any other Candida species was observed. This morphological shape specificity was confirmed by immunoblotting where a polydispersed high molecular mass component was identified. The molecular mass varied with the extraction procedure used; over 210 kDa with EDTA-2ME treatment, and ranging from 110 to 220 kDa after Zymolyase digestion. This phase-specific epitope was sensitive to proteolysis with pronase E, proteinase K and trypsin, but not to periodate treatment. Further purification of this material would allow further development of new serodiagnostic assays that might be more specific for invasive disease than currently available tests.