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1.
Animal ; 9(3): 534-43, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25407839

ABSTRACT

In New Zealand, agriculture is predominantly based on pastoral grazing systems and animal excreta deposited on soil during grazing have been identified as a major source of nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. Forage brassicas (Brassica spp.) have been increasingly used to improve lamb performance. Compared with conventional forage perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.), a common forage in New Zealand, forage brassicas have faster growth rates, higher dry matter production and higher nutritive value. The aim of this study was to determine the partitioning of dietary nitrogen (N) between urine and dung in the excreta from sheep fed forage brassica rape (B. napus subsp. oleifera L.) or ryegrass, and then to measure N2O emissions when the excreta from the two different feed sources were applied to a pasture soil. A sheep metabolism study was conducted to determine urine and dung-N outputs from sheep fed forage rape or ryegrass, and N partitioning between urine and dung. Urine and dung were collected and then used in a field plot experiment for measuring N2O emissions. The experimental site contained a perennial ryegrass/white clover pasture on a poorly drained silt-loam soil. The treatments included urine from sheep fed forage rape or ryegrass, dung from sheep fed forage rape or ryegrass, and a control without dung or urine applied. N2O emission measurements were carried out using a static chamber technique. For each excreta type, the total N2O emissions and emission factor (EF3; N2O-N emitted during the 3- or 8-month measurement period as a per cent of animal urine or dung-N applied, respectively) were calculated. Our results indicate that, in terms of per unit of N intake, a similar amount of N was excreted in urine from sheep fed either forage rape or ryegrass, but less dung N was excreted from sheep fed forage rape than ryegrass. The EF3 for urine from sheep fed forage rape was lower compared with urine from sheep fed ryegrass. This may have been because of plant secondary metabolites, such as glucosinolates in forage rape and their degradation products, are transferred to urine and affect soil N transformation processes. However, the difference in the EF3 for dung from sheep fed ryegrass and forage rape was not significant.


Subject(s)
Brassica napus/metabolism , Diet/veterinary , Feces/chemistry , Lolium/metabolism , Nitrous Oxide/analysis , Sheep, Domestic/metabolism , Agriculture/methods , Animals , New Zealand , Nitrogen/metabolism , Nitrous Oxide/urine , Nutritive Value/physiology , Sheep
2.
Ophthalmology ; 105(8): 1373-9, 1998 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9709745

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study aims to describe the clinical and sociodemographic characteristics of patients with diabetes who are newly presenting to an inner city public hospital eye clinic. This study also aims to determine the prevalence and severity of ocular morbidity in this population at time presentation and to assess the adequacy of the ophthalmic surveillance to which this population was exposed before presentation. DESIGN: A clinic-based, cross-sectional study. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 118 consecutive patients with diabetes participated. METHOD: During a 2-month interval, all patients with diabetes newly presenting to the Los Angeles County King-Drew Medical Center eye clinic were recruited who were at risk for diabetic eye complications according to American Diabetes Association criteria. Each patient underwent a standardized interviewer-administered questionnaire and a comprehensive ophthalmic examination. RESULTS: Of the 118 patients, 65 (55%) were Hispanic and 51 (43%) were African American. Forty-six percent had a grade school education or less, 91% were unemployed, and 64% had no health insurance. Type two diabetes was predominant (91%), including 24 (22%) of new onset. Thirty-six patients with diabetes (31%) reported duration of diabetes greater than 10 years at time of presentation. At time of presentation, 62% had clinically apparent ophthalmic disease, whereas 40% had advanced ocular disease, including 6.8% of the sample that were legally blind. Sixty-nine patients (58.5%) reported never having had a dilated fundus examination, whereas 31 (63%) of the 49 patients reporting a previous dilated examination were last examined more than 2 years before presentation. Timing of ophthalmic examination was classified as appropriate for 38 patients (32%), marginal for 20 patients (17%), and inappropriate for 60 patients (51%). CONCLUSION: In the setting of an inner city county hospital eye clinic, where the patient population is predominately minority and of low socioeconomic status, ophthalmic surveillance of high-risk patients with diabetes is inadequate and advanced disease often is present at initial presentation. Strategies must be developed to increase the routine use of eye services within this population.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/epidemiology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/epidemiology , Eye Diseases/epidemiology , Hospitals, County/statistics & numerical data , Ophthalmology/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/complications , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Eye Diseases/etiology , Female , Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Los Angeles/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Prevalence , Social Class , Socioeconomic Factors
3.
J Insect Physiol ; 44(7-8): 637-644, 1998 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12769946

ABSTRACT

Juvenile hormones (JHs) are thought to drive the regulation of yolk protein uptake by ovaries in Drosophila melanogaster. However, the level of JH production in a mutant stock (ap(56f)) is depressed yet the flies are normally vitellogenic. The production of ecdysteroids by these ap(56f) ovaries in vitro is elevated above that of wild-type ovaries. The incubation of wild-type ovaries in the presence of 0.1mM JHB(3) increased ecdysteroid biosynthesis only during the first 18h following eclosion. Female Drosophila melanogaster undergo a pre-vitellogenic reproductive diapause when exposed to low temperature (11 degrees C) and a short-day photoperiod (L12:D12). The rate of ecdysteroid synthesis by the ovaries, but not JH production, increased within 12h of a temperature upshift to 25 degrees C from a basal level of 20+/-1pg/10 pair of ovaries/5h to a sustained level of 150+/-20pg/10 pair/5h. Vitellogenic oocytes were noted in all females within 12h of this temperature upshift. Diapause was also terminated by the injection of 1&mgr;g of 20-hydroxyecdysone into the abdomens of diapausing females as determined by an increase in ovary size, and the appearance of vitellogenic oocytes as compared to controls. These results are consistent with a revised model for the regulation of yolk protein uptake by ovaries in which ecdysteroids, and not JHs, play the prominent role.

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