7 results on '"Gil, I. M."'
Search Results
2. One health approach for West Nile virus surveillance in the European Union: Relevance of equine data for blood safety
- Author
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Young, J. J., Coulombier, D., Domanović, D., Zeller, H., Gossner, C. M., Aberle, S., Schmoll, F., Christova, I., Chakarova, S., Novosel, I. P., Koliou, M., Kriz, B., Paty, M. C., Lecollinet, S., Pervanidou, D., Antoniou, S. -E., Nagy, O., Mezei, E., Malik, P., Terjék, Z., Rizzo, C., Calistri, P., Quintans, S., Sirbu, A., Florentina, D., Hristescu, D., Gil, I. M., Martínez, R. V., Sanchez-Seco, M. P., Sierra, M. J., Socan, M., and Gossner, Céline M. [0000-0001-9345-5511]
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,surveillance systems ,medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Epidemiology ,West Nile virus ,Blood Safety ,equids ,Euroroundup ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease Outbreaks ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virology ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Relevance (law) ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Animals ,Humans ,West Nile Virus ,Public Health Surveillance ,European Union ,Horses ,One Health ,European union ,Disease Notification ,media_common ,Disease Reservoirs ,West Nile fever ,blood-borne infections ,Transmission (medicine) ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,risk assessment ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,zoonoses ,030104 developmental biology ,Culicidae ,Blood safety ,Horse Diseases ,Public Health ,Risk assessment ,business - Abstract
West Nile virus (WNV) infection is notifiable in humans and equids in the European Union (EU). An area where a human case is detected is considered affected until the end of the mosquito transmission season (week 48) and blood safety measures have to be implemented. We used human and equine case notifications between 2013 and 2017 to define the WNV distribution in the EU and to investigate the relevance of using equine cases as a complementary trigger for blood safety measures. Adding areas with equine cases to the definition of an affected area would have a major impact on blood safety measures. Adding areas with equine cases where human cases have been reported in the past would increase the timeliness of blood safety measures with only a limited impact. Although the occurrence of human and/or equine cases confirms virus circulation in the EU, no evidence was found that occurrence of equine cases leads to human cases and vice versa. We conclude that information about equine data should contribute to raising awareness among public health experts and trigger enhanced surveillance. Further studies are required before extending the definition of affected areas to areas with human and/or equine cases.
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- 2019
- Full Text
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3. Climate change and coastal hydrographic response along the Atlantic Iberian margin (Tagus Prodelta and Muros Ría) during the last two millennia
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Martín Lebreiro, Susana, Francés, Guillermo, Abrantes, Fátima, Diz, Paula, Bartels-Jónsdóttir, H. B., Stroynowski, Z. N., Gil, I. M., Pena, Leopoldo, Rodrigues, T., Jones, P. D., Nombela, Miguel Ángel, Alejo, Irene, Briffa, K. R., Harris, I., Grimalt, Joan O., Martín Lebreiro, Susana, Francés, Guillermo, Abrantes, Fátima, Diz, Paula, Bartels-Jónsdóttir, H. B., Stroynowski, Z. N., Gil, I. M., Pena, Leopoldo, Rodrigues, T., Jones, P. D., Nombela, Miguel Ángel, Alejo, Irene, Briffa, K. R., Harris, I., and Grimalt, Joan O.
- Abstract
The Tagus Prodelta (W Portugal) and the Muros Ría (NW Spain) are areas of high deposition rates registering high-resolution palaeoclimatic records for western Iberia. We compare the climatic conditions of the two areas over the last two millennia based on proxies of temperature (sea surface temperatures and oxygen isotopes), continental input (grain size, iron and magnetic susceptibility) and productivity (inorganic and organic carbon, carbon isotopes, benthic foraminifera and diatoms). Biogeochemical changes in the Tagus Prodelta reflect widely recognized North Atlantic climatic periods encompassing the Roman Period (AD 0-350), the Dark Ages (AD 400-700), the ‘Mediaeval Warm Period’ (MWP; AD 800-1200) and the ‘Little Ice Age’ (LIA; AD 1300-1750). The atmospheric North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) drives the Tagus Prodelta multidecadal, long-term variability in precipitation-river input during cold periods (negative NAO) and marine upwelling during warmer periods (positive NAO), a scheme that is reversed in the Galician region. The Muros Ría shows only local hydrodynamics until AD 1150, including a ‘suboxic’ event in the inner Ría around AD 500-700. Since AD 1150 Atlantic warm upwelled waters have ventilated the outer Ría but only reach the inner Ría at AD 1750. The twentieth-century records are also interpreted as a reflex of the inverse NAO mode in both areas, resulting in amplification of the LIA biogeochemical water conditions. Centennial-scale solar activity appears to be another important forcing mechanism (or the only one, if solar activity drives the NAO and ‘Bond-cycles’) behind changes in the hydrography of the Tagus Prodelta, and primary production, bottom ventilation and organic carbon degradation in the Muros Ría.
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- 2006
4. Shallow-marine sediment cores record climate variability and earthquake activity off Lisbon (Portugal) for the last 2000 years
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Abrantes, Fátima, Lebreiro, S. M., Rodrigues, T., Gil, I. M., Bartels-Jónsdóttir, H. B., Oliveira, Paulo, Kissel, Catherine, Grimalt, Joan O., Abrantes, Fátima, Lebreiro, S. M., Rodrigues, T., Gil, I. M., Bartels-Jónsdóttir, H. B., Oliveira, Paulo, Kissel, Catherine, and Grimalt, Joan O.
- Abstract
Sea Surface Temperature (SST), river discharge and biological productivity have been reconstructed from a multi-proxy study of a high-temporal-resolution sedimentary sequence recovered from the Tagus deposition center off Lisbon (Portugal) for the last 2000 years. SST shows 2 °C variability on a century scale that allows the identification of the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) and the Little Ice Age (LIA)., High Iron (Fe) and fine-sediment deposition accompanied by high n-alkane concentrations and presence of freshwater diatoms during the LIA (1300–1900 AD) (Science 292 (2001) 662) suggest augmented river discharge, whereas higher total-alkenone concentrations point to increased river-induced productivity. During the MWP (550–1300 AD) (Science 292 (2001) 662) larger mean-grain size and low values of magnetic susceptibility, and concentrations of Fe, n-alkanes, and n-alcohols are interpreted to reflect decreased runoff. At the same time, increased benthic and planktonic foraminifera abundances and presence of upwelling related diatoms point to increased oceanic productivity. On the basis of the excellent match found between the negative phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index and the intensified Tagus River discharge observed for the last century, it is hypothesized that the increased influx of terrigenous material during the LIA reflects a negative NAO-like state or the occurrence of frequent extreme NAO minima. During the milder few centuries of the MWP, stronger coastal upwelling conditions are attributed to a persistent, positive NAO-like state or the frequent occurrence of extreme NAO maxima., The peak in magnetic susceptibility, centered at 90 cm composite core depth (ccd), is interpreted as the result of the well-known 1755 AD Lisbon earthquake. The Lisbon earthquake and accompanying tsunami are estimated to have caused the loss of 39 cm of sediment (355 years of record—most of the LIA) and the instantaneous deposition of a 19-cm sediment bed.
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- 2005
5. Climate change and coastal hydrographic response along the Atlantic Iberian margin (Tagus Prodelta and Muros Ría) during the last two millennia
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Lebreiro, S. M., primary, Francés, G., additional, Abrantes, F. F. G., additional, Diz, P., additional, Bartels-Jónsdóttir, H. B., additional, Stroynowski, Z. N., additional, Gil, I. M., additional, Pena, L. D., additional, Rodrigues, T., additional, Jones, P. D., additional, Nombela, M. A., additional, Alejo, I., additional, Briffa, K. R., additional, Harris, I., additional, and Grimalt, J. O., additional
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- 2006
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6. Diatoms as upwelling and river discharge indicators along the Portuguese margin: instrumental data linked to proxy information.
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Gil, I. M., Abrantes, F., and Hebbeln, D.
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DIATOMS , *PHYTOLITHS , *UPWELLING (Oceanography) , *STREAM measurements , *SEDIMENTS , *SEDIMENT analysis , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
High-resolution diatom and phytolith quantitative and assemblage analyses have been conducted on two box-cores from the Tagus pro-delta (SW Portuguese Margin) in order to compare these common palaeoceanographic proxies to instrumental data describing the upwelling regime and the freshwater input of the Tagus River. The western Portuguese margin is affected by seasonal coastal upwelling controlled by northerly winds and by strong freshwater input through the Tagus River, which is controlled by precipitation over the whole Iberian Peninsula. For both upwelling and freshwater input, instrumental data such as river flow and an upwelling index, are available for the last ∼100 and 50 yr, respectively. Diatoms and phytoliths are used as proxies for salinity and productivity changes, resulting from river input and upwelling variability. Comparison of the proxy and instrumental records confirms that diatom abundance and, in particular, the genus Chaetoceros (Ehrenberg) traces the main periods of intense upwelling, whereas freshwater diatoms and phytoliths trace the major floodings of the Tagus River. The results confirm that, despite the dissolution affecting silica compounds in the water column and in the sediment, diatoms and phytoliths are an accurate recorder of upwelling events and river discharge in this area. Based on such verification, the proxies can be used to reconstruct palaeoenvironments on timescales reaching far beyond the range of instrumental data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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7. Mathematical modelling of pore formation in polymers using supercritical fluid media in the Ornstein-Zernike approximation
- Author
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Gil, I M, Kuznetsova, I V, Gil, I I, and, mutdinov, and Sabirzyanov, A N
- Abstract
The paper studies the process of pore formation using supercritical fluid media. A mathematical model of pore formation in polymers in the process of supercritical carbon dioxide decompression has been developed, taking into account fluctuations in the Ornstein-Zernike approximation based on Patel-Teja cubic equation. Calculations and comparison with experimental data are given on the example of pore formation in polystyrene, which showed satisfactory agreement of the theory with experiment. Parameters of the Lennard-Jones pair interaction potential for carbon dioxide in the carbon dioxide-polystyrene system were obtained. The diffusion coefficient of supercritical carbon dioxide in a polymer takes on a different value than the coefficient of self-diffusion of pure carbon dioxide under the same thermodynamic conditions due to a change in the Lenard-Jones potential profile in a polymeric medium. The obtained values of the parameters of the Lennard-Jones equation, namely, the parameters of the intermolecular interaction potential and the maximum value of the attraction energy, make it possible to adequately estimate the value of the diffusion coefficient under given thermodynamic conditions.
- Published
- 2019
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