33 results on '"Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands)"'
Search Results
2. Sensor Noise in LISA Pathfinder: In-Flight Performance of the Optical Test Mass Readout
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German Research Foundation, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Sorbonne Université, Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Agenzia Spaziale Italiana, Generalitat de Catalunya, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Swiss Space Office, University of Glasgow, University of Birmingham, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US), Armano, M., Gesa, Lluis, Lobo, J. Alberto, López-Zaragoza, J. P., Martín, Victor, Nofrarias, Miquel, Sopuerta, Carlos F., Zweifel, P., German Research Foundation, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Sorbonne Université, Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Agenzia Spaziale Italiana, Generalitat de Catalunya, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Swiss Space Office, University of Glasgow, University of Birmingham, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US), Armano, M., Gesa, Lluis, Lobo, J. Alberto, López-Zaragoza, J. P., Martín, Victor, Nofrarias, Miquel, Sopuerta, Carlos F., and Zweifel, P.
- Abstract
We report on the first subpicometer interferometer flown in space. It was part of ESA's Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) Pathfinder mission and performed the fundamental measurement of the positional and angular motion of two free-falling test masses. The interferometer worked immediately, stably, and reliably from switch on until the end of the mission with exceptionally low residual noise of 32.0-1.7+2.4 fm/Hz, significantly better than required. We present an upper limit for the sensor performance at millihertz frequencies and a model for the measured sensitivity above 200 mHz.
- Published
- 2021
3. Boosting photoelectrochemical water oxidation of hematite in acidic electrolytes by surface state modification
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Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Generalitat de Catalunya, German Research Foundation, La Caixa, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), European Commission, Tang, Peng-Yi, Han, Li-Juan, Simone Hegner, Franziska, Paciok, Paul, Biset-Peiró, Martí, Du, Hong-Chu, Wei, Xian-Kui, Jin, Lei, Xie, Haibing, Shi, Qin, Andreu, Teresa, Lira-Cantú, Mónica, Heggen, Marc, Dunin-Borkowski, Rafal E., López, Núria, Galán-Mascarós, José Ramón, Morante, Joan Ramón, Arbiol, Jordi, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Generalitat de Catalunya, German Research Foundation, La Caixa, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), European Commission, Tang, Peng-Yi, Han, Li-Juan, Simone Hegner, Franziska, Paciok, Paul, Biset-Peiró, Martí, Du, Hong-Chu, Wei, Xian-Kui, Jin, Lei, Xie, Haibing, Shi, Qin, Andreu, Teresa, Lira-Cantú, Mónica, Heggen, Marc, Dunin-Borkowski, Rafal E., López, Núria, Galán-Mascarós, José Ramón, Morante, Joan Ramón, and Arbiol, Jordi
- Abstract
State-of-the-art water-oxidation catalysts (WOCs) in acidic electrolytes usually contain expensive noble metals such as ruthenium and iridium. However, they too expensive to be implemented broadly in semiconductor photoanodes for photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting devices. Here, an Earth-abundant CoFe Prussian blue analogue (CoFe-PBA) is incorporated with core–shell Fe2O3/Fe2TiO5 type II heterojunction nanowires as composite photoanodes for PEC water splitting. Those deliver a high photocurrent of 1.25 mA cm−2 at 1.23 V versus reversible reference electrode in acidic electrolytes (pH = 1). The enhancement arises from the synergic behavior between the successive decoration of the hematite surface with nanolayers of Fe2TiO5 and then, CoFe-PBA. The underlying physical mechanism of performance enhancement through formation of the Fe2O3/Fe2TiO5/ CoFe-PBA heterostructure reveals that the surface states’ electronic levels of hematite are modified such that an interfacial charge transfer becomes kinetically favorable. These findings open new pathways for the future design of cheap and efficient hematite-based photoanodes in acidic electrolytes.
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- 2019
4. Evaluation of the performance of existing mathematical models predicting enteric methane emissions from ruminants: Animal categories and dietary mitigation strategies
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Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock (Turkey), University of California, National Institute of Food and Agriculture (US), DSM Nutritional Products, Pennsylvania Soybean Board, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France), Department of Agriculture, Food and Marine (Ireland), Academy of Finland, European Commission, Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (US), PMI, Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality (The Netherlands), University of New Hampshire, Federal Office for Agriculture (Switzerland), Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), Scottish Government, Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases, CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), German Research Foundation, Swedish Infrastructure for Ecosystem Science, Fondo Regional de Tecnología Agropecuaria, Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica (Chile), Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile), Benaouda, M., Martín, C., Li, X., Kebreab, E., Hristov, A. N., Yu, Z., Yáñez Ruiz, David R., Reynolds, C. K., Crompton, L. A., Dijkstra, J., Bannink, A., Schwarm, A., Kreuzer, M., McGee, M., Lund, P., Hellwing, A. L. F., Weisbjerg, M.R., Moate, P.J., Bayat, A.R., Shingfield, K. J., Peiren, N., Eugène, M., Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock (Turkey), University of California, National Institute of Food and Agriculture (US), DSM Nutritional Products, Pennsylvania Soybean Board, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France), Department of Agriculture, Food and Marine (Ireland), Academy of Finland, European Commission, Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (US), PMI, Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality (The Netherlands), University of New Hampshire, Federal Office for Agriculture (Switzerland), Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), Scottish Government, Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases, CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), German Research Foundation, Swedish Infrastructure for Ecosystem Science, Fondo Regional de Tecnología Agropecuaria, Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica (Chile), Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile), Benaouda, M., Martín, C., Li, X., Kebreab, E., Hristov, A. N., Yu, Z., Yáñez Ruiz, David R., Reynolds, C. K., Crompton, L. A., Dijkstra, J., Bannink, A., Schwarm, A., Kreuzer, M., McGee, M., Lund, P., Hellwing, A. L. F., Weisbjerg, M.R., Moate, P.J., Bayat, A.R., Shingfield, K. J., Peiren, N., and Eugène, M.
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of existing models predicting enteric methane (CH) emissions, using a large database (3183 individual data from 103 in vivo studies on dairy and beef cattle, sheep and goats fed diets from different countries). The impacts of dietary strategies to reduce CH emissions, and of diet quality (described by organic matter digestibility (dOM) and neutral-detergent fiber digestibility (dNDF)) on model performance were assessed by animal category. The models were first assessed based on the root mean square prediction error (RMSPE) to standard deviation of observed values ratio (RSR) to account for differences in data between models and then on the RMSPE. For dairy cattle, the CH (g/d) predicting model based on feeding level (dry matter intake (DMI)/body weight (BW)), energy digestibility (dGE) and ether extract (EE) had the smallest RSR (0.66) for all diets, as well as for the high-EE diets (RSR = 0.73). For mitigation strategies based on lowering NDF or improving dOM, the same model (RSR = 0.48 to 0.60) and the model using DMI and neutral- and acid-detergent fiber intakes (RSR = 0.53) had the smallest RSR, respectively. For diets with high starch (STA), the model based on nitrogen, ADF and STA intake presented the smallest RSR (0.84). For beef cattle, all evaluated models performed moderately compared with the models of dairy cattle. The smallest RSR (0.83) was obtained using variables of energy intake, BW, forage content and dietary fat, and also for the high-EE and the low-NDF diets (RSR = 0.84 to 0.86). The IPCC Tier 2 models performed better when dietary STA, dOM or dNDF were high. For sheep and goats, the smallest RSR was observed from a model for sheep based on dGE intake (RSR = 0.61). Both IPCC models had low predictive ability when dietary EE, NDF, dOM and dNDF varied (RSR = 0.57 to 1.31 in dairy, and 0.65 to 1.24 in beef cattle). The performance of models depends mostly on explanatory variables and not on
- Published
- 2019
5. 3D orientational control in self‐assembled thin films with sub‐5 nm features by light
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Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gobierno de Aragón, European Commission, National Fund for Scientific Research (Belgium), Nickmans, Koen, Bögels, Gerardus M., Sánchez-Somolinos, Carlos, Murphy, Jeffrey N., Leclère, Philippe, Voets, Ilja K., Schenning, Albertus P. H. J., Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gobierno de Aragón, European Commission, National Fund for Scientific Research (Belgium), Nickmans, Koen, Bögels, Gerardus M., Sánchez-Somolinos, Carlos, Murphy, Jeffrey N., Leclère, Philippe, Voets, Ilja K., and Schenning, Albertus P. H. J.
- Abstract
While self-assembled molecular building blocks could lead to many next-generation functional organic nanomaterials, control over the thin-film morphologies to yield monolithic sub-5 nm patterns with 3D orientational control at macroscopic length scales remains a grand challenge. A series of photoresponsive hybrid oligo(dimethylsiloxane) liquid crystals that form periodic cylindrical nanostructures with periodicities between 3.8 and 5.1 nm is studied. The liquid crystals can be aligned in-plane by exposure to actinic linearly polarized light and out-of-plane by exposure to actinic unpolarized light. The photoalignment is most efficient when performed just under the clearing point of the liquid crystal, at which the cylindrical nanostructures are reoriented within minutes. These results allow the generation of highly ordered sub-5 nm patterns in thin films at macroscopic length scales, with control over the orientation in a noncontact fashion.
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- 2017
6. Mass-flowering crops dilute pollinator abundance in agricultural landscapes across Europe
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Wellcome Trust, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Swedish Research Council, Scottish Funding Council, Holzschuh, Andrea, Dainese, Matteo, González-Varo, Juan P., Mudri-Stojnic, Sonja, Riedinger, Verena, Rundlöf, Maj, Scheper, Jeroen, Wickens, Jennifer B., Wickens, Victoria J., Bommarco, R., Kleijn, David, Potts, Simon G., Roberts, Stuart P. M., Smith, Henrik G., Vilà, Montserrat, Vujic, Ante, Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf, Wellcome Trust, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Swedish Research Council, Scottish Funding Council, Holzschuh, Andrea, Dainese, Matteo, González-Varo, Juan P., Mudri-Stojnic, Sonja, Riedinger, Verena, Rundlöf, Maj, Scheper, Jeroen, Wickens, Jennifer B., Wickens, Victoria J., Bommarco, R., Kleijn, David, Potts, Simon G., Roberts, Stuart P. M., Smith, Henrik G., Vilà, Montserrat, Vujic, Ante, and Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf
- Abstract
Mass-flowering crops (MFCs) are increasingly cultivated and might influence pollinator communities in MFC fields and nearby semi-natural habitats (SNHs). Across six European regions and 2 years, we assessed how landscape-scale cover of MFCs affected pollinator densities in 408 MFC fields and adjacent SNHs. In MFC fields, densities of bumblebees, solitary bees, managed honeybees and hoverflies were negatively related to the cover of MFCs in the landscape. In SNHs, densities of bumblebees declined with increasing cover of MFCs but densities of honeybees increased. The densities of all pollinators were generally unrelated to the cover of SNHs in the landscape. Although MFC fields apparently attracted pollinators from SNHs, in landscapes with large areas of MFCs they became diluted. The resulting lower densities might negatively affect yields of pollinator-dependent crops and the reproductive success of wild plants. An expansion of MFCs needs to be accompanied by pollinator-supporting practices in agricultural landscapes.
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- 2016
7. Decades of population genetic research reveal the need for harmonization of molecular markers: the grey wolf Canis lupus as a case study
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Government of the Netherlands, Leibniz Association, National Science Centre (Poland), Wolves and Humans Foundation, EuroNatur, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Arjen De Groot, G., Nowak, Carsten, Skrbinšek, Tomaz, Andersen, Liselotte W., Aspi, Jouni, Fumagalli, Luca, Godinho, Raquel, Harms, Verena, Jansman, Hughs A. H., Liberg, Olof, Marucco, Francesca, Myslajek, Rober W., Nowak, Sabina, Pilot, Malgorzata, Randi, Ettore, Reinhardt, Ilka, Smietana, Wojciech, Szewczyk, Maciej, Taberlet, Pierre, Vilà, Carles, Muñoz-Fuentes, Violeta, Government of the Netherlands, Leibniz Association, National Science Centre (Poland), Wolves and Humans Foundation, EuroNatur, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Arjen De Groot, G., Nowak, Carsten, Skrbinšek, Tomaz, Andersen, Liselotte W., Aspi, Jouni, Fumagalli, Luca, Godinho, Raquel, Harms, Verena, Jansman, Hughs A. H., Liberg, Olof, Marucco, Francesca, Myslajek, Rober W., Nowak, Sabina, Pilot, Malgorzata, Randi, Ettore, Reinhardt, Ilka, Smietana, Wojciech, Szewczyk, Maciej, Taberlet, Pierre, Vilà, Carles, and Muñoz-Fuentes, Violeta
- Abstract
Following protection measures implemented since the 1970s, large carnivores are currently increasing in number and returning to areas from which they were absent for decades or even centuries. Monitoring programmes for these species rely extensively on non-invasive sampling and genotyping. However, attempts to connect results of such studies at larger spatial or temporal scales often suffer from the incompatibility of genetic markers implemented by researchers in different laboratories. This is particularly critical for long-distance dispersers, revealing the need for harmonized monitoring schemes that would enable the understanding of gene flow and dispersal dynamics. Based on a review of genetic studies on grey wolves Canis lupus from Europe, we provide an overview of the genetic markers currently in use, and identify opportunities and hurdles for studies based on continent-scale datasets. Our results highlight an urgent need for harmonization of methods to enable transnational research based on data that have already been collected, and to allow these data to be linked to material collected in the future. We suggest timely standardization of newly developed genotyping approaches, and propose that action is directed towards the establishment of shared single nucleotide polymorphism panels, next-generation sequencing of microsatellites, a common reference sample collection and an online database for data exchange. Enhanced cooperation among genetic researchers dealing with large carnivores in consortia would facilitate streamlining of methods, their faster and wider adoption, and production of results at the large spatial scales that ultimately matter for the conservation of these charismatic species.
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- 2016
8. Estimating the size of the Dutch breeding population of continental black-tailed godwits from 2007-2015 using resighting data from spring staging sites
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Van der Hucht de Beukelaar Stichting, SEO/BirdLife, World Wildlife Fund, European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds, Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality (The Netherlands), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Kentie, Rosemarie, Senner, Nathan R., Hooijmeijer, Jos C. E. W., Márquez-Ferrando, Rocío, Figuerola, Jordi, Masero, José A., Verhoeven, Mo A., Piersma, Theunis, Van der Hucht de Beukelaar Stichting, SEO/BirdLife, World Wildlife Fund, European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds, Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality (The Netherlands), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Kentie, Rosemarie, Senner, Nathan R., Hooijmeijer, Jos C. E. W., Márquez-Ferrando, Rocío, Figuerola, Jordi, Masero, José A., Verhoeven, Mo A., and Piersma, Theunis
- Abstract
Over the past 50 years, the population of Continental Black-tailed Godwits Limosa limosa limosa breeding of the East Atlantic Flyway has been in steep decline. This decline has previously been documented in trend analyses and six Netherlands-wide count-based population estimates, the last of which was completed in 1999. We provide an updated population size estimate and describe inter-annual fluctuations in the population between 2007 and 2015. To generate these estimates, we integrated a mark-recapture survival analysis with estimates of the densities of colour-marked individuals at migratory staging sites with known proportions of Continental and Icelandic L. l. islandica Black-tailed Godwits within a Bayesian framework. The use of these analytical techniques means that, in contrast with earlier efforts, our estimates are accompanied with confidence intervals, allowing us to estimate the population size with known precision. Using additional information on the breeding destination of 43 godwits equipped with satellite transmitters at Iberian staging areas, we found that 87% (75-95% 95% CI) of the nominate subspecies in the East Atlantic Flyway breed in The Netherlands. We estimated that the number of breeding pairs in The Netherlands has declined from 47,000 (38,000-56,000) pairs in 2007 to 33,000 (26,000-41,000) in 2015. Despite a temporary increase in 2010 and 2011, the population declined by an average of 3.7% per year over the entire period from 2007-2015, and by 6.3% from 2011-2015. We conclude that investing in an intensive demographic programme at a regional scale, when combined with targeted resightings of marked individuals elsewhere, can yield population estimates at the flyway scale.
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- 2016
9. Design, implementation and interpretation of in vitro batch culture experiments to assess enteric methane mitigation in ruminants-a review
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Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Academy of Finland, Yáñez Ruiz, David R., Bannink, A., Dijkstra, J., Kebreab, E., Morgavi, Diego P., O'Kiely, P., Reynolds, C. K., Schwarm, A., Shingfield, K. J., Yu, Z., Hristov, A. N., Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Academy of Finland, Yáñez Ruiz, David R., Bannink, A., Dijkstra, J., Kebreab, E., Morgavi, Diego P., O'Kiely, P., Reynolds, C. K., Schwarm, A., Shingfield, K. J., Yu, Z., and Hristov, A. N.
- Abstract
In vitro fermentation techniques (IVFT) have been widely used to evaluate the nutritive value of feeds for ruminants and in the last decade to assess the effect of different nutritional strategies on methane (CH4) production. However, many technical factors may influence the results obtained. The present review has been prepared by the 'Global Network' FACCE-JPI international research consortium to provide a critical evaluation of the main factors that need to be considered when designing, conducting and interpreting IVFT experiments that investigate nutritional strategies to mitigate CH emission from ruminants. Given the increasing and wide-scale use of IVFT, there is a need to critically review reports in the literature and establish what criteria are essential to the establishment and implementation of in vitro techniques. Key aspects considered include: i) donor animal species and number of animal used, ii) diet fed to donor animals, iii) collection and processing of rumen fluid as inoculum, iv) choice of substrate and incubation buffer, v) incubation procedures and CH measurements, vi) headspace gas composition and vii) comparability of in vitro and in vivo measurements. Based on an evaluation of experimental evidence, a set of technical recommendations are presented to harmonize IVFT for feed evaluation, assessment of rumen function and CH production.
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- 2016
10. Review of current in vivo measurement techniques for quantifying enteric methane emission from ruminants
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Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), National Institute of Food and Agriculture (US), CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), Hammond, K. J., Crompton, L. A., Bannink, A., Dijkstra, J., Yáñez Ruiz, David R., O'Kiely, P., Kebreab, E., Eugène, M. A., Yu, Z., Shingfield, K. J., Schwarm, A., Hristov, A. N., Reynolds, C. K., Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), National Institute of Food and Agriculture (US), CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), Hammond, K. J., Crompton, L. A., Bannink, A., Dijkstra, J., Yáñez Ruiz, David R., O'Kiely, P., Kebreab, E., Eugène, M. A., Yu, Z., Shingfield, K. J., Schwarm, A., Hristov, A. N., and Reynolds, C. K.
- Abstract
Ruminant husbandry is a major source of anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHG). Filling knowledge gaps and providing expert recommendation are important for defining future research priorities, improving methodologies and establishing science-based GHG mitigation solutions to government and non-governmental organisations, advisory/extension networks, and the ruminant livestock sector. The objectives of this review is to summarize published literature to provide a detailed assessment of the methodologies currently in use for measuring enteric methane (CH) emission from individual animals under specific conditions, and give recommendations regarding their application. The methods described include respiration chambers and enclosures, sulphur hexafluoride tracer (SF) technique, and techniques based on short-term measurements of gas concentrations in samples of exhaled air. This includes automated head chambers (e.g. the GreenFeed system), the use of carbon dioxide (CO) as a marker, and (handheld) laser CH detection. Each of the techniques are compared and assessed on their capability and limitations, followed by methodology recommendations. It is concluded that there is no ‘one size fits all’ method for measuring CH emission by individual animals. Ultimately, the decision as to which method to use should be based on the experimental objectives and resources available. However, the need for high throughput methodology e.g. for screening large numbers of animals for genomic studies, does not justify the use of methods that are inaccurate. All CH measurement techniques are subject to experimental variation and random errors. Many sources of variation must be considered when measuring CH concentration in exhaled air samples without a quantitative or at least regular collection rate, or use of a marker to indicate (or adjust) for the proportion of exhaled CH sampled. Consideration of the number and timing of measurements relative to diurnal patterns of CH emission and respira
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- 2016
11. Properties of silver nanoparticles influencing their uptake in and toxicity to the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus following exposure in soil
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NanoNextNL, Government of the Netherlands, European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Makama, Sunday, Piella, Jordi, Puntes, Víctor F., Brink, Nico W. van den, NanoNextNL, Government of the Netherlands, European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Makama, Sunday, Piella, Jordi, Puntes, Víctor F., and Brink, Nico W. van den
- Abstract
Physicochemical properties of nanoparticles influence their environmental fate and toxicity, and studies investigating this are vital for a holistic approach towards a comprehensive and adequate environmental risk assessment. In this study, we investigated the effects of size, surface coating (charge) of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) – a most commonly-used nanoparticle-type, on the bioaccumulation in, and toxicity (survival, growth, cocoon production) to the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus. AgNPs were synthesized in three sizes: 20, 35 and 50 nm. Surface-coating with bovine serum albumin (AgNP_BSA), chitosan (AgNP_Chit), or polyvinylpyrrolidone (AgNP_PVP) produced negative, positive and neutral particles respectively. In a 28-day sub-chronic reproduction toxicity test, earthworms were exposed to these AgNPs in soil (0–250 mg Ag/kg soil DW). Earthworms were also exposed to AgNO3 at concentrations below known EC50. Total Ag tissue concentration indicated uptake by earthworms was generally highest for the AgNP_BSA especially at the lower exposure concentration ranges, and seems to reach a plateau level between 50 and 100 mg Ag/kg soil DW. Reproduction was impaired at high concentrations of all AgNPs tested, with AgNP_BSA particles being the most toxic. The EC50 for the 20 nm AgNP_BSA was 66.8 mg Ag/kg soil, with exposure to <60 mg Ag/kg soil already showing a decrease in the cocoon production. Thus, based on reproductive toxicity, the particles ranked: AgNP_BSA (negative) > AgNP_PVP (neutral) > Chitosan (positive). Size had an influence on uptake and toxicity of the AgNP_PVP, but not for AgNP_BSA nor AgNP_Chit. This study provides essential information on the role of physicochemical properties of AgNPs in influencing uptake by a terrestrial organism L. rubellus under environmentally relevant conditions. It also provides evidence of the influence of surface coating (charge) and the limited effect of size in the range of 20–50 nm, in driving uptake and toxicity of the AgNPs
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- 2016
12. Strong diameter-dependence of nanowire emission coupled to waveguide modes
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Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Van Dam, D., Abujetas, Diego R., Sánchez-Gil, José A., Haverkort, Jos E. M., Bakkers, Erik P. A. M., Gómez Rivas, J., Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Van Dam, D., Abujetas, Diego R., Sánchez-Gil, José A., Haverkort, Jos E. M., Bakkers, Erik P. A. M., and Gómez Rivas, J.
- Abstract
The emission from nanowires can couple to waveguide modes supported by the nanowire geometry, thus governing the far-field angular pattern. To investigate the geometry-induced coupling of the emission to waveguide modes, we acquire Fourier microscopy images of the photoluminescence of nanowires with diameters ranging from 143 to 208 nm. From the investigated diameter range, we conclude that a few nanometers difference in diameter can abruptly change the coupling of the emission to a specific mode. Moreover, we observe a diameter-dependent width of the Gaussian-shaped angular pattern in the far-field emission. This dependence is understood in terms of interference of the guided modes, which emit at the end facets of the nanowire. Our results are important for the design of quantum emitters, solid state lighting, and photovoltaic devices based on nanowires. VC 2016 AIP Publishing LLC
- Published
- 2016
13. Long-term effect of serial infections with H13 and H16 low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses in black-headed gulls
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European Research Council, Netherlands Genomics Initiative, National Institutes of Health (US), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Verhagen, Josanne H., Höfle, Ursula, European Research Council, Netherlands Genomics Initiative, National Institutes of Health (US), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Verhagen, Josanne H., and Höfle, Ursula
- Abstract
Infections of domestic and wild birds with low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses (LPAIVs) have been associated with protective immunity to subsequent infection. However, the degree and duration of immunity in wild birds from previous LPAIV infection, by the same or a different subtype, are poorly understood. Therefore, we inoculated H13N2 (A/black-headed gull/Netherlands/7/2009) and H16N3 (A/black-headed gull/Netherlands/26/2009) LPAIVs into black-headed gulls (Chroicocephalus ridibundus), their natural host species, and measured the long-term immune response and protection against one or two reinfections over a period of >1 year. This is the typical interval between LPAIV epizootics in wild birds. Reinfection with the same virus resulted in progressively less virus excretion, with complete abrogation of virus excretion after two infections for H13 but not H16. However, reinfection with the other virus affected neither the level nor duration of virus excretion. Virus excretion by immunologically naive birds did not differ in total levels of excreted H13 or H16 virus between first- and second-year birds, but the duration of H13 excretion was shorter for second-year birds. Furthermore, serum antibody levels did not correlate with protection against LPAIV infection. LPAIV-infected gulls showed no clinical signs of disease. These results imply that the epidemiological cycles of H13 and H16 in black-headed gulls are relatively independent from each other and depend mainly on infection of firstyear birds.
- Published
- 2015
14. Ninety‑day oral toxicity studies on two genetically modified maize MON810 varieties in Wistar Han RCC rats (EU 7th Framework Programme project GRACE)
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European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Zeljenková, Dagmar, Ambrušová, Katarína, Bartušová, Mária, Kebis, Anton, Kovrižnych, Jevgenij, Krivošíková, Zora, Kuricová, Miroslava, Líšková, Aurélia, Rollerová, Eva, Spustová, Viera, Szabova, Elena, Tulinská, Jana, Wimmerová, Soňa, Levkut, Mikuláš, Révajová, Viera, Ševčíková, Zuzana, Schmidt, Kerstin, Schmidtke, Jörg, La-Paz, José Luis, Corujo, Maria, Pla, María, Kleter, Gijs, Kok, Esther J., Sharbati, Jutta, Hanisch, Carlos, Einspanier, Ralf, Adel‑Patient, Karine, Wasl, Jean‑Michel, Spök, Armin, Pöting, Annette, Kohl, Christian, Wilhelm, Ralf, Schiemann, Joachim, Steinberg, Pablo, European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Zeljenková, Dagmar, Ambrušová, Katarína, Bartušová, Mária, Kebis, Anton, Kovrižnych, Jevgenij, Krivošíková, Zora, Kuricová, Miroslava, Líšková, Aurélia, Rollerová, Eva, Spustová, Viera, Szabova, Elena, Tulinská, Jana, Wimmerová, Soňa, Levkut, Mikuláš, Révajová, Viera, Ševčíková, Zuzana, Schmidt, Kerstin, Schmidtke, Jörg, La-Paz, José Luis, Corujo, Maria, Pla, María, Kleter, Gijs, Kok, Esther J., Sharbati, Jutta, Hanisch, Carlos, Einspanier, Ralf, Adel‑Patient, Karine, Wasl, Jean‑Michel, Spök, Armin, Pöting, Annette, Kohl, Christian, Wilhelm, Ralf, Schiemann, Joachim, and Steinberg, Pablo
- Abstract
The GMO Risk Assessment and Communication of Evidence (GRACE; www.grace-fp7.eu) project is funded by the European Commission within the 7th Framework Programme. A key objective of GRACE is to conduct 90-day animal feeding trials, animal studies with an extended time frame as well as analytical, in vitro and in silico studies on genetically modified (GM) maize in order to comparatively evaluate their use in GM plant risk assessment. In the present study, the results of two 90-day feeding trials with two different GM maize MON810 varieties, their near-isogenic non-GM varieties and four additional conventional maize varieties are presented. The feeding trials were performed by taking into account the guidance for such studies published by the EFSA Scientific Committee in 2011 and the OECD Test Guideline 408. The results obtained show that the MON810 maize at a level of up to 33 % in the diet did not induce adverse effects in male and female Wistar Han RCC rats after subchronic exposure, independently of the two different genetic backgrounds of the event.
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- 2014
15. Plasmon scattering from single subwavelength holes
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Stichting ter Bevordering van Natuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek (The Netherlands), Ministerio de Educación y Cultura (España), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Rotenberg, Nir, Spasenovic, M., Krijger, T.L., Le Feber, B., García de Abajo, Francisco Javier, Kuipers, L., Stichting ter Bevordering van Natuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek (The Netherlands), Ministerio de Educación y Cultura (España), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Rotenberg, Nir, Spasenovic, M., Krijger, T.L., Le Feber, B., García de Abajo, Francisco Javier, and Kuipers, L.
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We map the complex electric fields associated with the scattering of surface plasmon polaritons by single subwavelength holes of different sizes in thick gold films. We identify and quantify the different modes associated with this event, including a radial surface wave with an angularly isotropic amplitude. This wave is shown to arise from the out-of-plane electric dipole induced in the hole, and we quantify the corresponding polarizability, which is in excellent agreement with electromagnetic theory. Time-resolved measurements reveal a time delay of 38±18fs between the surface plasmon polariton and the radial wave, which we attribute to the interaction with a broad hole resonance. © 2012 American Physical Society.
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- 2012
16. Tissue tropism and pathology of natural influenza virus infection in black-headed gulls (Chroicocephalus ridibundus)
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (US), National Institutes of Health (US), Höfle, Ursula, Kuiken, Thijs, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (US), National Institutes of Health (US), Höfle, Ursula, and Kuiken, Thijs
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Black-headed gulls (Chroicocephalus ridibundus) are a suitable host species to study the epidemiology of low-pathogenic avian influenza virus (LPAIV) infection in wild waterbirds because they are a common colony-breeding species in which LPAIV infection is detected frequently, limited mainly to the H13 and H16 subtypes. However, the sites of virus replication and associated lesions are poorly understood. We therefore performed virological and pathological analyses on tissues of black-headed gulls naturally infected with LPAIV. We found that 24 of 111 black-headed gulls collected from breeding colonies were infected with LPAIV (10 birds with H16N3, one bird with H13N8, 13 birds undetermined), based on virus and viral genome detection in pharyngeal and cloacal swabs. Of these 24 gulls, 15 expressed virus antigen in their tissues. Virus antigen expression was limited to epithelial cells of intestine and cloacal bursa. No histological lesions were detected in association with virus antigen expression. Our findings show that LPAIV replication in the intestinal tract of black-headed gulls is mainly a superficial infection in absence of detectable lesions, as determined recently for natural LPAIV infection in free-living mallards (Anas platyrhynchos). These findings imply that LPAIV in black-headed gulls has adapted to minimal pathogenicity to its host and that potentially the primary transmission route is faecal-oral.
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- 2012
17. Time for a Breakthrough in Europe's ICT Agenda.
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Ministry of Economic Affairs, The Netherlands
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INFORMATION technology ,INFORMATION & communication technologies ,ELECTRONIC commerce ,COMMUNICATION & technology ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,ECONOMIC development projects - Abstract
Highlights the promotion of new agenda to stimulate productivity growth and competitiveness of the European economy to create jobs and prosperity of the citizens. Objectives of the Lisbon Agenda which is adopted by the European Council; Observations by the PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC); List of countries that are successful in the creation and implementation of Information and Communication Technologies.
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- 2004
18. Design, implementation and interpretation of in vitro batch culture experiments to assess enteric methane mitigation in ruminants-a review
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Zhongtang Yu, Angela Schwarm, Christopher K. Reynolds, Alexander N. Hristov, Diego P. Morgavi, Padraig O'Kiely, Ermias Kebreab, David R. Yáñez-Ruiz, Jan Dijkstra, K. J. Shingfield, André Bannink, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas [Madrid] (CSIC), Wageningen University and Research Centre (WUR), Animal Nutrition Group, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] (WUR), Department of Animal Science, University of California, Unité Mixte de Recherche sur les Herbivores - UMR 1213 (UMRH), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement, Animal and Grassland Research and Innovation Centre, Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority, University of Reading (UOR), Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology [Zürich] (ETH Zürich), Natural Resources Institute Finland (LUKE), Institute of Biological, Environmental and Rural Sciences (IBERS), Aberystwyth University, Department of Animal Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign [Urbana], University of Illinois System-University of Illinois System, Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), Penn State System-Penn State System, INIA (Spain) MIT01-GLOBALNET-EEZ, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands, project Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouses Gases) BO-20-007-006, USDA-NIFA (USA)French National Research Agency through the program FACCE-JPI program, Agricultural GHG Research Initiative for Ireland (AGRI-I), Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs (UK), BLW (Switzerland), Academy of Finland, Helsinki, Finland 281337, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS), Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), and Academy of Finland
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0301 basic medicine ,Rumen ,In Vitro Techniques ,Animal Nutrition ,Dairy & Animal Science ,Mitigation ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Enteric methane ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Volatile fatty acids ,Animal Production ,In vivo measurements ,Microbial inoculum ,[INFO]Computer Science [cs] ,Animal species ,2. Zero hunger ,International research ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Diervoeding ,3. Good health ,Biotechnology ,030104 developmental biology ,In vitro gas production ,13. Climate action ,WIAS ,Animal Science and Zoology ,business ,Feed evaluation ,Methane - Abstract
In vitro fermentation techniques (IVFT) have been widely used to evaluate the nutritive value of feeds for ruminants and in the last decade to assess the effect of different nutritional strategies on methane (CH4) production. However, many technical factors may influence the results obtained. The present review has been prepared by the 'Global Network' FACCE-JPI international research consortium to provide a critical evaluation of the main factors that need to be considered when designing, conducting and interpreting IVFT experiments that investigate nutritional strategies to mitigate CH emission from ruminants. Given the increasing and wide-scale use of IVFT, there is a need to critically review reports in the literature and establish what criteria are essential to the establishment and implementation of in vitro techniques. Key aspects considered include: i) donor animal species and number of animal used, ii) diet fed to donor animals, iii) collection and processing of rumen fluid as inoculum, iv) choice of substrate and incubation buffer, v) incubation procedures and CH measurements, vi) headspace gas composition and vii) comparability of in vitro and in vivo measurements. Based on an evaluation of experimental evidence, a set of technical recommendations are presented to harmonize IVFT for feed evaluation, assessment of rumen function and CH production., This review is part of the FACCE-JPI ‘Global Network’ project and the ‘Feeding and Nutrition Network’ of Livestock Research Group, in the Global Research Alliance for Agricultural Greenhouse Gases (www.globalresearchalliance.org). Authors acknowledge national funding from INIA (Spain, project MIT01-GLOBALNET-EEZ), the Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands; project Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouses Gases, BO-20-007-006), USDA-NIFA (USA), French National Research Agency through the program FACCE-JPI program, the Irish contribution to this JPI-FACCE project was funded by the Agricultural GHG Research Initiative for Ireland (AGRI-I), Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs (UK), BLW (Switzerland) and Academy of Finland, Helsinki, Finland (Project 281337).
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- 2016
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19. Review of current in vivo measurement techniques for quantifying enteric methane emission from ruminants
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K.J. Hammond, Maguy Eugène, Alexander N. Hristov, Padraig O'Kiely, David R. Yáñez-Ruiz, Zhongtang Yu, Jan Dijkstra, Angela Schwarm, Ermias Kebreab, K. J. Shingfield, André Bannink, Christopher K. Reynolds, Les A. Crompton, University of Reading (UOR), Wageningen University and Research Centre (WUR), Animal Nutrition Group, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] (WUR), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas [Madrid] (CSIC), Teagasc Agriculture and Food Development Authority (Teagasc), California State University, Partenaires INRAE, Unité Mixte de Recherche sur les Herbivores - UMR 1213 (UMRH), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS), Ohio State University, Institute for Natural Resources, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology [Zürich] (ETH Zürich), Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), Penn State System, Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (UK), INIA (Spain) MIT01-GLOBALNET-EEZ, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Ministry of Economic Affairs (project Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouses Gases) BO-20-007-006, USDA-NIFA (USA), French National Research Agency through FACCE-JPI program, Agricultural GHG Research Initiative for Ireland (AGRI-I), Academy of Finland, Helsinki, Finland 281337, BLW (Switzerland), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), National Institute of Food and Agriculture (US), CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), and Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK)
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0301 basic medicine ,Dairy & Animal Science ,Animal Nutrition ,media_common.quotation_subject ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Enteric methane ,Fermentation rate ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Ruminant livestock ,Emission ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animal Production ,Rumen fermentation ,emission ,Sulphur Hexafluoride ,Quality (business) ,[INFO]Computer Science [cs] ,Feeding patterns ,media_common ,2. Zero hunger ,in vivo methodology ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,15. Life on land ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Diervoeding ,3. Good health ,Climate Action ,rumen fermentation ,030104 developmental biology ,13. Climate action ,Greenhouse gas ,Environmental chemistry ,WIAS ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,In vivo methodology ,Biochemical engineering ,Current (fluid) ,enteric methane - Abstract
Ruminant husbandry is a major source of anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHG). Filling knowledge gaps and providing expert recommendation are important for defining future research priorities, improving methodologies and establishing science-based GHG mitigation solutions to government and non-governmental organisations, advisory/extension networks, and the ruminant livestock sector. The objectives of this review is to summarize published literature to provide a detailed assessment of the methodologies currently in use for measuring enteric methane (CH) emission from individual animals under specific conditions, and give recommendations regarding their application. The methods described include respiration chambers and enclosures, sulphur hexafluoride tracer (SF) technique, and techniques based on short-term measurements of gas concentrations in samples of exhaled air. This includes automated head chambers (e.g. the GreenFeed system), the use of carbon dioxide (CO) as a marker, and (handheld) laser CH detection. Each of the techniques are compared and assessed on their capability and limitations, followed by methodology recommendations. It is concluded that there is no ‘one size fits all’ method for measuring CH emission by individual animals. Ultimately, the decision as to which method to use should be based on the experimental objectives and resources available. However, the need for high throughput methodology e.g. for screening large numbers of animals for genomic studies, does not justify the use of methods that are inaccurate. All CH measurement techniques are subject to experimental variation and random errors. Many sources of variation must be considered when measuring CH concentration in exhaled air samples without a quantitative or at least regular collection rate, or use of a marker to indicate (or adjust) for the proportion of exhaled CH sampled. Consideration of the number and timing of measurements relative to diurnal patterns of CH emission and respiratory exchange are important, as well as consideration of feeding patterns and associated patterns of rumen fermentation rate and other aspects of animal behaviour. Regardless of the method chosen, appropriate calibrations and recovery tests are required for both method establishment and routine operation. Successful and correct use of methods requires careful attention to detail, rigour, and routine self-assessment of the quality of the data they provide., This review is part of the FACCE-JPI ‘Global Network’ project. Authors acknowledge national funding from the Departmentfor Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (UK), INIA (Spain, project MIT01-GLOBALNET-EEZ), the Ministry of Economic Affairs(The Netherlands; project Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouses Gases, BO-20-007-006), USDA-NIFA (USA),French National Research Agency through the FACCE-JPI program, Agricultural GHG Research Initiative for Ireland (AGRI-I),Academy of Finland, Helsinki, Finland (Project 281337), and BLW (Switzerland).
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- 2016
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20. Evaluation of the performance of existing mathematical models predicting enteric methane emissions from ruminants:Animal categories and dietary mitigation strategies
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Peter J. Moate, Mark McGee, Cécile Martin, Zhongtang Yu, Jan Dijkstra, Angela Schwarm, Nico Peiren, K. J. Shingfield, Mmichael Kreuzer, Alexander N. Hristov, A.L.F. Hellwing, André Bannink, Ermias Kebreab, Maguy Eugène, Peter Lund, Les A. Crompton, Ali R. Bayat, Martin Riis Weisbjerg, Christopher K. Reynolds, Xinran Li, David R. Yáñez-Ruiz, Mohammed Benaouda, Unité Mixte de Recherches sur les Herbivores - UMR 1213 (UMRH), VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Animal Science, Universita degli Studi di Padova, Departement of Animal Science, Aarhus University [Aarhus], Estacion Experimental del Zaidin-CSIC, Centre for Dairy Research, Shool of Agriculture, Animal Science, University of Reading (UOR), Animal Nutrition Group, Animal Science, Wageningen University, Livestock Research, Animal Science, Department of Animal and Aquacultural Sciences, Animal Science, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU), Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Zurich, Department of Animal Science, McGill University, Veterinary Science, Queen's University [Belfast] (QUB), Biology, SAMS, Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock (Turkey), University of California, National Institute of Food and Agriculture (US), DSM Nutritional Products, Pennsylvania Soybean Board, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France), Department of Agriculture, Food and Marine (Ireland), Academy of Finland, European Commission, Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (US), PMI, Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality (The Netherlands), University of New Hampshire, Federal Office for Agriculture (Switzerland), Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), Scottish Government, Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases, CSIC - Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria (INIA), German Research Foundation, Swedish Infrastructure for Ecosystem Science, Fondo Regional de Tecnología Agropecuaria, Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica (Chile), Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Chile), Unité Mixte de Recherche sur les Herbivores - UMR 1213 (UMRH), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement, Image Science for Interventional Techniques (ISIT), Université d'Auvergne - Clermont-Ferrand I (UdA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Clermont Université, University of California [Davis] (UC Davis), University of California-University of California, Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), Penn State System, Ohio State University [Columbus] (OSU), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas [Madrid] (CSIC), Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] (WUR), Department of Animal and Aquacultural Sciences, Department of Animal Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign [Urbana], University of Illinois System-University of Illinois System, Agriculture Victoria (AgriBio), Animal Production Research, Agrifood Research Finland, McGill University = Université McGill [Montréal, Canada], Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-VetAgro Sup - Institut national d'enseignement supérieur et de recherche en alimentation, santé animale, sciences agronomiques et de l'environnement (VAS), Université d'Auvergne - Clermont-Ferrand I (UdA)-Clermont Université-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), University of California (UC)-University of California (UC), and Università degli Studi di Padova = University of Padua (Unipd)
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model evaluation ,dietary strategy ,Animal Nutrition ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,Ruminant ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,atténuation ,Forage ,methane emission ,ruminant ,Beef cattle ,Enteric methane ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animal science ,Fodder ,Dry matter ,méthane ,Animal nutrition ,hedging ,Model evaluation ,Dairy cattle ,Mathematics ,2. Zero hunger ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Dietary strategy ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Diervoeding ,13. Climate action ,marsh gas ,Methane emission ,WIAS ,Animal Science and Zoology ,[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition ,performance - Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of existing models predicting enteric methane (CH) emissions, using a large database (3183 individual data from 103 in vivo studies on dairy and beef cattle, sheep and goats fed diets from different countries). The impacts of dietary strategies to reduce CH emissions, and of diet quality (described by organic matter digestibility (dOM) and neutral-detergent fiber digestibility (dNDF)) on model performance were assessed by animal category. The models were first assessed based on the root mean square prediction error (RMSPE) to standard deviation of observed values ratio (RSR) to account for differences in data between models and then on the RMSPE. For dairy cattle, the CH (g/d) predicting model based on feeding level (dry matter intake (DMI)/body weight (BW)), energy digestibility (dGE) and ether extract (EE) had the smallest RSR (0.66) for all diets, as well as for the high-EE diets (RSR = 0.73). For mitigation strategies based on lowering NDF or improving dOM, the same model (RSR = 0.48 to 0.60) and the model using DMI and neutral- and acid-detergent fiber intakes (RSR = 0.53) had the smallest RSR, respectively. For diets with high starch (STA), the model based on nitrogen, ADF and STA intake presented the smallest RSR (0.84). For beef cattle, all evaluated models performed moderately compared with the models of dairy cattle. The smallest RSR (0.83) was obtained using variables of energy intake, BW, forage content and dietary fat, and also for the high-EE and the low-NDF diets (RSR = 0.84 to 0.86). The IPCC Tier 2 models performed better when dietary STA, dOM or dNDF were high. For sheep and goats, the smallest RSR was observed from a model for sheep based on dGE intake (RSR = 0.61). Both IPCC models had low predictive ability when dietary EE, NDF, dOM and dNDF varied (RSR = 0.57 to 1.31 in dairy, and 0.65 to 1.24 in beef cattle). The performance of models depends mostly on explanatory variables and not on the type of data (individual vs. treatment means) used in their development or evaluation. Some empirical models give satisfactory prediction error compared with the error associated with measurement methods. For better prediction, models should include feed intake, digestibility and additional information on dietary concentrations of EE and structural and nonstructural carbohydrates to account for different dietary mitigating strategies., This study is part of the Joint Programming Initiative on Agriculture, Food Security and Climate Change (FACCE-JPI)’s “GLOBAL NETWORK” project and the “Feeding and Nutrition Network” (http://animalscience.psu.edu/fnn) of the Livestock Research Group within the Global Research Alliance for Agricultural Greenhouse Gases (www.globalresearchalliance.org). Authors gratefully acknowledge funding for this project from: USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (Grant no. 2014-67003-21979) University of California, Davis Sesnon Endowed Chair Program, USDA, and Austin Eugene Lyons Fellowship (University of California, Davis); Funding from USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Federal Appropriations under Project PEN 04539 and Accession number 1000803, DSM Nutritional Products (Basel, Switzerland), Pennsylvania Soybean Board (Harrisburg, PA, USA), Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (Burlington, VT, USA), and PMI Nutritional Additives (Shoreview, MN, USA); the Ministry of Economic Affairs (the Netherlands; project BO-20-007-006; Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases), the Product Board Animal Feed (Zoetermeer, the Netherlands) and the Dutch Dairy Board (Zoetermeer, the Netherlands); The Cofund for Monitoring & Mitigation of Greenhouse Gases from Agri- and Silvi-culture (FACCE ERA-GAS)’s project Capturing Effects of Diet on Emissions from Ruminant Systems and the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality (AF-EU-18010 & BO-4400159-01); USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (Hatch Multistate NC-1042 Project Number NH00616-R; Project Accession Number 1001855) and the New Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station (Durham, NH); French National Research Agency through the FACCE-JPI program (ANR-13-JFAC-0003-01); the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Ireland Agricultural GHG Research Initiative for Ireland (AGRI-I) project; Academy of Finland (No. 281337), Helsinki, Finland; Swiss Federal Office of Agriculture, Berne, Switzerland; the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra; UK); Defra, the Scottish Government, DARD, and the Welsh Government as part of the UK’s Agricultural GHG Research Platform projects (www.ghgplatform.org.uk); INIA (Spain, project MIT01-GLOBALNET-EEZ); German Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture (BMBL) through the Federal Office for Agriculture and Food (BLE); Swedish Infrastructure for Ecosystem Science (SITES) at Röbäcksdalen Research Station; Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica, Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (Grant Nos. 11110410 and 1151355) and Fondo Regional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (FTG/RF-1028-RG); European Commission through SMEthane (FP7-SME-262270).
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- 2019
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21. Boosting Photoelectrochemical Water Oxidation of Hematite in Acidic Electrolytes by Surface State Modification
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Monica Lira-Cantu, Paul Paciok, Xian-Kui Wei, Martí Biset-Peiró, Franziska Simone Hegner, Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski, Lijuan Han, Teresa Andreu, Haibing Xie, Marc Heggen, Hongchu Du, Lei Jin, Jordi Arbiol, Qin Shi, Núria López, Joan Ramon Morante, José Ramón Galán-Mascarós, Pengyi Tang, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Generalitat de Catalunya, German Research Foundation, La Caixa, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), and European Commission
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Materials science ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Acidic electrolyte ,Hematite ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Surface states ,General Materials Science ,Christian ministry ,Cost action ,0210 nano-technology ,Humanities ,Photoelectrochemical water splitting - Abstract
State-of-the-art water-oxidation catalysts (WOCs) in acidic electrolytes usually contain expensive noble metals such as ruthenium and iridium. However, they too expensive to be implemented broadly in semiconductor photoanodes for photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting devices. Here, an Earth-abundant CoFe Prussian blue analogue (CoFe-PBA) is incorporated with core–shell Fe2O3/Fe2TiO5 type II heterojunction nanowires as composite photoanodes for PEC water splitting. Those deliver a high photocurrent of 1.25 mA cm−2 at 1.23 V versus reversible reference electrode in acidic electrolytes (pH = 1). The enhancement arises from the synergic behavior between the successive decoration of the hematite surface with nanolayers of Fe2TiO5 and then, CoFe-PBA. The underlying physical mechanism of performance enhancement through formation of the Fe2O3/Fe2TiO5/ CoFe-PBA heterostructure reveals that the surface states’ electronic levels of hematite are modified such that an interfacial charge transfer becomes kinetically favorable. These findings open new pathways for the future design of cheap and efficient hematite-based photoanodes in acidic electrolytes., This work was supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO, Grants CTQ2015-71287-R, CTQ2015-71287-R, and CTQ2015-68770-R) and the coordinated Project ValPEC (ENE2017-85087-C3), the BIST Ignite Project inWOC2 and the Generalitat de Catalunya (2017 SGR 90, 2017 SGR 327, 2017 SGR 329, 2017 SGR 1246, and 2017 SGR 1406). ICN2 acknowledges the support from the Severo Ochoa Program (MINECO, Grant SEV-2017-0706). ICN2, ICIQ, and IREC are funded by the CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya. P.Y.T. acknowledges the scholarship support of DAAD short term grant. H.C.D. acknowledges support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 917). F.S.H. thanks the “LaCaixa”-Severo Ochoa International Programme (Programa internacional de Becas “LaCaixa”- Severo Ochoa) for a Ph.D. fellowship. P.P. and M.H. thank for the support by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) (Fundingregistration number: 03ET6080E). M.L. thanks the COST Action StableNextSol project MP1307, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology). H.X. acknowledges the Spanish MINECO through the Severo Ochoa Centers of Excellence Program under Grant SEV-2013-0295 for the postdoctoral contract.
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- 2019
22. Estimating the size of the Dutch breeding population of continental black-tailed godwits from 2007-2015 using resighting data from spring staging sites
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Rosemarie Kentie, Rocío Márquez-Ferrando, Nathan R. Senner, José A. Masero, Mo A. Verhoeven, Jos C.E.W. Hooijmeijer, Theunis Piersma, Jordi Figuerola, Van der Hucht de Beukelaar Stichting, SEO/BirdLife, World Wildlife Fund, European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds, Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality (The Netherlands), Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Piersma group, Conservation Ecology Group, and Both group
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0106 biological sciences ,population estimate ,LIMOSA-LIMOSA-LIMOSA ,L.-LIMOSA ,MIGRATION ,NETHERLANDS ,Population ,CONSERVATION ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,010605 ornithology ,Mark and recapture ,Population estimate ,Flyway ,RICE FIELDS ,MANAGEMENT ,14. Life underwater ,education ,survival probability ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,COUNTS ,education.field_of_study ,Population size ,15. Life on land ,Confidence interval ,Fishery ,Geography ,trend ,Bayesian framework ,SURVIVAL ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Limosa limosa limosa ,mark-recapture ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Over the past 50 years, the population of Continental Black-tailed Godwits Limosa limosa limosa breeding of the East Atlantic Flyway has been in steep decline. This decline has previously been documented in trend analyses and six Netherlands-wide count-based population estimates, the last of which was completed in 1999. We provide an updated population size estimate and describe inter-annual fluctuations in the population between 2007 and 2015. To generate these estimates, we integrated a mark-recapture survival analysis with estimates of the densities of colour-marked individuals at migratory staging sites with known proportions of Continental and Icelandic L. l. islandica Black-tailed Godwits within a Bayesian framework. The use of these analytical techniques means that, in contrast with earlier efforts, our estimates are accompanied with confidence intervals, allowing us to estimate the population size with known precision. Using additional information on the breeding destination of 43 godwits equipped with satellite transmitters at Iberian staging areas, we found that 87% (75-95% 95% CI) of the nominate subspecies in the East Atlantic Flyway breed in The Netherlands. We estimated that the number of breeding pairs in The Netherlands has declined from 47,000 (38,000-56,000) pairs in 2007 to 33,000 (26,000-41,000) in 2015. Despite a temporary increase in 2010 and 2011, the population declined by an average of 3.7% per year over the entire period from 2007-2015, and by 6.3% from 2011-2015. We conclude that investing in an intensive demographic programme at a regional scale, when combined with targeted resightings of marked individuals elsewhere, can yield population estimates at the flyway scale., This study was funded mainly by the former Netherlands Ministry of Agriculture, Nature Management and Food Safety, now subsumed in the Ministry of Economic Affairs, by the Province of Fryslân, and by the Spinoza Premium Award 2014 from The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) to TP, with some additional funding by the Prins Bernard Cultuurfonds, the Van der Hucht Beukelaar Stichting, BirdLife Netherlands and WWF-Netherlands through Global Flyway Network and the Chair in Flyway Ecology, FP7-Regpot project ECOGENES (Grant No. 264125), the NWO-TOP grant ‘Shorebirds in space’ (854.11.004) awarded to TP, ExpeER Ecosystem Research, ‘ICTS-RBD’ to the ESFRI LifeWatch, MINECO, and European Union Structural Funds (AIC-A2011-0706).
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- 2016
23. Mass‐flowering crops dilute pollinator abundance in agricultural landscapes across Europe
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Juan P. González-Varo, Andrea Holzschuh, Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter, Simon G. Potts, Verena Riedinger, Victoria J. Wickens, Sonja Mudri-Stojnic, Jeroen Scheper, Ante Vujić, Henrik G. Smith, David Kleijn, Matteo Dainese, Jennifer B. Wickens, Montserrat Vilà, Riccardo Bommarco, Maj Rundlöf, Stuart P. M. Roberts, Novotny, Vojtech, Wellcome Trust, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Swedish Research Council, and Scottish Funding Council
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Crops, Agricultural ,0106 biological sciences ,Letter ,Pollination ,Agri‐environment schemes ,Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation ,Flowers ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Population density ,Ecosystem services ,ddc:590 ,Abundance (ecology) ,Pollinator ,Animals ,Semi‐natural habitats ,Letters ,Field boundaries ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Population Density ,2. Zero hunger ,Reproductive success ,Agricultural intensification ,Ecology ,Diptera ,Non‐crop habitats ,Landscape composition ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Bees ,15. Life on land ,PE&RC ,Europe ,Non-crop habitats ,Spillover ,Agri-environment schemes ,Agronomy ,Habitat ,13. Climate action ,Biofuels ,Crop pollination ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,Plantenecologie en Natuurbeheer ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Semi-natural habitats ,Agricultural landscapes - Abstract
Mass-flowering crops (MFCs) are increasingly cultivated and might influence pollinator communities in MFC fields and nearby semi-natural habitats (SNHs). Across six European regions and 2 years, we assessed how landscape-scale cover of MFCs affected pollinator densities in 408 MFC fields and adjacent SNHs. In MFC fields, densities of bumblebees, solitary bees, managed honeybees and hoverflies were negatively related to the cover of MFCs in the landscape. In SNHs, densities of bumblebees declined with increasing cover of MFCs but densities of honeybees increased. The densities of all pollinators were generally unrelated to the cover of SNHs in the landscape. Although MFC fields apparently attracted pollinators from SNHs, in landscapes with large areas of MFCs they became diluted. The resulting lower densities might negatively affect yields of pollinator-dependent crops and the reproductive success of wild plants. An expansion of MFCs needs to be accompanied by pollinator-supporting practices in agricultural landscapes., The study was funded by the EU FP7 project “Status and Trends of European Pollinators” (244 090, www.STEP-project.net) and Biodiversa‐FACCE project “Enhancing biodiversity‐based ecosystem services to crops through optimised densities of green infrastructure in agricultural landscapes” (PCIN‐2014‐048, http://www.cec.lu.se/research/ecodeal). JPGV and MV acknowledge support from the Severo Ochoa Program for Centres of Excellence in R+D+I (SEV‐2012‐0262), and FLORMAS (CGL 2012‐33801). JBW, VJW, SGP and SPMR acknowledge the support of Insect Pollinators Initiative research funded jointly by a grant from BBSRC, Defra, NERC, the Scottish Government and the Wellcome Trust, under the Living with Environmental Change Partnership. HGS and RB were supported by the Swedish Research Council FORMAS. JS and DK were supported by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs (BO‐11‐011.01‐011 and KB‐14‐003‐006), AH and ISD were supported by the DFG Collaborative Research Centre 1047 Insect timing, and ISD and MD through the 2013–2014 BiodivERsA/FACCE – JPI project Ecodeal with national funding from BMBF.
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- 2016
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24. Effects of systematic variation in size and Ssurface coating of silver nanoparticles on their in vitro toxicity to macrophage RAW 264.7 cells
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Samantha K. Kloet, Jordi Piella, Víctor F. Puntes, Ivonne M.C.M. Rietjens, Norbert C.A. de Ruijter, Hans van den Berg, Sunday Makama, Nico W. van den Brink, European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), and Government of the Netherlands
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Silver ,Engineered nanomaterials ,Cell Survival ,Surface Properties ,Physicochemical properties ,Metal Nanoparticles ,Nanoparticle ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Mitochondrial Membrane Transport Proteins ,01 natural sciences ,Silver nanoparticle ,Mice ,medicine ,Animals ,Life Science ,Viability assay ,Particle Size ,Bovine serum albumin ,Toxicologie ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Reactive oxygen species ,WIMEK ,Surface coating ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,biology ,Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore ,Chemistry ,Macrophages ,Laboratorium voor Celbiologie ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,3. Good health ,Laboratory of Cell Biology ,RAW 264.7 Cells ,Oxidative stress ,Toxicity ,Biophysics ,biology.protein ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
In literature, varying and sometimes conflicting effects of physicochemical properties of nanoparticles (NPs) are reported on their uptake and effects in organisms. To address this, small- and medium-sized (20 and 50 nm) silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) with specified different surface coating/charges were synthesized and used to systematically assess effects of NP-properties on their uptake and effects in vitro. Silver nanoparticles were fully characterized for charge and size distribution in both water and test media. Macrophage cells (RAW 264.7) were exposed to these AgNPs at different concentrations (0-200 µg/ml). Uptake dynamics, cell viability, induction of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, ATP production, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation were assessed. Microscopic imaging of living exposed cells showed rapid uptake and subcellular cytoplasmic accumulation of AgNPs. Exposure to the tested AgNPs resulted in reduced overall viability. Influence of both size and surface coating (charge) was demonstrated, with the 20-nm-sized AgNPs and bovine serum albumin (BSA)-coated (negatively charged) AgNPs being slightly more toxic. On specific mechanisms of toxicity (TNF-α and ROS production) however, the AgNPs differed to a larger extent. The highest induction of TNF-α was found in cells exposed to the negatively charged AgNP_BSA, both sizes (80× higher than control). Reactive oxygen species induction was only significant with the 20 nm positively charged AgNP_Chit., This work was financially supported by NanoNextNL, a micro- and nanotechnology consortium of the Government of The Netherlands and 130 partners; funding was also received from Managing Risks of Nanoparticles, MARINA (EU-FP7, contract CP-FP 263215); and the Strategic Research Funds titled Novel technologies by the Ministry of Economic Affairs of The Netherlands. Synthesis and characterization of the AgNPs used in this study received support from the QualityNano Project (http://www.qualitynano.eu/) financed by the European Community Research Infrastructures under the FP7 Capacities Program (Grant Number INFRA-2010-262163).
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- 2018
25. Ninety-day oral toxicity studies on two genetically modified maize MON810 varieties in Wistar Han RCC rats (EU 7th Framework Programme project GRACE)
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Jutta Sharbati, Maria Corujo, Ralf Wilhelm, Katarína Ambrušová, Joachim Schiemann, Viera Spustova, Soňa Wimmerová, Eva Rollerova, Elena Szabova, Gijs Kleter, Anton Kebis, Viera Revajová, Aurelia Liskova, Jörg Schmidtke, Ralf Einspanier, Carlos Hanisch, Armin Spök, Jose Luis La Paz, A. Pöting, Jana Tulinska, Zora Krivošíková, Christian Kohl, Maria Pla, Maria Bartusova, Kerstin Schmidt, Jevgenij Kovrižnych, Zuzana Ševčíková, Esther J. Kok, Miroslava Kuricova, Pablo Steinberg, Karine Adel-Patient, Dagmar Zeljenková, Mikuláš Levkut, Jean-Michel Wal, European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Slovak Medical University of Bratislava (SMU), GmbH, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), Universitat de Girona (UdG), RIKILT, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] (WUR), Free University of Berlin (FU), Unité de Recherche Immuno-Allergie Alimentaire, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt [Klagenfurt, Austria], Bundesinstitut für Risikobewertung - Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR), Julius Kühn-Institut (JKI), University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Department of Animal Nutrition, European Community [311957], and Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs
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Male ,genetically modified maize MON810 ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Food, Genetically Modified ,Administration, Oral ,Food/Feed Guidance Document of the EFSA Scientific Committee (2011) ,Genetically modified maize MON810 ,GRACE ,Rat feeding trial ,Subchronic oral toxicity study ,Genetically modified crops ,Toxicology ,rat feeding trial ,soybean trypsin-inhibitors ,rat ,Corn ,Organ Size ,General Medicine ,Plants, Genetically Modified ,Genetically modified organism ,Research Design ,Female ,Risk assessment ,maïs bt mon810 ,Wistar Han ,Biology ,Biologics ,Risk Assessment ,Zea mays ,BU Authenticity & Bioassays ,Animals ,Oral toxicity ,Adverse effect ,Genetically modified maize ,Plantes transgèniques ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Toxicity Tests, Subchronic ,Transgenic plants ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,Animal Feed ,proteins ,quantification ,Diet ,Biotechnology ,Blat de moro ,bacillus-thuringiensis ,BU Authenticiteit & Bioassays ,Consumer Product Safety ,Extended time ,business ,subchronic oral toxicity study - Abstract
The GMO Risk Assessment and Communication of Evidence (GRACE; www.grace-fp7.eu) project is funded by the European Commission within the 7th Framework Programme. A key objective of GRACE is to conduct 90-day animal feeding trials, animal studies with an extended time frame as well as analytical, in vitro and in silico studies on genetically modified (GM) maize in order to comparatively evaluate their use in GM plant risk assessment. In the present study, the results of two 90-day feeding trials with two different GM maize MON810 varieties, their near-isogenic non-GM varieties and four additional conventional maize varieties are presented. The feeding trials were performed by taking into account the guidance for such studies published by the EFSA Scientific Committee in 2011 and the OECD Test Guideline 408. The results obtained show that the MON810 maize at a level of up to 33 % in the diet did not induce adverse effects in male and female Wistar Han RCC rats after subchronic exposure, independently of the two different genetic backgrounds of the event., This study was carried out as part of the GRACE project (“GMO Risk Assessment and Communication of Evidence”), financially supported by the 7th Framework Programme of the European Community for Research, Technological Development and Demonstration Activities (FP7), Grant Agreement No. 311957, as well as the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs and various other co-sponsors.
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- 2014
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26. 3D orientational control in self‐assembled thin films with sub‐5 nm features by light
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Ilja K. Voets, Koen Nickmans, Albertus P. H. J. Schenning, Philippe Leclère, Gerardus M. Bögels, Jeffrey N. Murphy, Carlos Sánchez-Somolinos, Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Gobierno de Aragón, European Commission, National Fund for Scientific Research (Belgium), Stimuli-responsive Funct. Materials & Dev., Physical Chemistry, and Institute for Complex Molecular Systems
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Materials science ,Nanostructure ,Yield (engineering) ,Thin films ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Nanomaterials ,Self assembled ,Biomaterials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Optics ,Liquid crystal ,Journal Article ,General Materials Science ,Thin film ,Photoalignment ,Siloxane ,Azobenzene ,business.industry ,General Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Optoelectronics ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Biotechnology - Abstract
While self-assembled molecular building blocks could lead to many next-generation functional organic nanomaterials, control over the thin-film morphologies to yield monolithic sub-5 nm patterns with 3D orientational control at macroscopic length scales remains a grand challenge. A series of photoresponsive hybrid oligo(dimethylsiloxane) liquid crystals that form periodic cylindrical nanostructures with periodicities between 3.8 and 5.1 nm is studied. The liquid crystals can be aligned in-plane by exposure to actinic linearly polarized light and out-of-plane by exposure to actinic unpolarized light. The photoalignment is most efficient when performed just under the clearing point of the liquid crystal, at which the cylindrical nanostructures are reoriented within minutes. These results allow the generation of highly ordered sub-5 nm patterns in thin films at macroscopic length scales, with control over the orientation in a noncontact fashion., This research was supported by the Dutch Technology Foundation STW, which is part of the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), and which is partly funded by the Ministry of Economic Affairs. C.S.-S. thanks the Spanish MINECO projects MAT2011-27978-C02-02, SAF2014-54763-C2-2-R, Gobierno de Aragón, and FEDER (EU). P.L. is a Senior Research Associate from FRS-FNRS (Belgium). The X-ray diffractometer was financed by The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO).
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- 2017
27. Properties of silver nanoparticles influencing their uptake in and toxicity to the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus following exposure in soil
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Anna K. Undas, Jordi Piella, Nico W. van den Brink, Sunday Makama, Ruud J. B. Peters, Víctor F. Puntes, W.J. Dimmers, NanoNextNL, Government of the Netherlands, European Commission, and Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands)
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Chemical Phenomena ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Metal Nanoparticles ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Toxicology ,01 natural sciences ,Silver nanoparticle ,Chitosan ,BU Contaminants & Toxins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Soil Pollutants ,biology ,Particle characterization ,Povidone ,Serum Albumin, Bovine ,General Medicine ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Lumbricus rubellus ,Pollution ,Toxicokinetics ,Environmental chemistry ,Bioaccumulation ,Toxicity ,Dierecologie ,Animal Ecology ,0210 nano-technology ,Toxicodynamics ,Silver ,Surface Properties ,BU Contaminanten & Toxines ,Soil organism ,Environment ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Animals ,Cocoon production ,Oligochaeta ,Particle Size ,Toxicologie ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,WIMEK ,Surface coating ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Earthworm ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry - Abstract
et al., Physicochemical properties of nanoparticles influence their environmental fate and toxicity, and studies investigating this are vital for a holistic approach towards a comprehensive and adequate environmental risk assessment. In this study, we investigated the effects of size, surface coating (charge) of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) – a most commonly-used nanoparticle-type, on the bioaccumulation in, and toxicity (survival, growth, cocoon production) to the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus. AgNPs were synthesized in three sizes: 20, 35 and 50 nm. Surface-coating with bovine serum albumin (AgNP_BSA), chitosan (AgNP_Chit), or polyvinylpyrrolidone (AgNP_PVP) produced negative, positive and neutral particles respectively. In a 28-day sub-chronic reproduction toxicity test, earthworms were exposed to these AgNPs in soil (0–250 mg Ag/kg soil DW). Earthworms were also exposed to AgNO3 at concentrations below known EC50. Total Ag tissue concentration indicated uptake by earthworms was generally highest for the AgNP_BSA especially at the lower exposure concentration ranges, and seems to reach a plateau level between 50 and 100 mg Ag/kg soil DW. Reproduction was impaired at high concentrations of all AgNPs tested, with AgNP_BSA particles being the most toxic. The EC50 for the 20 nm AgNP_BSA was 66.8 mg Ag/kg soil, with exposure to AgNP_PVP (neutral) > Chitosan (positive). Size had an influence on uptake and toxicity of the AgNP_PVP, but not for AgNP_BSA nor AgNP_Chit. This study provides essential information on the role of physicochemical properties of AgNPs in influencing uptake by a terrestrial organism L. rubellus under environmentally relevant conditions. It also provides evidence of the influence of surface coating (charge) and the limited effect of size in the range of 20–50 nm, in driving uptake and toxicity of the AgNPs tested., This work was financially supported by NanoNextNL, a micro- and nano-technology consortium of the Government of The Netherlands and 130 partners; funding was also received from Managing Risks of Nanoparticles, MARINA (EU-FP7, contract CP-FP 263215), and; the Strategic Research Funds titled Novel technologies by the Ministry of Economic Affairs of The Netherlands. Synthesis and characterization of the AgNPs used in this study received support from the QualityNano Project http://www.qualitynano.eu/which is financed by the European Community Research Infrastructures under the FP7 Capacities Programme (Grant No. INFRA-2010-262163).
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- 2016
28. Strong diameter-dependence of nanowire emission coupled to waveguide modes
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Jaime Gómez Rivas, Diego R. Abujetas, AD Dick van Dam, Epam Erik Bakkers, José A. Sánchez-Gil, Jem Jos Haverkort, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Photonics and Semiconductor Nanophysics, and Surface Photonics
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Materials science ,Photoluminescence ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Nanophotonics ,Nanowire ,Physics::Optics ,02 engineering and technology ,Interference (wave propagation) ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,010309 optics ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Optics ,Optical microscope ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Microscopy ,SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy ,Coupling ,business.industry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall Effect ,Solid-state lighting ,Optoelectronics ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,SDG 7 – Betaalbare en schone energie - Abstract
4 pags., 5 figs., The emission from nanowires can couple to waveguide modes supported by the nanowire geometry, thus governing the far-field angular pattern. To investigate the geometry-induced coupling of the emission to waveguide modes, we acquire Fourier microscopy images of the photoluminescence of nanowires with diameters ranging from 143 to 208 nm. From the investigated diameter range, we conclude that a few nanometers difference in diameter can abruptly change the coupling of the emission to a specific mode. Moreover, we observe a diameter-dependent width of the Gaussian-shaped angular pattern in the far-field emission. This dependence is understood in terms of interference of the guided modes, which emit at the end facets of the nanowire. Our results are important for the design of quantum emitters, solid state lighting, and photovoltaic devices based on nanowires. VC 2016 AIP Publishing LLC, This research was supported by the Dutch technology foundation STW, which is part of the “Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO),” and partially funded by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs. This work was also part of the research program of the “Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM),” which is financially supported by NWO. J.A.S.G. acknowledges the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad for financial support through the Grant Nos. NANOPLASþ (FIS2012-31070) and LENSBEAM (FIS2015-69295-C3-2-P).
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- 2016
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29. Decades of population genetic research reveal the need for harmonization of molecular markers: the grey wolf Canis lupus as a case study
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Arjen De Groot, G., Nowak, Carsten, Skrbinšek, Tomaz, Andersen, Liselotte W., Aspi, Jouni, Fumagalli, Luca, Godinho, Raquel, Harms, Verena, Jansman, Hughs A. H., Liberg, Olof, Marucco, Francesca, Myslajek, Rober W., Nowak, Sabina, Pilot, Malgorzata, Randi, Ettore, Reinhardt, Ilka, Smietana, Wojciech, Szewczyk, Maciej, Taberlet, Pierre, Vilà, Carles, Muñoz-Fuentes, Violeta, Government of the Netherlands, Leibniz Association, National Science Centre (Poland), Wolves and Humans Foundation, EuroNatur, and Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands)
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Genetic monitoring ,Dierecologie ,Collaboration ,Recommendations ,Reference collection ,Transnational research ,Animal Ecology ,C170 Population Biology ,PE&RC - Abstract
Following protection measures implemented since the 1970s, large carnivores are currently increasing in number and returning to areas from which they were absent for decades or even centuries. Monitoring programmes for these species rely extensively on non-invasive sampling and genotyping. However, attempts to connect results of such studies at larger spatial or temporal scales often suffer from the incompatibility of genetic markers implemented by researchers in different laboratories. This is particularly critical for long-distance dispersers, revealing the need for harmonized monitoring schemes that would enable the understanding of gene flow and dispersal dynamics. Based on a review of genetic studies on grey wolves Canis lupus from Europe, we provide an overview of the genetic markers currently in use, and identify opportunities and hurdles for studies based on continent-scale datasets. Our results highlight an urgent need for harmonization of methods to enable transnational research based on data that have already been collected, and to allow these data to be linked to material collected in the future. We suggest timely standardization of newly developed genotyping approaches, and propose that action is directed towards the establishment of shared single nucleotide polymorphism panels, next-generation sequencing of microsatellites, a common reference sample collection and an online database for data exchange. Enhanced cooperation among genetic researchers dealing with large carnivores in consortia would facilitate streamlining of methods, their faster and wider adoption, and production of results at the large spatial scales that ultimately matter for the conservation of these charismatic species., The authors received financial support from the Dutch Ministry for Economic Affairs, the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment, the EuroNatur International Fund for Animal Welfare, Wolves and Humans Foundation, an IF Research contract from the Portuguese Science Foundation (FCT, IF/564/2012), grant SAW‐2011‐SGN‐3 of the Leibniz Association (Germany) and grant DEC‐2014/12/S/NZ8/00624 of the National Science Centre (Poland).
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- 2015
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30. Long-Term Effect of Serial Infections with H13 and H16 Low-Pathogenic Avian Influenza Viruses in Black-Headed Gulls
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Thijs Kuiken, Marco W. G. van de Bildt, Frank A Majoor, Ursula Höfle, Ron A. M. Fouchier, Geert van Amerongen, Josanne H. Verhagen, Virology, European Research Council, Netherlands Genomics Initiative, National Institutes of Health (US), and Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands)
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Charadriiformes ,Cross Protection ,Immunology ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Hemagglutinin (influenza) ,Hemagglutinins, Viral ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antibodies, Viral ,Microbiology ,Virus ,Host Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immunity ,Recurrence ,Virology ,Influenza A virus ,medicine ,Animals ,Viral shedding ,030304 developmental biology ,Subclinical infection ,Disease Resistance ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,Age Factors ,biology.organism_classification ,Influenza A virus subtype H5N1 ,3. Good health ,Immunity, Humoral ,Virus Shedding ,Insect Science ,Influenza in Birds ,biology.protein ,Pathogenesis and Immunity ,Immunization ,Disease Susceptibility - Abstract
Infections of domestic and wild birds with low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses (LPAIVs) have been associated with protective immunity to subsequent infection. However, the degree and duration of immunity in wild birds from previous LPAIV infection, by the same or a different subtype, are poorly understood. Therefore, we inoculated H13N2 (A/black-headed gull/Netherlands/7/2009) and H16N3 (A/black-headed gull/Netherlands/26/2009) LPAIVs into black-headed gulls (Chroicocephalus ridibundus), their natural host species, and measured the long-term immune response and protection against one or two reinfections over a period of >1 year. This is the typical interval between LPAIV epizootics in wild birds. Reinfection with the same virus resulted in progressively less virus excretion, with complete abrogation of virus excretion after two infections for H13 but not H16. However, reinfection with the other virus affected neither the level nor duration of virus excretion. Virus excretion by immunologically naive birds did not differ in total levels of excreted H13 or H16 virus between first- and second-year birds, but the duration of H13 excretion was shorter for second-year birds. Furthermore, serum antibody levels did not correlate with protection against LPAIV infection. LPAIV-infected gulls showed no clinical signs of disease. These results imply that the epidemiological cycles of H13 and H16 in black-headed gulls are relatively independent from each other and depend mainly on infection of firstyear birds., U.H. was partly funded by a Netherlands Genomics Institute/Virgo Consortium visiting scientist stipend. This work was sponsored by grants from the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, European Research Council project FLUPLAN (250136), and NIH NIAID contracts HHSN266200700010C (2007-2014) and HHSN272201400008C (2014- 2021).
- Published
- 2015
31. Plasmon scattering from single sub-wavelength holes
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Marko Spasenović, Theodorus L. Krijger, F. J. García de Abajo, Nir Rotenberg, B. le Feber, Laurens Kuipers, Stichting ter Bevordering van Natuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek (The Netherlands), Ministerio de Educación y Cultura (España), and Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands)
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Physics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Scattering ,business.industry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Resonance ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Physics::Optics ,Molecular physics ,Surface plasmon polariton ,Dipole ,Amplitude ,Optics ,Polarizability ,Electric field ,Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall) ,business ,Plasmon ,Optics (physics.optics) ,Physics - Optics - Abstract
5 pags, 4 figs. -- PACS numbers: 78.68.+m, 73.20.Mf, 73.50.Bk, We map the complex electric fields associated with the scattering of surface plasmon polaritons by single subwavelength holes of different sizes in thick gold films. We identify and quantify the different modes associated with this event, including a radial surface wave with an angularly isotropic amplitude. This wave is shown to arise from the out-of-plane electric dipole induced in the hole, and we quantify the corresponding polarizability, which is in excellent agreement with electromagnetic theory. Time-resolved measurements reveal a time delay of 38±18fs between the surface plasmon polariton and the radial wave, which we attribute to the interaction with a broad hole resonance. © 2012 American Physical Society., This work is part of the research program of the Stichting voor Fundamenteel Onderzoek der Materie (FOM), which is financially supported by the Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO). This work is supported by NanoNextNL of the Dutch ministry EL&I and 130 partners. F. J. G. d. A. acknowledges support from the Spanish MEC (MAT2010-14885 and Consolider NanoLight.es).
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- 2012
32. Tissue tropism and pathology of natural influenza virus infection in black-headed gulls (Chroicocephalus ridibundus)
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Geert van Amerongen, Ursula Höfle, Lonneke M. Leijten, Marco W. G. van de Bildt, Ron A. M. Fouchier, Thijs Kuiken, Josanne H. Verhagen, Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs (The Netherlands), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (US), and National Institutes of Health (US)
- Subjects
Male ,Disease reservoir ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Oropharynx ,Chick Embryo ,Genome, Viral ,Biology ,Virus Replication ,Epithelium ,Virus ,0403 veterinary science ,Charadriiformes ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virus antigen ,Cloaca ,Food Animals ,Antigen ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Antigens, Viral ,Disease Reservoirs ,Netherlands ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Transmission (medicine) ,Host (biology) ,Epithelial Cells ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Immunohistochemistry ,Virology ,Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms ,3. Good health ,Intestines ,Viral replication ,Influenza A virus ,Influenza in Birds ,embryonic structures ,Tissue tropism ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
Black-headed gulls (Chroicocephalus ridibundus) are a suitable host species to study the epidemiology of low-pathogenic avian influenza virus (LPAIV) infection in wild waterbirds because they are a common colony-breeding species in which LPAIV infection is detected frequently, limited mainly to the H13 and H16 subtypes. However, the sites of virus replication and associated lesions are poorly understood. We therefore performed virological and pathological analyses on tissues of black-headed gulls naturally infected with LPAIV. We found that 24 of 111 black-headed gulls collected from breeding colonies were infected with LPAIV (10 birds with H16N3, one bird with H13N8, 13 birds undetermined), based on virus and viral genome detection in pharyngeal and cloacal swabs. Of these 24 gulls, 15 expressed virus antigen in their tissues. Virus antigen expression was limited to epithelial cells of intestine and cloacal bursa. No histological lesions were detected in association with virus antigen expression. Our findings show that LPAIV replication in the intestinal tract of black-headed gulls is mainly a superficial infection in absence of detectable lesions, as determined recently for natural LPAIV infection in free-living mallards (Anas platyrhynchos). These findings imply that LPAIV in black-headed gulls has adapted to minimal pathogenicity to its host and that potentially the primary transmission route is faecal-oral., J.H.V. and R.A.M.F. are supported by contracts with the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture and NIAID/NIH (number HHSN266200700010C). U.H. had a short-term visiting scientist “José Castillejo” fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Innovation and Research (Ministerio de Innovación e Investigación MICINN, JC2010-0257) at Erasmus Medical Center. T. Kuiken is supported by contracts with the European Commission through the ANTIGONE project (number 278976) and with the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs through the Impulse Veterinary Avian Influenza Research.
- Published
- 2012
33. Exploring contacts facilitating transmission of influenza A(H5N1) virus between poultry farms in West Java, Indonesia: A major role for backyard farms?
- Author
-
Wibawa H, Karo-Karo D, Pribadi ES, Bouma A, Bodewes R, Vernooij H, Diyantoro, Sugama A, Muljono DH, Koch G, Tjatur Rasa FS, and Stegeman A
- Subjects
- Animals, Chickens, Disease Outbreaks, Humans, Indonesia, Influenza in Birds epidemiology, Poultry Diseases epidemiology, Farms, Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype, Influenza in Birds transmission, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Poultry virology, Poultry Diseases transmission
- Abstract
Highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAIV) H5N1 has been reported in Asia, including Indonesia since 2003. Although several risk factors related to the HPAIV outbreaks in poultry in Indonesia have been identified, little is known of the contact structure of farms of different poultry production types (backyard chickens, broilers, layers, and ducks). This study aims to quantify the contact rates associated with the movement of people, and movements of live birds and products and equipment that affect the risk of HPAIV H5N1 transmission between poultry farms in Indonesia. On 124 poultry farms in 6 districts in West Java, logbooks were distributed to record the movements of farmers/staff and visitors and their poultry contacts. Most movements in backyard chicken, commercial native chicken, broiler and duck farms were visits to and from other poultry farms, whilst in layer farms visits to and from poultry companies, visits to egg collection houses and visit from other poultry farms were most frequent. Over 75% of persons visiting backyard chicken and duck farms had previously visited other poultry farms on the same day. Visitors of backyard chicken farms had the highest average contact rate, either direct contact with poultry on other farms before the visits (1.35 contact/day) or contact during their visits in the farms (10.03 contact/day). These results suggest that backyard chicken farms are most at risk for transmission of HPAIV compared to farms of the other poultry production types. Since visits of farm-to-farm were high, backyard farms could also a potential source for HPAIV transmission to commercial poultry farms., (Copyright © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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