101 results on '"Staelens J"'
Search Results
2. The spatio-temporal evolution of black carbon in the North-West European ‘air pollution hotspot’
- Author
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Wyche, K.P., Cordell, R.L., Smith M, L., Smallbone, K.L., Lyons, P., Hama, S.M.L., Monks, P.S., Staelens, J., Hofman, J., Stroobants, C., Roekens, E., Kos, G.P.A., Weijers, E.P., Panteliadis, P., and Dijkema, M.B.A.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Evaluation of biomass burning across North West Europe and its impact on air quality
- Author
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Cordell, R.L., Mazet, M., Dechoux, C., Hama, S.M.L., Staelens, J., Hofman, J., Stroobants, C., Roekens, E., Kos, G.P.A., Weijers, E.P., Frumau, K.F.A., Panteliadis, P., Delaunay, T., Wyche, K.P., and Monks, P.S.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Ultrafine particles in four European urban environments: Results from a new continuous long-term monitoring network
- Author
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Hofman, J., Staelens, J., Cordell, R., Stroobants, C., Zikova, N., Hama, S.M.L., Wyche, K.P., Kos, G.P.A., Van Der Zee, S., Smallbone, K.L., Weijers, E.P., Monks, P.S., and Roekens, E.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Increased fungal dominance in N2O emission hotspots along a natural pH gradient in organic forest soil
- Author
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Rütting, T., Huygens, D., Boeckx, P., Staelens, J., and Klemedtsson, L.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Effect of vegetation type on throughfall deposition and seepage flux
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De Schrijver, A., Staelens, J., Wuyts, K., Van Hoydonck, G., Janssen, N., Mertens, J., Gielis, L., Geudens, G., Augusto, L., and Verheyen, K.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Nutrient cycling in two continuous cover scenarios for forest conversion of pine plantations on sandy soil. II. Nutrient cycling via throughfall deposition and seepage flux
- Author
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Gielis, L., De Schrijver, A., Wuyts, K., Staelens, J., Vandenbruwane, J., and Verheyen, K.
- Subjects
Plant-water relationships -- Research -- Methods -- Models ,Foliar diagnosis -- Methods -- Research -- Models ,Regeneration (Botany) -- Research -- Methods -- Models ,Land cover -- Models -- Research -- Methods ,Solute transport (Hydrology) -- Research -- Methods -- Models ,Earth sciences ,Models ,Research ,Methods - Abstract
This study examined ion throughfall deposition and seepage fluxes in silver birch (Betula pendula L.) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) regenerations a decade after a forest conversion intervention in two continuous cover scenarios (shelterwood cut versus group cut), as well as a 70-year-old control stand of Scots pine. Ion throughfall deposition was significantly influenced by the conversion scenario, being higher in the shelterwood cut than in the group cut. Compared with the control stand, nitrogen and acidifying throughfall deposition was significantly lower (-60%) in all regeneration types except for the birch regeneration under shelter. After shelter removal, ion throughfall deposition was significantly lower in all regeneration types than in the control stand. Seepage of N[O.sub.3-] and S[O.sub.4.sup.2-] was significantly affected by the tree species, being higher in the birch than the pine regenerations, and S[O.sub.4.sup.2-] seepage was significantly higher under shelter than in the group cut. After shelter removal, neither tree species nor scenario influenced the S[O.sub.4.sup.2-] seepage, whereas the tree species still affected N[O.sub.3-] seepage. We conclude that the chosen forest conversion scenario is of profound influence on the ion throughfall and seepage fluxes during the first phase of a forest conversion process. Cette etude porte sur les depots d'ions dans la precipitation au sol et les flux de 1'eau qui s'infiltre dans le sol sous la regeneration de bouleau verruqueux (Betula pendula L.) et de pin sylvestre (Pinus sylvestris L.) 10 ans apres une intervention de conversion forestiere ou deux scenarios impliquant le maintien d'un couvect forestier continu (coupe progressive versus coupe par trouees) ont ete utilises, ainsi que dans un peuplement temo in de pin sylvestre age de 70 ans. Les depots d'ions dans la precipitation au sol etaient significativement influences par le scenario de conversion; ils etaient plus abondants dans la coupe progressive que dans la coupe par trouees. Comparativement au peuplement temoin, les depots azotes et acidifiants dans la precipitation au sol etaient significativement plus faibles (-60%) dans tous les types de regeneration a l'exception de la regeneration de bouleau dans la coupe progressive. Apres avoir elimine le couvect, les depots d'ions dans la precipitation au sol etaient significativement plus faibles sous tous les types de regeneration que sous le peuplement temoin. L'infiltration de N[O.sub.3-] et de S[O.sub.4.sup.2-] dans le sol etait significativement affectee par (essence; elle etait plus elevee sous la regeneration de bouleau que sous la regeneration de pin et f infiltration de S[O.sub.4.sup.2-] etait significativement plus elevee dans la coupe progressive que dans la coupe par trouees. Apres avoir elimine le couvect, ni l'essence ni le scenario de conversion n'avaient d'influence sur (infiltration de S[O.sub.4.sup.2-] alors que l'essence affectait toujours l'infiltration de N[O.sub.3-]. Nous concluons que le choix du scenario de conversion forestiere a une profoune influence sur les ions presents dans la precipitation au sol et les flux de (eau qui s'infiltre dans le sol durant la premiere phase du processus de conversion forestiere. [Traduit par la Redaction], 1. Introduction By comparing mature deciduous and coniferous forest stands at the same site and under the same climatic conditions, recent review articles have confirmed the significant higher throughfall deposition [...]
- Published
- 2009
8. Nutrient cycling in two continuous cover scenarios for forest conversion of pine plantations on sandy soil. I. nutrient cycling via aboveground tree biomass
- Author
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De Schrijver, A., Geudens, G., Wuyts, K., Staelens, J., Gielis, L., and Verheyen, K.
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Birch -- Physiological aspects -- Research -- Models ,Plants -- Food and nutrition ,Tree crops -- Physiological aspects -- Research -- Models ,Regeneration (Botany) -- Research -- Physiological aspects -- Models ,Land cover -- Models -- Research -- Physiological aspects ,Growth (Plants) -- Research -- Models -- Physiological aspects ,Earth sciences ,Physiological aspects ,Models ,Research - Abstract
Conversion of coniferous pine plantations into mixed-species forests on sandy soils is an important concern for forest and nature management in Europe. However, little is know of the effect of the applied sylvicultural strategy on biogeochemical cycling throughout the conversion process. This study examined the aboveground biomass production and nutrient (N, P, K, Ca, and Mg) cycling in terms of litterfall, immobilization in stems and branches, canopy exchange, and yearly root uptake in two scenarios of continuous cover forestry a decade after the first intervention for converting a homogeneous Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forest. Four regeneration types were studied: silver birch (Betula pendula L.) and pine after a shelterwood cutting and birch and pine after a group cutting. In conclusion, it can be stated that both the tree species and the conversion scenario influence the circulation of nutrients through the forest ecosystem: cycling of N, P, and K is determined by the tree species as well as the conversion scenario, whereas circulation of Ca and Mg is predominantly influenced by the type of conversion. La conversion des plantations resineuses de pin en forets mixtes sur des sols sablonneux presente un interet particulier pour 1'amenagement de la nature et des forets en Europe. Cependant, les effecs de la strategie sylvicole qui est utilisee sur le cycle biogeochimique au tours du processus de conversion sont peu connus. Nous aeons etudie la production de biomasse aerienne et le recyclage des nutriments (N, P, K, Ca, Mg) en tenant compte de la chute de litiere, de I'immobilisation dans la tige et les branches, des echanges dans la canopee et de l'assimilation annuelle par les racines. L'etude a ete realisee 10 ans apres la premiere intervention pour convertir une foret homogene de pin (Pinus sylvestris L.) ou deux scenarios de conversion impliquant le maintien d'un couvert forestier continu ont ete utilises. Quatre types de regeneration ont ete etudies : bouleau (Betula pendula L.) et pin apres une coupe progressive et bouleau et pin apres une coupe par trouees. En conclusion, on peut affirmer que tart l'espece d'arbre que le scenario de conversion ont une influence sur la circulation des nutriments dans l'ecosysteme forestier; le recyclage de N, P et K est determine par l'espece d'arbre aussi bien que par le scenario de conversion alors que la circulation de Ca et Mg est surtout influencee par le type de conversion. [Traduit par la Redaction], 1. Introduction Conversion of secondary spruce or pine forests on sites where under natural conditions broad-leaved deciduous species would dominate is generally agreed upon in Europe (Spiecker et al. 2004). [...]
- Published
- 2009
9. Patterns of throughfall deposition along a transect in forest edges of silver birch and Corsican pine
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Wuyts, K., De Schrijver, A., Staelens, J., Gielis, M., Guedens, G., and Verheyen, K.
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Forest ecology -- Research ,Sedimentation and deposition -- Research ,Earth sciences ,Research - Abstract
Abstract: In two adjacent forest stands in Flanders, one dominated by Corsican pine (Pinus nigra subsp. laricio Maire) and another dominated by silver birch (Betula pendula Roth), throughfall deposition was [...]
- Published
- 2008
10. The spatio-temporal evolution of black carbon in the North-West European 'air pollution hotspot'
- Author
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Wyche, KP, Cordell, RL, Smith, L, Smallbone, KL, Lyons, P, Hama, SML, Monks, PS, Staelens, J, Hofman, J, Stroobants, C, Roekens, E, Kos, GPA, Weijers, EP, and Panteliadis, P
- Published
- 2020
11. Comparison of throughfall and soil solution chemistry between a high-density Corsican pine stand and a naturally regenerated silver birch stand
- Author
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De Schrijver, A., Nachtergale, L., Staelens, J., Luyssaert, S., and De Keersmaeker, L.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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12. DETECTION, CHARACTERISATION AND PURIFICATION OF A MURINE LIVER FACTOR CAPABLE OF DESENSITISING TOWARDS THE LETHAL ACTIVITY OF TUMOUR NECROSIS FACTOR
- Author
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Wielockx, B., Hochepied, T., Staelens, J., Van Molle, W., Brouckaert, P., and Libert, C.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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13. PM10 Source Apportionment in Five North Western European Cities - Outcome of the Joaquin Project
- Author
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Weijers, E.P., Hoogerbrugge, R., Mooibroek, D., Staelens, J., Panteliadis, P., Monks, P., Cordell, R., Delaunay, T., Vercauteren, J., Dijkema, M., and Roekens, E.
- Abstract
"The aim of this study was to identify and quantify sources contributing to particulate matter (PM10) at four urban background sites and an industrial site in North West Europe using a harmonized approach for aerosol sampling, laboratory analyses and statistical data processing. Filter samples collected every 6th day from April 2013 to May 2014 were analysed for metals, monosaccharide anhydrides, elemental and organic carbon, water-soluble ions and oxidative potential. The receptor-oriented model EPA-PMF 5.0.14 was used to carry out a source apportionment using the pooled data of all sites. A solution with 13 factor profiles was found which could be aggregated to eight groups: secondary aerosol; furnace slacks, road wear and construction; sea spray; mineral dust; biomass burning; industrial activities; traffic emissions and brake wear; and residual oil combustion. The largest part of PM10 (40-48%) was explained by nitrate-rich and sulphate-rich secondary aerosol, followed by (aged) sea spray (11-21%). Also clear traffic and biomass burning profiles were found. Conditional probability function plots were used to indicate likely directions of sources, while air mass back-trajectories were analysed using the HYSPLIT model. A better understanding of the composition and sources of particulate matter can facilitate the development of health- relevant air quality policies."
- Published
- 2016
14. Abstract: Monitoring of UFP concentration and size distribution at four urban background sites in NW-Europe
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Kos, G.P.A., Weijers, E.P., Frumau, K.F.A., Staelens, J., Matheeussen, C., Roekens, E., Monks, P., Hofman, J., Hama, S.M.L., Wyche, K.P., Cordell, R., Laan, J. van der, Meydam, J., Smallbone, K.L., and Energieonderzoek Centrum Nederland
- Published
- 2015
15. Comparison of UFP concentration and size distribution instruments at an urban site
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Kos, G.P.A., Weijers, E.P., Staelens, J., Frijns, E., Berghmans, P., Matheeussen, C., Roekens, E., Panteliadis, P., Wyche, K., and Bergmans, B.
- Abstract
nvt
- Published
- 2013
16. Ultrafine particles at eight urban sites in Antwerp: instrument comparison and spatiotemporal variation in particle number concentration and size distribution
- Author
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Kos, G.P.A., Weijers, E.P., Staelens, J., Frijns, E., Berghmans, P., Matheeussen, C., Roekens, E., Panteliadis, P., Wyche, K., and Bergmans, B.
- Abstract
nvt
- Published
- 2013
17. Short-term urban and residential monitoring of UFP concentration and size distribution
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Kos, G.P.A., Weijers, E.P., Staelens, J., Frijns, E., Berghmans, P., Matheeussen, C., Roekens, E., Panteliadis, P., Monks, P., Wyche, K., and Bergmans, B.
- Abstract
nvt
- Published
- 2013
18. Environmental monitoring of ultrafine particles in NW Europe (Joaquin project)
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Kos, G.P.A., Weijers, E.P., Jonge, D. de, Staelens, J., Frijns, E., Berghmans, P., Matheeussen, C., Roekens, E., and Energieonderzoek Centrum Nederland
- Abstract
Niet van toepassing
- Published
- 2012
19. Waterhuishouding
- Author
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Staelens, J. and Mohren, G.M.J.
- Subjects
Bosecologie en Bosbeheer ,PE&RC ,Forest Ecology and Forest Management - Published
- 2010
20. Air pollution impact on forests in a changing climate. In: Forests and Society Responding to Global Drivers of Change
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Lorenz M., Clarke N., Paoletti E., Bytnerowicz A., Grulke N., Lukina N., Sase H., and Staelens J.
- Abstract
Growing awareness of air pollution effects on forests has, from the early 1980s on, led to intensive forest damage research and monitoring. This has fostered air pollution control, especially in Europe and North America, and to a smaller extent also in other parts of the world. At several forest sites in these regions, there are first indications of a recovery of forest soil and tree conditions that may be attributed to improved air quality. This caused a decrease in the attention paid by politicians and the public to air pollution effects on forests. But air pollution continues to affect the structure and functioning of forest ecosystems not only in Europe and North America but even more so in parts of Russia, Asia, Latin America, and Africa. At the political level, however, attention to climate change is focussed on questions of CO2 emission and carbon sequestration. But ecological interactions between air pollution including CO2 and O3 concentrations, extreme temperatures, drought, insects, pathogens, and fire, as well as the impact of ecosystem management practices, are still poorly understood. Future research should focus on the interacting impacts on forest trees and ecosystems. The integrative effects of air pollution and climatic change, in particular elevated O3, altered nutrient, temperature, water availability, and elevated CO2, will be key issues for impact research. An important improvement in our understanding might be obtained by the combination of long-term multidisciplinary experiments with ecosystem-level monitoring, and the integration of the results with ecosystem modelling within a multiple-constraint framework.
- Published
- 2010
21. Seasonal canopy uptake of dry deposited 15N-NH3 under different N concentrations and the interaction with leaf physical properties
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Adriaenssens, S., Staelens, J., van Wittenberghe, Shari, Boeckx, P., Verheyen, K., and Samson, Roeland
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Biology - Published
- 2010
22. Predicting the spatial distribution of leaf litterfall in a mixed deciduous forest
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Staelens, J., Nachtergale, L., Sebastiaan Luyssaert, and Systems Ecology
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Forest canopy ,Upscaling ,Litter layer ,Nutrient cycling ,Spatial variability ,SDG 15 - Life on Land - Abstract
An accurate prediction of the spatial distribution of litterfall can improve insight in the interaction between the canopy layer and forest floor characteristics, which is a key feature in forest nutrient cycling. Attempts to model the spatial variability of litterfall have been made across forest types, but the reported models have not yet been compared. We predicted the spatial distribution of leaf litterfall for the same mixed hardwood stand using inverse distance interpolation, ordinary kriging, single and multiple regressions based on plot basal area, and three individual-tree models. Models were calibrated using litterfall data (n = 67) of white birch (Betula pendula Roth), pedunculate oak (Quercus robur L.), and northern red oak (Quercus rubra L.). Model performance was compared using an independent validation data set (n = 37). Interpolation techniques did not reliably estimate spatial patterns of leaf litterfall (r < 0.60, n = 37). However, models incorporating tree data, such as linear regressions and individual-tree models, successfully reproduced the observed spatial litterfall heterogeneity of each species (r > 0.80). No model was able to predict the variability of the total leaf litterfall of the three species. We conclude that, for an intimately mixed forest stand, a model that simulates leaf dispersal of individual trees is likely to be the best choice for predicting the spatial distribution of leaf litterfall.
- Published
- 2004
23. Biogeochemie van de bosrand en effecten op biodiversiteit. 2. Focus op biogeochemie
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Wuyts, K., De Schrijver, A., Staelens, J., Verheyen, K., Wuyts, K., De Schrijver, A., Staelens, J., and Verheyen, K.
- Abstract
Wereldwijd reduceren houtkap, urbanisatie, industrialisatie en uitbreiding van het landbouwareaal de oppervlakte bos. Daarbij worden continue of aansluitende bosgebieden gefragmenteerd tot kleinere, geïsoleerde vlekken en neemt het aandeel bosrandzone in het totale bosareaal snel toe. Ook Vlaanderen kent een sterke bosfragmentatie als gevolg van de hoge landgebruikdruk. Vlaamse bossen bestaan voor bijna 60% (!) uit externe bosrand, de overgang tussen bos en open gebied, zoals heide, grasland, akkerland, wegberm of braakliggend land. Het grote aandeel aan bosrand in vele landschappen over de ganse wereld staat in schril contrast met het kleine aantal bosecosysteemstudies uitgevoerd binnen de complexe invloed van externe bosrand. Het schaarse onderzoek toont dat bosranden op het vlak van biogeochemie, net als op dat van biodiversiteit, buitenbeentjes in het boslandschap zijn en speciale aandacht verdienen bij beheer. In dit artikel focussen we op de complexe biogeochemie van bosranden en de gevolgen daarvan voor de biodiversiteit.
- Published
- 2013
24. Sleutelrol voor halfparasieten in de biogeochemie van soortenrijke graslanden. 3. Focus op biogeochemie
- Author
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Demey, A., Ameloot, E., De Schrijver, A., Staelens, J., Hermy, M., Boeckx, P., Verheyen, K., Demey, A., Ameloot, E., De Schrijver, A., Staelens, J., Hermy, M., Boeckx, P., and Verheyen, K.
- Abstract
Het wereldrecord 'soortenrijkdom van planten' vinden we in tropisch regenwoud. Dat in Ecuador bevat 942 plantensoorten per hectare! Maar wist je ook dat op kleinere schaal (<50 m2) het wereldrecord te vinden is in de gematigde streken, in nutriëntarme graslanden onder maai- of begrazingsbeheer? In Roemeense kalkgraslanden staan wel 98 soorten op 10 m2 (Wilson et al. 2012). Deze soortenrijke graslanden hebben zich ontwikkeld onder invloed van eeuwenlang traditioneel beheer, maar kwamen voorbije decennia sterk onder druk te staan door intensivering van het beheer (gebruik van kunst- en drijfmest, toepassing van herbiciden en drainage), veranderingen in landgebruik (stopzetten van beheer, omvorming naar akkerland of woongebied) en verzurende en vermestende deposities. Sinds de jaren '90 van de vorige eeuw is er een stijgende belangstelling voor het herstel van deze waardevolle habitats (bv. Habitatrichtlijn, 1992). Inzicht in de biotische en biogeochemische factoren die de plantendiversiteit sturen is dan ook essentieel voor het beheer en herstel van graslanden. In dit artikel lichten we het belang van de halfparasieten Grote ratelaar en Heidekartelblad toe als sleutelsoorten in het behoud en herstel van soortenrijke graslanden.
- Published
- 2013
25. Verzuring van terrestrische ecosystemen : oorzaken, remedies en gevolgen voor biodiversiteit : focus op biogechemie
- Author
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De Schrijver, A., Wuyts, K., Schelfhout, S., Staelens, J., Verstraeten, G., Verheyen, K., De Schrijver, A., Wuyts, K., Schelfhout, S., Staelens, J., Verstraeten, G., and Verheyen, K.
- Abstract
In de jaren tachtig van de twintigste eeuw werden bosbeheerders opgeschrikt door verhalen van massale naaldbossterfte in centraal Europa, getypeerd door de term ‘Waldsterben’. Duitse wetenschappers wezen de hoge uitstoot van verzurende stoffen door de (bio)industrie en het verkeer aan als oorzaak (bv. Ulrich 1980, Schütt 1980), een hypothese die uitvoerig werd belicht in de Duitse media (zie bv. der Spiegel, Link 1), maar later door dezelfde wetenschappers genuanceerd werd (Ulrich 1995). In Duitsland en andere Europese landen voerde men ‘de politiek van de hoge schoorstenen’ in, waarbij schoorstenen van fabrieken werden verhoogd om de vervuiling hoger en verder te blazen. Dit had tot gevolg dat lokaal minder verzurende stoffen werden afgezet, maar dat de vervuiling breder werd uitgesmeerd over een grotere regio. Nu horen we vrijwel niets meer over het probleem van de verzurende regen en is de paniek over grootschalige bossterfte uitgedoofd. Maar is het verzuringsprobleem werkelijk van de baan? In Vlaanderen was geen sprake van massale naaldbossterfte, maar tussen 1950 en 2000 verzuurden de bodems van naaldbossen sterk (De Schrijver et al. 2006). Is verzuring enkel een probleem in bossen of zet het ook andere terrestrische natuur onder druk? Moeten we ons enkel zorgen maken als er bossterfte optreedt of zijn er andere, minder zichtbare gevolgen van bodemverzuring? Wat betekent dat eigenlijk, verzuring, wat zijn de oorzaken en wat zijn de gevolgen voor het functioneren van terrestrische ecosystemen en voor de biodiversiteit? Is er momenteel nog sprake van een hoge uitstoot van verzurende stoffen? Kan de natuur- en bosbeheerder bodemverzuring voorkomen of remediëren?
- Published
- 2012
26. New science on the effects of nitrogen deposition and concentrations on Natura 2000 sites (theme 3): working group report
- Author
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Hicks, W.K., Whitfield, C.P., Bealey, W.J., Sutton, M.A., Strengbom, J., Andersen, H.V., Aazem, K., Adema, E.B., Alard, D., Bobbink, R., Bringmark, L., Buchwald, E., Cape, J.N., Cruz, C., Feest, A., Forsius, M., Harmens, H., Nordin, A., Pinho, P., Rotthier, S.L.F., Sheppard, L., Staelens, J., Tsiouris, S., Wuyts, K., Hicks, W.K., Whitfield, C.P., Bealey, W.J., Sutton, M.A., Strengbom, J., Andersen, H.V., Aazem, K., Adema, E.B., Alard, D., Bobbink, R., Bringmark, L., Buchwald, E., Cape, J.N., Cruz, C., Feest, A., Forsius, M., Harmens, H., Nordin, A., Pinho, P., Rotthier, S.L.F., Sheppard, L., Staelens, J., Tsiouris, S., and Wuyts, K.
- Published
- 2011
27. Working group report
- Author
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Hicks, W.K., Whitfield, C.P., Bealey, W.J., Sutton, M.A., Strengbom, J., Andersen, H.V., Aazem, K., Adema, E.B., Aldard, D., Bobbink, R., Bringmark, L., Buchwald, E., Cape, N., Cruz, C., Feest, A., Forsius, M., Harmens, H., Nordin, A., Pinho, P., Rotthier, S.L.F., Sheppard, L., Staelens, J., Tsiouris, S., Wuyts, K., Hicks, W.K., Whitfield, C.P., Bealey, W.J., Sutton, M.A., Strengbom, J., Andersen, H.V., Aazem, K., Adema, E.B., Aldard, D., Bobbink, R., Bringmark, L., Buchwald, E., Cape, N., Cruz, C., Feest, A., Forsius, M., Harmens, H., Nordin, A., Pinho, P., Rotthier, S.L.F., Sheppard, L., Staelens, J., Tsiouris, S., and Wuyts, K.
- Published
- 2011
28. Increased fungal dominance in N2O emission hotspots along a natural pH gradient in organic forest soil
- Author
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Rütting, T., primary, Huygens, D., additional, Boeckx, P., additional, Staelens, J., additional, and Klemedtsson, L., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. An advanced AFLP-based linkage map of Penaeus monodon
- Author
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Staelens, J., primary, Argue, B., additional, Brock, J., additional, Rombaut, D., additional, Vercauteren, I., additional, Benzie, J.A.H., additional, and Vuylsteke, M., additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A comparison of bulk and wet-only deposition at two adjacent sites in Melle (Belgium)
- Author
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STAELENS, J, primary, DESCHRIJVER, A, additional, VANAVERMAET, P, additional, GENOUW, G, additional, and VERHOEST, N, additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Ostéomyélite subaiguë de l’acétabulum
- Author
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Viejo-Fuertes, D., primary, Clapuyt, P., additional, Staelens, J.-P., additional, Delronge, G., additional, Lecouvet, F., additional, and Rombouts, J.-J., additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Follow-up of residual disease (MRD) in B lineage acute leukaemias using a simplified PCR strategy: evolution of MRD rather than its detection is correlated with clinical outcome
- Author
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Nizet, Y, Martiat, Philippe, Vaerman, J L, Philippe, M, Wildmann, C, Staelens, J P, Cornu, G., Ferrant, Augustin, Michaux, Jean Louis, Sokal, G, Nizet, Y, Martiat, Philippe, Vaerman, J L, Philippe, M, Wildmann, C, Staelens, J P, Cornu, G., Ferrant, Augustin, Michaux, Jean Louis, and Sokal, G
- Abstract
Bone marrow samples of 16 patients (two adults and 14 children) with a B lineage acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), and in whom Ig heavy chain gene rearrangements were detectable at diagnosis using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), were studied during evolution using PCR. The VDJ junctional fragment of the Ig heavy chain rearranged gene was amplified at diagnosis. After length reduction by restriction digestion, the amplified fragment was recovered by chromatography, labelled using a specific hexamer as a primer and directly used as a clonospecific probe. The sensitivity of the PCR ranged from 1:10(4) to 1:10(5) cells, depending on the patient's rearrangement. Residual disease (MRD) was detected in most of the patients achieving a complete remission after induction therapy, regardless of the long-term outcome of treatment. However, in patients remaining in complete remission, the level of MRD showed a tendency to decrease and ultimately become undetectable for variable periods of time, while in patients eventually relapsing there was a trend for MRD to persist at stable levels and even to increase before relapse was clinically evident. We conclude that the use of a simplified methodology for obtaining a clonospecific probe from the Ig heavy chain gene, though less sensitive than the sequencing methodology, is a valuable and readily available tool to monitor MRD in a high proportion of B lineage ALL., Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, FLWNA, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 1991
33. Follow‐up of residual disease (MRD) in B lineage acute leukaemias using a simplified PCR strategy: evolution of MRD rather than its detection is correlated with clinical outcome
- Author
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Nizet, Y., primary, Martiat, P., additional, Vaerman, J. L., additional, Philippe, M., additional, Wildmann, C., additional, Staelens, J. P., additional, Cornu, G., additional, Ferrant, A., additional, Michaux, J. L., additional, and Sokal, G., additional
- Published
- 1991
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34. Toxicity of Urban PM 10 and Relation with Tracers of Biomass Burning.
- Author
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Van Den Heuvel R, Staelens J, Koppen G, and Schoeters G
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants analysis, Belgium, Carbon analysis, Cell Survival drug effects, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Environmental Monitoring methods, Galactose analogs & derivatives, Galactose analysis, Galactose toxicity, Glucose analogs & derivatives, Interleukin-8 biosynthesis, Mannose analogs & derivatives, Mannose analysis, Mannose toxicity, Mutagens analysis, Particulate Matter analysis, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons analysis, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons toxicity, Rural Health, Urban Health, Air Pollutants toxicity, Mutagens toxicity, Particulate Matter toxicity
- Abstract
The chemical composition of particles varies with space and time and depends on emission sources, atmospheric chemistry and weather conditions. Evidence suggesting that particles differ in toxicity depending on their chemical composition is growing. This in vitro study investigated the biological effects of PM
10 in relation to PM-associated chemicals. PM10 was sampled in ambient air at an urban traffic site (Borgerhout) and a rural background location (Houtem) in Flanders (Belgium). To characterize the toxic potential of PM10 , airway epithelial cells (Beas-2B cells) were exposed to particles in vitro. Different endpoints were studied including cell damage and death (cell viability) and the induction of interleukin-8 (IL-8). The mutagenic capacity was assessed using the Ames II Mutagenicity Test. The endotoxin levels in the collected samples were analyzed and the oxidative potential (OP) of PM10 particles was evaluated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Chemical characteristics of PM10 included tracers for biomass burning (levoglucosan, mannosan and galactosan), elemental and organic carbon (EC/OC) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Most samples displayed dose-dependent cytotoxicity and IL-8 induction. Spatial and temporal differences in PM10 toxicity were seen. PM10 collected at the urban site was characterized by increased pro-inflammatory and mutagenic activity as well as higher OP and elevated endotoxin levels compared to the background area. Reduced cell viability (-0.46 < rs < -0.35, p < 0.01) and IL-8 induction (-0.62 < rs < -0.67, p < 0.01) were associated with all markers for biomass burning, levoglucosan, mannosan and galactosan. Furthermore, direct and indirect mutagenicity were associated with tracers for biomass burning, OC, EC and PAHs. Multiple regression analyses showed levoglucosan to explain 16% and 28% of the variance in direct and indirect mutagenicity, respectively. Markers for biomass burning were associated with altered cellular responses and increased mutagenic activity. These findings may indicate a role of biomass burning in the observed adverse health effect of particulate matter., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.- Published
- 2018
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35. Correction to Multilayered Modeling of Particulate Matter Removal by a Growing Forest over Time, From Plant Surface Deposition to Washoff via Rainfall.
- Author
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Schaubroeck T, Deckmyn G, Neirynck J, Staelens J, Adriaenssens S, Dewulf J, Muys B, and Verheyen K
- Published
- 2017
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36. Assessment of estrogenic and androgenic activity in PM10 air samples from an urban, industrial and rural area in Flanders (Belgium) using the CALUX bioassay.
- Author
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Croes K, Van den Heuvel R, Van den Bril B, Staelens J, Denison MS, Van Langenhove K, Vandermarken T, and Elskens M
- Subjects
- Belgium, Cell Line, Tumor, Cells drug effects, Humans, Particle Size, Air Pollutants toxicity, Androgen Antagonists toxicity, Endocrine Disruptors toxicity, Environmental Monitoring, Estrogen Antagonists toxicity, Particulate Matter toxicity
- Abstract
Background: Endocrine disrupting chemicals represent a broad class of compounds, are widespread in the environment and can pose severe health effects., Objectives: The objective of this study was to investigate and compare the overall estrogen and androgen activating potential of PM10 air samples at an urban, rural and industrial location in Flanders, using a human in vitro cell bioassay., Methods: PM10 samples were collected on glass fiber filters every six days between April 2013 and January 2014 using a high-volume sampler. Extraction was executed with a hexane/acetone mixture before analysis using a recombinant estrogen- or androgen responsive human carcinoma cell line. Results were expressed as bioanalytical equivalents (BEQs) per cubic meter of air., Results: High fluctuations in estrogenic activity were observed during the entire sampling period, with median BEQs of 32.1, 35.9 and 31.1 fg E2-Eq m(-)³ in the industrial, urban and rural background area, respectively. Estrogenic activity was measured in 70% of the samples, while no androgenic activity was observed in any of the samples. The estrogenic activity in the industrial area was positively correlated with the airborne concentration of the sum of the non-carcinogenic PAHs pyrene and fluoranthene (rho=0.48; p<0.01) and the sum of the carcinogenic PAHs (rho=0.36; p=0.05)., Conclusions: This study showed that no androgenic activity was present in PM10 and that although the median estrogenic activity was rather low and comparable in the three locations, high fluctuations in estrogenic response exist over time. While atmospheric PAHs contributed to the observed estrogenic response, especially in the industrial area, the chemicals responsible for the majority of estrogenic activity remain to be identified., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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37. Identification of PM10 characteristics involved in cellular responses in human bronchial epithelial cells (Beas-2B).
- Author
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Van Den Heuvel R, Den Hond E, Govarts E, Colles A, Koppen G, Staelens J, Mampaey M, Janssen N, and Schoeters G
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants analysis, Belgium, Endotoxins analysis, Epithelial Cells drug effects, Humans, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Particle Size, Particulate Matter analysis, Soot analysis, Air Pollutants toxicity, Bronchi drug effects, Particulate Matter toxicity
- Abstract
Notwithstanding evidence is present that physicochemical characteristics of ambient particles attribute to adverse health effects, there is still some lack of understanding in this complex relationship. At this moment it is not clear which properties (such as particle size, chemical composition) or sources of the particles are most relevant for health effects. This study investigates the in vitro toxicity of PM10 in relation to PM chemical composition, black carbon (BC), endotoxin content and oxidative potential (OP). In 2013-2014 PM10 was sampled (24h sampling, 108 sampling days) in ambient air at three sites in Flanders (Belgium) with different pollution characteristics: an urban traffic site (Borgerhout), an industrial area (Zelzate) and a rural background location (Houtem). To characterize the toxic potential of PM10, airway epithelial cells (Beas-2B cells) have been exposed to particles in vitro. Different endpoints were studied including cell damage and death (cell viability) using the Neutral red Uptake assay, the production of pro-inflammatory molecules by interleukin 8 (IL-8) induction and DNA-damaging activity using the FPG-modified Comet assay. The endotoxin levels in the collected samples were analysed and the capacity of PM10 particles to produce reactive oxygen species (OP) was evaluated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Chemical characteristics of PM10 (BC, As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn) and meteorological conditions were recorded on the sampling days. PM10 particles exhibited dose-dependent cytotoxicity in Beas-2B cells and were found to significantly induce the release of IL-8 in samples from the three locations. Oxidatively damaged DNA was observed in exposed Beas-2B cells. Endotoxin levels above the detection limit were detected in half of the samples. OP was measurable in all samples. Associations between PM10 characteristics and biological effects of PM10 were assessed by single and multiple regression analyses. The reduction in cell viability was significantly correlated with BC, Cd and Pb. The induction of IL-8 in Beas-2B cells was significantly associated with Cu, Ni and Zn and endotoxin. Endotoxin levels explained 33% of the variance in IL-8 induction. A significant interaction between ambient temperature and endotoxin on the pro-inflammatory activity was seen. No association was found between OP and the cellular responses. This study supports the hypothesis that, on an equal mass basis, PM10 induced biological effects differ due to differences in PM10 characteristics. Metals (Cd, Cu, Ni and Zn), BC, and endotoxin were among the main determinants for the observed biological responses., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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38. Assessment of estrogenic activity in PM₁₀ air samples with the ERE-CALUX bioassay: Method optimization and implementation at an urban location in Flanders (Belgium).
- Author
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Croes K, Debaillie P, Van den Bril B, Staelens J, Vandermarken T, Van Langenhove K, Denison MS, Leermakers M, and Elskens M
- Subjects
- Belgium, Biological Assay, Cell Line, Tumor, Cities, Humans, Air Pollutants toxicity, Endocrine Disruptors toxicity, Estrogens toxicity, Particulate Matter toxicity
- Abstract
Endocrine disrupting chemicals represent a broad class of compounds, are widespread in the environment and can pose severe health effects. The objective of this study was to investigate the overall estrogen activating potential of PM10 air samples at an urban location with high traffic incidence in Flanders, using a human in vitro cell bioassay. PM10 samples (n = 36) were collected on glass fiber filters every six days between April 2013 and January 2014 using a high-volume sampler. Extraction was executed with a hexane/acetone mixture before analysis using a recombinant estrogen-responsive human ovarian carcinoma (BG1Luc4E2) cell line. In addition, several samples and procedural blanks were extracted with ultra-pure ethanol or acetonitrile to compare extraction efficiencies. Results were expressed as bioanalytical equivalents (BEQs) in femtogram 17β-estradiol equivalent (fg E2-Eq) per cubic meter of air. High fluctuations in estrogenic activity were observed during the entire sampling period, with mean and median BEQs of 50.7 and 35.9 fg E2-Eq m(-)(3), respectively. Estrogenic activity was measured in more than 70% of the samples and several sample extracts showed both high BEQs and high cytotoxicity, which could not be related to black carbon, PM10 or heavy metal concentrations. At this moment, it remains unclear which substances cause this toxicity, but comparison of results obtained with different extraction solvents indicated that acetone/hexane extracts contained more compounds that were cytotoxic and suppressive of responses than those extracted using ultra-pure ethanol. Although more research is needed, the use of a more polar extraction solvent seems to be advisable., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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39. Glucocorticoid-induced microRNA-511 protects against TNF by down-regulating TNFR1.
- Author
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Puimège L, Van Hauwermeiren F, Steeland S, Van Ryckeghem S, Vandewalle J, Lodens S, Dejager L, Vandevyver S, Staelens J, Timmermans S, Vandenbroucke RE, and Libert C
- Subjects
- Animals, Down-Regulation, Mice, Glucocorticoids metabolism, MicroRNAs metabolism, Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I biosynthesis, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism
- Abstract
TNF is a central actor during inflammation and a well-recognized drug target for inflammatory diseases. We found that the mouse strain SPRET/Ei, known for extreme and dominant resistance against TNF-induced shock, displays weak expression of TNF receptor 1 protein (TNFR1) but normal mRNA expression, a trait genetically linked to the major TNFR1 coding gene Tnfrsf1a and to a locus harbouring the predicted TNFR1-regulating miR-511. This miRNA is a genuine TNFR1 regulator in cells. In mice, overexpression of miR-511 down-regulates TNFR1 and protects against TNF, while anti-miR-511 up-regulates TNFR1 and sensitizes for TNF, breaking the resistance of SPRET/Ei. We found that miR-511 inhibits endotoxemia and experimental hepatitis and that this miR is strongly induced by glucocorticoids and is a true TNFR1 modulator and thus an anti-inflammatory miR. Since minimal reductions of TNFR1 have considerable effects on TNF sensitivity, we believe that at least part of the anti-inflammatory effects of glucocorti-coids are mediated by induction of this miR, resulting in reduced TNFR1 expression., (© 2015 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.)
- Published
- 2015
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40. Contributing factors in foliar uptake of dissolved inorganic nitrogen at leaf level.
- Author
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Wuyts K, Adriaenssens S, Staelens J, Wuytack T, Van Wittenberghe S, Boeckx P, Samson R, and Verheyen K
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Photosynthesis physiology, Plant Leaves physiology, Inorganic Chemicals analysis, Nitrogen analysis, Plant Leaves chemistry, Trees physiology
- Abstract
We investigated the influence of leaf traits, rainwater chemistry, and pedospheric nitrogen (N) fertilisation on the aqueous uptake of inorganic N by physiologically active tree leaves. Leaves of juvenile silver birch and European beech trees, supplied with NH₄NO₃ to the soil at rates from 0 to 200 kg N ha(-1)y(-1), were individually exposed to 100 μl of artificial rainwater containing (15)NH₄(+) or (15)NO₃(-) at two concentration levels for one hour. In the next vegetative period, the experiment was repeated with NH₄(+) at the highest concentration only. The N form and the N concentration in the applied rainwater and, to a lesser extent, the pedospheric N treatment and the leaf traits affected the aqueous foliar N uptake. The foliar uptake of NH₄(+) by birch increased when leaves were more wettable. High leaf N concentration and leaf mass per area enhanced the foliar N uptake, and NO₃(-) uptake in particular, by birch. Variation in the foliar N uptake by the beech trees could not be explained by the leaf traits considered. In the first experiment, N fertilisation stimulated the foliar N uptake in both species, which was on average 1.42-1.78 times higher at the highest soil N dose than at the zero dose. However, data variability was high and the effect was not appreciable in the second experiment. Our data suggest that next to rainwater chemistry (N form and concentration) also forest N status could play a role in the partitioning of N entering the ecosystem through the soil and the canopy. Models of canopy uptake of aqueous N at the leaf level should take account of leaf traits such as wettability and N concentration., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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41. Multilayered modeling of particulate matter removal by a growing forest over time, from plant surface deposition to washoff via rainfall.
- Author
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Schaubroeck T, Deckmyn G, Neirynck J, Staelens J, Adriaenssens S, Dewulf J, Muys B, and Verheyen K
- Subjects
- Health, Time Factors, Trees metabolism, Air Pollutants isolation & purification, Forests, Models, Theoretical, Particulate Matter isolation & purification, Plants metabolism, Rain
- Abstract
Airborne fine particulate matter (PM) is responsible for the most severe health effects induced by air pollution in Europe. Vegetation, and forests in particular, can play a role in mitigating this pollution since they have a large surface area to filter PM out of the air. Many studies have solely focused on dry deposition of PM onto the tree surface, but deposited PM can be resuspended to the air or may be washed off by precipitation dripping from the plants to the soil. It is only the latter process that represents a net-removal from the atmosphere. To quantify this removal all these processes should be accounted for, which is the case in our modeling framework. Practically, a multilayered PM removal model for forest canopies is developed. In addition, the framework has been integrated into an existing forest growth model in order to account for changes in PM removal efficiency during forest growth. A case study was performed on a Scots pine stand in Belgium (Europe), resulting for 2010 in a dry deposition of 31 kg PM2.5 (PM < 2.5 μm) ha(-1) yr(-1) from which 76% was resuspended and 24% washed off. For different future emission reduction scenarios from 2010 to 2030, with altering PM2.5 air concentration, the avoided health costs due to PM2.5 removal was estimated to range from 915 to 1075 euro ha(-1) yr(-1). The presented model could even be used to predict nutrient input via particulate matter though further research is needed to improve and better validate the model.
- Published
- 2014
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42. Plant movements and climate warming: intraspecific variation in growth responses to nonlocal soils.
- Author
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De Frenne P, Coomes DA, De Schrijver A, Staelens J, Alexander JM, Bernhardt-Römermann M, Brunet J, Chabrerie O, Chiarucci A, den Ouden J, Eckstein RL, Graae BJ, Gruwez R, Hédl R, Hermy M, Kolb A, Mårell A, Mullender SM, Olsen SL, Orczewska A, Peterken G, Petřík P, Plue J, Simonson WD, Tomescu CV, Vangansbeke P, Verstraeten G, Vesterdal L, Wulf M, and Verheyen K
- Subjects
- Light, Seedlings growth & development, Seedlings physiology, Seeds, Trees, Climate, Global Warming, Plant Dispersal, Poaceae growth & development, Soil, Temperature
- Abstract
Most range shift predictions focus on the dispersal phase of the colonization process. Because moving populations experience increasingly dissimilar nonclimatic environmental conditions as they track climate warming, it is also critical to test how individuals originating from contrasting thermal environments can establish in nonlocal sites. We assess the intraspecific variation in growth responses to nonlocal soils by planting a widespread grass of deciduous forests (Milium effusum) into an experimental common garden using combinations of seeds and soil sampled in 22 sites across its distributional range, and reflecting movement scenarios of up to 1600 km. Furthermore, to determine temperature and forest-structural effects, the plants and soils were experimentally warmed and shaded. We found significantly positive effects of the difference between the temperature of the sites of seed and soil collection on growth and seedling emergence rates. Migrant plants might thus encounter increasingly favourable soil conditions while tracking the isotherms towards currently 'colder' soils. These effects persisted under experimental warming. Rising temperatures and light availability generally enhanced plant performance. Our results suggest that abiotic and biotic soil characteristics can shape climate change-driven plant movements by affecting growth of nonlocal migrants, a mechanism which should be integrated into predictions of future range shifts., (© 2014 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2014 New Phytologist Trust.)
- Published
- 2014
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43. Effects of two contrasting hemiparasitic plant species on biomass production and nitrogen availability.
- Author
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Demey A, Ameloot E, Staelens J, De Schrijver A, Verstraeten G, Boeckx P, Hermy M, and Verheyen K
- Subjects
- Biodiversity, Host-Parasite Interactions, Poaceae parasitology, Biomass, Nitrogen metabolism, Orobanchaceae physiology, Pedicularis physiology
- Abstract
Hemiparasitic plants can substantially change plant community structure; the drainage of host resources has a direct negative effect on host biomass and, as a consequence, promotes non-host biomass production (parasitism pathway); on the other hand, hemiparasitic litter inputs can enhance nutrient cycling which may have an indirect positive effect on both host and non-host biomass production (litter pathway). We evaluated the net effect of both pathways on total shoot biomass (with and without the hemiparasite) and shoot biomass of graminoids, forbs and ericaceous shrubs using a removal experiment in three sites infested with the annual Rhinanthus angustifolius, and three sites infested with the biennial Pedicularis sylvatica. We addressed the potential importance of litter effects by determination of litter quantity and quality, as well as modeling N release during decomposition. In the second year after removing the hemiparasites, total plant biomass at Rhinanthus sites was 24 % higher in weeded plots than in control plots, while weeding had no significant effect at Pedicularis sites. The increase in total biomass following Rhinanthus removal was mainly due to a higher biomass of graminoids. The amount of litter produced by Rhinanthus was only half of that produced by Pedicularis; N contents were similar. The amount of N in the litter was 9 and 30 % of the amount removed by mowing for Rhinanthus and Pedicularis sites, respectively. Within 2 months, about 45 % of the N in both hemiparasitic litter types was released by decomposition. Our results suggest that in addition to the suppression of host biomass due to parasitism, positive litter feedbacks on host and non-host biomass-via an increase in nutrient availability-also affect plant community structure. We propose that, depending on the particular hemiparasite and/or site conditions, these positive litter feedbacks on shoot biomass can compensate for the negative effect of parasitism.
- Published
- 2013
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44. Safe TNF-based antitumor therapy following p55TNFR reduction in intestinal epithelium.
- Author
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Van Hauwermeiren F, Armaka M, Karagianni N, Kranidioti K, Vandenbroucke RE, Loges S, Van Roy M, Staelens J, Puimège L, Palagani A, Berghe WV, Victoratos P, Carmeliet P, Libert C, and Kollias G
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Monoclonal pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Agents toxicity, Apoptosis, Cytokines genetics, Cytokines metabolism, Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor, Endothelium pathology, Gene Expression, Gene Knock-In Techniques, Humans, Inflammation chemically induced, Interferon-gamma physiology, Intestinal Mucosa metabolism, Intestinal Mucosa pathology, Melanoma, Experimental metabolism, Melanoma, Experimental pathology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Neoplasm Transplantation, Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I antagonists & inhibitors, Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I metabolism, Signal Transduction, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha therapeutic use, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha toxicity, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Intestinal Mucosa drug effects, Melanoma, Experimental drug therapy, Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I genetics, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha pharmacology
- Abstract
TNF has remarkable antitumor activities; however, therapeutic applications have not been possible because of the systemic and lethal proinflammatory effects induced by TNF. Both the antitumor and inflammatory effects of TNF are mediated by the TNF receptor p55 (p55TNFR) (encoded by the Tnfrsf1a gene). The antitumor effect stems from an induction of cell death in tumor endothelium, but the cell type that initiates the lethal inflammatory cascade has been unclear. Using conditional Tnfrsf1a knockout or reactivation mice, we found that the expression level of p55TNFR in intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) is a crucial determinant in TNF-induced lethal inflammation. Remarkably, tumor endothelium and IECs exhibited differential sensitivities to TNF when p55TNFR levels were reduced. Tumor-bearing Tnfrsf1a⁺⁺/⁻ or IEC-specific p55TNFR-deficient mice showed resistance to TNF-induced lethality, while the tumor endothelium remained fully responsive to TNF-induced apoptosis and tumors regressed. We demonstrate proof of principle for clinical application of this approach using neutralizing anti-human p55TNFR antibodies in human TNFRSF1A knockin mice. Our results uncover an important cellular basis of TNF toxicity and reveal that IEC-specific or systemic reduction of p55TNFR mitigates TNF toxicity without loss of antitumor efficacy.
- Published
- 2013
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45. The response of the foliar antioxidant system and stable isotopes (δ(13)C and δ(15)N) of white willow to low-level air pollution.
- Author
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Wuytack T, AbdElgawad H, Staelens J, Asard H, Boeckx P, Verheyen K, and Samson R
- Subjects
- Ascorbic Acid metabolism, Lipid Peroxidation drug effects, Nitrogen Dioxide metabolism, Plant Leaves drug effects, Plant Leaves metabolism, Air Pollution adverse effects, Antioxidants metabolism, Carbon Isotopes metabolism, Nitrogen Isotopes metabolism, Salix drug effects, Salix metabolism
- Abstract
In this study we aimed to determine and elucidate the effect of ambient air pollution on the foliar antioxidant system and stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes of white willow (Salix alba L.). We grew white willow in uniform potting soil in the near vicinity of sixteen air quality monitoring stations in Belgium where nitrogen dioxide (NO2), ozone, sulfur dioxide and particulate matter concentrations were continuously measured. The trees were exposed to ambient air during six months (April-September 2011), and, thereafter, the degree of lipid peroxidation and foliar content of antioxidant molecules (ascorbate, glutathione, polyphenols, flavonoids), antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase, ascorbate peroxidase, peroxidase) and foliar stable carbon (δ(13)C) and nitrogen (δ(15)N) isotopes were measured. We found that lipid peroxidation was caused by air pollution stress, arising from high ambient NO2 concentrations, as shown by an increased amount of malondialdehyde. The antioxidant system was activated by increasing the amount of polyphenols at monitoring stations with a high atmospheric NO2 and low O3 concentration, while no increase of key enzymes (e.g., ascorbate, glutathione) was observed. The δ(13)C also decreased with increasing NO2 concentrations and decreasing O3 concentrations, probably reflecting a decreased net photosynthesis and/or a concomitant decrease of (13)CO2 in the atmosphere. Shade also influenced foliar δ(13)C and the content of leaf ascorbate and glutathione., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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46. Four decades of post-agricultural forest development have caused major redistributions of soil phosphorus fractions.
- Author
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De Schrijver A, Vesterdal L, Hansen K, De Frenne P, Augusto L, Achat DL, Staelens J, Baeten L, De Keersmaeker L, De Neve S, and Verheyen K
- Subjects
- Belgium, Carbon analysis, Carbon metabolism, Denmark, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Phosphorus metabolism, Plant Roots, Time Factors, Trees metabolism, Phosphorus analysis, Quercus metabolism, Soil chemistry
- Abstract
Fertilisation of agricultural land causes an accumulation of nutrients in the top soil layer, among which phosphorus (P) is particularly persistent. Changing land use from farmland to forest affects soil properties, but changes in P pools have rarely been studied despite their importance to forest ecosystem development. Here, we describe the redistributions of the P pools in a four-decadal chronosequence of post-agricultural common oak (Quercus robur L.) forests in Belgium and Denmark. The aim was to assess whether forest age causes a repartitioning of P throughout the various soil P pools (labile P, slowly cycling P and occluded P); in particular, we addressed the time-related alterations in the inorganic versus organic P fractions. In less than 40 years of oak forest development, significant redistributions have occurred between different P fractions. While both the labile and the slowly cycling inorganic P fractions significantly decreased with forest age, the organic fractions significantly increased. The labile P pool (inorganic + organic), which is considered to be the pool of P most likely to contribute to plant-available P, significantly decreased with forest age (from >20 to <10% of total P), except in the 0-5 cm of topsoil, where labile P remained persistently high. The shift from inorganic to organic P and the shifts between the different inorganic P fractions are driven by biological processes and also by physicochemical changes related to forest development. It is concluded that the organic labile P fraction, which is readily mineralisable, should be taken into account when studying the bioavailable P pool in forest ecosystems.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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47. Throughfall deposition and canopy exchange processes along a vertical gradient within the canopy of beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) and Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst).
- Author
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Adriaenssens S, Hansen K, Staelens J, Wuyts K, De Schrijver A, Baeten L, Boeckx P, Samson R, and Verheyen K
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Models, Theoretical, Nitrogen analysis, Plant Leaves chemistry, Air Pollution analysis, Environmental Monitoring, Fagus, Picea, Water chemistry
- Abstract
To assess the impact of air pollution on forest ecosystems, the canopy is usually considered as a constant single layer in interaction with the atmosphere and incident rain, which could influence the measurement accuracy. In this study the variation of througfall deposition and derived dry deposition and canopy exchange were studied along a vertical gradient in the canopy of one European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) tree and two Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst) trees. Throughfall and net throughfall deposition of all ions other than H(+) increased significantly with canopy depth in the middle and lower canopy of the beech tree and in the whole canopy of the spruce trees. Moreover, throughfall and net throughfall of all ions in the spruce canopy decreased with increasing distance to the trunk. Dry deposition occurred mainly in the upper canopy and was highest during the growing season for H(+), NH(4)(+), NO(3)(-) and highest during the dormant season for Na(+), Cl(-), SO(4)(2-) (beech and spruce) and K(+), Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) (spruce only). Canopy leaching of K(+), Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) was observed at all canopy levels and was higher for the beech tree compared to the spruce trees. Canopy uptake of inorganic nitrogen and H(+) occurred mainly in the upper canopy, although significant canopy uptake was found in the middle canopy as well. Canopy exchange was always higher during the growing season compared to the dormant season. This spatial and temporal variation indicates that biogeochemical deposition models would benefit from a multilayer approach for shade-tolerant tree species such as beech and spruce., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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48. Advances in 15N-tracing experiments: new labelling and data analysis approaches.
- Author
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Rütting T, Huygens D, Staelens J, Müller C, and Boeckx P
- Subjects
- Plant Roots metabolism, Soil Microbiology, Nitrogen metabolism, Nitrogen Isotopes metabolism, Soil chemistry
- Abstract
To obtain an in-depth understanding of soil nitrogen dynamics, it is necessary to quantify a variety of simultaneously occurring gross nitrogen transformation processes. In order to do so, most studies apply 15N in a disturbed soil-microbial-root system and quantify gross rates based on the principles of 15N isotope dilution. However, this approach has several shortcomings. First, studying disturbed soil provides only limited information on in situ soil nitrogen dynamics. Secondly, the analytical data analysis allows the quantification of total production and consumption rates of the labelled pool, but does not provide information on process-specific transformation rates. Combining in situ 15N isotope labelling over 1-2 weeks with numerical data analysis allows determining process-specific gross nitrogen transformations in undisturbed soils under field conditions in the presence of live roots and their associated microbial communities. This has the potential to increase our understanding of nitrogen dynamics in the soil environment.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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49. Comparison of forest edge effects on throughfall deposition in different forest types.
- Author
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Wuyts K, De Schrijver A, Staelens J, Gielis L, Vandenbruwane J, and Verheyen K
- Subjects
- Belgium, Betula physiology, Biodegradation, Environmental, Environmental Monitoring methods, Pinus physiology, Quercus physiology, Species Specificity, Acid Rain, Air Pollutants analysis, Nitrogen analysis, Sulfur analysis, Trees
- Abstract
This study examined the influence of distance to the forest edge, forest type, and time on Cl-, SO4(2-), NO3(-), and NH4+ throughfall deposition in forest edges. The forests were dominated by pedunculate oak, silver birch, or Corsican/Austrian pine, and were situated in two regions of Flanders (Belgium). Along transects, throughfall deposition was monitored at distances of 0-128 m from the forest edge. A repeated-measures analysis demonstrated that time, forest type, and distance to the forest edge significantly influenced throughfall deposition of the ions studied. The effect of distance to the forest edge depended significantly on forest type in the deposition of Cl-, SO4(2-), and NO3(-): the edge effect was significantly greater in pine stands than in deciduous birch and oak stands. This finding supports the possibility of converting pine plantations into oak or birch forests in order to mitigate the input of nitrogen and potentially acidifying deposition.
- Published
- 2008
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50. High-density linkage maps and sex-linked markers for the black tiger shrimp (Penaeus monodon).
- Author
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Staelens J, Rombaut D, Vercauteren I, Argue B, Benzie J, and Vuylsteke M
- Subjects
- Alleles, Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis, Animals, Base Sequence, DNA genetics, Female, Genetic Markers, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Sex Determination Processes, Chromosome Mapping, Penaeidae genetics, Sex Chromosomes genetics
- Abstract
We report on the construction of sex-specific high-density linkage maps and identification of sex-linked markers for the black tiger shrimp (Penaeus monodon). Overall, we identified 44 male and 43 female linkage groups (2n = 88) from the analysis of 2,306 AFLP markers segregating in three full-sib families, covering 2,378 and 2,362 cM, respectively. Twenty-one putatively homologous linkage groups, including the sex-linkage groups, were identified between the female and male linkage maps. Six sex-linked AFLP marker alleles were inherited from female parents in the three families, suggesting that the P. monodon adopts a WZ-ZZ sex-determining system. Two sex-linked AFLP markers, one of which we converted into an allele-specific assay, confirmed their association with sex in a panel of 52 genetically unrelated animals.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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