Bateshoughton6536
We suggest that habitat quality's effect could be more significant than metal concentration on the biological fitness (juvenile production) of O. nitens in metal-contaminated soils.Thriving oil palm agroindustry comes at a price of voluminous waste generation, with palm oil mill effluent (POME) as the most cumbersome waste due to its liquid state, high strength, and great discharge volume. selleck chemicals llc In view of incompetent conventional ponding treatment, a voluminous number of publications on non-conventional POME treatments is filed in the Scopus database, mainly working on alternative or polishing POME treatments. In dearth of such comprehensive review, all the non-conventional POME treatments are rigorously reviewed in a conceptual and comparative manner. Herein, non-conventional POME treatments are sorted into the five major routes, viz. biological (bioconversions - aerobic/anaerobic biodegradation), physical (flotation & membrane filtration), chemical (Fenton oxidation), physicochemical (photooxidation, steam reforming, coagulation-flocculation, adsorption, & ultrasonication), and bioelectrochemical (microbial fuel cell) pathways. For aforementioned treatments, the constraints, pros, and cons are qualitatively and quantitatively (with compiled performance data) detailed to indicate their process maturity. Authors recommended (i) bioconversions, adsorption, and steam reforming as primary treatments, (ii) flotation and ultrasonication as pretreatments, (iii) Fenton oxidation, photooxidation, and membrane filtration as polishing treatments, and (iv) microbial fuel cell and coagulation-flocculation as pretreatment or polishing treatment. Life cycle assessments are required to evaluate the environmental, economic, and energy aspects of each process.In the last decade, more and more refractory organic contaminants with severe health risks have been detected in the aquatic ecosystem. Sulfate radical (SO4·-)-based advanced oxidation process (SR-AOP) is recognized as an efficient approach for the removal of organic contaminants. Biochar (BC) and its composites (BCs) have been applied into SR-AOP for the double advantages of adsorption and catalytic ability. This paper gives systematic emphasis to the development and progress of biochar and its composites as catalyst in persulfate-advanced oxidation process. Synthetic techniques including the directed pyrolysis of mixed materials and post-immersed method are discussed. The physicochemical properties of biochar (such as surface area, surface functional groups, defect structure and persistent free radicals, etc.) that affect persulfate activation are provided. Then, emphasis is placed on the crucial role of biochar in affecting the catalytic property of BCs including stabilizing nanoparticles, expanding the surface area, increasing active sites and regulating electron transfer reactions. Integrating mechanistic insights and different biochar-based catalysts highlight the understanding of persulfate activation and catalytic degradation. Possible challenges are finally proposed in the fundamental research and practically scaled-up application.In recent years, substantial progress has been made towards developing effective catalysts for the hydrogenation of CO2 into fuels. However, the quest for a robust catalyst with high activity and stability still remains challenging. In this study, we present a cost-effective catalyst composed of MoS2 nanosheets and functionalized porous date seed-derived activated carbon (f-DSAC) for hydrogenation of CO2 into formic acid (FA). As-fabricated MoS2/f-DSAC catalysts were characterized by FE-SEM, XRD, Raman, FT-IR, BET, and CO2-TPD analyses. At first, bicarbonate (HCO3-) was successfully converted into FA with a high yield of 88% at 200 °C for 180 min under 10 bar H2 atmosphere. A possible reaction pathway for the conversion of HCO3- into FA is postulated. The catalyst has demonstrated high activity and long-term stability over five consecutive cycles. Additionally, MoS2/f-DSAC catalyst was effectively used for the conversion of gaseous CO2 into FA at 200 °C under 20 bar (CO2/H2 = 11) over 15 h. The catalyst exhibited a remarkable TOF of 510 h-1 with very low activation energy of 12 kJ mol-1, thus enhancing the catalytic conversion rate of CO2 into FA. Thus, this work demonstrates the MoS2/f-DSAC nanohybrid system as an efficient non-noble catalyst for converting CO2 into fuels.The gut microbiota has been increasingly recognized to regulate host fitness, which in turn is dependent on stability of community structure and composition. Many biotic and abiotic factors have been demonstrated to shape gut microbiota of cladocerans. However, the interactive effects of these variables on cladocerans fitness due to alteration of gut microbiota and their linkage with life history parameters are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the responses of Daphnia magna gut microbiota to the combined effects of toxic Microcystis aeruginosa and high temperature and its associations with fitness. We found that under good food regime, the temperature has no effect on the composition of the gut microbiota, whereas under high proportion of toxic M. aeruginosa and high temperature conditions, D. magna lost their symbionts. High proportion of toxic M. aeruginosa and high temperature had synergistically negative effects on D. magna performance due to altered gut microbiota. The high abundance of symbiotic Comamonadaceae and good food increased D. magna fitness. The present study illustrates that understanding life history strategies in response to multiple stressors related to changes in the gut microbiota diversity and composition requires integrated approaches that incorporate multiple linked traits and tether them to one another.The odor problems in river-type micro-polluted water matrixes are complicated compared to those in lakes and reservoirs. For example, the TY River in Jiangsu Province has been associated with complex odors, whereas the specific odor compounds were not clear. In this paper, a comprehensive study on characterizing the odors and odorants in source water from the TY River was conducted. Six odor types, including earthy, marshy, fishy, woody, medicinal, and chemical odors, were detected for the first time; correspondingly, thirty-three odor-causing compounds were identified. By means of evaluating odor activity values and reconstituting the identified odorants, 95, 93, 92, 90, 89 and 88% of the earthy, marshy, fishy, woody, medicinal and chemical odors in the source waters could be clarified. Geosmin and 2-methylisoborneol were associated with earthy odor, while amyl sulfide, dibutyl sulfide, propyl sulfide, dimethyl disulfide, dimethyl trisulfide and indole were related to marshy odor. The major woody and fishy odor compounds were vanillin, geraniol, β-cyclocitral and 2,4-decadienal, 2-octenal, respectively.