PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

University of Guelph study assesses environmental impact of Ontario corn production

2014-02-14
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the University of Guelph examined the energy use and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with corn production in Ontario. Their findings are published today in the Agricultural Institute of Canada's (AIC) Canadian Journal of Soil Science.

The study reports estimated county-level energy and GHG intensity of grain corn, stover and cob production in Ontario from 2006-2011. According to the paper's authors, most of the energy used during corn production comes from the use of natural gas and electricity during grain drying; the production and application of nitrogen fertilizers (which are also associated with GHG emissions); and the use of diesel fuel during field work.

"Corn is a major economic crop in North America, and the renewable fuels developed from corn production are frequently used to mitigate the GHG emissions from fossil fuel use," explained Susantha Jayasundara, lead author of the paper.

"Assessing the GHG and energy intensity of corn production helps identify opportunities for efficiency and aids in improving the GHG mitigation potential of corn-derived renewable fuels," continued Jayasundara. The authors note that reducing GHG intensity and improving energy efficiency during corn production can be achieved through the use of field-drying corn hybrids, reduced tillage and diminished nitrogen inputs.

The article, "Energy and Greenhouse Gas Intensity of Corn (Zea Mays L.) in Ontario: A regional assessment," by Susantha Jayasundara, Claudia Wagner-Riddle, Goretty Dias and Kumudinie Kariyapperuma, is available Open Access in the Canadian Journal of Soil Science.

"Given the environmental and economic benefits of renewable fuels and the proliferation of their use in Canada, it is important to more fully understand the environmental impacts of their associated agricultural production," added Serge Buy, CEO of AIC. "Essential studies such as this are of national significance and are certainly evidence of the need for targeted federal investments in agricultural science."

INFORMATION: DOI:10.4141/CJSS2013-044


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

South African healthcare workers face greater risk for TB, HIV

2014-02-14
A large-scale survey of South African healthcare workers has revealed major gaps in workplace protection against tuberculosis, HIV and hepatitis, according to a University of British Columbia health researcher. Presenting findings today at the 2014 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), Dr. Annalee Yassi says issues such as confidentiality, stigma, technological capacity and staff training need to be addressed while improving hospital resources and protocols. Preliminary results of the 2012 baseline survey ...

Survey: Americans struggle with science; respect scientists

2014-02-14
While most Americans could be a bit more knowledgeable in the ways of science, a majority are interested in hearing about the latest scientific breakthroughs and think highly of scientists. This is according to a survey of more than 2,200 people conducted by the National Science Foundation, one that is conducted every two years and is part of a report – Science and Engineering Indicators – that the National Science Board provides to the president and Congress. A Michigan State University faculty member served as lead author for the chapter in the report that covers ...

New research reinforces danger of drinking alcohol while pregnant

2014-02-14
Women who drink alcohol at moderate or heavy levels in the early stages of their pregnancy might damage the growth and function of their placenta – the organ responsible for supplying everything that a developing infant needs until birth - research at The University of Manchester shows. Placentas studied in a laboratory environment showed that drinking alcohol at moderate (2/3 standard drinks) to high (4-6 standard drinks) rates reduced the cell growth in a woman's placenta. The research, published in the journal PLoS One and funded by the British Medical Association, ...

Passive smoking impairs children's responses to asthma treatment

2014-02-14
Children exposed to cigarette smoke at home have lower levels of an enzyme that helps them respond to asthma treatment, a study has found. Passive smoking is known to worsen asthma symptoms in children and impair their response to inhaled steroid treatment, but how this effect occurs was not known. Researchers at Imperial College London found that children with severe asthma with a parent who smokes at home have lower levels of the enzyme HDAC2 compared with those whose parents don't smoke. HDAC2 is required for steroids to exert their beneficial anti-inflammatory effects ...

Physicists produce a potentially revolutionary material

Physicists produce a potentially revolutionary material
2014-02-14
A new breed of ultra thin super-material has the potential to cause a technological revolution. "Artificial graphene" should lead to faster, smaller and lighter electronic and optical devices of all kinds, including higher performance photovoltaic cells, lasers or LED lighting. For the first time, scientists are able to produce and have analysed artificial graphene from traditional semiconductor materials. Such is the scientific importance of this breakthrough these findings were published recently in one of the world's leading physics journals, Physical Review X. A researcher ...

Penn study: Topiramate reduces heavy drinking in patients seeking to cut down on alcohol consumption

2014-02-14
PHILADELPHIA – Heavy drinking is common in the United States and takes a personal and societal toll, with an annual estimated cost of $223.5 billion due to losses in workplace productivity, health care and criminal justice expenses. Data shows that 23 percent of individuals age 12 or older reported drinking five or more drinks on one occasion in the previous month, and almost seven percent reported doing so on at least five days per month. Despite this, few heavy drinkers seek out treatment—especially those who do not meet the clinical criteria for an alcohol use disorder, ...

Rice's carbon nanotube fibers outperform copper

2014-02-14
On a pound-per-pound basis, carbon nanotube-based fibers invented at Rice University have greater capacity to carry electrical current than copper cables of the same mass, according to new research. While individual nanotubes are capable of transmitting nearly 1,000 times more current than copper, the same tubes coalesced into a fiber using other technologies fail long before reaching that capacity. But a series of tests at Rice showed the wet-spun carbon nanotube fiber still handily beat copper, carrying up to four times as much current as a copper wire of the same ...

Tinnitus study signals advance in understanding link between loud sounds exposure and hearing loss

2014-02-14
A research team investigating tinnitus, from the University of Leicester, has revealed new insights into the link between the exposure to loud sounds and hearing loss. Their study, published this week in Neuroscience, helps to understand how damage to myelin – a protection sheet around cells - alters the transmission of auditory signals occurring during hearing loss. The three-year study was derived from a PhD studentship funded by Action on Hearing Loss. It was led by Dr Martine Hamann, Lecturer in Neurosciences at the University's Department of Cell Physiology and ...

Pregnancy study leads to fewer high birth weight babies

2014-02-14
The world's biggest study offering healthy eating and exercise advice to pregnant women who are overweight or obese has shown a significant reduction in the number of babies born over 4kg (8.8 pounds) in weight. The LIMIT Study, led by researchers from the University of Adelaide's Robinson Institute and the Women's and Children's Hospital, involved more than 2200 pregnant women from 2008-2011. In the first major results from the LIMIT Study, published this week in the British Medical Journal, the researchers say that providing advice and assistance to adopt a healthy ...

A strategy that narrows academic achievement gap by 63 percent

2014-02-14
Americans don't like to talk about social class. But new research from Northwestern and Stanford universities suggests that, at least in college and university settings, they should do just that. An upcoming article in "Psychological Science" describes a novel one-hour intervention that closed by 63 percent the persistent academic achievement gap between first-generation college students and continuing-generation students. (Continuing-generation students are defined as those with at least one parent with a four-year college degree.) The key to the one-time intervention's ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Excessive pregnancy weight gain and substantial postpartum weight retention common in military health care beneficiaries

Odor-causing bacteria in armpits targeted using bacteriophage-derived lysin

Women’s heart disease is underdiagnosed, but new machine learning models can help solve this problem

Extracting high-purity gold from electrical and electronic waste

Tropical fish are invading Australian ocean water

No bull: How creating less-gassy cows could help fight climate change

ECU researchers call for enhanced research into common post-stroke condition

SharpeRatio@k: novel metric for evaluation of risk-return tradeoff in off-policy evaluation

$1.8M NIH grant will help researchers follow a virus on its path to the nucleus

Follow-up 50 years on finds landmark steroid study remains safe

Active military service may heighten women’s risk of having low birthweight babies

Significant global variation in national COVID-19 treatment guidelines

Cost increasingly important motive for quitting smoking for 1 in 4 adults in England

Is there an association between HPV vaccination and anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis?

Blood-based multi-omics guided detection of a precancerous pancreatic tumor

Eye-opener: Pupils enlarge when people focus on tasks

Current Nanomaterials and Current Analytical Chemistry have been indexed in Ei Compendex

International balance of power determined by Chinese control over emerging technologies, study shows

New writing therapy helps late-stage cancer patients face biggest fears

National Jewish Health researchers identify connection between air pollutants and allergic diseases

In the United States, the election of progressive prosecutors led to higher relative rates of property and overall crime, but not to higher relative rates of violent crime

European Court of Human Rights is “backsliding” on legal protections for asylum seekers, study says

Being treated by a female physician associated with lower risk for death

Treatment from female doctors leads to lower mortality and hospital readmission rates

Historically redlined areas see more modern-day gun violence

Bonobos aren’t as peace-loving as we thought

Abdominal obesity might predict risk of fecal incontinence

Smartphone swabs provide convenient toxicology testing

Advancing high-resolution ultrasound imaging with deep learning

New study confirms community pharmacies can help people quit smoking

[Press-News.org] University of Guelph study assesses environmental impact of Ontario corn production