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

E. coli can survive in streambed sediments for months

2011-07-02
(Press-News.org) Studies by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists have confirmed that the presence of Escherichia coli pathogens in surface waters could result from the pathogen's ability to survive for months in underwater sediments. Most E. coli strains don't cause illness, but they are indicator organisms used by water quality managers to estimate fecal contamination.

These findings, which can help pinpoint potential sources of water contamination, support the USDA priorities of promoting sustainable agriculture and food safety.

Soil scientist Yakov Pachepsky works at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Environmental Microbial and Food Safety Laboratory in Beltsville, Md. He is conducting studies to learn more about where the E. coli pathogens in streambeds come from, where they end up, and how long they can survive. ARS is USDA's chief intramural scientific research agency.

Lab studies conducted by Pachepsky and his colleagues suggested that non-pathogenic strains of E. coli can survive much longer in underwater sediments than in the water column itself, and provided the first published evidence that E. coli can overwinter in the sediment.

The results also indicated that the pathogens lived longer when levels of organic carbon and fine sediment particles in the sediment were higher. In addition, when organic carbon levels were higher, water temperatures were less likely to affect the pathogens' survival rates.

The researchers also collected three years of data on stream flow, weather, and E. coli levels in water and sediments from a stream in Pennsylvania that was fed by several smaller tributaries. Then they used the information to calibrate the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT), a model developed by ARS scientists that predicts how farming practices affect water quality on watershed scale.

The resulting simulations indicated pasture runoff contributed to E. coli levels in nearby streams only during temporary interludes of high-water flows. Since the SWAT model currently does not include data on E. coli levels in streambed sediments, this research indicates that SWAT simulations would overestimate how much E. coli contamination in surface waters is due to pasture runoff.

Results from this work were published in Water Research, Ecological Modeling, Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology, and Journal of Hydrology.

INFORMATION:

Read more about this work in the July 2011 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer and lender. To file a complaint of discrimination, write: USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Ave., S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice), or (202) 720-6382 (TDD).

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Copper reduces infection risk by more than 40 percent

Copper reduces infection risk by more than 40 percent
2011-07-02
Professor Bill Keevil, Head of the Microbiology Group and Director of the Environmental Healthcare Unit at the University of Southampton, has presented research into the mechanism by which copper exerts its antimicrobial effect on antibiotic-resistant organisms at the World Health Organization's first International Conference on Prevention and Infection Control (ICPIC). 'New Insights into the Antimicrobial Mechanisms of Copper Touch Surfaces' observes the survival of pathogens on conventional hospital touch surfaces contributes to increasing incidence and spread of antibiotic ...

Environs prompt advantageous gene mutations as plants grow; changes passed to progeny

2011-07-02
If a person were to climb a towering redwood and take a sample from the top and bottom of the tree, a comparison would show that the DNA are different. Christopher A. Cullis, chair of biology at Case Western Reserve University, explains that this is the basis of his controversial research findings. Cullis, who has spent over 40 years studying mutations within plants, most recently flax (Linum usitatissimum), has found that the environment not only weeds out harmful and useless mutations through natural selection, but actually influences helpful mutations. Cullis published ...

New technique advances bioprinting of cells

2011-07-02
College Park, Md. (July 1, 2011) -- Ever since an ordinary office inkjet printer had its ink cartridges swapped out for a cargo of cells about 10 years ago and sprayed out cell-packed droplets to create living tissue, scientists and engineers have never looked at office equipment in quite the same way. They dream of using a specialized bio-inkjet printer to grow new body parts for organ transplants or tissues for making regenerative medicine repairs to ailing bodies. Both these new therapies begin with a carefully printed mass of embryonic stem cells. And now there's progress ...

UT Southwestern pediatric urologist develops procedure to eliminate scarring in kidney surgeries

2011-07-02
DALLAS – July 1, 2011 – Surgery and all its implications can be scary, especially so for pediatric patients and their parents who dread sometimes disfiguring scars. Now a UT Southwestern Medical Center urologist has developed a new "hidden" minimally invasive procedure that makes scarring virtually invisible yet is just as effective as more common surgical methods. "Currently used incisions, even with minimally invasive surgery, leave the child with up to three scars that are visible any time the abdomen is exposed. The new technique of hidden incision endoscopic surgery ...

Mass. General team identifies new class of antiangiogenesis drugs

2011-07-02
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers have discovered the first of an entirely new class of antiangiogenesis drugs – agents that interfere with the development of blood vessels. In a report in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences/Early Edition, the investigators describe how a compound derived from a South American tree was able, through a novel mechanism, to interfere with blood vessel formation in animal models of normal development, wound healing and tumor growth. "Most of the FDA-approved antiangiogenesis drugs inhibit the pathway controlled ...

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution study sheds light on tunicate evolution

2011-07-02
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) researchers have filled an important gap in the study of tunicate evolution by genetically sequencing 40 new specimens of thaliaceans, gelatinous, free-swimming types of tunicates. Their study was featured on the cover of the June issue of the Journal of Plankton Research. Tunicates are a phylum of animals closely related to vertebrates, with a firm, rubbery outer covering called a tunic, from which the name derives. "Thaliaceans have been poorly represented in previous studies of tunicate evolution," said Annette Govindarajan ...

Health providers should emphasize breast cancer screening, Wayne State University research finds

2011-07-02
DETROIT – Wayne State University researchers believe medical practitioners can help reduce the number of breast cancer deaths among low-income African-American women by more effectively educating their patients about the importance of mammography screening. In a study published this month in the Journal of Cancer Education, Rosalie Young, Ph.D., associate professor; Kendra Schwartz, M.D., M.S.P.H., interim chair; and Jason Booza, Ph. D., assistant professor, all from the Department of Family Medicine and Public Health Sciences in WSU's School of Medicine, examined clinical, ...

Delayed access to tertiary care associated with higher death rate from type of pulmonary fibrosis

2011-07-02
Patients with a form of pulmonary fibrosis often do not get referred to a tertiary care center quickly. Delayed access is associated with a higher death rate. Better methods of early detection would shorten time from first symptoms to referral. (NEW YORK, NY, July 1, 2011) – Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF)―scarring and thickening of the lungs from unknown causes―is the predominant condition leading to lung transplantation nationwide. Columbia University Medical Center researchers confirmed that delayed access to a tertiary care center for IPF is associated ...

Citywide study shows racial disparities in emergency stroke treatment

2011-07-02
Washington, D.C., June 30, 2011 –A citywide study published online in today's issue of Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association demonstrates racial disparities in the use of clot-busting drugs to treat acute ischemic stroke, the most common type of stroke. According to the study's results, significantly fewer black patients receive the drug tPA than whites because of delays in seeking emergency care and the presence of medical conditions that exclude them from receiving the treatment. On the other hand, racial bias in doctors' treatment decisions do not appear ...

Extending the vase life of cut flowers: Pre-treatments and preservatives studied

Extending the vase life of cut flowers: Pre-treatments and preservatives studied
2011-07-02
RALEIGH, NC—Each year, a wide variety of new cut flower cultivars and species are evaluated in trials administered by North Carolina State University and the Association of Specialty Cut Flower Growers. The research, conducted at about 50 locations in the United States and Canada, provides valuable production and marketing information. John M. Dole and a research team from North Carolina State University undertook a multiyear study designed to identify patterns of postharvest responses to commercial hydrator and holding floral preservatives among 121 cultivars from 47 ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How to identify and prevent fraudulent participants in health research

Parents' attachment style may be linked with risk of parental burnout, especially when associated with difficulty in understanding and identifying their emotions

Abnormal repetitive behaviors in mice are associated with oxidative stress

Double disadvantage hurts more than twice as much

Paradox of rotating turbulence finally tamed with world-class ‘hurricane-in-a-lab’

Brain pathway may fuel both aggression, self-harm

Study: Macrophage “bodyguard” disruptors could change breast cancer treatment by helping to overcome endocrine resistance

New study reveals southern ocean’s winter CO₂ outgassing underestimated by 40%

U of A-led team discovers large ritual constructions by early Mesoamericans

MIT study finds targets for a new tuberculosis vaccine

Kono awarded American Physical Society’s Isakson Prize

Scripps Research team identifies sugar molecules that trigger placental formation

ITU at COP30: Driving Green Digital Action for a sustainable future

Want to be more persuasive? Talk with your hands, UBC study finds

Mount Sinai health system to roll out Microsoft Dragon copilot

Scientists map how the brain develops – and how it resolves inflammation

Triggering cell death in metastatic melanoma may pave the way for new cancer treatments

A path to safer painkillers – revealed by freezing opioids and their protein receptors in motion

Reducing reliance on corticosteroids with rituximab: renewed hope for adult-onset patients with relapsing nephrotic syndrome

Psilocybin outside the clinic – public health challenges of increasing publicity, accessibility, and use

Parent-teen sexual health communication and teens’ health information and service seeking

Two small changes, that may transform agriculture

New brain atlas offers unprecedented detail in MRI scans

Two main gene discovery methods reveal complementary aspects of biology

Blocking key protein triggers cancer cell self-destruction

Proposed all-climate battery design could unlock stability in extreme temps

Princeton’s new quantum chip built for scale

High risk of suicide after involuntary psychiatric care

From degradation to restoration: Remote sensing tracks Asia’s struggle for sustainable drylands

Can Israel feed itself? Economic model to rethink food self-sufficiency unveiled

[Press-News.org] E. coli can survive in streambed sediments for months