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Many tropical biomes are threatened by rapid land-use change, but its catchment-wide biogeochemical effects are poorly understood. The few previous studies on DOM in tropical catchments suggest that deforestation and subsequent land use increase stream water dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations, but consistent effects on DOM elemental stoichiometry have not yet been reported. Here, we studied stream water DOC concentrations, catchment DOC exports, and DOM elemental stoichiometry in 20 tropical catchments at the Cerrado-Atlantic rainforest transition, dominated by natural vegetation, pasture, intensive agriculture, and urban land cover. Streams draining pasture could be distinguished from those draining natural catchments by their lower DOC concentrations, with lower DOM C:N and C:P ratios. Catchments with intensive agriculture had higher DOC exports and lower DOM C:P ratios than natural catchments. Finally, with the highest DOC concentrations and exports, as well as the highest DOM C:P and N:P ratios, but the lowest C:N ratios among all land-use types, urbanized catchments had the strongest effects on catchment DOM. Thus, urbanization may have alleviated N limitation of heterotrophic DOM decomposition, but increased P limitation. Land use-especially urbanization-also affected the seasonality of catchment biogeochemistry. While natural catchments exhibited high DOC exports and concentrations, with high DOM C:P ratios in the rainy season only, urbanized catchments had high values in these variables throughout the year. Our results suggest that urbanization and pastoral land use exerted the strongest impacts on DOM biogeochemistry in the investigated tropical catchments and should thus be important targets for management and mitigation efforts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.01.158 | DOI Listing |
Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol
September 2025
Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Background: Studies of child mortality that employ minimally invasive tissue sampling (MITS) produce highly accurate cause of death data; however, selection bias may render these as non-representative of their underlying populations.
Objectives: Estimate cause-specific mortality fractions and rates for the five most frequent causes-underlying and others in the chain of events leading to death-among stillbirths, neonatal, infant and child deaths-in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, adjusted for any identified selection biases.
Methods: The Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance (CHAMPS) Network collects standardised, population-based, longitudinal data on causes of death among stillbirths and under-five children in 12 catchments in seven countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.
There is currently a debate about the timing and drivers of former glacier behaviour and climate change in the tropical Andes. Using Be dating we determined the ages of 21 boulders on moraines in the Santa Cruz Valley, Peru (∼10°S, altitudes ~ 4100 to ~ 4300 m a.s.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransl Vis Sci Technol
August 2025
International Centre for Eye Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Purpose: The Peek digital near vision test has been previously validated in a trial setting; here it is assessed in clinic (stage 1) and community (stage 2) settings.
Methods: The study was carried out in the catchment area of Dr. Shroff's Charity Eye Hospital, Mohammadi, Uttar Pradesh, India, with a total of 768 participants.
JAMA Netw Open
August 2025
Francis I. Proctor Foundation, University of California, San Francisco.
Importance: Mass azithromycin distributions may reduce malaria parasitemia in the short term, but longer-term effectiveness is unclear.
Objective: To examine whether biannual mass azithromycin distributions are associated with lower rates of malaria parasitemia in preschool children living in Niger.
Design, Setting, And Participants: A cluster randomized trial was performed from November 23, 2014, until June 9, 2020, as an ancillary trial to a larger trial studying the effect of mass azithromycin on child mortality.
Schizophr Res
August 2025
WHO Collaborating Centre for Research and Training in Mental Health, Neurosciences and Substance Abuse, Department of Psychiatry, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Background: There is limited information on the prevalence and profile of comorbid physical health conditions in persons with untreated psychotic disorder in countries of the Global South.
Aim: To investigate the frequency of occurence and association of physical health indicators with untreated psychotic disorder in three diverse settings in the Global South.
Methods: Data were collected as part of the International Research Programme on Psychoses in Diverse Settings (INTREPID II), a population-based incidence and case-control study conducted in selected catchment areas in India, Nigeria, and Trinidad.