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Objective: To verify the life jacket's airway-securing capacity to keep the nose and mouth out of the water in a flood disaster.
Design: Physical experiment.
Setting: University of Miyazaki.
Materials And Methods: We experimented with an open channel in which we created a wave and running water. In the channel, we observed a dummy attached to a balloon as a buoyant body. We used 170-, 220-, and 320-ml balloons. Experiment 1, we reproduced a tsunami. We created three sizes of wave. Experiment 2, we reproduced running water. When we installed an obstacle at the channel bottom, the current that submerged the dummy occurred downstream of the obstacle. We measured the submergence time of the dummy.
Results: For the medium-sized wave, the submergence time decreased as the balloon volume increased. For the largest wave, the submergence time was the shortest for a balloon of 220 ml, not 320 ml. Experiment 2, the submergence time decreased as the balloon volume increased. However, a dummy attached to a 320-ml balloon remained downstream of the obstacle.
Conclusions: The biggest drawback is that the parameters of this study are not based on real-world experience. Therefore, if an evacuee with a life jacket is submerged in a flood disaster, we cannot easily decide whether the buoyancy is appropriate because in some situations, buoyancy adversely affected airway security. If we could decide buoyancy based on specific disaster conditions, the airway-securing capacity of a life jacket would improve.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5055/ajdm.2017.0271 | DOI Listing |
J Exp Biol
September 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, Binghamton University, State University of New York, Binghamton, NY 13902, USA.
Dissolved oxygen (DO) dramatically impacts the habitat use of many aquatic animals, particularly for air-breathing animals that rely on 'physical gills' for respiration while submerged. Invertebrates that use bubbles as physical gills directly uptake DO from the water for respiration. However, no vertebrate animals have yet been documented using physical gills.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFolia Microbiol (Praha)
September 2025
Department of Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering, Hazara University, Mansehra, Pakistan.
Herein, we report the isolation and characterization of an endophytic bacterium associated with the Berberis aristata roots to uncover bioactive compounds, particularly Antimicrobials, using submerged culture. The bacterial isolate was identified via 16S rDNA sequence analysis and characterized using morphological, microscopic, and biochemical techniques. It was identified as Bacillus toyonensis strain BAR1, a motile, gram-positive, halotolerant bacterium capable of producing yellow pigments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The objective of this study was to conduct a comparative evaluation of the clinical and radiographic findings of definitive two-piece abutments placed at secondary surgery following submerged healing and definitive abutments used in standard prosthetic treatments.
Materials And Methods: The study was designed as a prospective, split-mouth, randomised, parallel-design, blinded clinical trial. The study comprised two groups: a test group and a control group.
Mycobiology
August 2025
Environmental Microbiology Laboratory, Department of Agricultural Biological Chemistry, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Chonnam National University, Gwangju, Korea.
Freshwater ascomycetes are fungi that play an important role in the decomposition of submerged plant debris in freshwater habitats. At present, approximately 3000 species of ascomycetes have been described from freshwater habitats. However, the number of fungi in freshwater habitats in South Korea is small, and many species are still completely unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Technol
September 2025
Competence Centre for Sustainable Engineering and Environmental Systems, THM University of Applied Sciences, Gießen, Germany.
Pond systems represent the simplest and most widely used technology for treating high-strength wastewater containing biodegradable suspended solids. When covered, they offer advantages such as odour control, intensified organics degradation, and biomethane capture. However, their efficiency is often limited by unmixed zones and the formation of floating or sinking layers, which reduce residence times and treatment performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF