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Institution

United States Environmental Protection Agency

GovernmentWashington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
About: United States Environmental Protection Agency is a government organization based out in Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Environmental exposure. The organization has 13873 authors who have published 26902 publications receiving 1191729 citations. The organization is also known as: EPA & Environmental Protection Agency.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that subsidence related to groundwater extraction has gradually increased in the past decades with highest sinking rates at present, and is likely to increase in the near future.
Abstract: Many major river deltas in the world are subsiding and consequently become increasingly vulnerable to flooding and storm surges, salinization and permanent inundation. For the Mekong Delta, annual subsidence rates up to several centimetres have been reported. Excessive groundwater extraction is suggested as the main driver. As groundwater levels drop, subsidence is induced through aquifer compaction. Over the past 25 years, groundwater exploitation has increased dramatically, transforming the delta from an almost undisturbed hydrogeological state to a situation with increasing aquifer depletion. Yet the exact contribution of groundwater exploitation to subsidence in the Mekong delta has remained unknown. In this study we deployed a delta-wide modelling approach, comprising a 3D hydrogeological model with an integrated subsidence module. This provides a quantitative spatially-explicit assessment of groundwater extraction-induced subsidence for the entire Mekong delta since the start of widespread overexploitation of the groundwater reserves. We find that subsidence related to groundwater extraction has gradually increased in the past decades with highest sinking rates at present. During the past 25 years, the delta sank on average ~18 cm as a consequence of groundwater withdrawal. Current average subsidence rates due to groundwater extraction in our best estimate model amount to 1.1 cm yr−1, with areas subsiding over 2.5 cm yr−1, outpacing global sea level rise almost by an order of magnitude. Given the increasing trends in groundwater demand in the delta, the current rates are likely to increase in the near future.

228 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors replicated earlier analysis using the 1976 Health Interview Survey to relate morbidity (measured as either days of work loss, restricted activity or respiratory-related restricted activity) to particulate matter.

228 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The future use of mosquito control pesticides in view of niche markets, incentives for new product development, Environmental Protection Agency registration, the Food Quality Protection Act, and improved pest management strategies for mosquito control are assessed.
Abstract: Pesticides have a role in public health as part of sustainable integrated mosquito management. Other components of such management include surveillance, source reduction or prevention, biological control, repellents, traps, and pesticide-resistance management. We assess the future use of mosquito control pesticides in view of niche markets, incentives for new product development, Environmental Protection Agency registration, the Food Quality Protection Act, and improved pest management strategies for mosquito control.

227 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A model that uses the varying isotopic changes in multiple tissues as a chemical clock to estimate the time elapsed since a diet shift, and the magnitude of the isotopic shift in the tissues at the new equilibrium may be useful for studying the movement and behavior of animals changing isotopic environments.
Abstract: Stable isotope analysis has become an important tool in studies of trophic food webs and animal feeding patterns. When animals undergo rapid dietary shifts due to migration, metamorphosis, or other reasons, the isotopic composition of their tissues begins changing to reflect that of their diet. This can occur both as a result of growth and metabolic turnover of existing tissue. Tissues vary in their rate of isotopic change, with high turnover tissues such as liver changing rapidly, while relatively low turnover tissues such as bone change more slowly. A model is outlined that uses the varying isotopic changes in multiple tissues as a chemical clock to estimate the time elapsed since a diet shift, and the magnitude of the isotopic shift in the tissues at the new equilibrium. This model was tested using published results from controlled feeding experiments on a bird and a mammal. For the model to be effective, the tissues utilized must be sufficiently different in their turnover rates. The model did a reasonable job of estimating elapsed time and equilibrial isotopic changes, except when the time since the diet shift was less than a small fraction of the half-life of the slowest turnover tissue or greater than 5–10 half-lives of the slowest turnover tissue. Sensitivity analyses independently corroborated that model estimates became unstable at extremely short and long sample times due to the effect of random measurement error. Subject to some limitations, the model may be useful for studying the movement and behavior of animals changing isotopic environments, such as anadromous fish, migratory birds, animals undergoing metamorphosis, or animals changing diets because of shifts in food abundance or competitive interactions.

227 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two in vivo fish preparation studies support the passive diffusion model for the uptake of organics at the gill-water interface and predict that high log P and melting point (low water solubility) may substantially reduce the rate of accumulation in fish.

227 citations


Authors

Showing all 13926 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Joel Schwartz1831149109985
Timothy A. Springer167669122421
Chien-Jen Chen12865566360
Matthew W. Gillman12652955835
J. D. Hansen12297576198
Dionysios D. Dionysiou11667548449
John P. Giesy114116262790
Douglas W. Dockery10524457461
Charles P. Gerba10269235871
David A. Savitz9957232947
Stephen Polasky9935459148
Judith C. Chow9642732632
Diane R. Gold9544330717
Scott L. Zeger9537778179
Rajender S. Varma9567237083
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202356
202279
2021780
2020787
2019852
2018929