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Institution

University of Nigeria, Nsukka

EducationNsukka, Nigeria
About: University of Nigeria, Nsukka is a education organization based out in Nsukka, Nigeria. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 10211 authors who have published 13685 publications receiving 138922 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper studied the effect of adding crop residues and manure to soil, at five sites in Ethiopia, on carbohydrate properties, aggregate stability and the C and N distribution within water-stable aggregates.
Abstract: When over exploited and coupled with climatic conditions, tropical soils are subject to increased erosion and a loss of soil organic matter. Countermeasures include the incorporation of organic materials such as crop and animal residues. We studied the effect of adding crop residues and manure to soil, at five sites in Ethiopia, on carbohydrate properties, aggregate stability and the C and N distribution within water-stable aggregates. The effects of organic amendments varied between sites. The largest content of carbohydrates was obtained in the control treatment at Holeta, Ginchi (91 kg ha -1 mustard meal), Jimma (5 t ha -1 cow dung +9 t ha -1 coffee husk), Awassa (forested soil), and Sirinka (soil alley-cropped with Leuceanae). The aggregate stability of these soils was highly correlated with the OM content but not with carbohydrates. The smaller aggregates ( 1.00 mm), thereby suggesting a protecting effect within the finer soil fractions. A protecting role played by humified OM components was also indicated by the C and N distribution as well as the C:N ratios which showed preferential accumulation in small rather than in large aggregates. The isotopic 13 C-OC values of carbohydrate extracts were generally low, suggesting that OM was from plants with C3 photosynthetic pathways. Soil treatments with maize alone or combined with coffee husks at Jimma decreased the δ 13 C‰ values slightly, revealing that maize contributed a share of the labile OM. Despite the improvement in the soil OM content, neither the carbohydrate content nor the aggregate stability were increased to the level of the forested sites, suggesting that the additions of crop residues and manure were not alone sufficient to restore the soil physical quality.

66 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the relationship between environmental change and non-traditional security, defined as non-military threats that challenge the survival of the human species, and build on the growing literature that explores the relationships between environmental changes and traditional security.
Abstract: This article builds on the growing literature that explores the relationships between environmental change and non-traditional security, defined as non-military threats that challenge the survival ...

66 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the participation of Igbo men in nonfarm activities and waged employment has resulted in an increased workload for women in food crop production as well as a breakdown of the gender division of labor in agriculture.

66 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There are species variations in the nature and extent of uterine remodeling during pregnancy and the regulatory influence of these uterine wall modifications on conceptus survival, implantation and placentation in sheep and goats are discussed in this review.

66 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that 2.8% of babies admitted to a Newborn Special Care Unit in a teaching hospital in Enugu had congenital abnormalities and that the commonest forms seen were mainly surgical birth defects and includes cleft lip/cleft palate and neural tube defects.
Abstract: Congenital abnormalities are not uncommon among newborns and contribute to neonatal and infant morbidity and mortality. The prevalence and pattern of presentation vary from place to place. Many a time the exact etiology is unknown but genetic and environmental factors tend to be implicated. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of congenital malformations among newborns admitted in a tertiary hospital in Enugu, the nature of these abnormalities and the outcome/prognosis. For purposes of this study, congenital abnormalities are defined as obvious abnormality of structure or form which is present at birth or noticed within a few days after birth. A cross-sectional retrospective study in which a review of the records of all babies admitted in the Newborn Special Care Unit (NBSCU) of the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), Ituku/Ozalla, Enugu over a four year period (January 2007-April 2011) was undertaken. All babies admitted in the unit with the diagnosis of congenital abnormality were included in the study. Information extracted from the records included characteristics of the baby, maternal characteristics, nature/type of abnormalities and outcome. Data obtained was analyzed using SPSS 13. Rates and proportions were calculated with 95% confidence interval. The proportions were compared using students T-test. Level of significance was set at P < 0.05 Seventeen (17) out of a total of six hundred and seven newborn babies admitted in the newborn unit of UNTH over the study period (Jan 2007-March 2011) were found to have congenital abnormalities of various types, giving a prevalence of 2.8%. Common abnormalities seen in these babies were mainly surgical birth defects and included cleft lip/cleft palate, neural tube defects (occurring either singly or in combination with other abnormalities), limb abnormalities (often in combination with neural tube defects of various types), omphalocoele, umbilical herniae, ano-rectal malformations and dysmorphism associated with multiple congenital abnormalities. The results of this study show that 2.8% of babies admitted to a Newborn Special Care Unit in a teaching hospital in Enugu had congenital abnormalities and that the commonest forms seen were mainly surgical birth defects and includes cleft lip/cleft palate and neural tube defects.

66 citations


Authors

Showing all 10333 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh118102556187
Peter J. Houghton6322814321
Alessandro Piccolo6228414332
R. W. Guillery6010613439
Ulrich Klotz5621310774
Nicholas H. Oberlies522629683
Brian Norton493229251
Adesola Ogunniyi4727211806
Obinna Onwujekwe432828960
Sanjay Batra393297179
Benjamin Uzochukwu381639318
Christian N. Madu361345378
Jude U. Ohaeri361213088
Peter A. Akah331643422
Charles E. Chidume331533639
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202360
2022129
20211,654
20201,560
20191,191
2018884