scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Zimbabwe

EducationHarare, Harare, Zimbabwe
About: University of Zimbabwe is a education organization based out in Harare, Harare, Zimbabwe. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The organization has 4378 authors who have published 6800 publications receiving 160720 citations. The organization is also known as: UZ & University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a study on forest floor and canopy interception in a savannah ecosystem and show that combining both canopy and forest floor interception yields a total interception flux amounting to 37% of rainfall, or close to 50% of the total evaporation.
Abstract: Interception is one of the most underestimated processes of the hydrological cycle. However, it amounts to a substantial part of the terrestrial evaporation and forms a direct feedback of moisture to the atmosphere which is important to sustain continental rainfall. Most investigations on interception focus on canopy interception only, whereas the interception by the surface and forest floor may be of same order of magnitude. Moreover there is a regional bias. Most research has been carried out in Europe and America and little is known about interception in Africa. This paper presents a study on forest floor and canopy interception in a savannah ecosystem. The study deals with both interception storage capacity of different vegetation types and the related moisture fluxes. The interception storage capacity of Msasa leaf litter and of Thatching grass is 1.8 mm and 1.5 mm respectively. This water storage capacity is dependent on storm intensity, with high intensity storms resulting in smaller storage capacity than less intensive storms. Canopy interception for the study period averaged 25% of the total rainfall, which is comparable with other studies. More importantly, the study revealed that combining canopy and forest floor interception yields a total interception flux amounting to 37% of the rainfall, or close to 50% of the total evaporation. This is a significant amount which implies that interception of both canopy and forest floor should be included in hydrological modelling and that interception is relevant for water management.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was concluded that vagal tone could be selectively measured in an intact person using these simplified and fast algorithms for quantifying respiratory sinus arrhythmia or beat-to-beat variation.
Abstract: 1. Different levels of parasympathetic control of the heart were measured using ratios of the longest to the shortest intervals between R-waves in the ECGs (R-R) recorded during a deep breathing exercise in the supine position (respiratory sinus arrhythmia). The mean of absolute differences in consecutive R-R intervals was also measured in the supine position during quiet breathing (beat-to-beat variation), in six healthy volunteers, after cumulative doses of atropine (0.1-2.0 mg 70 kg-1, i.v.). 2. Full atropinization was observed at 2.0 mg 70 kg-1 where the respiratory sinus arrhythmia decreased by 97%, and the beat-to-beat variation dropped by 94%. There was no further drop in both indices at doses above 2.0 mg 70 kg-1. The different levels of parasympathetic control of the heart were directly proportional to the equivalent levels of respiratory sinus arrhythmia or beat-to-beat variation. 3. A universal linear vagal scale was calculated for use with these non-invasive indices to assess the levels of parasympathetic control of the heart. Zero in this scale would represent no activities in the cardiac vagus nerve. 4. It was concluded that vagal tone could be selectively measured in an intact person using these simplified and fast algorithms for quantifying respiratory sinus arrhythmia or beat-to-beat variation. A linear scale for measuring the vagal tone was possible. This linear scale was called the linear vagal scale (LVS).

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of conservation agriculture adoption on household livelihood outcomes and concluded that conservation agriculture can effectively reduce food insecurity and poverty in the medium to long term.
Abstract: In southern Africa, conservation agriculture (CA) has received a lot of research and promotional support from various organizations in the past decades. Conservation agriculture is largely promoted as one of the few win–win technologies affordable to farmers, in the sense that potentially it improves farmers’ yields (in the long term) at the same time conserving the environment. This is because conservation agriculture reduces nitrogen loss in the soil, promotes water and soil conservation and improves agronomic use efficiency of applied nutrients. However, some concerns have been raised over the feasibility of conservation agriculture on smallholder farms given constraints imposed by the biophysical and institutional realities under which smallholder farmers operate. The main aim of this study is to answer the question whether conservation agriculture is resulting in tangible livelihood outcomes to smallholder farmers. The counterfactual outcome approach was used to estimate ex post impact of conservation agriculture adoption on one of the key livelihood outcomes—food security. The study that utilized a data set covering 1623 households in Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique found no significant impact of conservation agriculture adoption on Food Consumption Score of farmers in Zimbabwe and Malawi. Possible reasons for the insignificant of CA impact on food security in Zimbabwe and Malawi could include the small land areas currently devoted to CA, and the failure to implement the full complement of practices necessary to set off the biophysical process that are expected to drive yield increases. In Mozambique, conservation agriculture significantly improved the Food Consumption Score for farmers exposed to the technology. A possible reason for effectiveness of CA in Mozambique could be due to the fact that often CA is being promoted together with other better cropping management practices such as timely weeding and improved seed varieties, which are poorly practiced by the generality of farmers in a country just emerging from a war period. This paper provides one of the few ex post assessments of the impact of conservation agriculture adoption on household livelihood outcomes—food security. Given the mixed findings, the study suggests that conservation agriculture farmers in the three countries need to be supported to adopt a value chain approach to conservation agriculture. This entails the introduction of commercial or high-value crops in the conservation agriculture programmes, value addition on farmers produce, access to the necessary support services such as markets for seed, fertilizer, herbicides and equipment as well as reliable extension. We believe that under such circumstances conservation agriculture can effectively reduce food insecurity and poverty in the medium to long term.

65 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: With a standardised rate of 68 per 100000 and a first-week mortality rate of 35%, stroke must now be considered an important cause of morbidity and mortality in the population of Zimbabwe.
Abstract: Objective. To estimate the crude incidence rates of cerebrovascular accidents among the black residents of Harare. Design. Prospective community-based study. Setting. Black residents of Harare, Zimbabwe. Participants. Two hundred and seventy-three 'first- ever' strokes prospectively identified over a 12-month period. Main outcome study factors. Cerebrovascular accident first-week fatality rate; age-and sex-related incidence. Results. The crude incidence rate was estimated to be 30.7 per 100 000 (95% confidence interval 27.1 - 34.4) and the standardised rate was 68 per 100 000. Fifty-one per cent of stroke victims were below the age of 54 years. Thirty-five per cent of patients died within 1 week of the stroke. Overall, the age-specific rates for both sexes rose with age, with the rates for women being higher at all age strata except for the group 45 - 54 years. Conclusion. With a standardised rate of 68 per 100 000 and a first-week mortality rate of 35%, stroke must now be considered an important cause of morbidity and mortality in the population.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings are in agreement with the 0-2% prevalence of poor metabolizers (PMs) in the black populations previously phenotyped and indicate important interethnic differences in the CYP2D locus between Caucasian, Asian and different black populations.
Abstract: The objective of this study was to determine the CYP2D6 genotype of a black Zimbabwean population. Genotyping was carried out using Eco RI and Xba I RFLP, and allele-specific PCR amplification. Of 114 Zimbabwean samples analysed, no individual homozygous for any of the defect allelic forms CYP2D6A, CYP2D6B or CYP2D6D or combinations thereof was found. The allele frequencies of the three defect genes were 0, 1.8 and 3.9%, respectively. No subject carrying the Xba I 44 kb haplotype, indicative for poor metabolizers among Caucasians, was identified, whereas five individuals being heterozygous with a 29/42 kb haplotype were seen. Three out of the four CYP2D6B alleles found were associated with the 29/42 kb haplotype. Our findings are in agreement with the 0-2% prevalence of poor metabolizers (PMs) in the black populations previously phenotyped. The very low frequency of the CYP2D6B allele in the Zimbabwean population is different from very recent data from black Americans (allele frequency = 8.5%) and might indicate the Caucasian ancestry of this allele. Taken together, our data indicate important interethnic differences in the CYP2D locus between Caucasian, Asian and different black populations.

64 citations


Authors

Showing all 4433 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Didier Raoult1733267153016
Roy M. Anderson11652665549
Vikram Patel11665459717
Richard M. Cowling9639230042
Ken E. Giller9255536374
Leif Bertilsson8732123933
Johan Rockström8523657842
Alex Aiken7729520254
Frances M. Cowan7645619984
Robert J. Biggar7323118474
Charles A. Thornton7118217195
David Wilson6961818780
David Katzenstein6928021239
Bruce M. Campbell6722717616
David Sanders6549217119
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of KwaZulu-Natal
33.4K papers, 713.4K citations

89% related

Stellenbosch University
42.2K papers, 1M citations

88% related

University of the Witwatersrand
52.7K papers, 1.3M citations

87% related

University of Pretoria
45.4K papers, 814.6K citations

87% related

University of Cape Town
63.8K papers, 1.9M citations

87% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202327
202289
2021485
2020393
2019291
2018326