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Sources of pathogenic microorganisms and their fate during land application of wastes.

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TLDR
The results improve the understanding of P and its labile components within a spatially explicit context and distinguish P-enriched areas from unaffected ("natural") areas and intermediate zones that are currently undergoing change as P is mobilized and translocated.
Abstract
The hazards associated with pathogens in land-applied animal and human wastes have long been recognized. Management of these risks requires an understanding of sources, concentrations, and removal by processes that may be used to treat the wastes; survival in the environment; and exposure to sensitive populations. The major sources are animal feeding operations, municipal wastewater treatment plant effluents, biosolids, and on-site treatment systems. More than 150 known enteric pathogens may be present in the untreated wastes, and one new enteric pathogen has been discovered every year over the past decade. There has been increasing demand that risks associated with the land treatment and application be better defined. For risks to be quantified, more data are needed on the concentrations of pathogens in wastes, the effectiveness of treatment processes, standardization of detection methodology, and better quantification of exposure.

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A review of waste management practices and their impact on human health.

TL;DR: The main conclusion of the overall assessment of the literature is that the evidence of adverse health outcomes for the general population living near landfill sites, incinerators, composting facilities and nuclear installations is usually insufficient and inconclusive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathways to zoonotic spillover

TL;DR: A synthetic framework for animal-to-human transmission that integrates the relevant mechanisms reveals that all zoonotic pathogens must overcome a hierarchical series of barriers to cause spillover infections in humans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contamination of water resources by pathogenic bacteria

TL;DR: This review paper attempts to develop the first comprehensive single source of existing information on pathogen contamination in multiple types of water resources, and describes the challenges associated with using indicator organisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of Waste from Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations on Water Quality.

TL;DR: There is a need to promote and enforce best practices to minimize inputs of nutrients and toxicants from CAFOs into freshwater and marine ecosystems and for improved characterization of major toxicants affecting the environment and human health.
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Fecal pollution can explain antibiotic resistance gene abundances in anthropogenically impacted environments

TL;DR: It is found that the presence of resistance genes can largely be explained by fecal pollution, with no clear signs of selection in the environment, with the exception of environments polluted by very high levels of antibiotics from manufacturing, where selection is evident.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A modified single solution method for the determination of phosphate in natural waters

J. Murphy, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a single solution reagent was described for the determination of phosphorus in sea water, which consists of an acidified solution of ammonium molybdate containing ascorbic acid and a small amount of antimony.
Book

Aquatic Chemistry: Chemical Equilibria and Rates in Natural Waters

TL;DR: In this paper, the Solid-Water Interface Adsorption Dissolution of Minerals Nucleation and Crystal Growth Particle-Particle Interaction Colloids Coagulation and Filtration Regulation of the Chemical Composition of Natural Waters (Examples) Thermodynamic Data.
Book

Geostatistics for natural resources evaluation

TL;DR: In this article, an advanced-level introduction to geostatistics and Geostatistical methodology is provided, including tools for description, quantitative modeling of spatial continuity, spatial prediction, and assessment of local uncertainty and stochastic simulation.
Book

Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems

TL;DR: The authors examines theories (models) of how systems (those of humans, nature, and combined humannatural systems) function, and attempts to understand those theories and how they can help researchers develop effective institutions and policies for environmental management.
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