Exposure to geogenic particulate matter (PM) comprised of mineral particles has been linked to human health effects. However, very little data exist on health effects associated with geogenic dust exposure in natural settings. Therefore, we characterized particulate matter size, metal chemistry, and health effects of dust collected from the Nellis Dunes Recreation Area (NDRA), a popular off-road vehicle area located near Las Vegas, NV. Adult female B6C3F1 mice were exposed to several concentrations of mineral dust collected from active and vegetated sand dunes in NDRA. Dust samples (median diameter: 4.4 μm) were suspended in phosphate-buffered saline and delivered at concentrations ranging from 0.01 to 100 mg dust/kg body weight by oropharyngeal aspiration. ICP-MS analyses of total dissolution of the dust resulted in aluminum (55,090 μg/g), vanadium (70 μg/g), chromium (33 μg/g), manganese (511 μg/g), iron (21,600 μg/g), cobalt (9.4 μg/g), copper (69 μg/g), zinc (79 μg/g), arsenic (62 μg/g), strontium (620 μg/g), cesium (13 μg/g), lead 25 μg/g) and uranium (4.7 μg/g). Arsenic was present only as As(V). Mice received four exposures, once/week over 28-days to mimic a month of weekend exposures. Descriptive and functional assays to assess immunotoxicity and neurotoxicity were performed 24 h after the final exposure. The primary observation was that 0.1 to 100 mg/kg of this sand dune derived dust dose-responsively reduced antigen-specific IgM antibody responses, suggesting that dust from this area of NDRA may present a potential health risk.
Growth and nutrition of four clones (DN 17, DN 125, NM 2, Jac 4) of hybrid poplar in a sandy loam nursery soil, were examined for fertilization response to P at four rates (0,288, 576, and 1152 kg ha -1) in 1986 and 1987. Except for clone NM 2, fertilization reduced height growth and caused various degrees of leaf symptoms suggesting nutrient disorders. Height of DN 17, the most sensitive of the four clones, was decreased 23 and 47% by the highest P treatment in the first and second year, respectively. Foliar vector diagnosis indicated that P addition induced Zn and/or Cu deficiencies rather than a direct P toxicity, since P vectors were smaller than Zn and Cu vectors. Available P levels in soil were raised proportionally by fertilization, but DTPA-extractable micronutrient status was not affected except for Mn. Differences in leaf P/Zn and P/Cu ratios among clones suggested that the clonal variation in growth performance may be related to maintaining nutritional balance in plants.
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