Phytoremediation of polychlorinated biphenyls: new trends and promises. (41/155)

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Removal of the endocrine disrupter butyl benzyl phthalate from the environment. (42/155)

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Impact of organic-liquid distribution and flow-field heterogeneity on reductions in mass flux. (43/155)

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Dense, viscous brine behavior in heterogeneous porous medium systems. (44/155)

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Recovery of silver residues from dental amalgam. (45/155)

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Acidification remediation alternatives: exploring the temporal dimension with cost benefit analysis. (46/155)

Acidification of soils and surface waters caused by acid deposition is still a major problem in southern Scandinavia, despite clear signs of recovery. Besides emission control, liming of lakes, streams, and wetlands is currently used to ameliorate acidification in Sweden. An alternative strategy is forest soil liming to restore the acidified upland soils from which much acidified runoff originates. This cost-benefit analysis compared these liming strategies with a special emphasis on the time perspective for expected benefits. Benefits transfer was used to estimate use values for sport ffishing and nonuse values in terms of existence values. The results show that large-scale forest soil liming is not socioeconomically profitable, while lake liming is, if it is done efficiently-in other words, if only acidified surface waters are treated. The beguiling logic of "solving" an environmental problem at its source (soils), rather than continuing to treat the symptoms (surface waters), is thus misleading.  (+info)

The costs of meeting the environmental objectives for the Baltic Sea: a review of the literature. (47/155)

The environmental targets of the recently agreed Baltic Sea Action Plan (BSAP) targets are likely associated with a considerable cost, which motivates a search for low-cost policies. The following review shows there is a substantial literature on cost-efficient nutrient reduction strategies, including suggestions regarding low-cost abatement, but actual policies at international and national scale tend to be considerably more expensive due to lack of instruments that ensure a cost-efficient allocation of abatement across countries and sectors. Economic research on the costs of reducing hazardous substances and oil spill damages in the Baltic Sea is not available, but lessons from the international literature suggest that resources could be used more efficiently if appropriate analysis is undertaken. Common to these pollution problems is the need to ensure that all countries in the region are provided with positive incentives to implement international agreements.  (+info)

Arthropod recolonization in the restoration of a semideciduous forest in southeastern Brazil. (48/155)

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