Matching Items (105)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

155731-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Urbanization and woody plant encroachment, with subsequent brush management, are two significant land cover changes that are represented in the southwestern United States. Urban areas continue to grow, and rangelands are undergoing vegetation conversions, either purposely through various rangeland management techniques, or by accident, through inadvertent effects of climate and

Urbanization and woody plant encroachment, with subsequent brush management, are two significant land cover changes that are represented in the southwestern United States. Urban areas continue to grow, and rangelands are undergoing vegetation conversions, either purposely through various rangeland management techniques, or by accident, through inadvertent effects of climate and management. This thesis investigates how areas undergoing land cover conversions in a semiarid region, through urbanization or rangeland management, influences energy, water and carbon fluxes. Specifically, the following scientific questions are addressed: (1) what is the impact of different urban land cover types in Phoenix, AZ on energy and water fluxes?, (2) how does the land cover heterogeneity influence energy, water, and carbon fluxes in a semiarid rangeland undergoing woody plant encroachment?, and (3) what is the impact of brush management on energy, water, and carbon fluxes?

The eddy covariance technique is well established to measure energy, water, and carbon fluxes and is used to quantify and compare flux measurements over different land surfaces. Results reveal that in an urban setting, paved surfaces exhibit the largest sensible and lowest latent heat fluxes in an urban environment, while a mesic landscape exhibits the largest latent heat fluxes, due to heavy irrigation. Irrigation impacts flux sensitivity to precipitation input, where latent heat fluxes increase with precipitation in xeric and parking lot landscapes, but do not impact the mesic system. In a semiarid managed rangeland, past management strategies and disturbance histories impact vegetation distribution, particularly the distribution of mesquite trees. At the site with less mesquite coverage, evapotranspiration (ET) is greater, due to greater grass cover. Both sites are generally net sinks of CO2, which is largely dependent on moisture availability, while the site with greater mesquite coverage has more respiration and generally greater gross ecosystem production (GEP). Initial impacts of brush management reveal ET and GEP decrease, due to the absence of mesquite trees. However the impact appears to be minimal by the end of the productive season. Overall, this dissertation advances the understanding of land cover change impacts on surface energy, water, and carbon fluxes in semiarid ecosystems.
ContributorsTempleton, Nicole Pierini (Author) / Vivoni, Enrique R (Thesis advisor) / Archer, Steven R (Committee member) / Mascaro, Giuseppe (Committee member) / Scott, Russell L. (Committee member) / Wang, Zhi-Hua (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
128784-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Cisplatin-based chemotherapy is currently the standard treatment for locally advanced esophageal cancer. Cisplatin has been shown to induce both apoptosis and necrosis in cancer cells, but the mechanism by which programmed necrosis is induced remains unknown. In this study, we provide evidence that cisplatin induces necrotic cell death in apoptosis-resistant

Cisplatin-based chemotherapy is currently the standard treatment for locally advanced esophageal cancer. Cisplatin has been shown to induce both apoptosis and necrosis in cancer cells, but the mechanism by which programmed necrosis is induced remains unknown. In this study, we provide evidence that cisplatin induces necrotic cell death in apoptosis-resistant esophageal cancer cells. This cell death is dependent on RIPK3 and on necrosome formation via autocrine production of TNFα. More importantly, we demonstrate that RIPK3 is necessary for cisplatin-induced killing of esophageal cancer cells because inhibition of RIPK1 activity by necrostatin or knockdown of RIPK3 significantly attenuates necrosis and leads to cisplatin resistance. Moreover, microarray analysis confirmed an anti-apoptotic molecular expression pattern in esophageal cancer cells in response to cisplatin. Taken together, our data indicate that RIPK3 and autocrine production of TNFα contribute to cisplatin sensitivity by initiating necrosis when the apoptotic pathway is suppressed or absent in esophageal cancer cells. These data provide new insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying cisplatin-induced necrosis and suggest that RIPK3 is a potential marker for predicting cisplatin sensitivity in apoptosis-resistant and advanced esophageal cancer.

ContributorsXu, Yang (Author) / Lin, Zhengwei (Author) / Zhao, Nan (Author) / Zhou, Lanping (Author) / Liu, Fang (Author) / Cichacz, Zbigniew (Author) / Zhang, Lin (Author) / Zhan, Qimin (Author) / Zhao, Xiaohang (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2014-06-24
128657-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

This study examines the spatial and temporal patterns of the surface urban heat island (SUHI) intensity in the Phoenix metropolitan area and the relationship with land use land cover (LULC) change between 2000 and 2014. The objective is to identify specific regions in Phoenix that have been increasingly heated and

This study examines the spatial and temporal patterns of the surface urban heat island (SUHI) intensity in the Phoenix metropolitan area and the relationship with land use land cover (LULC) change between 2000 and 2014. The objective is to identify specific regions in Phoenix that have been increasingly heated and cooled to further understand how LULC change influences the SUHI intensity. The data employed include MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) land surface temperature (LST) 8-day composite June imagery, and classified LULC maps generated using 2000 and 2014 Landsat imagery. Results show that the regions that experienced the most significant LST changes during the study period are primarily on the outskirts of the Phoenix metropolitan area for both daytime and nighttime. The conversion to urban, residential, and impervious surfaces from all other LULC types has been identified as the primary cause of the UHI effect in Phoenix. Vegetation cover has been shown to significantly lower LST for both daytime and nighttime due to its strong cooling effect by producing more latent heat flux and less sensible heat flux. We suggest that urban planners, decision-makers, and city managers formulate new policies and regulations that encourage residential, commercial, and industrial developers to include more vegetation when planning new construction.

ContributorsWang, Chuyuan (Author) / Myint, Soe (Author) / Wang, Zhi-Hua (Author) / Song, Jiyun (Author) / College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
Created2016-02-26
141208-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Studies on urban heat island (UHI) have been more than a century after the phenomenon was first discovered in the early 1800s. UHI emerges as the source of many urban environmental problems and exacerbates the living environment in cities. Under the challenges of increasing urbanization and future climate changes, there

Studies on urban heat island (UHI) have been more than a century after the phenomenon was first discovered in the early 1800s. UHI emerges as the source of many urban environmental problems and exacerbates the living environment in cities. Under the challenges of increasing urbanization and future climate changes, there is a pressing need for sustainable adaptation/mitigation strategies for UHI effects, one popular option being the use of reflective materials. While it is introduced as one effective method to reduce temperature and energy consumption in cities, its impacts on multi-dimensional environmental sustainability and large-scale non-local effect are inadequately explored. This paper provides a synthetic overview of potential environmental impacts of reflective materials at a variety of scales, ranging from energy load on a single building to regional hydroclimate. The review shows that mitigation potential of reflective materials depends on a portfolio of factors, including building characteristics, urban environment, meteorological and geographical conditions, to name a few. Precaution needs to be exercised by city planners and policy makers for large-scale deployment of reflective materials before their environmental impacts, especially on regional hydroclimates, are better understood. In general, it is recommended that optimal strategy for UHI needs to be determined on a city-by-city basis, rather than adopting a “one-solution-fits-all” strategy.
ContributorsYang, Jiachuan (Contributor) / Wang, Zhi-Hua (Correspondent) / Kaloush, Kamil (Contributor)
Created2015-06-11
190809-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Nonlinear responses in the dynamics of climate system could be triggered by small change of forcing. Interactions between different components of Earth’s climate system are believed to cause abrupt and catastrophic transitions, of which anthropogenic forcing is a major and the most irreversible driver. Meantime, in the face of global

Nonlinear responses in the dynamics of climate system could be triggered by small change of forcing. Interactions between different components of Earth’s climate system are believed to cause abrupt and catastrophic transitions, of which anthropogenic forcing is a major and the most irreversible driver. Meantime, in the face of global climate change, extreme climatic events, such as extreme precipitations, heatwaves, droughts, etc., are projected to be more frequent, more intense, and longer in duration. These nonlinear responses in climate dynamics from tipping points to extreme events pose serious threats to human society on a large scale. Understanding the physical mechanisms behind them has potential to reduce related risks through different ways. The overarching objective of this dissertation is to quantify complex interactions, detect tipping points, and explore propagations of extreme events in the hydroclimate system from a new structure-based perspective, by integrating climate dynamics, causal inference, network theory, spectral analysis, and machine learning. More specifically, a network-based framework is developed to find responses of hydroclimate system to potential critical transitions in climate. Results show that system-based early warning signals towards tipping points can be located successfully, demonstrated by enhanced connections in the network topology. To further evaluate the long-term nonlinear interactions among the U.S. climate regions, causality inference is introduced and directed complex networks are constructed from climatology records over one century. Causality networks reveal that the Ohio valley region acts as a regional gateway and mediator to the moisture transport and thermal transfer in the U.S. Furthermore, it is found that cross-regional causality variability manifests intrinsic frequency ranging from interannual to interdecadal scales, and those frequencies are associated with the physics of climate oscillations. Besides the long-term climatology, this dissertation also aims to explore extreme events from the system-dynamic perspective, especially the contributions of human-induced activities to propagation of extreme heatwaves in the U.S. cities. Results suggest that there are long-range teleconnections among the U.S. cities and supernodes in heatwave spreading. Findings also confirm that anthropogenic activities contribute to extreme heatwaves by the fact that causality during heatwaves is positively associated with population in megacities.
ContributorsYang, Xueli (Author) / Yang, Zhihua (Thesis advisor) / Lai, Ying-Cheng (Committee member) / Li, Qi (Committee member) / Xu, Tianfang (Committee member) / Zeng, Ruijie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023