Browsing by Author "Binder, Michael"
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Item Open Access Development of a Botrytis specific immunosensor: towards using PCR species identification(Cranfield University, 2014-01) Binder, Michael; Terry, Leon A.; Tothill, Ibtisam E.Botrytis species affect over 300 host plants in all climate areas of the world, at both pre and post-harvest stages, leading to significant losses in agricultural produce. Therefore, the development of a rapid, sensitive and reliable method to assess the pathogen load of infected crops can help to prescribe an effective curing regime. Growers would then have the ability to predict and manage the full storage potential of their crops and thus provide an effective disease control and reduce post-harvest losses. A highly sensitive electrochemical immunosensor based on a screen-printed gold electrode (SPGE) with onboard carbon counter and silver / silver chloride (Ag/AgCl) pseudo-reference electrode was developed in this work for the detection and quantification of Botrytis species. The sensor utilised a direct sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) format with a monoclonal antibody against Botrytis immobilised on the gold working electrode. Two immobilisation strategies were investigated for the capture antibody, and these included adsorption and covalent immobilisation after self-assembled monolayer formation with 3-dithiodipropionic acid (DTDPA). A polyclonal antibody conjugated to the electroactive enzyme horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was then applied for signal generation. Electrochemical measurements were conducted using 3,3’, 5,5’-tetramethylbenzidine dihydrochloride / hydrogen peroxide (TMB/H2O2) as the enzyme substrate system at a potential of -200 mV. The developed biosensor was capable of detecting latent Botrytis infections 24 h post inoculation with a linear range from 150 to 0.05 μg fungal mycelium ml-1 and a limit of detection (LOD) as low as 16 ng ml-1 for covalent immobilisation and 58 ng ml-1 for adsorption, respectively. Benchmarked against the commercially available Botrytis ELISA kits, the optimised immuno-electrochemical biosensor showed strong correlation of the quantified samples (R2=0.998) ... [cont.].Item Open Access The value of manure - Manure as co-product in life cycle assessment(Elsevier, 2019-04-19) Leip, Adrian; Ledgard, Stewart; Uwizeye, Aimable; Palhares, Julio C.P.; Fernanda Aller, M.; Amon, Barbara; Binder, Michael; Cordovil, Claudia M.d.S.; De Camillis, Camillo; Dong, Hongming; Fusi, Alessandra; Helin, Janne; Hörtenhuber, Stefan; Hristov, Alexander N.; Koelsch, Richard; Liu, Chunjiang; Masso, Cargele; Nkongolo, Nsalambi V.; Wang, YingLivestock production is important for food security, nutrition, and landscape maintenance, but it is associated with several environmental impacts. To assess the risk and benefits arising from livestock production, transparent and robust indicators are required, such as those offered by life cycle assessment. A central question in such approaches is how environmental burden is allocated to livestock products and to manure that is re-used for agricultural production. To incentivize sustainable use of manure, it should be considered as a co-product as long as it is not disposed of, or wasted, or applied in excess of crop nutrient needs, in which case it should be treated as a waste. This paper proposes a theoretical approach to define nutrient requirements based on nutrient response curves to economic and physical optima and a pragmatic approach based on crop nutrient yield adjusted for nutrient losses to atmosphere and water. Allocation of environmental burden to manure and other livestock products is then based on the nutrient value from manure for crop production using the price of fertilizer nutrients. We illustrate and discuss the proposed method with two case studies.