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Dive into the research topics where Francisco J. Díaz is active.

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Featured researches published by Francisco J. Díaz.


Geoderma | 2003

Volcanic materials as mulches for water conservation

M. Tejedor; C. Jiménez; Francisco J. Díaz

Abstract Arid regions are characterised by a limited rainfall, a circumstance that acts as a barrier to dryland farming. Lanzarote in the Canary Islands (Spain) is one of the most arid regions in Europe, with less than 150 mm annual rainfall and potential evapotranspiration in excess of 2000 mm. A traditional farming system developed on the island has led to a diversified and productive form of agriculture that uses no irrigation. The system utilizes a layer of 10–20 cm of tephra, covering the natural soil. The tephra acts as mulch and is highly effective for soil water conservation. In this work, we present the results of a 3-year monitoring of soil moisture content in three plots covered with two types of basaltic tephra with different grain sizes. The results are compared to those obtained on adjacent plots that were not covered with the mulch. Sampling was conducted once a month every 10 cm, up to a depth of 1 m. Compared to the noncovered soils, the tephra-covered soils managed to retain eight times more water in the surface layer during the driest months. At a depth of 1 m, twice the amount of water was retained in the tephra-covered plots. This positive effect was explained by the tephras physical properties, particularly its low water retention capacity and high porosity, enhancing water infiltration and reducing evaporation rates. Differences observed in the water conservation depending on the mulch type was explained largely by grain size. The pyroclastic materials proved to be very effective for soil water conservation under arid conditions.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2008

Feasibility of Irrigating Pickleweed ( Salicornia bigelovii Torr) with Hyper-saline Drainage Water

Stephen R. Grattan; S. E. Benes; D. W. Peters; Francisco J. Díaz

Reuse of drainage water (DW) for irrigation reduces the volume of DW requiring treatment or disposal. We conducted a greenhouse study to evaluate the performance of the halophyte Salicornia bigelovii Torr. when irrigated with hyper-saline DW and seawater (SW) treatments, ranging from 1/3 strength to full strength (18-49 dS m(-1)), in a sand-culture system. Results indicate that Salicornia grows well over the entire range of iso-osmotic SW and DW salinity treatments. Moreover, when boron (B) was added to SW treatments to concentrations equivalent to that of corresponding 1/3- and 2/3-strength DW treatments (i.e., 9 and 17 mg L(-1)), growth was not affected, and tissue B concentrations were <150 mg kg(-1) dry wt. However, when plants were irrigated with synthetic DW where B was reduced to solution culture levels (0.5-1.0 mg L(-1)), plants generally performed worse than when irrigated with actual DW high in B at the same salinity level. Evapotranspiration (ET) rates exceeded that lost from an evaporation pan from 1.5 to 2.5 times. Using a method accounting for changes in the isotopic signature of water in the reservoir due to evaporation, we estimated that high ET rates were due primarily to high transpiration rates (>78% of ET). The salt content in the tissue was very high (ash content 43-52%), but ionic composition in the shoot tissue reflected that of the treatment water used to irrigate the plants. These data indicate that hyper-saline DW, characteristic of Californias San Joaquin Valley, can be used to irrigate Salicornia and substantially reduce drainage volumes.


Water Research | 2009

Effect of constructed wetlands receiving agricultural return flows on disinfection byproduct precursors

Francisco J. Díaz; Alex T. Chow; Anthony T. O’Geen; Randy A. Dahlgren; Po-Keung Wong

The effects of wetland treatment on disinfection byproduct precursors were evaluated for six constructed wetlands receiving agricultural return flows in the Central Valley of California. Wetlands varied in size, age, vegetation, hydrologic residence time (0.9-20 days) and water management (continuous flow vs. flood pulse). The effects of wetland treatment were determined by analyzing input and outflow waters for dissolved organic carbon concentration and quality, bromide concentration, and formation potentials for nine disinfection byproduct species, including trihalomethanes, haloacetronitriles, chloral hydrate, and haloketones. We hypothesized that hydraulic residence time was a key factor governing differences in disinfection byproduct precursors. Small wetlands (<3 ha) with short hydraulic residence times (<2 days) did not produce significant changes in disinfection byproduct precursor concentrations with respect to the agricultural return flows input to the wetlands. In these wetlands hydraulic residence times were not long enough to promote processes that adversely affect dissolved organic carbon and bromide quantity, such as evapoconcentration and leaching from vegetation. Thus, less negative effects were associated with disinfection byproduct formation. In contrast, larger wetlands (>100 ha) with long hydraulic residence times (>10 days) resulted in higher dissolved organic carbon and bromide levels, increasing disinfection byproduct formation by factors ranging between 1.7 and 10.2 compared to agricultural return flows. Results from this study provide important information for optimizing the design and management of constructed wetlands to effectively combine control of disinfection byproduct precursors with other water quality parameters.


Soil Science Society of America Journal | 2002

Soil Moisture Regime Changes in Tephra-Mulched Soils

M. Tejedor; C. Jiménez; Francisco J. Díaz

Large areas of the Canarian archipelago are catalogued as aridic according to U.S. soil taxonomy. A traditional system of cultivation, based on the application of a mulch layer of tephra, is widely practiced. The objective of this work is to compare the classification of soils with and without mulch using U. S. soil taxonomy, and illustrate the problems in estimating the soil moisture regime on the basis of meteorological data. In this study the moisture regime of a natural soil and an adjacent soil mulched with a 12-cm layer of basaltic tephra was characterized on the basis of gravimetric moisture measurements, taken over a period of >1 yr, at 10-cm intervals to a depth of 1 m. The moisture regime of the soil was also estimated using meteorological data. Results obtained for the natural, nonmulched soil using measured values and those estimated from atmospheric data are very similar, and both indicate an aridic soil moisture regime. The difference with the soil covered with basaltic tephra is noteworthy. In the latter case, the soil remained moist throughout the year, representing a udic moisture regime. This noteworthy difference is reflected in the classification of the soils: Aridisols in the first case and Inceptisols in the second. A proposal is made to include mulching with tephra as a cultural practice along with irrigation and fallowing in the definition of the classes of soil moisture regimes in U.S. soil taxonomy. This would prevent the practice of mulching with tephra from changing the soil order placement in U.S. soil taxonomy.


Nephron | 1996

Renal Infarction in a Severely Hypertensive Patient with Lupus erythematosus and Antiphospholipid Antibodies

Domingo Hernández; M.L. Dominguez; Francisco J. Díaz; Maria Luisa Fernandez; Victor Lorenzo; Aurelio Rodríguez; Armando Torres

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients, specially those with antiphospholipid antibodies, have a high incidence of arterial and venous thrombotic manifestations. However, renal infarction has been rarely reported in these patients. The case of a young female with renal infarction, diagnosed by renal arteriography and scintigraphy, and arterial hypertension (AH) is described. In subsequent years she also suffered several cerebrovascular accidents with important neurological sequelae. No evidence of systemic disease was observed at this time. Fourteen years after the renal infarction a diagnosis of SLE was established. Despite therapy with prednisone, acetylsalicylic acid, azathioprine and antihypertensive drugs the progression of the neurological disease led to death. The sudden appearance of severe AH in a young woman with a renal infarction should alert the clinician about a possible underlying renal artery thrombosis in association with SLE and antiphospholipid antibodies.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2011

Reactivity of litter leachates from California oak woodlands in the formation of disinfection by-products.

Alex T. Chow; Anthony T. O'Geen; Randy A. Dahlgren; Francisco J. Díaz; Kin-Hang Wong; Po-Keung Wong

Litter materials from forested watersheds can be a significant source of dissolved organic matter (DOM) to surface waters that can contribute to the formation of carcinogenic disinfection by-products (DBPs) during drinking-water chlorination. This study characterized the reactivity of DOM from litter leachates of representative vegetation in oak woodlands, a major plant community in the Foothill Region of California. Leachates from fresh and decomposed litter (duff) from two oak species, pine, and annual grasses were collected for an entire rainy season to evaluate their reactivity to form DBPs on chlorination. Relationships among specific ultraviolet absorbance (SΔUVA), fluorescence index (FI), specific differential ultraviolet absorbance (SΔUVA), specific chlorine demand (SCD), and the dissolved organic carbon:dissolved organic nitrogen (DOC:DON) ratio to the specific DBP formation potential (SDBP-FP) were examined. The DOM derived from litter materials had considerable reactivity in forming trihalomethanes (THMs) (1.80-3.49 mmol mol), haloacetic acid (HAAs) (1.62-2.76 mmol mol(-1)), haloacetonitriles (HANs) (0.12-0.37 mmol mol(-1)), and chloral hydrate (CHD) (0.16-0.28 mmol mol). These values are comparable to other identified watershed sources of DBP precursors reported for the California Delta, such as wetlands and organic soils. Vegetation type and litter decomposition stage (fresh litter versus 1-5 yr-old duff) were key factors that determined characteristics of DOM and their reactivity to form DBPs. Pine litter had significantly lower specific THM formation potential compared with oak and grass, and decomposed duff had a greater DON content, which is a precursor of HANs and other nitrogenous DBPs. The SΔUVA and SDBP-FP were temporally variable and dependent on vegetation type, degree of decomposition, and environmental conditions. Among the optical properties of DOM, SΔUVA was the only parameter that was consistently correlated with SDBP-FP.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2013

Photochemical and bacterial transformations of disinfection by-product precursors in water.

Alex T. Chow; Francisco J. Díaz; Kin-Hang Wong; Anthony T. O’Geen; Randy A. Dahlgren; Po-Keung Wong

In situ grab sampling from source waters and water extraction from source materials are common methods for determining disinfection by-product (DBP) formation potential (FP) of water samples or reactivity of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in forming DBPs during chlorination. However, DOM, as the main DBP precursor, collected using these techniques may not represent the DOM reacting with disinfectants due to biogeochemical alterations during water conveyance to drinking water treatment facilities. In this study, we exposed leachates from fresh litter and associated decomposed duff to natural sunlight or K-12 for 14 d and evaluated the changes, if any, on the propensity to form trihalomethane (THM), haloacetonitrile (HAN), and chloral hydrate (CHD) during chlorination. Sunlight treatment did not significantly change dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration but caused a 24 to 43% decrease in the specific ultraviolet absorbance (SUVA) at 254 nm, indicating that UV-active chromophores were transformed or degraded. There were significant increases ( < 0.05) in specific HAN formation potential (HAN-FP) and specific CHD formation potential (CHD-FP) (i.e., HAN and CHD formation potentials per unit carbon), but no change in specific THM formation potential (THM-FP) after sunlight exposure. In contrast, bacterial treatment did not show any significant effect on SUVA, specific chlorine demand, or any specific DBP-FPs, although bacterial colony counts suggested DOM in leachates was utilized for bacterial growth. Results of this study confirmed that the reactivity of DOM in forming DBPs could be different after biogeochemical processes compared with its source materials. For this study, photochemical reactions had a greater effect on DBP-FPs than did microbial degradation.


Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma & Leukemia | 2015

Evaluation of Clinical and Biological Prognostic Factors in Relapsed or Refractory Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma Patients After Previous Treatment With Rituximab and Chemotherapy: Results of the PRO-R-IPI Study

Carlos Panizo; Anny Jaramillo Rodríguez; Gonzalo Gutierrez; Francisco J. Díaz; Eva González-Barca; Raquel de Oña; Carlos Grande; Juan Manuel Sancho; María García-Álvarez; Blanca Sanchez-Gonzalez; Francisco Javier Peñalver; Jimena Cannata; Manuel Espeso; Maria José Requena; Santiago Gardella; Soledad Durán; Ana Pilar Gonzalez; Ana Alfonso; Maria Dolores Caballero

INTRODUCTION Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is a heterogeneous entity, showing a highly variable outcome. In patients with DLBCL relapsed/refractory to first-line treatment with rituximab the usefulness of the revised International Prognostic Index (R-IPI) as a prognostic tool remains unexplored. Some biological parameters (B-cell lymphoma 6 [Bcl-6], Bcl-2, p53, and multiple myeloma 1 [MUM1]) and blood populations (lymphocyte and monocyte counts) have been described as International Prognostic Index-independent prognostic factors. The objective was to evaluate the R-IPI to predict the outcome of DLBCL patients at the time of relapse after a front-line treatment with chemotherapy and rituximab and to establish in this population the relationship between biological parameters and outcome. PATIENTS AND METHODS We included patients with refractory/relapsed DLBCL after first-line treatment with rituximab-containing regimens; patients must have already finished a rescue treatment also including rituximab. Immunohistochemical assessment of Bcl-2, Bcl-6, p53, and MUM1 expression were undertaken in available biopsies. R-IPI factors were identified from the clinical data at diagnosis and at relapse. Response was assessed using National Cancer Institute-sponsored Working Group guidelines. RESULTS R-IPI prognosis at relapse was not significantly associated with overall response rate (ORR) after Rituximab-chemotherapy rescue therapy. None of the immunohistochemical parameters analyzed correlated with rescue therapy results. In contrast, patients with absolute lymphocyte count (ALC) ≥ 1 × 10(9)/L at relapse were more likely to respond than patients with ALC < 1 × 10(9)/L (P = .05). CONCLUSION The R-IPI score calculated at relapse could not predict the ORR to second-line treatment. Lymphopenia is a simple and useful predictor for outcome in relapsed/refractory DLBCL and the only prognostic factor that in our hands could predict the overall response to a second-line treatment with rituximab and chemotherapy.


Open Mathematics | 2006

Category with a natural cone

Francisco J. Díaz; Sergio Rodríguez-Machín

Generally, in homotopy theory a cylinder object (or, its dual, a path object) is used to define homotopy between morphisms, and a cone object is used to build exact sequences of homotopy groups. Here, an axiomatic theory based on a cone functor is given. Suspension objects are associated to based objects and cofibrations, obtaining homotopy groups referred to an object and relative to a cofibration, respectively. Exact sequences of these groups are built. Algebraic and particular examples are given. We point out that the main results of this paper were already stated in [3], and the purpose of this article is to give full details of the foregoing.


international work conference on artificial and natural neural networks | 1997

Interactions Between Environmental and Hormonal Oscillations Induce Plastic Changes in a Simple Neuroendocrine Transducer

Rafael Alonso Solís; Ignacio López-Coviella; Francisco J. Díaz; Pedro Abreu González; Eduardo Salido Ruíz; Lucia Tabares

Steroid hormones may affect, simultaneously, a wide variety of neuronal targets and influence the way neural networks interact and the way the brain reacts to the environment. Some of the neuronal effects of steroid hormones may be very fast and affect specific membrane conductances or second messenger cascades, while others may last a long time and exert profound influences on gene expression. The cross-talk between these forms of action may be crucial for the regulation of the way the brain develops and differentiates, changes with age, or remodels its synaptic circuitry during life. Here, we present some evidence of specific molecular changes brought about by gonadal steroids on a simple neuroendocrine transducer, the pineal gland.

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C. Jiménez

University of La Laguna

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M. Tejedor

University of La Laguna

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S.R. Grattan

University of California

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Po-Keung Wong

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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