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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: new orleans + hurricanes katrina + new  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/8/2008)


Times Online
New Orleans Hurricane Center
The Times-Picayune - NOLA.com, LA -
Three years after Katrina, we face a new hurricane season. Are we ready? Washing Away is the Times- Picyaune's acclaimed 2002 series on our city's hurricane ...
AssociatedPress
Atlantic storm Bertha may soon turn to hurricane Reuters
all 2,740 news articles »

WWL
UNO poll: post-Katrina voter satisfaction rises
WDAM-TV, MS - 48 minutes ago
AP - July 8, 2008 8:54 PM ET NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Satisfaction with life in New Orleans has crept back up to near pre-Hurricane Katrina levels among voters ...
UNO poll latest measure of recovery attitudes The Times-Picayune - NOLA.com
Nagin's rating dips in UNO survey WWL
UNO poll latest measure of recovery attitudes WDAM-TV
The Times-Picayune - NOLA.com
all 19 news articles »
The Continuing Chronicle of Katrina?s Tragic Aftermath
The Moderate Voice -
Last week, we learned about slow progress in rebuilding New Orleans and protecting the city from future storms (Time and BN-Politics). ...

WWL
Governor Jindal Signs New Orleans Mental Health Bills
Bayou Buzz, LA -
... at the New Orleans Adolescent Hospital . The hospital was the city?s first public in-patient mental health facility to reopen after Hurricane Katrina ...
Jindal Marks New Mental Health legislation KTAL
all 6 news articles »
Post Hurricane Katrina, Audubon Park's Egrets Still Thrive
The Epoch Times Ireland, Ireland -
... bending tree branches like so many oversized magnolia blossoms in a semi-occluded herony in New Orleans' Audubon Park. While Hurricane Katrina uprooted ...
La. high court sides with insurers in Katrina case
KATC, LA - 12 minutes ago
NEW ORLEANS -- The Louisiana Supreme Court refused Tuesday to reconsider its recent ruling that an insurance company isn't liable for water damage from the ...
La. high court sides with insurers in Katrina case
WDAM-TV, MS -
AP - July 8, 2008 6:24 PM ET NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The Louisiana Supreme Court has refused to reconsider its recent ruling that an insurance company isn't ...
Katrina?s Most Vulnerable
New York Times, United States -
Homeless-services agencies that work in New Orleans are rightly worried. In a city where rents have skyrocketed and housing is in short supply, ...
A musical revival
Wicked Local Waltham, MA -
"New Orleans has influenced my persona as a musician, and watching the Katrina events unfold a few years back, I felt helpless about what we could do," ...
Patients Losing Patience in Eastern New Orleans
RedOrbit, TX - Jul 7, 2008
By Webster, Richard A Forty-five minutes -- that is the difference between pre- and post-Katrina health care in eastern New Orleans. ...
Source: Google News

[BOOK] The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast -
D Brinkley - 2006 - books.google.com
... n I i 1 Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast Douglas Brinkley
\\ I II I \ MM <) \\ K OU \ // Imprint of 11 ar |> rr (] oIIi n s ...

Chemical and Microbiological Parameters in New Orleans Floodwater Following Hurricane Katrina -
JH Pardue, WM Moe, D McInnis, LJ Thibodeaux, KT … - Environmental Science & Technology, 2005 - pubs3.acs.org
... Copyright ? 2005 American Chemical Society Chemical and Microbiological Parameters
in New Orleans Floodwater Following Hurricane Katrina. ...

Assessment of Pathogens and Toxicants in New Orleans, LA Following Hurricane Katrina -
SM Presley, TR Rainwater, GP Austin, SG Platt, JC … - Environmental Science & Technology, 2006 - pubs.acs.org
... Copyright ? 2005 American Chemical Society Assessment of Pathogens and
Toxicants in New Orleans, LA Following Hurricane Katrina. ...

HURRICANE KATRINA: Scientists' Fears Come True as Hurricane Floods New Orleans -
J Travis - Science, 2005 - sciencemag.org
... Katrina's wobble and weakening seemed at first to prevent what many have called
the New Orleans "nightmare scenario." The city's main threat from hurricanes is ...

[BOOK] Radical possibilities: public policy, urban education, and a new social movement -
J Anyon - 2005 - tcrecord.org
... in New Orleans, there is no viable evacuation plan. They suffer the horror of draconian
federal regulations and, again, like the victims of Hurricane Katrina, ...

After the Storm--Health Care Infrastructure in Post-Katrina New Orleans -
RE Berggren, TJ Curiel - New England Journal of Medicine, 2006 - content.nejm.org
... week of the last six months.? Immediately after Hurricane Katrina, our crisis ... The
population of metropolitan New Orleans is approximately 24 percent smaller ...

The Repopulation of New Orleans After Hurricane Katrina
K McCarthy, DJ Peterson, N Sastry, M Pollard - 2006 - stinet.dtic.mil
Accession Number : ADA449315. Title : The Repopulation of New Orleans After
Hurricane Katrina. Descriptive Note : Technical rept. ...

[CITATION] Mental Health and Recovery in the Gulf Coast After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita -
RH Weisler, JG Barbee IV, MH Townsend - JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 2006 - JAMA
... 6. Assessment of health-related needs after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: Orleans
and Jefferson Parishes, New Orleans area, Louisiana, October 17-22, 2005. ...

[CITATION] Administrative Breakdowns in the Governmental Response to Hurricane Katrina
SK Schneider - Public Administration Review, 2005 - Blackwell Synergy

Reconstruction of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina: A research perspective -
RW Kates, CE Colten, S Laska, SP Leatherman - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006 - National Acad Sciences
... PERSPECTIVE Reconstruction of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina: A research
perspective. ... New Orleans Flood and Hurricane History Before Katrina. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Study finds fecal microbes high in New Orleans sediments following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita

MBL, WOODS HOLE, MA—In a new study documenting the microbial landscape of New Orleans and Lake Pontchartrain in the wake of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, scientists report that sediments in interior portions of the city appear to be contaminated with fecal microbes, a chronic condition they say persisted in the area before the hurricanes, and that the resulting water quality in the city and in nearshore waters of the lake continues to be impacted by discharges from this contamination.

According to the study authors, including Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) Assistant Research Scientist, Dr. Linda Amaral Zettler, while floodwaters pumped from New Orleans back into Lake Ponchartrain following the Hurricanes showed higher-than-normal levels of bacteria and pathogens, fecal indicator microbe and pathogen concentrations in the lake returned to pre-hurricane levels within two months. However, the sediments left behind in the flooded regions of the city appear to contain microbes commonly found in sewage treatment and remain a cause for concern because they may serve as a potential source of ongoing microbial exposure.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The report, which appears this week's Online Early Edition of The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, maintains that further investigation is needed to evaluate the microbial quality of floodwater sediments deposited in the New Orleans area and highly recommends epidemiologic studies to determine whether there is an elevated risk of exposure to human pathogens through contact, ingestion, and inhalation of these sediments.

The study was a collaborative response of several institutions, including the Woods Hole Center for Oceans and Human Health, of which the MBL and Amaral Zettler are a part. The researchers began collecting water and sediment samples from the interior canals and shoreline of New Orleans and the offshore waters of Lake Pontchartrain in October 2005 after the floodwaters had receded. They examined the presence of a diverse group of microbes including fecal indicators E.coli and others,as well as human pathogenic bacteria Vibrio and Legionella.

Amaral Zettler and her colleagues at the MBL led the effort to analyze overall microbial diversity in the post-hurricane water and sediment samples using DNA sequencing technology. Through analyzing the DNA makeup of the microbes found, they were able to get a big picture view of the kinds of microbes in the environment and whether or not they were similar in makeup to known pathogens or to microbes typically found in sewage treatment.

Amaral Zettler points out the importance of knowing the microbial landscape of an area before a natural disaster hits. Some pathogens are endemic to the natural environment and some are introduced through sewage and run-off. Likewise, microbial communities are under the influence of seasonal variability in temperature and salinity that will naturally affect microbial population structure. "Our hope is that this data will provide some perspective not just on the immediate impact to the area, but the long term effects of this kind of natural disaster," says Amaral Zettler. "We certainly know a lot more now about the microbial diversity present in Pontchartrain than we did when we started the study."

According to Amaral Zettler, the Centers for Oceans and Human Health network enabled the team to mobilize quickly. The logistics of sampling were tremendous," she says. "Security was huge and the logistics of just getting around the city at that time were not trivial," she says. A collaborative grant from the National Science Foundation made it possible for the scientists to leverage their expertise and use their resources to contribute to a common goal. "We really felt that as centers we were serving a role. This research would have been next to impossible if we would have had to go it alone—a true example of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts."

###

This work was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Ocean and Human Health Program, and the NSF Small Grant for Exploratory Research Program, the NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates Program, and by the Georgia Sea Grant College Program.

Note to Editors: The paper entitled "Impacts of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on the Microbial Landscape of the New Orleans Area" will be published in the online Early Edition of The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences sometime during the week of April 30, 2007. For full text of the paper, media contact Gina Hebert, ghebert@mbl.edu.

The MBL® is a leading international, independent, nonprofit institution dedicated to discovery and to improving the human condition through creative research and education in the biological, biomedical and environmental sciences. Founded in 1888 as the Marine Biological Laboratory, the MBL is the oldest private marine laboratory in the Western Hemisphere. For more information, visit www.MBL.edu

 
 
 
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