University of Arizona Institute of the Environment Annual Report

Page 34

CAMPUS & COMMUNITY United UA Researchers Battle Germs to Improve Public Health You can’t see them, but they are there. Microbial pathogens—a fancy way of saying germs—lurk on everything from elevator buttons to salad bar tongs, often finding their way into an unsuspecting host and wreaking health havoc. To better prevent the diseases these bacteria and viruses cause, a collaborative team of researchers at the UA’s Environment, Exposure Science and Risk Assessment Center is integrating public health with environmental research to help businesses and communities assess where, when, and why people are likely to be exposed. “What we do as exposure scientists is take data and work with it to see how frequently people are exposed and the magnitude of those exposures,” said Kelly Reynolds, director of the center. “I think we’re going to continue to be seen as leaders in this field, especially now that we’re working as a united force.” Formed in 2013, the center provides a platform for UA researchers from different disciplines across campus to work together to address environmental public health issues. It is one of only a handful of such initiatives in the nation to specialize in exposure science, the study of human contact with harmful agents occurring in the environment.

“When we’re trying to identify a human health hazard that some people are exposed to, the environment for us becomes whatever relates to that source of exposure,” Reynolds said. “So, if it’s an airborne hazard we want to know what the air quality is like for the person in their workplace, their home, and outside.” One project is centered in Yuma, where 90 percent of the nation’s winter lettuce is harvested. In 2013, 94 people who had eaten shredded lettuce at a Mexican restaurant in Arizona became sick from E. coli bacteria. The outbreak underscored a lack of food safety policy on lettuce as a product and sparked a large collaborative effort to address the issue. Interdisciplinary departments on campus measured factors from the natural environment on lettuce, such as crop contamination from birds, deer, and moles that scurry through the fields. They also collected, analyzed, and calculated occupational safety factors, including pesticide exposure, microbial contaminants, outbreaks, and water quality from irrigation from the Colorado River that runs through the canals. The center is partially funded by the WEES initiative, which awarded Reynolds’ team more than $250,000 since the center’s initiation. Marc Verhougstraete, a postdoctoral research associate at the center, said the team quadrupled its primary funding and raised more than $1 million in grants in 2014–2015 by expanding Its collaborations from within the UA to external industry. “Having the WEES support for Marc’s position was instrumental in getting us organized, in being able to think about how we wanted the center to look, grow, and what the goals are for the future,” Reynolds said. “Having that support is really vital in launching these programs and goals that we have.” WWW.ENVIRONMENT.ARIZONA.EDU/NEWS/UNITED-UARESEARCHERS-BATTLE-GERMS-IMPROVE-PUBLIC-HEALTH

POST-DOC MARC VERHOUGSTEATE COUNTS BACTERIA FROM ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLES. EACH COLONY (COLORED SPOT ON THE PETRI DISH) REPRESENTS A UNIQUE SPECIES. PHOTO CREDIT: ENVIRONMENT, EXPOSURE SCIENCE AND RISK ASSESSMENT CENTER.

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PUBLICATIONS

7min
pages 43-46

AWARDS AND ACCOLADES

1min
page 41

NEW BUILDING, NEW LOOK

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page 40

IE STAFF

1min
page 42

BUILDING COMES ALIVE WITH INLAYS

2min
pages 38-39

CARSON SCHOLARS

7min
pages 27-30

HOOKED ON FISHING CAT CONSERVATION

2min
page 31

IN MEMORIAM: RAFE SAGARIN

1min
page 32

WELCOME TO THE UA’S NEW ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES 2 BUILDING

2min
pages 36-37

MEET MOLITA YAZZIE THE FIRST HAURY NATIVE AMERICAN/ FIRST NATIONS OXFORD SCHOLAR

1min
page 26

SUSTAINABLE SLUG IS ALL ABOUT FUN AND FUNCTIONALITY

2min
page 35

UNITED UA RESEARCHERS BATTLE GERMS TO IMPROVE PUBLIC HEALTH

2min
page 34

SEEKING SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS FOR SOCIETY

1min
page 33

FORMER PRESIDENT OF IRELAND URGES PEOPLE-CENTERED CLIMATE SOLUTIONS

2min
page 25

TRAINING A NEW KIND OF CLIMATE SCIENTIST

1min
page 20

STUDYING RESILIENCE IN SOUTHWESTERN FORESTS

2min
page 21

A FRAMEWORK FOR STEWARDSHIP: IDENTIFYING LANDS WITH HIGH CONSERVATION VALUES

2min
page 19

UA INVENTION SLOWS WATER EVAPORATION, GENERATES ENERGY

1min
page 18

UA-HAURY PARTNERSHIP FOCUSES ON ENVIRONMENT, SOCIETY, AND SOUTHWEST

1min
page 24

PLAYGROUND GAMES– NETWORKING FOR A MORE ENVIRONMENTALLY CONSCIOUS TUCSON

2min
page 23

NAVIGATING ROUGH WATER

2min
page 22

WEBSITE SHINES LIGHT ON RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES

2min
page 17

A SPLASH OF CLIMATE INFORMATION WITH THAT COFFEE

2min
page 12

HELPING VULNERABLE SOUTHWESTERN COMMUNITIES ADAPT TO CLIMATE CHANGE

2min
page 11

ASSESSING CLIMATE CHANGE RISK AND ADAPTABILITY ON DOD FACILITIES

2min
page 13

CLIMAS FELLOWS

2min
page 10

HELPING WESTERN CITIES BOUNCE BACK FROM CLIMATE EXTREMES

3min
page 16

UA POLL: ARIZONANS CONCERNED ABOUT GLOBAL WARMING

2min
page 15

TACKLING THE GROWING DROUGHT CHALLENGE IN THE SOUTHWEST AND BEYOND

1min
page 14

MINDING THE CLIMATE GAP

2min
page 9
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