Search results for "ABIOTIC"

showing 10 items of 201 documents

Simultaneous determination of traditional and emerging illicit drugs in sediments, sludges and particulate matter

2015

An analytical method for determining traditional and emerging drugs of abuse in particulate matter, sewage sludge and sediment has been developed and validated. A total of 41 drugs of abuse and metabolites including cocainics, tryptamines, amphetamines, arylcyclohexylamines, cathinones, morphine derivatives, pyrrolidifenones derivatives, entactogens, piperazines and other psychostimulants were selected. Samples were ultrasound extracted with McIlvaine buffer and methanol, and the extracts were cleaned up by solid phase extraction (SPE) using Strata-X cartridges. Drugs were eluted using methanol and methanol-dichloromethane and determined by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Th…

Drugs of abuseTandem mass spectrometryLiquid chromatographyDimethyltryptamineBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryDesigner Drugschemistry.chemical_compoundCocaethyleneLiquid chromatography–mass spectrometrymedicineSolid phase extractionEphedrineSolid-phase extractionChromatographySewageIllicit DrugsOrganic ChemistryExtraction (chemistry)Solid Phase ExtractionGeneral MedicinechemistryBenzoylecgonineUltrasound assisted extractionParticulate MatterAbiotic environmental samplesEcgoninemedicine.drugChromatography LiquidJournal of chromatography A 1405: 103-115 (2015)
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Invasion biology in non‐free‐living species: interactions between abiotic (climatic) and biotic (host availability) factors in geographical space in …

2013

In invasion processes, both abiotic and biotic factors are considered essential, but the latter are usually disregarded when modeling the potential spread of exotic species. In the framework of set theory, interactions between biotic (B), abiotic (A), and movement-related (M) factors in the geographical space can be hypothesized with BAM diagrams and tested using ecological niche models (ENMs) to estimate A and B areas. The main aim of our survey was to evaluate the interactions between abiotic (climatic) and biotic (host availability) factors in geographical space for exotic symbionts (i.e., non-free-living species), using ENM techniques combined with a BAM framework and using exotic Entoc…

Ecological nicheAbiotic componentBiotic componentEcologybiologyEcologyRange (biology)ecological niche modelsIntroduced speciesbiological invasions; BAM diagrams; ecological niche models; host availability.biology.organism_classificationCrayfishPacifastacusInvasive speciesBiological invasionsBAM diagramshost availabilityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOriginal ResearchNature and Landscape ConservationEcology and Evolution
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The Ecology of Ostracoda Across Levels of Biological Organisation from Individual to Ecosystem

2012

Abstract Palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic applications of fossil ostracods rely on a uniformitarian approach underpinned by knowledge of the biology and ecology of living species. This review reveals that in recent decades, major advances have been made in the understanding of species’ abiotic niches in relation to their preferences for different water chemistries and temperatures. However, the underlying ecophysiological mechanisms for such preferences are still largely unknown. Only a few works analyse in detail aspects of population growth or species interactions (competition, predation) in the framework of classical ecological theories. Similarly, the role of Ostracoda in the asse…

Ecological nicheAbiotic componentEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEcology (disciplines)EcosystemEcological successionPopulation ecologyBiologyBiological organisationCompetition (biology)media_common
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Data for: Evaluating anthropogenic impacts on naturally stressed ecosystems: revisiting river classifications and biomonitoring metrics along salinit…

2018

Data and R-code to run statistical analysis (Appendix E) THIS DATASET IS ARCHIVED AT DANS/EASY, BUT NOT ACCESSIBLE HERE. TO VIEW A LIST OF FILES AND ACCESS THE FILES IN THIS DATASET CLICK ON THE DOI-LINK ABOVE

EcologyFOS: Biological sciencesBiomonitoringAbiotic StressOtherGlobal ChangeInterdisciplinary sciencesFreshwater BiologyEntomology
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Effects of temporal abiotic drivers on the dynamics of an allometric trophic network model

2023

Current ecological research and ecosystem management call for improved understanding of the abiotic drivers of community dynamics, including temperature effects on species interactions and biomass accumulation. Allometric trophic network (ATN) models, which simulate material (carbon) transfer in trophic networks from producers to consumers based on mass-specific metabolic rates, provide an attractive framework to study consumer–resource interactions from organisms to ecosystems. However, the developed ATN models rarely consider temporal changes in some key abiotic drivers that affect, for example, consumer metabolism and producer growth. Here, we evaluate how temporal changes in carrying ca…

Ecologyfood webseasonalitykausivaihteluteliöyhteisötjärvetabiotic forcingabioottiset tekijätLake Constancelämpötilabiomassa (ekologia)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsravintoverkotNature and Landscape Conservationbiomass dynamicstrophic interactions
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Environmentally driven changes in Baltic salmon oxidative status during marine migration.

2020

The fitness and recruitment of fish stocks can be markedly affected by environmental disturbances including global warming, eutrophication and contamination. Understanding the effects of environmental stressors on salmon physiology during marine residence is of a global concern as marine survival has decreased. We present a unique combination of physiological responses - antioxidant defence and oxidative damage biomarkers, stable isotopes and contaminant exposure biomarkers - measured from adult Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) collected at the Baltic Sea and studied in relation to environmental variables and fitness estimates. The results demonstrate that feeding populations of salmon display…

EcophysiologyBaltic StatesEnvironmental EngineeringAntioxidant010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesBaltic Seaecophysiologymedicine.medical_treatmentSalmo salarZoologylohi010501 environmental sciencesekofysiologia01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineEnvironmental ChemistryAnimals14. Life underwaterSalmoWaste Management and Disposaloksidatiivinen stressi0105 earth and related environmental sciencesYolk SacAbiotic componentvaelluskalatbiologyoxidative statussalmonδ15NGlutathionebiology.organism_classificationPollutionIndirect effectenvironmental stressOxidative Stresschemistrymarine migration13. Climate actionCatalaseItämeribiology.proteinLipid PeroxidationympäristönmuutoksetThe Science of the total environment
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Low-altitude outbreaks of human fascioliasis related with summer rainfall in Gilan province, Iran

2011

Following human fascioliasis outbreaks in 1988 and 1999 in Gilan province, northern Iran, efforts are now made to shed light on the seasonal pattern of fascioliasis transmission in this endemic area, taking into account snail host populations, climatic conditions and human cases. Populations of the intermediate host snail (Lymnaea spp.) peak in May and November, while there is a fourfold increase in the rate of human fascioliasis in February compared to that of September. Transmission is likely to occur mainly in late autumn and sporadically in late spring. Rainfall, seasonally analysed in periods of 3 years, indicates that accumulated summer rainfall may be related with the 1988 and 1999 h…

FascioliasisHealth (social science)RainGeography Planning and Developmentlcsh:G1-922Medicine (miscellaneous)Climate changeDisease VectorsIranDisease Outbreakslaw.inventionEffects of global warminglawAnimalsHumansfascioliasis human outbreak summer rainfall Iran.LymnaeaAbiotic componentBiotic componentEcologyHealth PolicyIntermediate hostOutbreakTransmission (mechanics)GeographyHuman fascioliasisSeasonslcsh:Geography (General)Geospatial health
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Shifts in macroalgal communities in relation to some abiotic factors: a functional group approach

2007

The aim of the present study was to test whether the functional group approach is effective in describing changes in community structure, resulting from exposure to different substratum inclination and levels of organic pollution. The results of this study suggest that the functional group approach could detect changes in community structure as response to some abiotic factors. However, since species response is not always a functional group response, this method is difficult to generalize and a better definition of the functional group model is required.

Functional groups community structure abiotic factors
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Stress responses in citrus peel: Comparative analysis of host responses to Huanglongbing disease and puffing disorder

2015

Abstract A comparison between transcriptomic responses to puffing disorder and Huanglongbing disease was conducted to decipher differences and similarities in gene and pathway regulation induced by abiotic (puffing) and biotic stresses (Huanglongbing) in citrus peel tissues. We functionally analyzed two previously published datasets: the first obtained for the study of puffing disorder using an Affymetrix citrus microarray and the second consisting of a deep sequencing analysis of symptomatic responses to Huanglongbing disease. Transcriptomic data were mined using bioinformatic tools to highlight genes and pathways playing a key role in modulating responses to different types of stress in c…

GeneticsMicroarrayStreAbiotic stressCitrufood and beveragesHuanglongbingHorticultureBiotic stressBiologyPuffingDeep sequencingTranscriptomeBiochemistryFruitSettore AGR/07 - Genetica AgrariaHeat shock proteinTranscriptomicsSecondary metabolismGeneScientia Horticulturae
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Aquatic pollution may favor the success of the invasive species A. franciscana

2015

The genus Artemia consists of several bisexual and parthenogenetic sibling species. One of them, A. franciscana, originally restricted to the New World, becomes invasive when introduced into ecosystems out of its natural range of distribution. Invasiveness is anthropically favored by the use of cryptobiotic eggs in the aquaculture and pet trade. The mechanisms of out-competition of the autochthonous Artemia by the invader are still poorly understood. Ecological fitness may play a pivotal role, but other underlying biotic and abiotic factors may contribute. Since the presence of toxicants in hypersaline aquatic ecosystems has been documented, our aim here is to study the potential role of an…

Health Toxicology and Mutagenesismedia_common.quotation_subjectDrug ResistanceAquatic ScienceBiologyCompetition (biology)Invasive specieschemistry.chemical_compoundSpecies SpecificityInvasionLife tablesAnimalsmedia_commonAbiotic componentResistance (ecology)ToxicityEcologyAquatic animalFecunditychemistryChlorpyrifosAChEChlorpyrifosArtemiaIntroduced SpeciesWater Pollutants ChemicalToxicantAquatic toxicology 161: 208-220 (2015)
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