Search results for "Aquatic animal"

showing 10 items of 96 documents

The structure of parasite component communities in brackish water fishes of the northeastern Baltic Sea

2001

We used nestedness analysis to seek non-random patterns in the structure of component communities of metazoan parasites collected from 31 sympatric fish species from the northeastern Bothnian Bay, the most oligohaline area of the Baltic Sea. Only 8 marine parasite species were found among the 63 species recorded, although some marine fish species reproduce in the bay and others occasionally visit the area. Marine parasite species can utilize both freshwater and marine fish species as intermediate or final hosts, and marine fish can harbour freshwater parasite species. This exchange of parasite species between marine and freshwater fish has probably resulted from ecological factors acting ov…

Oceans and SeasGeneralist and specialist speciesHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesCrustaceaHelminthsLeechesAnimalsParasitesSeawaterMolluscaEcosystembiologyEcologyFishesAquatic animalbiology.organism_classificationInfectious DiseasesMolluscaSympatric speciationFreshwater fishNestednessAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologySpecies richnessHelminthiasis AnimalBayParasitology
researchProduct

Metallothionein in the freshwater gastropod Melanopsis dufouri chronically exposed to cadmium: A methodological approach

2010

Previous studies have demonstrated that the use of differential pulse polarography (DPP) for metallothionein (MT) determination in marine gastropod tissues, particularly the digestive gland, requires taking into account the presence of heat-stable high molecular weight compounds that exhibit polarographic signal. In the present paper, similar compounds were identified in tissues from the freshwater snail Melanopsis dufouri which also interfere with MT determination by DPP and, due to their silver binding capacity, also interfere in the silver assay for MT quantification. Ultrafiltration seems to be effective in removing these high molecular weight compounds from heat-denatured homogenate su…

Health Toxicology and MutagenesisSnailsMelanopsischemistry.chemical_elementChemicalFreshwater snailAquatic organismsWater pollutantsMetallothioneinAnimalsChronicToxicity Tests ChronicCadmiumbiologyWater pollutantsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAquatic animalGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPollutionUltrafiltration (renal)BiochemistrychemistryEnvironmental chemistryMetallothioneinToxicity testsWater Pollutants ChemicalCadmium
researchProduct

Factors affecting between-lake variation in the occurrence of epidermal papillomatosis in roach,Rutilus rutilus(L.)

2009

The theory of island biogeography predicts that the probability of a species occupying an island depends on a dynamic equilibrium between extinction and colonization. Epidermal papillomatosis is a disease manifesting as skin tumours on fish. We studied the factors affecting the occurrence of the disease in roach, Rutilus rutilus (L.), in 34 lakes. The results of discrimination analysis suggest that maximum depth, percentage of the drainage area of the lake covered by lakes in the vicinity and altitude best identified diseased lakes. Comparison of diseased and non-diseased lakes revealed that lake area could also be regarded as a variable contributing to the occurrence of the disease. The sa…

MaleInsular biogeographyVeterinary (miscellaneous)BiogeographyCyprinidaeDrainage basinFresh WaterAquatic ScienceFish DiseasesAltitudeRisk Factorsparasitic diseasesAnimalsColonizationAnalysis of Variancegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryExtinctionPapillomabiologyEcologyDiscriminant AnalysisAquatic animalbiology.organism_classificationSkin Diseases ViralFemaleRutilusJournal of Fish Diseases
researchProduct

The influence of environmental factors on abundance and prevalence of a commensal ostracod hosted by an invasive crayfish: are ‘parasite rules’ relev…

2014

Summary Symbiosis represents a widespread and successful lifestyle, but research on symbiotic associations has been mainly focused on parasites. Three general patterns in parasite ecology have been proposed: (i) aggregation, (ii) positive and tight correlation between mean symbiont abundance and its variance and (iii) positive correlation between abundance and prevalence of symbionts. The factors affecting abundance and prevalence within symbiont species can be grouped into host features and environmental conditions. According to research in parasite ecology, environmental conditions seem to play a minor role. We investigated whether the three most recognised parasite patterns were also evi…

Procambarus clarkiieducation.field_of_studybiologyHost (biology)EcologyPopulationAquatic animalAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationCrayfishSymbiosisAbundance (ecology)OstracodeducationFreshwater Biology
researchProduct

A mechanistic approach reveals non linear effects of climate warming on mussels throughout the Mediterranean sea

2016

There is a dire need to forecast the ecological impacts of global climate change at scales relevant to policy and management. We used three interconnected models (climatic, biophysical and energetics) to estimate changes in growth, reproduction and mortality risk by 2050, for three commercially and ecologically important bivalves at 51 sites in the Mediterranean Sea. These results predict highly variable responses (both positive and negative) in the time to reproductive maturity and in the risk of lethality among species and sites that do not conform to simple latitudinal gradients, and which would be undetectable by methods focused only on lethal limits and/or range boundaries.

0106 biological sciencesAtmospheric ScienceGlobal and Planetary ChangeRange (biology)Ecology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyGlobal warmingEnergeticsClimate changeAquatic animal010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAquatic organismsMediterranean seaEnvironmental scienceClimatic Change
researchProduct

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)
researchProduct

Effects of sublethal exposure to lead on levels of energetic compounds in Procambarus clarkii (Girard, 1852).

1994

Lead is neither essential nor beneficial to living organisms; all existing data show that its metabolic effects are adverse. Lead is toxic to all phyla of aquatic biota. Most of the lead discharged into surface water is rapidly incorporated into suspended and bottom sediments. The American red crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, lives in a wide range of environmental conditions that include highly polluted waters. Lead present in take sediments can be available to aquatic animals such as P. clarkii because it is a detritivor and burrow into the sediment. In fact, we found remarkable levels of lead in tissues of P. clarkii caught in Albufera Lake and kept 15 days in clean water (e. g. 223 [mu]g/g…

GillGillsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAstacoideaToxicologyEcotoxicologyAnimalsPancreasHeavy metal detoxificationProcambarus clarkiibiologyEcologyDecapodaAquatic animalGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationCrayfishLipid MetabolismPollutionLeadLiverEnvironmental chemistryHepatopancreasEnergy MetabolismGlycogenWater Pollutants ChemicalBulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology
researchProduct

Chironomus riparius exposure to fullerene-contaminated sediment results in oxidative stress and may impact life cycle parameters

2015

A key component of understanding the potential environmental risks of fullerenes (C60) is their potential effects on benthic invertebrates. Using the sediment dwelling invertebrate Chironomus riparius we explored the effects of acute (12 h and 24 h) and chronic (10 d, 15 d, and 28 d) exposures of sediment associated fullerenes. The aims of this study were to assess the impact of exposure to C60 in the sediment top layer ((0.025, 0.18 and 0.48) C60 mg/cm2) on larval growth, oxidative stress and emergence rates and to quantify larval body burdens in similarly exposed organisms. Oxidative stress localization was observed in the tissues next to the microvilli and exoskeleton through a method fo…

Environmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesisved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesta1172010501 environmental sciencesBiologymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencescarbon nanoparticleChironomidaeArticleecotoxicologyLipid dropletmedicineAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistryEcotoxicologyWaste Management and Disposalta2180105 earth and related environmental sciencesChironomus ripariuschemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesved/biologyEcologySedimentAquatic animalInvertebratesPollutionOxidative StresschemistryBenthic zoneLarvaEnvironmental chemistryFullerenesOxidative stressJournal of Hazardous Materials
researchProduct

Development and habitat selection of a new sanguinicolid parasite of cultured greater amberjack, Seriola dumerili, in the Mediterranean

2009

Abstract This study presents a description of the developmental stages of a new sanguinicolid disease agent (Paradeontacylix ibericus) of cultured Seriola dumerili (greater amberjack) in the Mediterranean, and investigates parasite habitat selection in the definitive host and the development of sanguinicolidosis in experimental, inshore cultures of S. dumerili . Two experimental surveys were carried out using fish captured as wild 0+ juveniles in the aquaculture facilities at Puerto de Mazarron (Spain). Encysted, early post-cercarial stages (schistosomula) were detected in histological sections of the pelvic and thoracic muscles of fish and four subsequent stages of parasite development wer…

biologyEcologybusiness.industryZoologyAquatic animalAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationSeriola dumeriliAquacultureCarangidaeParasite hostingJuvenileHelminthsAmberjackbusinessAquaculture
researchProduct

Concentrations of Organochlorine Substances in Relation to Fish Size and Trophic Position:  A Study on Perch (Perca fluviatilis L.)

2000

The aim of this study was to evaluate the importance of trophic position as a determinant of the concentrations of organochlorine substances (OCS) in fish. Perch (Perca fluvatilis) was selected since the species increases in trophic level over the course of its lifetime. The trophic position was characterized by stable isotope analysis of nitrogen and gut content. Perch (130 individuals) of different lengths and of both sexes were analyzed for polychlorinated biphenyls and chlorinated pesticides. There were no pronounced differences in the OCS concentrations between the perch sexes. Perch up to a length of 20 cm did not show any increase in OCS concentrations with increased length, despite …

PerchbiologyEcologyZoologyAquatic animalGeneral ChemistryPesticidebiology.organism_classificationPercidaemental disordersEnvironmental ChemistryFish <Actinopterygii>Isotope analysisA determinantTrophic levelEnvironmental Science &amp; Technology
researchProduct