Search results for "Crustacea"

showing 10 items of 244 documents

EctoparasiticArgulus coregoni(Crustacea: Branchiura) hedge their bets - studies on egg hatching dynamics

2004

Unpredictability in the temporal availability of susceptible hosts is likely to act as a selection pressure affecting the life history strategies of parasites. In highly variable environments the future of the lineage can be secured by spreading the risk, for example, by producing descendants that differ in their timing of emergence. Counter to this, in predictable environments a single “best-adapted” phenotype is expected. We asked whether ectoparasitic Argulus coregoni egg hatching pattern can be explained as a genetically canalized individual trait; an instance of phenotypic plasticity or bet-hedging. We collected egg clutches laid by individual A. coregoni females in early and late repr…

Phenotypic plasticityeducation.field_of_studybiologyCentropomidaeHatchingBranchiuraEcologyPopulationZoologybiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanLife history theoryembryonic structuresAdaptationeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOikos
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Sexual selection on male body size and assortative pairing in Gammarus pulex (Crustacea: Amphipoda): field surveys and laboratory experiments

2004

Variation in size-assortative pairing was studied in relation to sexual selection on male body size in the amphipod Gammarus pulex, using both transverse and longitudinal surveys of natural populations. In addition, the influence of male–male competition on size-assortative pairing was tested in the laboratory. In both surveys, the intensity of sexual selection was positive and significant for male body size but not for females, and size-assortative pairing was positive and significant. The magnitude of size-assortative pairing, however, varied significantly between populations. The magnitude of size-assortative pairing was positively correlated with the intensity of sexual selection on mal…

Physics::Physics and SocietyAmphipodabiologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyBody sizebiology.organism_classificationQuantitative Biology::OtherCrustaceanCompetition (biology)Gammarus pulexPulexSexual selectionPairingQuantitative Biology::Populations and EvolutionAnimal Science and ZoologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonJournal of Zoology
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Breaking the temperature-size rule: Thermal effects on growth, development and fecundity of a crustacean from temporary waters

2013

The temperature-size rule (TSR) is a well-established phenomenon to describe the growth response of ectotherms to temperature by which individuals maintained at low temperatures grow more slowly, but attain a larger size upon maturity. Although there are adaptive and non-adaptive theories about the plasticity of body size in response to temperature, these cannot be applied to all ectotherms, and little is known about the changes in growth and development rates through ontogeny. The ostracod species Heterocypris bosniaca, an inhabitant of freshwater temporary ponds, was used to examine the growth and development rates of its nine growth stages and female fecundity at four different temperatu…

PhysiologyEcologyOntogenyBiologybiology.organism_classificationFecundityBiochemistryCrustaceanBody TemperatureTemperature gradientFertilityCrustaceaOstracodEctothermAnimalsBody SizeInstarFemaleCarapaceGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesDevelopmental BiologyJournal of Thermal Biology
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Temperature adaptation influences the aggregation state of hemocyanin from Astacus leptodactylus.

2000

When Astacus leptodactylus were kept at various temperatures for several weeks, different ratios between di-hexameric and hexameric hemocyanins were observed in their hemolymph. The higher the temperature the more hexamers were present. This long-term adaptation to different temperatures or/and to temperature-induced pH-shifts as observed in the hemolymph has different effects on the expression of subunit types building up hexamers and those which covalently link two hexamers within the di-hexamers. The oxygen binding behaviour of di-hexameric hemocyanins from cold and warm adapted animals do not show differences with respect to affinity, Bohr effect and cooperativity.

PhysiologyEcologymedicine.medical_treatmentProtein subunitTemperatureCooperativityHemocyaninBohr effectmacromolecular substancesBiologyHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAstacus leptodactylusbiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryAdaptation PhysiologicalCrustaceaHemolymphHemocyaninsmedicineBiophysicsAnimalsElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelAdaptationMolecular BiologyOxygen bindingComparative biochemistry and physiology. Part A, Molecularintegrative physiology
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Origin of the natural variation in the storage of dietary carotenoids in freshwater amphipod crustaceans

2020

16 pages; International audience; Carotenoids are diverse lipophilic natural pigments which are stored in variable amounts by animals. Given the multiple biological functions of carotenoids, such variation may have strong implications in evolutionary biology. Crustaceans such as Gammarus amphipods store large amounts of these pigments and inter-population variation occurs. While differences in parasite selective pressure have been proposed to explain this variation, the contribution of other factors such as genetic differences in the gammarid ability to assimilate and/or store pigments, and the environmental availability of carotenoids cannot be dismissed. This study investigates the relati…

Pigments0106 biological sciencesSpeciationMarine and Aquatic SciencesFresh Water01 natural sciencesGammarusMedicine and Health SciencesNatural variabilityMaterialsCarotenoidchemistry.chemical_classificationEnzyme Precursors0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybiologyQREukaryotafood and beveragesCrustaceansPhysical SciencesMedicineCatechol OxidaseResearch ArticleFreshwater EnvironmentsEvolutionary ProcessesArthropodaScienceMaterials ScienceZoologyNatural variation010603 evolutionary biology03 medical and health sciencesRiversCryptic SpeciationGeneticsParasitic DiseasesAnimalsAmphipodaParasitesNutrition030304 developmental biologyEvolutionary BiologyOrganic PigmentsPopulation BiologyEcology and Environmental SciencesOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesAquatic EnvironmentsEnvironmental availabilityBodies of Waterbiology.organism_classificationCarotenoidsInvertebratesCrustaceanDiet[SDV.BA.ZI]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biology/Invertebrate ZoologychemistryFood supplementMicrosporidiaGammarus fossarumEarth SciencesGenetic PolymorphismPopulation GeneticsPLOS ONE
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Shipping noise affecting immune responses of European spiny lobster (Palinuruselephas)

2015

Marine crustaceans are influenced by numerous environmental factors. Environmental stress from pollutants seems to affect their metabolism, growth, moulting, survival, and immune defence. Recently, it has become clear that there is an impact of the global increase in sea noise levels due to shipping traffic on crustacean welfare. Considering the ecological and commercial importance of the European spiny lobster (Palinurus elephas (Fabricius, 1787)) in most parts of the Mediterranean coastal area, in the present study we investigated whether shipping noise pollution contribute to changing the immune parameters of stress in the European spiny lobster. The animals were exposed to a mix of nois…

Pollutantanimal structuresbiologyEcologyPalinurus elephafungiPalinurus elephasSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAquatic animalbiology.organism_classificationCrustaceanEuropean spiny lobsterImmune systemNoise pollutionPO activityAnimal Science and ZoologyHsp27Immune responseSpiny lobsterMoultingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsShellfishCanadian Journal of Zoology
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Changes in epizoic crustacean infestations during cetacean die-offs: the mass mortality of Mediterranean striped dolphins Stenella coeruleoalba revis…

2006

In the summer and autumn of 1990, a cetacean morbillivirus caused a massive epizootic mortality of striped dolphins Stenella coeruleoalba in the western Mediterranean. Previous circum- stantial evidence suggested that the disease could also have increased host susceptibility to infesta- tions with epizoic crustaceans. In this study we provide strong evidence supporting this hypothesis. We examined striped dolphins stranded along the Mediterranean central coast of Spain from 1981 to 2004 (n = 136), and recorded data on prevalence, intensity of infestation, size and reproductive status of 2 sessile crustacean species specific to cetaceans, the phoront cirriped Xenobalanus globicipitis and the…

PopulationCetaceaStenella coeruleoalbaEctoparasitic InfestationsAquatic ScienceSpecies SpecificityStenellabiology.animalCrustaceamedicineMediterranean SeaAnimalseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEpizooticeducation.field_of_studyAnalysis of VariancebiologyEcologyReproductionAge Factorsbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseCrustaceanPolychlorinated BiphenylsCetacean morbillivirusSpainPennella balaenopteraeDisease Susceptibilityhuman activitiesBiologieCopepodMorbillivirus InfectionsDiseases of aquatic organisms
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DNA taxonomy of the potamid freshwater crabs from Northern Africa (Decapoda, Potamidae)

2020

The Mediterranean area, from southern Balkans to western Maghreb, is inhabited by the Potamon subgenus Euthelphusa, with three currently recognised species. The Maghrebian species P. (E.) algeriense is isolated from other Potamon species by the Mediterranean Sea and the Sahara Desert, and nearly no molecular data are currently available for this taxon. Present study investigated the mtDNA and nuDNA diversity in Potamon algeriense s.l. with the aims of exploring its molecular diversity pattern throughout its known distribution range, and testing the possible presence of cryptic taxa currently lumped under this binomen. The phylogenetic and DNA taxonomy analyses showed the presence of two wel…

PotamidaeEuthelphusa Kabylian phylogeographic break Maghreb biogeography Potamon algeriensebiologyDecapodaSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaZoologybiology.organism_classificationDecapoda (Crustacea)Potamon algerienseMalacostracaGeneticsPotamonautidaeAnimal Science and ZoologyDna taxonomyMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZoologica Scripta
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Cadmium-binding proteins in midgut gland of freshwater crayfishProcambarus clarkii

1989

Metallothioneins, metal binding proteins, were originally isolated and characterized by Margoshes and Vallee. These proteins have a high affinity for various heavy metals, particularly cadmium and mercury and have extensively been studied in mammals. Metal binding proteins have been observed in a variety of marine invertebrates; however, there is very little information available on metal binding proteins in freshwater invertebrates, and particularly in freshwater crustaceans. Cadmium is an ubiquitous non essential element which possesses high toxicity to aquatic organisms. Cadmium binding proteins observed in invertebrates have similar characteristics to mammalian metallothioneins. In 1978…

Procambarus clarkiiCadmiumbiologyDecapodaHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesischemistry.chemical_elementAstacoideaGeneral MedicineMarine invertebratesToxicologybiology.organism_classificationCrayfishPollutionCrustaceanchemistryEnvironmental chemistryAnimalsMetallothioneinEcotoxicologyMetallothioneinSpectrophotometry UltravioletChromatography LiquidBulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
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Comparison of Two Chemicals for Removing an Entocytherid (Ostracoda: Crustacea) Species from Its Host Crayfish (Cambaridae: Crustacea)

2011

Entocytherids are epifauna on larger crustaceans. We assessed the effectiveness of chlorobutanol and carbonated water for removing entocytherid, Ankylocythere sinuosa, from crayfish, Procambarus clarkii. This was done using different exposure times and by assessing entocytherid and crayfish survival, together with the number of entocytherids removed. According to our results, chlorobutanol submersion of crayfishes in shorter time periods is more effective for removing entocytherids without killing the crayfish host. However, carbonated water submersion is better to extract larger amounts of living entocytherids. Finally, both chemicals are appropriate tools to establish standardised protoco…

Procambarus clarkiibiologyHost (biology)ChlorobutanolAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationCrayfishCrustaceanCambaridaeSubmersion (mathematics)Fisherychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryAnkylocythere sinuosaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternational Review of Hydrobiology
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