Search results for "Environmental stre"

showing 10 items of 56 documents

Stock-specific variation of trophic position, diet and environmental stress markers in Atlantic salmon Salmo salar during feeding migrations in the B…

2012

This study investigated stock-specific variation in selected ecophysiological variables during the feeding migrations of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar in the Baltic Sea. Oxidative stress biomarkers and EROD (ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase, Cyp1A enzyme) activity were used as indicators of possible environmental stress and stable isotopes as determinants of diet and trophic position. Latvian S. salar stocks Daugava and Gauja had distinct stable-isotope signatures compared to the other stocks, indicating differences in migration patterns, residency or arrival times, or dietary specialization among stocks. Salmo salar originating from Daugava and Gauja also had lower catalase enzyme activity than …

MaleForagingSalmo salarAquatic ScienceBiologyEnvironmentEnvironmental stressPredationCytochrome P-450 CYP1A1AnimalsSalmoEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsStock (geology)Trophic levelCarbon IsotopesNitrogen IsotopesEcologySequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationGlutathioneDietOxidative StressBaltic seaAnimal MigrationFemaleLipid PeroxidationBayBiomarkersMicrosatellite RepeatsJournal of fish biology
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Stress Response in Marine Sponges: Genes and Molecules Involved and Their use as Biomarkers

2000

Sponges (Porifera) are sessile filter feeders that are able to accumulate compounds from the surrounding water and thus are highly exposed to environmental stress by pollutants of both anthropogenic and natural origin. However, these animals possess a number of protective mechanisms against environmental stress, such as the expression of heat-shock proteins, the induction of the multi xenobiotic resistance mechanism, and the apoptotic elimination of cells. In the last years, a number of genes involved in the stress response of sponges have been cloned and characterized. In thischapter, the various molecular mechanisms by which cells of the lowest multicellular organisms—the marine sponges—r…

Marine spongesFight-or-flight responsePollutantchemistry.chemical_compoundMulticellular organismchemistryEcologyMechanism (biology)BiologyXenobioticEnvironmental stressGeneCell biology
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A Grain-Scale Model of Inter-Granular Stress Corrosion Cracking in Polycrystals

2017

In this contribution, we propose a cohesive grain-boundary model for hydrogen-assisted inter-granular stress corrosion cracking at the grain-scale in 3D polycrystalline aggregates. The inter-granular strength is degraded by the presence of hydrogen and this is accounted for by employing traction-separation laws directly depending on hydrogen concentration, whose diffusion is represented at this stage through simplified phenomenological relationships. The main feature of the model is that all the relevant mechanical fields are represented in terms of grain-boundary variables only, which couples particularly well with the employment of traction-separation laws.

Materials scienceMechanical EngineeringMetallurgyMicromechanicsStress corrosion cracking02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesStrength of materials010101 applied mathematics020303 mechanical engineering & transportsPolycrystalline material0203 mechanical engineeringMechanics of MaterialsBoundary element methodMechanics of MaterialGeneral Materials ScienceMaterials Science (all)0101 mathematicsStress corrosion crackingComposite materialCohesive zone modelingMicromechanicScale modelBoundary element methodEnvironmental stress fractureKey Engineering Materials
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Idiopathic Environmental Intolerance: A Comprehensive Model

2017

Idiopathic environmental intolerance refers to a group of poorly understood health conditions characterized by heterogeneous somatic symptoms that occur in response to environmental triggers, but for which no physiological causes can be found. We focus on three varieties, namely symptoms attributed to (a) chemical substances, (b) electromagnetic fields, and (c) infrasound and vibroacoustic sources. As no clear link with organ pathology or dysfunction has been established so far, we review critical evidence about alternative causal mechanisms as a platform for a novel unifying model of these conditions. There is consistent evidence that expectancy and nocebo mechanisms are critically involve…

Nocebobusiness.industryEnvironmental Intolerancemedicine.diseaseIdiopathic environmental intoleranceEnvironmental stressDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesClinical Psychology0302 clinical medicineMedicine030212 general & internal medicinebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMultiple chemical sensitivityClinical psychologyClinical Psychological Science
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From foes to friends: Viral infections expand the limits of host phenotypic plasticity

2020

Phenotypic plasticity enables organisms to survive in the face of unpredictable environmental stress. Intimately related to the notion of phenotypic plasticity is the concept of the reaction norm that places phenotypic plasticity in the context of a genotype-specific response to environmental gradients. Whether reaction norms themselves evolve and which factors might affect their shape has been the object of intense debates among evolutionary biologists along the years. Since their discovery, viruses have been considered as pathogens. However, new viromic techniques and a shift in conceptual paradigms are showing that viruses are mostly non-pathogenic ubiquitous entities. Recent studies hav…

Phenotypic plasticityHuman evolutionary geneticsBiologyEnvironmental stressAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionEvolutionary biologyVirus DiseasesViral evolutionVirusesAnimalsHumansNorm (social)Evolutionary dynamicsPhysiological HomeostasisVirus Physiological Phenomena
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Physiological,anatomical and biomass partitioning responses to ozone in the Mediterranean endemic plant Lamottea dianae

2011

Ozone effects on the perennial forb Lamottea dianae were studied in an open-top chamber experiment. Ozone was found to induce reductions in CO 2 assimilation and water use efficiency in the leaves of this species. These reductions were mainly related to a decline in the in vivo CO 2 fixation capacity of Rubisco (V c,max), rather than to stomatal limitations or photoinhibitory damage (F v:F m). In addition to chloroplast degeneration, other observed effects were callose accumulation, formation of pectinaceous wart-like cell wall exudates and phloem alterations. Moreover, ozone exposure significantly reduced root dry biomass. The possible relevance of these adverse effects for Mediterranean f…

Plant water useChlorophyllPhotoinhibitionEndemic plantsRubiscoSouthern EuropeChloroplastsPerennial plantPhysiological processHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisEnvironmental stressAsteraceaeEnvironmental protectionPlant RootsEnvironmental impactchemistry.chemical_compoundAnatomical variationIn vivo studyPhysiological responseBiomassPhotosynthesisBiomass partitioningBIOLOGIA VEGETALfood and beveragesGeneral MedicinePollutionPollenBiomass partitioningAnatomyStomatal conductanceCarbon dioxide fixationBOTANICAStomatal conductanceBiologyPhloemPhotosynthesisArticleAdverse outcomeOzoneLamottea dianaeBiomass allocationBotanyPhotoinhibitionSpecies conservationCalloseRuBisCOPlant damagePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthWater use efficiencyPlant exudatePlantNonhumanPlant LeaveschemistryCarbon dioxideOxidative stressSpainbiology.proteinDegenerationPhloemEndemic speciesRisk factorControlled study
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Dynamic Animal Populations in Managed Forests: Species Ecological Requirements and Sustainable Harvesting

2015

Forest management has altered forested environments and provoked stress to many natural habitats and biodiversity. The goal of biodiversity management is the long-term persistence of populations in human-modified environments. We demonstrate a spatio-temporal modeling approach to address the relationship between various management objectives and population persistence in the long-term in a commercial forest landscape. We used the flying squirrel (Pteromys volans), the three-toed woodpecker (Picoides tridactylus) and the long-tailed tit (Aegithalos caudatus) as example species. They are all forest species but they have distinctly different habitat requirements. In the model, forest growth, f…

PopulationForest managementBiodiversityBiologyforest clearanceForest restorationForest ecologypopulation dynamicseducationIntact forest landscapepasserineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationbiodiversityeducation.field_of_studygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorymodelEcologyEcologyAgroforestryhabitat availabilityrodentpersistenceharvestingOld-growth forestanimal communitynature-society relationsenvironmental stressSecondary forestta1181Animal Science and ZoologyAnnales Zoologici Fennici
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Establishing mussel behaviour as a monitoring tool to measure climatic disturbances

2021

Freshwater mussels (FM) are suitable biological indicators to assess environmental stressors. Behaviour is a good parameter to measure rapid mussel’s responses. In this sense, valvometric method, that exploits the Hall sensor (real-time remote monitoring tool), has been used to measure the behavioural responses of mussels (valve opening amplitude and valve opening-closure frequency). During the last two decades, these methodologies have been used to measure the presence of the pollutants in the waterbodies. However, studies that focus on physical disturbances in the environment related to climate changes are lacking. Since future climatic scenarios in Europe predict an increase in temperatu…

Riverbiological sensormusselfloodvalve gappingenvironmental stressors
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INVESTIGATION ON THE GENETIC BASIS OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS IN FRUIT TREE CROPS

2021

Plant stress can be divided into two major categories: abiotic stress and biotic stress. Abiotic stress happens when plants are exposed to the environment either physically or chemically. There is an emergency in developing crop varieties that are tolerant to abiotic stresses to ensure food security and safety in the coming years. Multiple abiotic stress like drought, heat, frost at flowering and nutrient deficiency can cause an erratic fruiting behavior or following extreme events, the death of the plants. Plants require an optimal level of nutrients and essential minerals for their growth and development that are mainly acquired from soil by their roots. Nutrient deficiency is an environm…

Settore AGR/07 - Genetica AgrariaFruit Tree Crops Bioinformatics Genetics Abiotic Stress Environmental Stress
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Thermal adaptation and physiological responses to environmental stress in tunicates

2017

Understanding the multifaceted nature of environmental fluctuations is crucial to predicting the physiological adjustments utilised by organisms in resisting or adapting to changes over time. Here we investigate the effects of 2 environmental stressors on tunicates, whose fitness can have important repercussions on the quality of habitat. Specifically, we report respiration rate (RR), clearance rate (CR), and assimilation efficiency (AE) of the ascidian Styela plicata in response to a range of temperatures and varying food availability. Temperature-dependent RR was observed only within a portion of the thermal window of the species. Significant differences in clearance rates were detected a…

Settore BIO/07 - Ecologia0106 biological sciencesEcophysiologyEcologyQH301-705.5Ecology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyClearance rate Ecophysiology Thermal tolerance Trade-offAquatic ScienceBiologyOceanographyMicrobiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesEnvironmental stressQR1-502Physiological responsesBiology (General)AdaptationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAquatic Biology
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