Search results for "Vertebrates"

showing 10 items of 440 documents

Dental disease and dietary isotopes of individuals from St Gertrude Church cemetery, Riga, Latvia.

2018

This research explores oral health indicators and stable carbon and nitrogen isotope data to explore diet, and differences in diet, between people buried in the four different contexts of the St Gertrude Church cemetery (15th– 17th centuries AD): the general cemetery, two mass graves, and a collective mass burial pit within the general cemetery. The main aim is to assess whether people buried in the mass graves were rural immigrants, or if they were more likely to be the victims of plague (or another epidemic) who lived in Riga and its suburbs. The data produced (from dental disease assessments and isotope analyses) were compared within, as well as between, the contexts. Most differences em…

Bacterial DiseasesTeethPhysiologyImmigrationDigestive PhysiologyPrevalencelcsh:MedicineMarine and Aquatic SciencesOral DiseasesCariesMedicine and Health Sciences0601 history and archaeologyCemeteriesMarine Fishlcsh:Sciencemedia_commonCarbon IsotopesMultidisciplinaryCalculus060102 archaeologyStomatognathic DiseasesMarine fishEukaryota06 humanities and the artsGeographyInfectious DiseasesPhysical SciencesVertebratesAnatomyResearch Articlemedia_common.quotation_subjectOral MedicineMarine BiologyOral healthPlague (disease)Research and Analysis MethodsOral and maxillofacial pathologymedicineHumansAnimalsDentitionChemical CharacterizationPeriodontal DiseasesNutritionIsotope Analysis060101 anthropologyNitrogen Isotopeslcsh:ROrganismsBiology and Life Sciencesmedicine.diseaseLatviaDietFishJawEarth Scienceslcsh:QRural areaDigestive SystemHeadMathematicsDemographyPloS one
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Bioaccumulation of hepatotoxins : A considerable risk in the Latvian environment

2014

Abstract The Gulf of Riga, river Daugava and several interconnected lakes around the City of Riga, Latvia, form a dynamic brackish-freshwater system favouring occurrence of toxic cyanobacteria. We examined bioaccumulation of microcystins and nodularin-R in aquatic organisms in Latvian lakes, the Gulf of Riga and west coast of open Baltic Sea in 2002–2007. The freshwater unionids accumulated toxins efficiently, followed by snails. In contrast, Dreissena polymorpha and most lake fishes (except roach) accumulated much less hepatotoxins. Significant nodularin-R concentrations were detected also in marine clams and flounders. No transfer of nodularin-R and microcystins between lake and brackish …

Baltic StatesCyanobacteriatoksiinitHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesishealth risksFresh WaterFlounderToxicologyWater columnWater Pollutantsta116riskitkalatbiologyEcologyFishesHepatotoxinGeneral Medicineta3142selkärangattomatPollutionRiianlahtibioaccumulationBioaccumulationmaksamyrkytEnvironmental MonitoringmyrkytMicrocystinsOceans and SeasBacterial Toxinsta1172hepatotoxinsCyanobacteriaPeptides CyclicDreissenaAquatic organismsAnimalsInvertebratefishBrackish waterbiology.organism_classificationinvertebratessimpukatLatviaBivalviaFisheryLakesItämerikertyminenEnvironmental scienceterveysriskitEnvironmental Pollution
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Complementary methods assessing short and long-term prey of a marine top predator ‒ Application to the grey seal-fishery conflict in the Baltic Sea.

2019

The growing grey seal (Halichoerus grypus) population in the Baltic Sea has created conflicts with local fisheries, comparable to similar emerging problems worldwide. Adequate information on the foraging habits is a requirement for responsible management of the seal population. We investigated the applicability of available dietary assessment methods by comparing morphological analysis and DNA metabarcoding of gut contents (short-term diet; n = 129/125 seals, respectively), and tissue chemical markers i.e. fatty acid (FA) profiles of blubber and stable isotopes (SIs) of liver and muscle (mid- or long-term diet; n = 108 seals for the FA and SI markers). The methods provided complementary inf…

Baltic StatespredatorsMolecular biologyTroutSeals EarlessMarine and Aquatic SciencesPredationSocial Sciencespredator populationMolecular biology assays and analysis techniquesFATTY-ACID-COMPOSITIONDIET COMPOSITIONPsychologyForagingpetokannatMammalssaaliseläimetSealsEcologyAnimal BehaviorNucleic acid analysisDatabase and informatics methodsFatty AcidsQSequence analysisREukaryotaTrophic InteractionsCommunity EcologyOsteichthyesVertebrates1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyMedicinepreyHALICHOERUS-GRYPUSDNA analysisFOOD-WEBResearch Articlegrey sealBioinformaticsECOLOGICAL REGIME SHIFTSScienceFisheriesMarine BiologyPHOCA-HISPIDA-BOTNICAfisherypetoeläimetGeneticsAnimalsGenetikMarine MammalsDNA sequence analysisEcosystemRINGED SEALSEkologiBehaviorSTABLE-ISOTOPE ANALYSISDNA-analyysiBLUBBEREcology and Environmental SciencesOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesCARBON ISOTOPESResearch and analysis methodskalatalousMolecular biology techniquesFishAmniotesEarth Sciences1182 Biochemistry cell and molecular biologyhalli (hylkeet)ZoologyPLoS ONE
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Ultra-conserved elements provide insights to the biogeographic patterns of three benthic macroinvertebrate species in the Baltic Sea

2022

The Baltic Sea, with its steep salinity gradient, high water retention time, and relatively young age, represents a marginal ecosystem between marine and freshwater extremes. Due to differing invasion history and dispersal capabilities of Baltic species, there are large differences in species distributions, species-specific genetic structure and variation, and edge populations that may represent both a subset of the original population, as well as unique genetic lineages. We used a phylogenomic approach to investigate relationships between populations of three benthic macroinvertebrate species: Pygospio elegans, Corophium volutator, and Mya arenaria, providing new insight into evolutionary …

Baltic seaBiogeographypopulaatiogenetiikkaPopulation geneticsBenthic invertebrateslajitAquatic ScienceselkärangattomatOceanographymurtovesimereteliömaantiedeUltra-conserved elements
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Novel antimicrobial and anti-biofilm agents from a marine invertebrate

2011

Biofim antimicrobial marine invertebratesSettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia Generale
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Biological indices applied to benthic macroinvertebrates at reference conditions of mountain streams in two ecoregions (Poland, the Slovak Republic)

2013

The study was carried out from 2007 to 2010 in two ecoregions: the Carpathians and the Central Highlands. The objectives of our survey were to test the existing biological index metric based on benthic macroinvertebrates at reference conditions in the high- and mid-altitude mountain streams of two ecoregions according to the requirements of the EU WFD and to determine which environmental factors influence the distribution of benthic macroinvertebrates. Our results revealed statistically significant differences in the values of the physical and chemical parameters of water as well as the mean values of metrics between the types of streams at the sampling sites. RDA analysis showed that the t…

Biological indicesHydrologyEcologyStream gradientReference conditionsSampling (statistics)STREAMSAquatic SciencePollutionWater Framework DirectiveAltitudeWater Framework DirectiveEnvironmental Science(all)Benthic macroinvertebratesBenthic zoneCentral HighlandsMountain streamInvertebrateHydrobiologia
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Comparing modified biological monitoring working party score system and several biological indices based on macroinvertebrates for water-quality asse…

2005

Abstract Macroinvertebrate communities from the lower Nysa Klodzka River catchment, southern Poland, were analyzed seasonally, in order to assess changes in their composition and structure, in relation to water quality. Two major groups of sites, differing in both morphological structure and taxonomical composition by cluster analysis, were identified within the catchment area. Wider and deeper sites, located along the Nysa Klodzka River, were associated with the dominance of Chironomidae. Sites assigned along tributaries were characterized by a diversified structure of dominant taxa, including Oligochaeta, Hirudinea, Crustacea, Trichoptera, Ephemeroptera and Diptera. The performance of the…

Biological indicesNysa Kłodzka rivergeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMacroinvertebratesbiologyEcologyAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationChironomidaeBiological monitoring working partyWater qualityTaxonTributaryDominance (ecology)Species richnessWater qualityInvertebrateLimnologica
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Temperature-induced microstructural changes in shells of laboratory-grown Arctica islandica (Bivalvia).

2021

Bivalve shells are increasingly used as archives for high-resolution paleoclimate analyses. However, there is still an urgent need for quantitative temperature proxies that work without knowledge of the water chemistry–as is required for δ18O-based paleothermometry–and can better withstand diagenetic overprint. Recently, microstructural properties have been identified as a potential candidate fulfilling these requirements. So far, only few different microstructure categories (nacreous, prismatic and crossed-lamellar) of some short-lived species have been studied in detail, and in all such studies, the size and/or shape of individual biomineral units was found to increase with water temperat…

BiomineralizationAtmospheric Science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPhysiologyScanning electron microscopeArctica islandica010502 geochemistry & geophysicsBiochemistry01 natural sciencesMachine LearningMaterials PhysicsPhase (matter)Image Processing Computer-AssistedElectron MicroscopyMicrostructureClimatologyMicroscopyMultidisciplinaryAgricultural and Biological Sciences(all)biologyPhysicsQTemperatureREukaryotaSoftware EngineeringMicrostructureAdaptation PhysiologicalDiagenesisPhysical SciencesEngineering and TechnologyMedicineScanning Electron MicroscopyPaleotemperaturePorosityResearch ArticleBivalvesComputer and Information SciencesMaterials scienceBaltic SeaImaging TechniquesScienceMaterials ScienceShell (structure)MineralogyResearch and Analysis MethodsComputer SoftwareAnimal ShellsBodies of waterAnimalsPaleoclimatologyGeneralArctica islandica0105 earth and related environmental sciencesBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology(all)MorphometryOrganismsPaleontologyWaterBiology and Life SciencesMolluscsbiology.organism_classificationBivalviaInvertebratesBivalviaMarine and aquatic sciencesEarth sciencesMicroscopy Electron ScanningLaboratoriesPhysiological ProcessesZoologySoftwareGenetics and Molecular Biology(all)BiomineralizationPLoS ONE
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Climate variation during the Holocene influenced the skeletal properties of Chamelea gallina shells in the North Adriatic Sea (Italy)

2021

Understanding how marine taxa will respond to near-future climate changes is one of the main challenges for management of coastal ecosystem services. Ecological studies that investigate relationships between the environment and shell properties of commercially important marine species are commonly restricted to latitudinal gradients or small-scale laboratory experiments. This paper aimed to explore the variations in shell features and growth of the edible bivalve Chamelea gallina from the Holocene sedimentary succession to present-day thanatocoenosis of the Po Plain-Adriatic Sea system (Italy). Comparing the Holocene sub-fossil record to modern thanatocoenoses allowed obtaining an insight o…

BiomineralizationAtmospheric ScienceRecrystallization (geology)010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPhysiologyOceans and Sea01 natural sciencesAnimal ShellX-Ray DiffractionSpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredHoloceneClimatologySedimentary GeologyMineralsMultidisciplinaryQuaternary PeriodbiologyGeographyFossilsQREukaryotaFossilGeologyMineralogyDiagenesisOceanographyItalyTaphonomyPhysical SciencesMedicineChamelea gallina[SDU.STU.PG]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PaleontologyPorosityGeologyResearch Article010506 paleontologyBivalvesScienceClimate ChangeOceans and SeasMaterials ScienceMaterial PropertiesClimate changeengineering.materialCalcium CarbonateCalcification PhysiologicAnimal ShellsAnimals14. Life underwaterPaleoclimatologyEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPetrologyHolocene EpochAnimalAragoniteRadiometric DatingOrganismsBiology and Life SciencesPaleontologyGeologic TimeMolluscsbiology.organism_classificationInvertebratesBivalviaSea surface temperatureAragonite13. Climate actionengineeringEarth SciencesCenozoic EraSedimentary rockSedimentPaleobiologyPhysiological ProcessesZoologyPloS One
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Shell proteome of rhynchonelliform brachiopods.

2015

7 pages; International audience; Brachiopods are a phylum of marine invertebrates that have an external bivalved shell to protect their living tissues. With few exceptions, this biomineralized structure is composed of calcite, mixed together with a minor organic fraction, comprising secreted proteins that become occluded in the shell structure, once formed. This organic matrix is thought to display several functions, in particular, to control mineral deposition and to regulate crystallite shapes. Thus, identifying the primary structure of matrix proteins is a prerequisite for generating bioinspired materials with tailored properties. In this study, we employed a proteomic approach to identi…

BiomineralizationProteomicsProteomeShell (structure)BrachiopodsBiologyMatrix (biology)ProteomicsCalcium CarbonatePaleontologychemistry.chemical_compoundCalcification PhysiologicAnimal ShellsStructural Biology[SDV.BBM.GTP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/Genomics [q-bio.GN]ShellAnimals14. Life underwater[SDV.IB.BIO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Bioengineering/BiomaterialsCalciteMineralsPhylumMarine invertebratesExtracellular matrix[ SDV.IB.BIO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Bioengineering/BiomaterialsInvertebrateschemistryEvolutionary biology[ SDV.BBM.GTP ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/Genomics [q-bio.GN]ProteomePeptidesBiomineralization
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