Search results for "Wild"

showing 10 items of 542 documents

Very highly prevalent Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus infection of wild boar Sus scrofa in Khuzestan province, south-western Iran

2006

Abstract An epidemiological and pathological study of Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus infection in a total of 50 wild boars Sus scrofa attila from cane sugar fields of Iranian Khuzestan was performed. The total prevalence of 64.0 % detected is the highest hitherto known by this acanthocephalan species in wild boars and may reflect a very high contamination of the farm lands studied as the consequence of the crowding of the wild boar population in cane sugar fields. Observations prove that this species is a wild boar gut wall perforating acanthocephalan. High burdens may become so pathogenic for the host individual as to be responsible for its elimination from the population. Thus, this aca…

endocrine systemVeterinary medicineMedicine (General)Agriculture (General)PopulationS1-972Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceusR5-920Wild boarbiology.animalCaneSugareducationiraneducation.field_of_studyHigh prevalencebiologyurogenital systemHost (biology)food and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyepidemiologypathologyPEST analysismacracanthorhynchus hirudinaceuskhuzestan provincewild boarHelminthologia
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Does Arsenic Contamination Affect DNA Methylation Patterns in a Wild Bird Population? : An Experimental Approach

2021

Pollutants, such as toxic metals, negatively influence organismal health and performance, even leading to population collapses. Studies in model organisms have shown that epigenetic marks, such as DNA methylation, can be modulated by various environmental factors, including pollutants, influencing gene expression, and various organismal traits. Yet experimental data on the effects of pollution on DNA methylation from wild animal populations are largely lacking. We here experimentally investigated for the first time the effects of early-life exposure to environmentally relevant levels of a key pollutant, arsenic (As), on genome-wide DNA methylation in a wild bird population. We experimentall…

environmental epigeneticsPopulationAnimals Wild010501 environmental sciencesBiology01 natural sciencesArticleArsenicecotoxicologyarseeniBirdsParus majorGene expressionEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalspollutionhaitalliset aineetEpigeneticseducationGene0105 earth and related environmental sciencesZinc fingerGeneticseducation.field_of_studyPlan_S-Compliant-TAympäristön saastuminenGeneral ChemistrytalitiainenDNA Methylation3. Good healthDNA-metylaatioArsenic contamination of groundwaterekotoksikologiaCpG site13. Climate actionepigenetiikkavillieläimetinternationalDNA methylationecological epigeneticsEnvironmental Pollutants
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Effect of Land-Use Change on the Changes in Human Lyme Risk in the United States

2022

The spatial extent and incidence of Lyme disease is increasing in the United States, particularly in the Upper Midwest and Northeast. Many previous studies have explored the drivers of its spatial pattern, however, few studies tried to explore the drivers for the changes of Lyme disease. We here compared the spatial patterns of changes of human Lyme cases and incidence in the Northeast and Upper Midwest between 2003–2005 and 2015–2017, and applied two different approaches (i.e., a statistical regularization approach and model averaging) to investigate the climatic and landscape factors affecting the risk change between the two periods. Our results suggested that changes in land-use variable…

esiintyvyysLyme disease; <i>Borrelia burgdorferi</i>; landscape factors; climatic factors; risk changeympäristötekijätRenewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentGeography Planning and Developmentlandscape factorszoonoositriskitekijätmaankäyttöilmastonmuutoksetManagement Monitoring Policy and LawPE&RCclimatic factorsBorrelia-bakteeritborrelioosiWildlife Ecology and ConservationBorrelia burgdorferiLymen borrelioosiLyme diseasesense organsLaboratory of Nematologyskin and connective tissue diseasesLaboratorium voor Nematologierisk changeSustainability
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Unpacking Relational Dignity: In Pursuit of an Ethic of Care for Outdoor Therapies

2022

Dignity is a universal principle that requires us to treat every person as having worth beyond who a particular person is or what they do. Dignity is a complex and sometimes contested idea, that at times can be compromised in health care and allegedly also within the practice of outdoor therapy. Outdoor therapies comprise a range of therapeutic approaches including nature-based therapy, adventure therapy, animal-assisted therapy, forest therapy, wilderness therapy, surf therapy, and more. Within the literature of outdoor therapies there has been limited research on ethics related to common understandings of care concepts such as relational dignity and human rights. The aim of this paper is …

ethic of careVDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Helsefag: 800dignityPsychologyrelational dignityecological dignityGeneral Psychologyoutdoor therapywilderness therapyBF1-990Frontiers in Psychology
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Pre- and Postnatal Predator Cues Shape Offspring Anti-predatory Behavior Similarly in the Bank Vole

2021

Prey animals can assess the risks predators present in different ways. For example, direct cues produced by predators can be used, but also signals produced by prey conspecifics that have engaged in non-lethal predator-prey interactions. These non-lethal interactions can thereby affect the physiology, behavior, and survival of prey individuals, and may affect offspring performance through maternal effects. We investigated how timing of exposure to predation-related cues during early development affects offspring behavior after weaning. Females in the laboratory were exposed during pregnancy or lactation to one of three odor treatments: (1) predator odor (PO) originating from their most comm…

feromonitalarm pheromonesaaliseläimetEcologyjyrsijätmetsämyyräEvolutionlumikkoPE&RClisääntymineneläinten käyttäytyminenhajuWildlife Ecology and Conservationpredation riskcross-generational effectsrodentspetoeläimetconspecific alarm cueQH359-425odor cuesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsQH540-549.5Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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Exposure to Chemical Cues from Predator-Exposed Conspecifics Increases Reproduction in a Wild Rodent

2018

Abstract Predation involves more than just predators consuming prey. Indirect effects, such as fear responses caused by predator presence, can have consequences for prey life history. Laboratory experiments have shown that some rodents can recognize fear in conspecifics via alarm pheromones. Individuals exposed to alarm pheromones can exhibit behavioural alterations that are similar to those displayed by predator-exposed individuals. Yet the ecological and evolutionary significance of alarm pheromones in wild mammals remains unclear. We investigated how alarm pheromones affect the behaviour and fitness of wild bank voles (Myodes glareolus) in outdoor enclosures. Specifically, we compared th…

feromonitmetsämyyrälcsh:Rbehavioural ecologylcsh:MedicinePE&RClisääntyminensaalistusevoluutioekologiaWildlife Ecology and ConservationMyodes glareolusLife Sciencelcsh:Qlcsh:ScienceScientific Reports
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Teschoviruses and sapeloviruses in faecal samples from wild boar in Spain

2013

Teschovirus and Sapelovirus are two genera of the Picornaviridae family, comprising highly variable and heterogeneous enteric viruses, commonly found in faecal samples from domestic pigs. Although both of them are also known to infect wild boar, studies on their presence in these wild suids are scarce. The present study aimed at determining the presence of porcine teschovirus (PTV) and sapelovirus (PSV) in free-living wild boar populations, as well as to study their relationships with similar viruses present in pigs. Fresh faecal samples (n = 63) from wild boar were collected in Doñana Biological Reserve (SW Spain) during 2007 and 2011, and analysed using multiplex RT-PCR for the simultaneo…

food.ingredientPicornavirusgenetic structuresTeschovirusSwineCharacterizationSus scrofaRT-PCRPicornaviridaeWild boarMicrobiologyFecesfoodWild boarPhylogeneticsbiology.animalAnimalsMultiplexSapelovirusPhylogenySwine DiseasesPicornaviridae InfectionsGeneral VeterinarybiologyCoinfectionPicornavirusGeneral MedicineAmpliconbiology.organism_classificationVirologyDomestic pigSpainTeschovirusCapsid ProteinsSapelovirus
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Analysis of pteridines in Pyrrhocoris apterus (L.) (Heteroptera, Pyrrhocoridae) during development and in body-color mutants

1997

By using thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), five different pteridines have been quantified in extracts from Pyrrhocoris apterus: neopterin, isoxanthopterin, isoxantholumazine (violapterin), 7-methylxanthopterin, and erythropterin. Biopterin was also detected using HPLC. Pteridines have been analyzed separately in bodies and eyes of the wild type regarding developmental stage and sex. The pteridine content in both bodies and eyes increased from nymphs to 2-day-old adults. After this period, the concentration of pteridines in the eyes of adults remained approximately constant, while in the bodies isoxantholumazine, 7-methylxanthopterin, and isox…

food.ingredientbiologyPhysiologyPyrrhocoridaeMutantWild typeNeopterinGeneral MedicinePyrrhocorisbiology.organism_classificationBiochemistryWhite (mutation)chemistry.chemical_compoundfoodBiochemistrychemistryInsect ScienceYolkBotanymedicinePteridinemedicine.drug
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In vitroplant regeneration and gene transfer in the wild tomatoLycopersicon cheesmanii

2001

SummaryThis paper reports on protocols for in vitro plant regeneration, gene transfer and on shoot salt tolerance from two accessions of L. cheesmanii (Riley). Shoot organogenesis was achieved on media with zeatin or BA/IAA combinations. The two accessions tested, LA1401 and LA530, showed differences in both their aptitude to regenerate and their salt tolerance in vitro. The accession LA530 had a higher organogenic potential than LA1401 (97% vs. 80% of organogenic explants). In contrast, none of the LA530 isolated shoots rooted when cultured in full strength MS-modified medium supplemented with 200.mM NaCl while 93% of shoots from LA1401 formed roots. Finally, Agrobacterium-mediated transfo…

food.ingredientbiologyfungifood and beveragesOrganogenesisGenetically modified cropsHorticulturebiology.organism_classificationTransformation (genetics)chemistry.chemical_compoundfoodchemistryBotanyShootGeneticsWild tomatoZeatinCotyledonExplant cultureThe Journal of Horticultural Science and Biotechnology
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Cholesterol-Streptolysin O Interaction: An EM Study of Wild-Type and Mutant Streptolysin O

1998

We present transmission electron microscopical data from negatively stained specimens of cholesterol following interaction with the thiol-activated bacterial toxin streptolysin O (SLO) (wild-type and a number of cysteine substitution mutants), with and without chemical modification of the cysteine residues. Two experimental systems were used, one with an aqueous suspension of cholesterol microcrystals and the other with immobilized thin planar cholesterol crystals attached to a carbon film. In both systems the wild-type SLO and two cytolytically active mutants, Cys 530 --Ala (C530A) and Ser 101 --Cys (S101C), readily generated the characteristic SLO arc- and ring-like oligomers on the surfa…

genetic structuresMutantWild typeChemical modificationOligomereye diseaseschemistry.chemical_compoundMonomerchemistryBiochemistryStructural BiologyBiotinylationBiophysicsStreptolysinsense organsCysteineJournal of Structural Biology
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