Search results for "actin"

showing 10 items of 1375 documents

Catch-and-release of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua): post-release behaviour of acoustically pretagged fish in a natural marine environment

2014

Studying the sublethal effects of catch-and-release (C&R) is challenging, as there are several potential sources of bias. For example, if behavioural alterations immediately after the release event are to be studied, separation of tagging effects from actual C&R effects is required, which is a challenge in the wild, particularly in marine environments. To investigate the effects of C&R on Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in their natural environment, 80 cod were caught in fyke nets, fitted with acoustic transmitters, and released. After recovery from tagging and handling for at least 14 days, nine individuals were recaptured and released at least once during experimental angling, fo…

FisheryPost releaseRecreational fishingVDP::Agriculture and fishery disciplines: 900::Fisheries science: 920::Fish health: 923GadusFish <Actinopterygii>Aquatic ScienceBiologyAtlantic codbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCatch and releaseCanadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
researchProduct

Age is not just a number – senescence affects how fish populations respond to different fishing regimes

2021

Abstract The presence of senescence in natural populations remains an unsolved problem in biology. Described as an age-dependent increase in natural mortality (known as actuarial senescence) and an age-dependent decrease in fecundity (known as reproductive senescence), the role of senescence in nature is still poorly understood. Based on empirical estimates of reproductive and actuarial senescence, we explored how senescence affects the population dynamics of Coregonus albula, a small, schooling salmonid fish. Using an empirically-based eco-evolutionary model, we investigated how the presence or absence of senescence affects how the fish population responds to pristine, intensive harvest, a…

FisherySenescenceFishingFish <Actinopterygii>Biology
researchProduct

A ROOT-based analysis tool for measurements of neutron-induced fission products at the IGISOL facility

2012

For the sustainable development of nuclear energy, the handling of used nuclear fuel is a key issue. Innovative fuel cycles are being developed for the transmutation of minor actinides and long-lived fission products. In view of these developments, accurate knowledge of the fuel inventory is necessary. The IGISOL facility with JYFLTRAP, at the accelerator laboratory of the University of Jyvaskyla, will be used to measure independent fission yield distributions from neutron-induced fission on different actinides. In this paper, an analysis tool is developed, using the CERN-based ROOT Data Analysis Framework, with the objective of performing full data analysis within the same code. The analys…

Fission productsLarge Hadron ColliderNuclear transmutationFissionNuclear engineeringFission product yieldActinideCondensed Matter PhysicsAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsSpent nuclear fuelNuclear physicsEnvironmental scienceNeutronMathematical PhysicsPhysica Scripta
researchProduct

Endocrine and ovarian response after a 2-day controlled suckling and eCG treatment in lactating rabbit does.

2006

Synchronization methods are used to obtain higher fertility when artificial insemination (AI) is applied to lactating rabbit does. The most common methods are eCG administration or temporary doe–litter separation. Nevertheless, drawbacks have been reported, such as negative side effects of hormonal treatment in the doe and low litter growth due to absence of suckling, respectively. Recently, improved reproductive performance (without visible consequences on young rabbit growth), has been obtained by applying a 2-day controlled nursing method before AI, by allowing for a 10 min nursing of the litter 24 h of separation. The present study was undertaken to examine the pituitary (PRL, LH, FSH) …

FollicleLHLitter (animal)Malemedicine.medical_specialtyPRLmedicine.medical_treatmentOvaryRabbitSynchronizationBiologyInseminationChorionic GonadotropinAndrologyFollicleEndocrinologyFood AnimalsOvarian FolliclePregnancyInternal medicineLactationFSHFollicular phasemedicineEndocrine systemAnimalsLactationInsemination ArtificialArtificial inseminationOvaryGeneral MedicineOrgan SizeLuteinizing HormoneImmunohistochemistryGHAnimals SucklingProlactinEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureAnimal Science and ZoologyFemaleRabbitsFollicle Stimulating HormoneEstrus SynchronizationAnimal reproduction science
researchProduct

Probabilistic risk assessment of the exposure to polybrominated diphenyl ethers via fish and seafood consumption in the Region of Valencia (Spain)

2013

The study was carried out to estimate the dietary intake of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in the Region of Valencia (Spain) in order to evaluate the resultant risk. The PBDE levels in fish and seafood (a total of 206 samples) were determined. Dietary intake was estimated using results of PBDE analyses in fish and seafood marketed in the Region of Valencia over the period 2007-2012 and data of the first Valencian Food Consumption Survey, conducted in 2010. Two scenarios were assumed for left-censored results: the lower-bound (LB) scenario, in which unquantified results (below the limit of quantification (LOQ)) were set to zero and the upper-bound (UB) scenario, in which unquantified…

Food SafetyEnvironmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisMackerelRisk AssessmentValencianToxicologyPolybrominated diphenyl ethersHalogenated Diphenyl EthersAnimalsHumansEnvironmental ChemistryProbabilitybiologyProbabilistic risk assessmentbusiness.industrySwordfishDietary intakeFishesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationFood safetyPollutionlanguage.human_languageSeafoodSpainEnvironmental chemistrylanguageFish <Actinopterygii>businessChemosphere
researchProduct

Ultrasound as a preservation technique

2021

Abstract The application of ultrasound offers a wide range of possibilities in food preservation, especially when it is used combined with heat or other preservation treatments (natural antimicrobials). In this chapter, some relevant studies dealing with the impact of the ultrasound alone and/or combined with other preservation techniques on microbial inactivation from different food groups (fruits and vegetables, milk and derived products as well as fish and meat) will be discussed. In addition, some findings regarding the effects of ultrasound on nutritional and physicochemical properties of the products will be also presented.

Food groupPreservation Techniquebusiness.industryFruits and vegetablesUltrasoundFood preservationFish <Actinopterygii>Food scienceBiologybusinessMicrobial inactivation
researchProduct

Effects of repeated handling, with or without anaesthesia, on feed intake and growth in juvenile rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum)

2006

The effects of weekly anaesthetization with clove oil and tricaine methanesulphonate (MS-222) on feed intake and growth were examined in juvenile rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum), held individually. Repeated handling without anaesthetics significantly reduced feed intake and weight gain compared with an unhandled control group during an 8-week experiment. When anaesthetics were used during handling the feed consumption and weight gain were significantly (MS-222) or not significantly (clove oil) higher than in fish handled without anaesthesia. When compared with the unhandled control group, neither of these two anaesthetics had significant effects on feed intake but, in contrast …

Food intakeFeed consumptionAnesthesiaTricaine methanesulphonatemedicineFish <Actinopterygii>JuvenileRainbow troutAquatic Sciencemedicine.symptomBiologyWeight gainFeed conversion ratioAquaculture Research
researchProduct

Säugetiere, Fisch-Otolithen, Ostracoden, Mollusken und Charophyten aus den Süßwasser- Schichten (Oligozän) von Wolfsheim im Mainzer Becken

2000

The Suswasser-Schichten (Freshwater Beds) (Oligocene) in the Mainz Basin are a paleontologically poorly studied formation. A succession of predominantly lacustrine marls from Wolfsheim can be attributed to the Suswasser-Schichten on basis of a palaeoecological and biostratigraphic analysis of its mammal teeth, fish otoliths, ostracods, mollusks, foraminifera and charophytes. The occurrence of the mammal speciesToeniodus aff.hexalophodus andIssiodoromys minor (primitive form) enables an attribution of the Suswasser-Schichten to the reference level MP 24 of the eurasiatic mammal biostratigraphic zonation. As the reference fauna of level MP 24 is believed to occur in a lithostratigraphically m…

ForaminiferaPaleontologybiologyFaunaReference levelMarlPaleontologyFish <Actinopterygii>MammalEcological successionStructural basinbiology.organism_classificationGeologyPalZ
researchProduct

Density functional theory calculations on magnetic properties of actinide compounds

2010

We have performed a detailed analysis of the magnetic (collinear and noncollinear) order and atomic and the electron structures of UO2, PuO2 and UN on the basis of density functional theory with the Hubbard electron correlation correction (DFT+U). We have shown that the 3-k magnetic structure of UO2 is the lowest in energy for the Hubbard parameter value of U=4.6 eV (and J=0.5 eV) consistent with experiments when Dudarev's formalism is used. In contrast to UO2, UN and PuO2 show no trend for a distortion towards rhombohedral structure and, thus, no complex 3-k magnetic structure is to be anticipated in these materials.

Formalism (philosophy of mathematics)Condensed Matter - Materials ScienceMaterials scienceElectronic correlationMagnetic structureCondensed matter physicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyDensity functional theoryActinideTrigonal crystal systemElectronPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPhysics - Computational Physics
researchProduct

Lethal toxicity of Lindane on a teleost fish,Anguilla anguillafrom albufera lake (Spain): Hardness and temperature effects

1988

This paper reports the results of toxicity tests conducted using Anguilla anguilla under three different water temperature (15, 22 and 29 degrees C) and two hardness regimes (250 and greater than 600 ppm CaCO3). The 96-h LC50 increased in the experimental medium (p less than 0.05) by an order of magnitude from 0.32 to 0.45 mg/L between 15 and 29 degrees C. However in the natural medium it is similar (p greater than 0.05) (0.54 to 0.55 mg/L) for these same temperatures. The toxicity of Lindane on eels increased when the water hardness decreased. The 24, 48, 72 and 96-h LC50 for this fish in both media is less at 15 degrees C (96-h LC50 = 0.32 and 0.55 mg/L) than at 29 degrees C (96-h LC50 = …

Fresh WaterBiologyMedian lethal doseLethal Dose 50chemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal scienceAnimalsWater PollutantsEcologyTemperatureWaterGeneral MedicinePesticideAnguillaPollutionchemistryFresh waterSpainWater temperatureToxicityFish <Actinopterygii>SeawaterLindaneHexachlorocyclohexaneWater Pollutants ChemicalFood ScienceJournal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B
researchProduct