Search results for "shark"

showing 10 items of 47 documents

Illegal fishing in Isla del Coco National Park: Spatial-temporal distribution and the economic trade-offs

2020

Abstract The Isla del Coco National Park, located on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica, is rich in biodiversity and has a high concentration of pelagic species. This high marine biodiversity makes the Isla del Coco National Park (PNIC) a very attractive place for illegal fishers. We analyzed a dataset covering 8 years (2003–2010) of patrol records from PNIC with the aim of determining, a) the spatial-temporal distribution of illegal fishing, b) other areas that could be prone to illegal fishing but are currently undetected, c) the most profitable areas for this activity and d) the economic trade-offs of this illegal activity in relation to potential gains and the costs. Residuals Autocovariat…

Costa RicaEconomics and EconometricsYellowfin tunaCosta RicaIBiodiversityDistribution (economics)Sede Central IEOllegal fishingManagement Monitoring Policy and LawAquatic ScienceYellowfin tunaAbundance (ecology)ZoologíaPesqueríasSpatial-temporal modelGeneral Environmental SciencebiologyNational parkbusiness.industryGeneralized additive modelMarine reserveMarine reservePelagic zoneSharkbiology.organism_classificationIllegal fishingFisheryGeographybusinessLawMarine Policy
researchProduct

Literature, social media and questionnaire surveys identify relevant conservation areas for Carcharhinus species in the Mediterranean Sea

2023

Sharks support ecosystems’ health, but their populations are facing severe declines worldwide. Knowledge gaps on shark distribution and the negative human perception of them still represent a barrier to the implementation of effective conservation measures. Here we carried out a regional-scale analysis in the Mediterranean Sea using data on requiem shark catches and sightings available in the scientific literature and on social media platforms to: 1) depict the distribution of Carcharhinus species across the basin, 2) identify potentially relevant areas for their conservation, and 3) evaluate people’s attitude toward shark protection. In addition, we administered 112 questionnaires in one o…

Extinction Social media data mining Conservation hotspot Public perception Ecotourism Coastal sharks Requiem sharksEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservation
researchProduct

Grouping behaviour impacts on the parasitic pressure and squamation of sharks

2022

The evolution of grouping behaviour involves a complex trade-off of benefits and costs. Among the latter, an increase in the risk of parasitic transmission is a well-documented phenomenon that has likely promoted the evolution of defensive mechanisms in aquatic vertebrates. Here, we explore the relationship between grouping behaviour, parasitic richness (∼parasitic pressure), and the evolution of potential defensive traits in the squamation of sharks through phylogenetic, standard and zero-inflation regression models. Our results demonstrate that sharks that frequently aggregate show increased parasitic pressure, which may constitute an agent of selection. Accordingly, their squamation is c…

General Immunology and MicrobiologyVertebratesHydrodynamicsSharksAnimalsParasitesGeneral MedicineGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPhylogenyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyGeneral Environmental ScienceEvolució (Biologia)
researchProduct

Ecomorphological inferences in early vertebrates: reconstructing

2017

Our knowledge about the body morphology of many extinct early vertebrates is very limited, especially in regard to their post-thoracic region. The prompt disarticulation of the dermo-skeletal elements due to taphonomic processes and the lack of a well-ossified endoskeleton in a large number of groups hinder the preservation of complete specimens. Previous reconstructions of most early vertebrates known from partial remains have been wholly based on phylogenetically closely related taxa. However, body design of fishes is determined, to a large extent, by their swimming mode and feeding niche, making it possible to recognise different morphological traits that have evolved several times in no…

Geometric morphometricsEcologySizeEcomorphologySharksPaleontologyPalaeoartDunkleosteus terrelliZoologyCaudal finEarly vertebratesPeerJ
researchProduct

Commercial sharks under scrutiny: Baseline genetic distinctiveness supports structured populations of small-spotted catsharks in the Mediterranean Sea

2023

The present study, based on microsatellite markers, describes a population genetic analysis of the small-spotted catshark Scyliorhinus canicula (Linnaeus, 1758), representing one of the most abundant and commonly caught cartilaginous fishes in the Mediterranean Sea and adjacent areas. The analyses were performed to unravel the genetic features (variability, connectivity, sex-biased dispersal) of their relative geographic populations, both at the small (around the coast of Sardinia, Western Mediterranean Sea) and at a larger spatial scale (pan-Mediterranean level and between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea). Individual clustering, multivariate and variance analyses rejected the …

Global and Planetary ChangeSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaGenetic assessment Reference baseline Elasmobranchs Microsatellites Mediterranean Sea Population structure Small-spotted catshark Commercial speciesOcean EngineeringAquatic ScienceOceanographyWater Science and TechnologyFrontiers in Marine Science
researchProduct

Tracing keratin evolution: catalog, expression patterns and primary structure of shark (Scyliorhinus stellaris) keratins.

1998

We have studied individual keratins of an elasmobranch, the shark Scyliorhinus stellaris (the lesser-spotted dogfish). From various shark tissues, notably skin and stomach, cytoskeletal proteins were isolated and then separated by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Using complementary keratin blot-binding assays and immunoblotting, among these proteins we identified a variety of type I and type II keratins. According to their tissue-specific expression, we distinguished Is and IIs keratins from IE and IIE keratins ("S" and "E" from "simple epithelial" and "epidermal", respectively). Guinea pig antibodies which in immunoblots specifically labeled the entire range of identifi…

HistologyDNA ComplementaryMolecular Sequence Datamacromolecular substancesPathology and Forensic MedicineKeratinAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceIntermediate filamentPolyacrylamide gel electrophoresisPeptide sequencechemistry.chemical_classificationintegumentary systemPhylogenetic treebiologyBase SequenceProtein primary structureCell BiologyGeneral MedicineKeratin 6Abiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyBiological EvolutionchemistryMicroscopy FluorescenceSharksKeratinshuman activitiesScyliorhinus stellarisEuropean journal of cell biology
researchProduct

Sequence, evolution and tissue expression patterns of an epidermal type I keratin from the shark Scyliorhinus stellaris.

2004

From the shark Scyliorhinus stellaris we cloned and sequenced a cDNA encoding a novel type I keratin, termed SstK10. By MALDI-MS peptide mass fingerprinting of cytoskeletal proteins separated on polyacrylamide gels, we assigned SstK10 to a 46-kDa protein which is the major epidermal type I (“IE”) keratin in this fish and is specifically expressed in stratified epithelia. In a phylogenetic tree based on type I keratin sequences and with lamprey keratins applied as outgroup, SstK10 branches off in a rather basal position. This tree strongly supports the concept that teleost keratins and tetrapod keratins resulted from two independent gene radiation processes. The only exception is human K18 b…

HistologyDNA ComplementaryType I keratinMolecular Sequence Datamacromolecular substancesMass SpectrometryPathology and Forensic MedicineSequence Analysis Proteinbiology.animalKeratinAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularPhylogenychemistry.chemical_classificationintegumentary systemPhylogenetic treebiologyLampreyVertebrateCell BiologyGeneral MedicineGnathostomataKeratin 6AAnatomybiology.organism_classificationImmunohistochemistryCell biologychemistryEpidermal CellsGene Expression RegulationOrgan SpecificitySharksKeratinsElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelEpidermisScyliorhinus stellarisEuropean journal of cell biology
researchProduct

Vimentin and desmin of a cartilaginous fish, the shark Scyliorhinus stellaris: Sequence, expression patterns and in vitro assembly

2002

In the shark Scyliorhinus stellaris we have biochemically identified and cDNA-cloned orthologs of human vimentin and desmin, SstV and SstD, as deduced from immunoblotting and sequence alignment with teleost, frog and human vimentin and desmin, respectively. This allowed us to further clarify the relationship of previously identified lower vertebrate intermediate filament proteins to mammalian vimentin and desmin. Immunofluorescence microscopy with antibodies H5 and VIM13.2 showed vimentin expression in shark eye and brain and absence in epithelia, which resembles the situation in higher vertebrates. In addition, SstV is expressed in many mesenchymal cell types which corresponds to the case …

HistologyNeurofilamentMolecular Sequence DataIntermediate FilamentsGene ExpressionVimentinmacromolecular substancesDesminPathology and Forensic MedicineEvolution MolecularProtein filamentKeratinAnimalsVimentinIntermediate filamentPhylogenychemistry.chemical_classificationSequence Homology Amino AcidbiologyProtein primary structureCell BiologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyMicroscopy ElectronchemistrySharksbiology.proteinDesminScyliorhinus stellarisEuropean Journal of Cell Biology
researchProduct

The occurrence of the extinct shark genus Sphenodus in the Jurassic of Sicily

2015

During the systematic revision of some historical collections containing Mesozoic ammonites, housed at the "G.G. Gemmellaro" Geological Museum of the Palermo University, a fossil shark’s tooth has been discovered. This specimen, indicated as Lamna in the original catalogue, can be attributed to the genus Sphenodus, an extinct cosmopolitan shark ranging from Lower Jurassic rocks to the Paleocene. The specimen is part of the Mariano Gemmellaro Collection which mainly consists of Middle-Upper Jurassic ammonites coming from Tardàra Mountain, between Menfi and Sambuca di Sicilia (Agrigento Province, Southwestern Sicily). Some of the ammonite specimens were listed, but not illustrated, by M. Gemm…

JurassicSharkSicilyGemmellaro G.G.
researchProduct

Pliocene colonization of the Mediterranean by Great White Shark inferred from fossil records, historical jaws, phylogeographic and divergence time an…

2020

Aim: Determine the evolutionary origin of the heretofore poorly characterized contemporary Great White Shark (GWS; Carcharodon carcharias) of the Mediterranean Sea, using phylogenetic and dispersal vicariance analyses to trace back its global palaeo-migration pattern. Location: Mediterranean Sea. Taxon: Carcharodon carcharias. Methods: We have built the largest mitochondrial DNA control region (CR) sequence dataset for the Mediterranean GWS from referenced historical jaws spanning the 19th and 20th centuries. Mediterranean and global GWS CR sequences were analysed for genetic diversity, phylogenetic relationships and divergence time. A Bayes factor approach was used to assess two scenarios …

LARGE PREDATORY SHARKSATLANTICMediterranean climateGreat White Shark Mediterranean historical DNA divergence time phylogeography Carcharodon carchariasMIGRATIONEnvironmental Sciences & Ecologydivergence timeMediterraneanphylogeographyLAMNIDAECarcharodon carcharias; divergence time; Great White Shark; historical DNA; Mediterranean; phylogeographyDivergencePaleontologyDISPERSALbiology.animalGreat White SharkCARCHARODON-CARCHARIASColonizationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsScience & TechnologyCarcharodon carchariasEcologybiologyGeography PhysicalPhylogeographyGreat white sharkEXTINCTIONGeographyPhysical GeographyPhysical SciencesCLOSUREPATTERNSGENETIC DIVERSITYLife Sciences & Biomedicinehistorical DNAJournal of Biogeography
researchProduct