889 resultados para Fish eggs
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The broad objective of the present study is to present a synoptic picture of the distribution and abundance of fish eggs and the lmportant groups of fish larvae obtained off the SW coast of India. so as to delineate the spawning areas and seasones of the fish population. with special reference to the scombroid fishes. An attempt was also made to correlate the occurrence of certain categories of larvae and hydrographical factors like temperature and salinity. The present effort was a pioneering one in Indian waters. in as much as it involved systematic and seasonally repetitive collection of ichthyoplankton from a large stretch of our seas and mapping of their distribution and abudance.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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The occurrence, distribution and abundance of ichthyoplankton in Todos os Santos and Camamu Bays were analyzed based on four samplings (winter 2003, summer 2003, winter 2004 and summer 2005). Samples were obtained by surface horizontal hauls, using a 200-µm mesh conical-cylinder plankton net. The distribution and abundance of eggs indicate a remarkable seasonal and annual variation of spawning activity in the region, especially when the two summer campaigns are compared. In summer 2003 the highest quantitative values were recorded, especially for Camamu, where the maximum reached 106.56 eggs.m-3, with an overall average of 43.46 eggs.m-3 for the two areas. In summer 2005 values were relatively low, the overall average being 3.49 eggs.m-3. The larval taxonomic composition is characterized by the predominance of gobiids, with small variation from summer to winter. Considering all the campaigns and samplings undertaken in both areas, larvae of 11 families were identified: Engraulidae, Clupeidae, Mugilidae, Atherinopsidae, Hemiramphidae, Syngnathidae, Blenniidae, Carangidae, Gobiidae, Achiridae and Tetraodontidae.
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This poster shows graphically how much of each of the following food groups we should eat for a healthy, balanced diet: fruit and vegetables; bread, rice, potatoes, pasta and other starchy foods; milk and dairy foods; meat, fish, eggs, beans and other non-dairy sources of protein; and foods and drinks high in fat and/or sugar.��
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The northern Humboldt Current system (NHCS) off Peru is one of the most productive world marine regions. It represents less than 0.1% of the world ocean surface but presently sustains about 10% of the world fish catch, with the Peruvian anchovy or anchoveta Engraulis ringens as emblematic fish resource. Compared with other eastern boundary upwelling systems, the higher fish productivity of the NHCS cannot be explained by a corresponding higher primary productivity. On another hand, the NHCS is the region where El Niño, and climate variability in general, is most notable. Also, surface oxygenated waters overlie an intense and extremely shallow Oxygen Minimum Zone (OMZ). In this context, the main objective of this study is to better understand the trophic flows in the NHCS using both stomach content and stable isotope analyses. The study focuses on a variety of organisms from low trophic levels such as zooplankton to top predators (seabirds and fur seals). The approach combines both long-term and specific studies on emblematic species such as anchoveta, and sardine Sardinops sagax and a more inclusive analysis considering the 'global' food web in the recent years (2008 – 2012) using stable isotope analysis. Revisiting anchovy and sardine we show that whereas phytoplankton largely dominated anchoveta and sardine diets in terms of numerical abundance, the carbon content of prey items indicated that zooplankton was by far the most important dietary component. Indeed for anchovy euphausiids contributed 67.5% of dietary carbon, followed by copepods (26.3%). Selecting the largest prey, the euphausiids, provide an energetic advantage for anchoveta in its ecosystem where oxygen depletion imposes strong metabolic constrain to pelagic fish. Sardine feed on smaller zooplankton than do anchoveta, with sardine diet consisting of smaller copepods and fewer euphausiids than anchoveta diet. Hence, trophic competition between sardine and anchovy in the northern Humboldt Current system is minimized by their partitioning of the zooplankton food resource based on prey size, as has been reported in other systems. These results suggest an ecological role for pelagic fish that challenges previous understanding of their position in the foodweb (zooplanktophagous instead of phytophagous), the functioning and the trophic models of the NHCS. Finally to obtain a more comprehensive vision of the relative trophic position of NHCS main components we used stable isotope analyses. For that purpose we analyzed the δ13C and δ15N stable isotope values of thirteen taxonomic categories collected off Peru from 2008 - 2011, i.e., zooplankton, fish, squids and air-breathing top predators. The δ15N isotope signature was strongly impacted by the species, the body length and the latitude. Along the Peruvian coast, the OMZ get more intense and shallow south of ~7.5ºS impacting the baseline nitrogen stable isotopes. Employing a linear mixed-effects modelling approach taking into account the latitudinal and body length effects, we provide a new vision of the relative trophic position of key ecosystem components. Also we confirm stomach content-based results on anchoveta Engraulis ringens and highlight the potential remarkable importance of an often neglected ecosystem component, the squat lobster Pleuroncodes monodon. Indeed, our results support the hypothesis according to which this species forage to some extent on fish eggs and larvae and can thus predate on the first life stages of exploited species. However, the δ13C values of these two species suggest that anchoveta and squat lobster do not exactly share the same habitat. This would potentially reduce some direct competition and/or predation.
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Fish eggs are associated with microbes, whose roles range from mutualism to parasitism. Recent laboratory experiments have shown that the taxonomic composition of associated microbial communities on the egg influences embryonic development. Host genetics also plays an important role in determining the consequences for embryonic growth and survival in this interaction. Moreover, it has been found that the importance of host genetics increases during embryogenesis. These findings suggest that during embryogenesis, the host increasingly influences the composition of its associated microbial community. However, little is known about the composition of microbial communities associated with naturally spawned eggs in the wild. We sampled fertilized whitefish eggs (Coregonus spp.) of different developmental stages from six sub-Alpine lakes and used a universal primer pair and 454 pyrosequencing in order to describe the taxonomic composition of egg-associated bacterial communities. We found bacterial communities on early embryos to be very diverse and to resemble the bacterial composition of the surrounding water environment. The bacterial communities on late embryos were significantly less diverse than on early embryos and displayed a clear shift in taxonomic composition that corresponded poorly with the bacterial composition of the surrounding water environment. The main bacterial components on whitefish eggs in this study were Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Firmicutes, while the five most common families were Leuconostocaceae, Streptococcaceae, Comamonadaceae, Oxalobacteraceae and Moraxellaceae. Their putative relationships with the host are discussed. We conclude that natural symbiotic bacterial communities become more specialized during embryogenesis because of specific interactions with their embryo host.
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La saprolégniose est une maladie fongique causée par le champignon aquatique Saprolegnia sp. qui affecte les poissons sauvages et ceux provenant des piscicultures. L’apparition de touffes cotonneuses semblables à de la ouate de couleur blanche à grise est souvent la première indication de l’infection. Ce saprophyte ubiquitaire se nourrit habituellement des œufs de poissons morts, mais peut se propager rapidement aux œufs sains causant la mort de ces derniers. La saprolégniose est souvent une infection secondaire, mais des souches virulentes peuvent facilement se développer sur les salmonidés ayant subi un stress ou une mauvaise manipulation. De grandes pertes économiques associées à la saprolégniose sont rapportées chaque année à travers le monde surtout dans l’industrie de la pisciculture. Jusqu’en 2002, le contrôle de la saprolégniose pouvait se faire par l’utilisation du vert de malachite, un colorant organique ayant une grande activité antifongique. Malheureusement, cette molécule a été bannie à cause de ses propriétés cancérigènes. Aucun composé aussi efficace n’est actuellement disponible pour traiter les infections de la saprolégniose. Des molécules ou extraits naturels ayant un potentiel antifongique ont donc été testés à l’aide de deux techniques (par graines de chanvre et par cylindre d’agar). Les molécules d’un extrait de propolis (cire de ruches d’abeilles) démontrant de l’activité anti-Saprolegnia ont été identifiées. De plus, une bactérie, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, pouvant être retrouvée dans le même environnement que Saprolegnia sp. a démontré un effet antagoniste au champignon. Une molécule de signalisation intercellulaire produite par P. aeruginosa, 4-hydroxy-2-heptylquinoline (HHQ), a été identifiée comme responsable de l’effet antagoniste contre Saprolegnia sp.
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Les maladies constituent présentement la cause la plus importante de perte économique en aquaculture moderne. Chez certaines espèces, notamment les salmonidés (Oncorhynchus sp. et Salmo sp.), on rapporte des pertes annuelles atteignant cinquante pour cent de la production. À l’heure actuelle, les infections fongiques occupent le second rang derrière les maladies bactériennes en fonction de leur importance économique. Ces poissons sont particulièrement vulnérables à une infection fongique causée par Saprolegnia sp. qui infecte habituellement les oeufs morts. Le saprophyte ubiquitaire se propage ensuite aux oeufs sains et aux individus matures. Malheureusement, le traitement efficace de cette infection, souvent primaire et parfois secondaire, est de plus en plus difficile en raison de nouvelles réglementations restrictives entourant le vert de malachite. Jadis, ce colorant constituait le fongicide le plus efficace dans la lutte contre la saprolégniose, mais son potentiel cancérigène en limite maintenant l’utilisation. Jusqu'à présent, aucun traitement disponible n’est aussi efficace que le vert de malachite pour le contrôle de la saprolégniose. Récemment, nous sommes parvenus à isoler trois bactéries capables d’inhiber la croissance de Saprolegnia sp. in vitro. Ces trois Pseudomonas fluorescens proviennent d’une pisciculture dans laquelle survenaient des cas d’infections à Saprolegnia parasitica. En poussant la caractérisation de l’activité grâce à des analyses de chromatographie liquide haute performance et de spectrométrie de masse, nous avons réussi à isoler et à identifier la molécule responsable. L’acide phénazine-1-carboxylique (PCA), sécrété par deux de nos trois souches, cause l’inhibition de la croissance de Saprolegnia.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Vibrio cholerae is an autochthonous marine bacterium, and its association with diverse planktonic crustaceans has been extensively investigated; however, the presence of V. cholerae on individuals of most phyla of planktonic animals is still incompletely understood. The objective of this study was to analyze the distribution of V. cholerae serogroup O1 associated with specific zooplankton taxa in an estuary and the adjacent continental shelf of the southeastern Brazilian coast. The occurrence of the bacterium was assessed in zooplankton samples, specifically on the most abundant taxa, using direct fluorescence assay (DFA) and direct viable count-direct fluorescence assay (DVC-DFA) methods. Vibrio cholerae O1 was detected in 88% of samples collected from the Santos-Bertioga estuary and in 67% of samples from the shelf. The salinity of the estuarine water ranged from 21.8 to 34.6, significantly lower than the shelf water which was 32.1-36.1. Salinity was the only environmental variable measured that displayed a significant correlation with the presence of V. cholerae (P < 0.05). Vibrio cholerae O1 was detected in chaetognaths, pluteus larvae of echinoderms and planktonic fish eggs (Engraulidae), all new sites for this bacterium.
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The occurrence, distribution and abundance of ichthyoplankton in Todos os Santos and Camamu Bays were analyzed based on four samplings (winter 2003, summer 2003, winter 2004 and summer 2005). Samples were obtained by surface horizontal hauls, using a 200-mu m mesh conical-cylinder plankton net. The distribution and abundance of eggs indicate a remarkable seasonal and annual variation of spawning activity in the region, especially when the two summer campaigns are compared. In summer 2003 the highest quantitative values were recorded, especially for Camamu, where the maximum reached 106.56 eggs.m(-3), with an overall average of 43.46 eggs.m(-3) for the two areas. In summer 2005 values were relatively low, the overall average being 3.49 eggs.m(-3). The larval taxonomic composition is characterized by the predominance of gobiids, with small variation from summer to winter. Considering all the campaigns and samplings undertaken in both areas, larvae of 11 families were identified: Engraulidae, Clupeidae, Mugilidae, Atherinopsidae, Hemiramphidae, Syngnathidae, Blenniidae, Carangidae, Gobiidae, Achiridae and Tetraodontidae.