276 resultados para Leporinus friderici
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This study evaluated stress indicators of juvenile piau (Leporinus friderici) during and after a 4-hour transportation in order to establish an appropriate transportation protocol for this type of fish. Fish were transported in plastic bags (133.1 g/L) and sampled before loading, during 1, 2, 3 and 4 h and after transportation (2, 6, 12 and 24 h). Blood samples were analyzed for cortisol and glucose levels, hematocrit, hemoglobin level, number and mean corpuscular volume of erythrocytes. Water pH, dissolved oxygen, temperature and ammonia were monitored before, during and after transportation. No mortality was observed through the experiment. Ammonia levels increased throughout transportation, but the low pH values kept NH3 in safe levels for fish. Cortisol levels increased within 4 h of transportation, and returned to control condition 2 h after arrival. Plasma glucose increased within one hour of transportation, reaching peak value within 4 h and returning to initial condition 2 h after arrival. Erythrocyte number and hemoglobin levels showed the lowest levels 2 h after arrival, and mean corpuscular volume increased during transportation, decreasing at 12 and 24 h after arrival. Transporting piau is stressful, but fish recover the initial condition in short time, showing tolerance to the changes in the water quality parameters.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Leporinus friderici Bloch, 1794 é um Anostomidae com ampla distribuição nas bacias dos rios Amazonas, Paraná e Araguaia-Tocantins. Tem hábito alimentar onívoro, alimentando-se de insetos, material vegetal, detritos, frutos, sementes, camarão e pequenos peixes, bem como hábitos diurnos e sedentárias. No sistema Rio Amazonas, esse peixe se reproduz no período de abril a outubro, e tem desova total. Este estudo comparou a estrutura das comunidades de parasitos metazoários em duas populações de Leporinus friderici de diferentes bacias do sistema do Rio Amazonas, no Brasil. Em julho de 2012, 47 espécimes de L. friderici (22.1 ± 3.8 cm e 171.1 ± 86.3 g) foram coletados na bacia do Rio Jari, município de Vitória do Jari, Estado do Amapá (Brasil), e de julho a dezembro de 2012, 50 espécimes de L. friderici (15.1 ± 3.6 cm e 57.4 ± 42.8 g) foram coletadas na bacia Igarapé Fortaleza, próximo à cidade de Macapá, estado do Amapá (Brasil), para análise parasitológica. Métodos usuais de coleta, fixação, conservação e identificação dos parasitos foram usados neste estudo. Os termos ecológicos usados foram os recomendados na literatura. O índice de diversidade de Shannon (H) e uniformidade (E), riqueza de espécies e frequência de dominância (FD%) foram calculados para avaliar a comunidade componente de parasitos. O índice de dispersão e índice de discrepância foram calculados, para detectar o padrão de distribuição das infracomunidades de parasitos para espécies com prevalência >10%. As duas populações de L. friderici estavam parasitadas por Jainus leporini, Urocleidoides paradoxus, Urocleidoides sp., Tereancistrum parvus, Tereancistrum sp., Clinostomum marginatum, Procamallanus (Spirocamallanus) inopinatus, Contracaecum sp., Octospiniferoides incognita e Ergasilus sp. Houve diferença na riqueza de espécies de parasitos, índice de Shannon e equitabilidade entre ambas as populações de L. friderici, pois a comunidade de parasitos mostrou similaridade de apenas 33%. Somente os monogenoideas, C. marginatum e P. (S.) inopinatus foram as espécies de parasitos compartilhadas por ambas as populações de L. friderici examinados. Os parasitos apresentaram padrão dispersão agregada, exceto Contracaecum sp., que mostrou padrão de dispersão randômica. Diferenças no tamanho dos hospedeiros foi um dos fatores que contribuiram para as diferenças nos níveis de parasitos encontradas entre as populações estudadas. O hábito alimentar contribui para ocorrência de endoparasitos em L. friderici, hospedeiro intermediário para tais esses parasitos como ciclo de vida complexo. Este é primeiro registro de O. incognita, C. marginatum e Ergasilus para L. friderici.
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In order to study the divergence of teleost sex chromosomes, subtractive cloning was carried out between genomic DNA of males and females of the rainbow trout (XX/XY) and of Leporinus elongatus (ZW/ZZ). Inserts cloned in a plasmid vector were individually tested on Southern blots of DNA of males and females for sex specificity. No sex-specific insert was obtained from trout, but two out of ten inserts cloned from L. elongatus showed sex-specific patterns in this species: one corresponds to a sequence present on both Z and W chromosomes, while the other is W specific. Sequences of these two inserts show neither clear homology with other known sequences, nor an open reading frame. They cross-hybridize with the genomic DNA of Leporinus friderici, but without sex-specific patterns. Twenty-four L. elongatus adults were sexed by gonadal observation, chromosomed examination and Southern hybridization with one or the other insert. Ten males and 11 females had chromosomes and hybridization patterns typical of their sex. One ZW female was recognized as a male with the W-specific probe. This was also the case for two unusual ZW males, one having a male hybridization pattern with the other probe. These three atypical individuals may result from single genetic exchanges between four regions of the Z and the W, giving rise to three atypical W chromosomes. Finding males with such atypical heterochromosomes in a female heterogametic species may indicate that a gradual transition occurs between the heterogametic systems.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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We observed individuals of Odontostilbe pequira, a small characid, approaching and biting individuals of larger-bodied fishes of other species. This observation was made in two clear water headwater streams of the Cuiaba basin, Paraguay River system, located in Nobres, Mato Grosso State, Brazil, which led us to investigate the behavioral interactions of these fish. We characterized behavioral interactions between species by direct underwater observations using snorkelling and video recordings. Additionally, we proceeded diet analyses of O. pequira, obtaining intestinal coefficient and the index of alimentary importance. During underwater observations we checked the relative frequency of attacks by O. pequira on larger fish species. Odontostilbe pequira attacked individually or in large groups, and the anostomid Leporinus friderici was the preferred target prey species, while Prochilodus lineatus was apparently avoided. Our study sustains that O. pequira is omnivorous, with a diet that varies seasonally. It feeds mainly on plants, but also on animal prey, including the scales of small fishes, and, possibly, the mucus and epidermis of larger fish species. We suggest the term "mutilating predation" to describe the latter relationship.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Background: Members of the Anostomidae family provide an interesting model system for the study of the influence of repetitive elements on genome composition, mainly because they possess numerous heterochromatic segments and a peculiar system of female heterogamety that is restricted to a few species of the Leporinus genus. The aim of this study was to isolate and identify important new repetitive DNA elements in Anostomidae through restriction enzyme digestion, followed by cloning, characterisation and chromosome mapping of this fragment. To identify repetitive elements in other Leporinus species and expand on studies of repetitive elements in Anostomidae, hybridisation experiments were also performed using previously described probes of LeSpeI repetitive elements. Results: The 628-base pair (bp) LeSpeII fragment was hybridised to metaphase cells of L. elongatus individuals as well as those of L. macrocephalus, L. obtusidens, L. striatus, L. lacustris, L. friderici, Schizodon borellii and S. isognathus. In L. elongatus, both male and female cells contained small clusters of LeSpeII repetitive elements dispersed on all of the chromosomes, with enrichment near most of the terminal portions of the chromosomes. In the female sex chromosomes of L. elongatus (Z2,Z2/W1W 2), however, this repeated element was absent. In the remaining species, a dispersed pattern of hybridisation was observed on all chromosomes irrespective of whether or not they were sex chromosomes. The repetitive element LeSpeI produced positive hybridisations signals only in L. elongatus, L. macrocephalus and L. obtusidens, i.e., species with differentiated sex chromosomes. In the remaining species, the LeSpeI element did not produce hybridisation signals. Conclusions: Results are discussed in terms of the effects of repetitive sequences on the differentiation of the Anostomidae genome, especially with respect to sex chromosome evolution. LeSpeII showed hybridisation patterns typical of Long Interspersed Elements (LINEs). The differential distribution of this element may be linked to sex chromosome differentiation in L. elongatus species. The relationship between sex chromosome specificity and the LeSpeI element is confirmed in the species L. elongatus, L. macrocephalus and L. obtusidens. © 2012 da Silva et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Colbertinus