Publications by authors named "A J Morash"

Article Synopsis
  • Warmer and variable temperatures are linked to the decline of Atlantic salmon in Eastern Canada, raising concerns about how these temperature changes affect fish swimming performance.
  • The study investigates the effects of warm versus cool daily temperature changes on swimming efficiency and overall swimming capabilities in juvenile Atlantic salmon.
  • Results show that while acclimation to different thermal profiles didn't significantly impact swimming efficiency, sudden exposure to higher temperatures did elevate metabolic rates, suggesting that salmon can still swim effectively in both warm and cool conditions.
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Temperature in many natural aquatic environments follows a diel cycle, but to date, we know little on how diel thermal cycles affect fish biology. The current study investigates the growth, development and physiological performance of wild Atlantic salmon collected from the Miramichi and Restigouche rivers (NB, Canada). Fish were collected as parr and acclimated to either 16-21 or 19-24°C diel thermal cycles throughout the parr and smolt life stages.

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Physiological and environmental stressors can cause osmotic stress in fish hearts, leading to a reduction in intracellular taurine concentration. Taurine is a β-amino acid known to regulate cardiac function in other animal models but its role in fish has not been well characterized. We generated a model of cardiac taurine deficiency (TD) by feeding brook char (Salvelinus fontinalis) a diet enriched in β-alanine, which inhibits cardiomyocyte taurine uptake.

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Enhanced behavioral interventions are gaining increasing interest as innovative treatment strategies for major depressive disorder (MDD). In this study protocol, we propose to examine the synergistic effects of a self-administered home-treatment, encompassing transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) along with a video game based training of attentional control. The study is designed as a two-arm, double-blind, randomized and placebo-controlled multi-center trial (ClinicalTrials.

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Taurine is a non-proteinogenic sulfonic acid found in high concentrations inside vertebrate cardiomyocytes and its movement across the sarcolemmal membrane is critical for cell volume regulation. Taurine deficiency is rare in mammals, where it impairs cardiac contractility and leads to congestive heart failure. In fish, cardiac taurine levels vary substantially between species and can decrease by up to 60% in response to environmental change but its contribution to cardiac function is understudied.

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