Publications by authors named "Agnieszka Magierecka"

At cold winter temperatures, juvenile salmonids typically spend much of their time sheltering from predators, which negatively impacts foraging for food. Previous work shows that inter-individual variation in mitochondrial efficiency explains variation in food intake, growth and metabolic rate. Here, we examine whether inter-individual variation in mitochondrial efficiency predicts sheltering as a proxy of foraging patterns for overwintering juvenile Atlantic salmon ().

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Article Synopsis
  • Exposure to stressful conditions during pregnancy can significantly impact the behavior and physiological responses of offspring, with maternal stress affecting both behavioral patterns and stress responses.
  • The study primarily investigates chronic maternal stress in female sticklebacks during the breeding season and its effects on the behavior of their offspring across three clutches.
  • Findings suggest that while maternal stress does not influence acute stress responses, it leads to greater variability in offspring behavior, potentially serving as a bet-hedging strategy to enhance survival in uncertain environments.
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Stressful environmental conditions can shape both an individual's phenotype and that of its offspring. However, little is known about transgenerational effects of chronic (as opposed to acute) stressors, nor whether these vary across the breeding lifespan of the parent. We exposed adult female (F0 generation) three-spined sticklebacks () to chronic environmental stressors and compared their reproductive allocation with that of non-exposed controls across early, middle and late clutches produced within the single breeding season of this annual population.

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Invasive vertebrate species can act as hosts for endemic pathogens and may alter pathogen community composition and dynamics. For the zoonotic pathogen Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato, the agent of Lyme borreliosis, recent work shows invasive rodent species can be of high epidemiological importance and may support host-specific strains. This study examined the role of gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) (n = 679), an invasive species in the United Kingdom, as B.

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