Publications by authors named "Bris H"

Opportunistic green macroalgae blooms increasingly affect coastal areas worldwide. Understanding their impacts on organisms that use this zone, such as juvenile flatfish, is critical. By combining stable isotope data, digestive tract contents and community analyses of flatfish and their potential prey (benthic macroinvertebrates) from two North-East Atlantic sandy beaches (one impacted by blooms and one not), we detected similar and species-specific trophic changes among three co-occurring species (sand sole, plaice and turbot).

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The characterization and quantification of diets of nine commercially important Celtic Sea fish species (black-bellied angler Lophius budegassa, blue whiting Micromesistius poutassou, Atlantic cod Gadus morhua, haddock Melanogrammus aeglefinus, European hake Merluccius merluccius, megrim Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis, European plaice Pleuronectes platessa, common sole Solea solea and whiting Merlangius merlangus) was undertaken November 2014 and November 2015 to gain a better understanding of fish feeding strategies, prey preferences, competition for resources and, more generally, increases knowledge of marine ecosystem functioning. Prey were classified into 39 taxonomic groups. A feeding overlap index and multivariate analyses were used to classify the fishes into four main trophic groups where interspecific competition for resources may be important: piscivorous species, omnivorous species, planktivorous species and invertebrate benthic feeders.

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Through their tissues or activities, engineer species create, modify, or maintain habitats and alter the distribution and abundance of many plants and animals. This study investigates key ecological functions performed by an engineer species that colonizes coastal ecosystems. The gregarious tubiculous amphipod is used as a biological model.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A study conducted on a French river, which included fish farms and a sewage plant, utilized both passive and active monitoring methods over a year to assess antibiotic contamination in water, sediment, and bryophytes.
  • * The results indicated that sediment and bryophytes were effective in detecting contamination, especially from flumequine and oxytetracycline, linked primarily to fish farming and possibly other sources like terrestrial farming and human pharmaceuticals.
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Objectives: A multiresistant Aeromonas bestiarum strain, shown to be persistent and spreading in a freshwater stream, was investigated for the presence, location and organization of antimicrobial resistance genes.

Methods: The plasmid pAB5S9 was transferred by electroporation into Escherichia coli TG1. The resistance phenotype mediated by pAB5S9 was determined.

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Aims: The aims of this study were: (i) to determine the proportions of Aeromonas spp. resistant to florfenicol (FC), oxolinic acid (OA) and oxytetracycline (OTC) along a river receiving effluents from fish farms, and (ii) to assess the relevance of using this bacterial group as an indicator for studying the consequences of the use and release of these aquacultural antimicrobials in the freshwater environment, as compared with performing antimicrobial measurements in sediments.

Methods And Results: Sediment interstitial waters sampled along a river during two distinct climatic seasons were plated on an Aeromonas-selective medium supplemented or not with OA, OTC or FC.

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The consequences of antibiotic use in aquatic integrated systems, which are based on trophic interactions between different cultured organisms and physical continuity through water, need to be examined. In this study, fish reared in a prototype marine integrated system were given an oxolinic acid treatment, during and after which the level of resistance to this quinolone antibiotic was monitored among vibrio populations from the digestive tracts of treated fish, co-cultured bivalves and sediments that were isolated on thiosulfate-citrate-bile-sucrose. Oxolinic acid minimum inhibitory concentration distributions obtained from replica plating of thiosulfate-citrate-bile-sucrose plates indicated that a selection towards oxolinic acid resistance had occurred in the intestines of fish under treatment.

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In recent years, the fate of pharmacological substances in the aquatic environment have been more and more studied. Oxolinic acid (OA), flumequine (FLU) and oxytetracycline (OTC) are commonly used antibacterial agents. A large amount of these drugs is released into water directly by dissolved fraction and indirectly in urine and feces.

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The ability of blue mussel (Mytilus edulis) to act as a potential antibiotic bioindicator in marine waters was experimentally tested by the study of the kinetics of two veterinary antibiotics (oxolinic acid: OA and oxytetracycline: OTC). Antibiotic uptake was fast in the soft parts of the mussels. OA was quickly eliminated while OTC was released more slowly (half-life in viscera=3.

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Some land-based marine fish-farms situated on the Atlantic coastline of France use high volumes of underground sea water. Studies of the available quantities and movements of this underground resource became necessary, using fluorescent dyes such as fluorescein. As fluorescein may reach reared fish, it became important to assess its toxicity to fish.

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A retrospective study of 69 cases of infective endocarditis in 68 children (group I: 1971-1981; 34 children; group II: 1982-1992; 34 children) disclosed the following features: a moderate increase in the global incidence of infective endocarditis (0.5% of children hospitalized in paediatric cardiology units) and of its incidence in the very young (proportion of children less than 1 year of age: 9% in group 1 and 17% in group II); no rheumatic heart disease amongst predisposing heart diseases in children living in France; a major causal role of congenital heart diseases (72%), with an increasing incidence of previous operation (group I: 42%; group II: 56%); an increase in associated complex congenital heart diseases (group I: 11%; group II: 20%); no change in related mitral valve prolapse (5% in both groups); positive blood cultures in 76% of cases, with similar rates of Staphylococci (group I: 27%; group II: 30%) and of unusual microorganisms (15% in both groups); a major diagnostic role for echocardiography (vegetations in group II: 64%). Complications occurred in 75% of cases in both groups (pulmonary or systemic emboli, mycotic aneurysms, valvar regurgitation), leading to heart failure in 29% of group I patients and in 32% of group II patients.

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The authors undertook a retrospective study of 69 cases of infective endocarditis (IE) in 68 children treated from 1971 to 1992. The comparison between two groups (Group I comprising 34 patients treated between 1971 and 1981; Group II comprising 34 patients treated between 1982 and 1992) based on a review of the literature showed that the natural history of paediatric IE has changed during these two decades: a slight increase in the incidence in young children. The sequellae of rheumatic heart disease play no role in determining IE in France.

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The authors report the cardiovascular manifestations observed in 15 cases of severe leptospirosis in New Caledonia. Cardiovascular collapse is frequent. Electrocardiographic alterations consist mainly of arrhythmia secondary to atrial fibrillation and repolarisation disorders.

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57 cases of leptospirosis were diagnosed in New Caledonia (South Pacific French Territory) between June 1983 and May 1985. 25% cases are severe infections; thrombopenia and renal failure are frequently observed. Leptospires are found in blood or spinal or urine culture confirmed by haemagglutination tests on microplates (Martin et Petit).

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In sixty abruptions of the placenta observed during eighteen months, a severe condition of shock was observed in thirty per cent of patients. This shock state is seen during the abruption or after delivery. It's essentially a question of hemorrhagic shock, the importance of hemorrhagy being often underestimated, if the drop of blood pressure and blood losses are only estimated.

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Two varieties of conditions of shock may be isolated during necrotic amoebic colitis (13 cases). Eight patients present a simple hypovolemic shock secondary to wastage by diarrhea and perilesional oedema with globular, protein, alcaline and potassic deficiency. Its prognosis is relatively good, after vascular infilling and corrections of metabolic disorders.

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