Publications by authors named "C Fiol Castano"

Trees affect organic matter decomposition through allocation of recently fixed carbon belowground, but the magnitude and direction of this effect may depend on substrate type and decomposition stage. Here, we followed mass loss, chemical composition and fungal colonisation of leaf and root litters incubated in mountain birch forests over 4 years, in plots where belowground carbon allocation was severed by tree girdling or in control plots. Initially, girdling stimulated leaf and root litter mass loss by 12% and 22%, respectively, suggesting competitive release of saprotrophic decomposition when tree-mediated competition by ectomycorrhizal fungi was eliminated (Gadgil effect).

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Spermatozoa collected from the cauda epididymis of wild ruminants are more cryoresistant than are ejaculated spermatozoa. This work examines the effects of lactoferrin (LF) and phosphoglycerate mutase 2 (PGAM2), which are abundant in the epididymal sperm of wild ruminants, as additives in Iberian ibex and mouflon sperm extenders. In addition, LF was added to a vitrification medium to determine whether it also provided protection during the cryopreservation of testicular tissue.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Studied how testosterone influenced sperm quality during cryopreservation, finding that it negatively impacted acrosome integrity in mouflons and ibexes, especially when combined with the aquaporin blocker phloretin.
  • * Concluded that testosterone and the AQP blocker adversely affect sperm cryoresistance, contributing to an understanding of seasonal changes in sperm freezing capacity in ruminants.
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Diplodia sapinea causes Diplodia tip blight (DTB) and is recognised as an opportunistic necrotrophic pathogen affecting conifers. While DTB is associated with abiotic stress, the impact of biotic stress in the host on D. sapinea's lifestyle shift is unknown.

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The present study compares two protocols for the cryopreservation of chicken semen. Both protocols had an initial low cooling rate in the first step, followed by higher cooling rates around ice nucleation (Protocol 1) or following the dissipation of the latent heat of fusion (Protocol 2) in the second step. Semen ejaculates obtained from 12 roosters were diluted with Rootex with 6% dimethylformamide and frozen following either Protocol 1 (from +5°C to -10°C at 5°C/min and from -10°C to -130°C at 60°C/min) or Protocol 2 (from +5°C to -35°C at 7°C/min and from -35°C to -140°C at 60°C/min).

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