Publications by authors named "D Morick"

The classic epidemiological triangle model of host-environment-pathogen is recently being reshaped into a tetrahedron, with the growing understanding of the importance of the microbiome in this array. The gills, being a gateway into the fish body, bearing an important role in fish homeostasis, host a complex microbiome that reflects the ambient water, while also showing resemblance to gut microbiome. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) and improvements in data analysis tools enable researchers to gather and analyse a lot more data than ever before, take a closer, more detailed look at microbiota, and gain a much better understanding of the biological processes at work in these complex relations.

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The Eastern Mediterranean Sea (EMS) exhibits high temperature and salinity, low levels of biologic production and is considered oligotrophic. Nonetheless, it is also a hotspot of biodiversity, with several important endangered flagship species, including several species of sea turtles. These turtles serve as bioindicators for the health of their ecologic systems, due to changes in diet, habitat and migration patterns that characterize different stages in their lives.

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Objective: The Blackchin Guitarfish Glaucostegus cemiculus is endemic to the Mediterranean Sea and is critically endangered, but relevant routine laboratory data are unavailable. Our objectives were to determine the packed cell volume (PCV), comprehensive serum chemistry analytes, and serum total thyroxine (sTT4) concentration; compare serum albumin and serum globulin concentrations as measured by two different methods; and describe the blood cell morphology of healthy, free-ranging Blackchin Guitarfish.

Methods: Wild Blackchin Guitarfish were captured using a seine net.

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Spirorchiid blood flukes are widespread in sea turtles, causing disease and mortality in their populations, with high prevalence in several ocean basins. Besides being leading parasitic causes of sea turtle strandings in several parts of the world, these infectious agents can cause endocarditis, vasculitis, thrombosis, miliary egg granulomas, and aneurysms, which ultimately may compromise the survival of green sea turtles. More severe cases may also result in multifocal granulomatous meningitis or pneumonia, both of which can be fatal.

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Article Synopsis
  • Freshwater and marine ecosystems, particularly the Sea of Galilee, serve as habitats for parasitic nematodes from the Anisakidae family, which can use various fish species as hosts to complete their life cycle.
  • A study conducted in 2021, 57 years after the initial survey in 1964, found a significant decrease in the prevalence of nematode larvae in fish, with rates of 16.8% in 1964 dropping to 0.85% in 2021, using both morphological and molecular identification methods.
  • The research discovered two native cyprinid fish infected with larvae and highlighted the importance of understanding the distribution and host range of these parasites for potential risks in fishery products
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