Publications by authors named "K P Lampert"

The round goby, Neogobius melanostomus, is a successful invasive fish species. Originating from the Caspian and Black Sea, it is now distributed widely within European fresh- and brackish waters. The River Rhine was colonized in 2008 only a few years after the opening of the Rhine-Main-Danube canal and only four years after N.

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Aquatic organisms are challenged by changes in their external environment, such as temperature and salinity fluctuations. If these variables interacted with each other, the response of organisms to temperature changes would be modified by salinity and vice versa. We tested for potential interaction between temperature and salinity effects on freshwater, brackish, and marine organisms, including algae, macrophytes, heterotrophic protists, parasites, invertebrates, and fish.

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Article Synopsis
  • Freshwater salinization poses a significant threat to biodiversity, particularly fish populations, prompting a study on how a non-native minnow species (Phoxinus septimaniae x P. dragarum) responds to saline effluents from potash mines in the Llobregat River, Spain.
  • This research utilized advanced mRNA sequencing to analyze gene expression in the fish's brain, gills, and liver from locations both upstream and downstream of the saline discharge, revealing that the brain showed the most significant changes in gene expression in response to salinity.
  • The findings highlight specific molecular pathways related to stress and osmoregulation, and validate the data through quantitative PCR, contributing essential insights for the conservation and management of freshwater ecosystems affected
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Freshwater salinization poses global challenges for aquatic organisms inhabiting urban streams, impacting their physiology and ecology. However, current salinization research predominantly focuses on mortality endpoints in limited model species, overlooking the sublethal effects on a broader spectrum of organisms and the exploration of adaptive mechanisms and pathways under natural field conditions. To address these gaps, we conducted high-throughput sequencing transcriptomic analysis on the gill tissue of the euryhaline fish Gasterosteus aculeatus, investigating its molecular response to salinity stress in the highly urbanized river Boye, Germany.

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Our capacity to predict trajectories of ecosystem degradation and recovery is limited, especially when impairments are caused by multiple stressors. Recovery may be fast or slow and either complete or partial, sometimes result in novel ecosystem states or even fail completely. Here, we introduce the Asymmetric Response Concept (ARC) that provides a basis for exploring and predicting the pace and magnitude of ecological responses to, and release from, multiple stressors.

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