Publications by authors named "Malcolm I"

There is increasing interest in the potential of single-pass and timed electrofishing to assess status and trends in fish populations. However, where capture probability varies over time, there is a risk that uncalibrated electrofishing data could fail to detect, or provide biased estimates of trends. This study analysed a long-term electrofishing dataset collected over 50 years in an intensively studied catchment where egg deposition and emigrant production declined by c.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climatic warming will increase river temperature globally, with consequences for cold water-adapted organisms. In regions with low forest cover, elevated river temperature is often associated with a lack of bankside shading. Consequently, river managers have advocated riparian tree planting as a strategy to reduce temperature extremes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Diadromous fish populations are strongly affected by in-stream barriers that cause river network fragmentation, constraining productivity or preventing completion of their lifecycle. Removal or reduction of barrier impacts is a restoration measure associated with unambiguous benefits. Management of barriers is therefore often prioritised above other restoration actions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The thermal suitability of riverine habitats for cold water adapted species may be reduced under climate change. Riparian tree planting is a practical climate change mitigation measure, but it is often unclear where to focus effort for maximum benefit. Recent developments in data collection, monitoring and statistical methods have facilitated the development of increasingly sophisticated river temperature models capable of predicting spatial variability at large scales appropriate to management.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate change is likely to increase summer temperatures in many river environments, raising concerns that this will reduce their thermal suitability for a range of freshwater fish species. As a result, river managers have pursued riparian tree planting due to its ability to moderate stream temperatures by providing shading. However, little is known about the relative ability of different riparian forest types to moderate stream temperatures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We show how spatial variability in channel bed morphology affects the hydraulic characteristics of river reaches available to Atlantic salmon parr (Salmo salar) under different flow conditions in an upland stream. The study stream, the Girnock Burn, is a long-term monitoring site in the Scottish Highlands. Six site characterised by different bed geometry and morphology were investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Stream water dissolved oxygen was monitored in a 3.2km2 moorland headwater catchment in the Scottish Highlands. The stream consists of three 1st order headwaters and a 2nd order main stem.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite perceptions of pristine condition, upland environments are increasingly subject to a range of anthropogenic pressures including air pollution, climate change, land-use change and evolving land management strategies. Although they have received little attention to date, the large-scale development of upland wind farms also has the potential to disturb vegetation and soils, alter hydrology and water quality and, thus, impact freshwater ecosystems. This paper presents the findings of a 5-year study of the impacts of wind farm construction on the freshwater environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ova fecundities of Scottish Atlantic salmon Salmo salar, predicted from log(10) regression of ova numbers and female fork length (L(F)), differed widely between upland and lowland stocks within the same river, whereas sea-age, river and year factors had insignificant effects on fecundity once L(F) was accounted for. For upland fish, the relationship between log(10)L(F) and log(10) ova mass (M(O)) was stable between two datasets collected 40 years apart. Although upland and lowland females both produced comparable log(10)M(O) (log(10)L(F))(-1), lowland females partitioned this into 45% more, but smaller ova, whereas upland females produced fewer, but larger, eggs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spawning patterns in female brown trout Salmo trutta were examined by documenting the construction of nests in a small stream and later excavating them to recover progeny. The maternal provenance of nests was determined by genetic typing of embryos using microsatellite markers. Seventy-two nests, for which position and date of construction were known, were made by 59 individuals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study investigated the effects of diurnal temperature variability (>7° C) on the growth of 1+ year Atlantic salmon Salmo salar. Experimental manipulation of water temperature was used to simulate: (1) constant and (2) naturally varying thermal regimes with similar daily mean values. Data from two replicates of four treatments (two thermal and two feeding regimes) were collected over 6 months corresponding to the main spring to summer growth period.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The quantity and composition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) exported from upland soils to surface waters is a key link in the global carbon cycle and economically important for treating potable waters. The relationship between ultraviolet (UV) absorbance and DOC concentrations can be used to infer changes in the proportion of hydrophobic (aromatic, recalcitrant) carbon and hence biodegradability of DOC. This study describes a significant change in the relationship between UV absorbance and DOC over 22 years at two upland moorland catchments in Scotland, UK.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 31P NMR investigation has been carried out of the headgroup dynamics of sphingomyelin molecules in bilayers for the L alpha and L beta' phases. The resulting line shapes have been analysed in terms of a reduced-parameter model, using van Faassen's method for obtaining an analytic solution to first-order stochastic differential equations to simulate the line shapes of oriented and non-oriented samples. Our treatment results in good fits to measured data but using fewer parameters than traditional methods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Van Faassen's method for obtaining an explicit solution to a first order stochastic differential equation is applied to the simulation of 31P NMR line shapes of unoriented phospholipid bilayers in the Lalpha phase and of oriented bilayers in both the Lalpha and Lbeta' phases. The effects of the two slowest motions on the density matrix are described by the stochastic Liouville equation (SLE) which is solved analytically using the method of van Faassen. These two slowest motions are assumed to be a rotational re-orientation about the long molecular axis and a uniform wobble of this axis within a conical volume with re-orientation rates characterised by correlation times tau(parallel) and tau(perpendicular) respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Like many streams draining intensively farmed parts of lowland Scotland, water quality in the Newmills burn, Aberdeenshire, is characterized by relatively high nutrient levels; mean concentrations of NO3-N and NH3-N are 6.09 mg l(-1) and 0.28 mg l(-1), respectively, whilst average PO4-P concentrations reach 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A case of a woman who had tricuspid valve bacterial endocarditis is presented. Her course was complicated by persistent disseminated intravascular coagulation and acute renal failure, followed by pulmonary embolization of the vegetation. Transthoracic echocardiography showed almost complete obstruction of the right pulmonary artery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spawning habitat utilized by Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar) and Sea Trout (Salmo trutta) was characterized in a 1.6-km reach of the Newmills Burn, a small, highly canalized tributary of the River Don in Aberdeenshire. The Newmills Burn is typical of the intensively farmed lower sub-catchments of the major salmon rivers on the east coast of Scotland.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Torsade de pointes is a polymorphic ventricular tachyarrhythmia associated with a long QT interval. The prognosis is excellent if torsade is recognized early. In the acquired long QT syndrome, measures should be taken quickly to identify and correct all predisposing conditions and to treat or prevent torsade.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Right atrial or ventricular thrombi in patients with pulmonary embolism are emboli in transit and are a medical emergency because they are associated with a high mortality rate when treated conservatively with anticoagulation. The current standard therapy is less well accepted because of the risk of clot fragmentation and distal embolization. A case in which an unsuspected right ventricular thrombus was diagnosed by echocardiography is reported.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A patient with a persistent aortic-to-right atrial shunt 8 years after replacement of the aortic valve and root ("Cabrol procedure") is described. Echocardiographic images are presented.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 50-year-old man with 'presyncope' is presented. He was found to have an aneurysm of the right coronary sinus of Valsalva and an aneurysm of the noncoronary sinus. Neither aneurysm had ruptured.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Clinically apparent myocardial disease is infrequent in sarcoidosis. However, autopsy data show myocardial involvement in up to 30 percent of patients. Unexplained exertional symptomatology is a common complaint in patients with sarcoidosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF