The Annelida phylum is composed of a myriad of species exhibiting key phenotypic adaptations. They occupy key ecological niches in a variety of marine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems. Importantly, the increment of omic resources is rapidly modifying the taxonomic landscape and knowledge of species belonging to this phylum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistorically famous for their negative impact on human-built marine wood structures, mollusc shipworms play a central ecological role in marine ecosystems. Their association with bacterial symbionts, providing cellulolytic and nitrogen-fixing activities, underscores their exceptional wood-eating and wood-boring behaviours, improving energy transfer and the recycling of essential nutrients locked in the wood cellulose. Importantly, from a molecular standpoint, a minute of omic resources are available from this lineage of Bivalvia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Atlantic chub mackerel, (Gmelin, 1789), is a medium-sized pelagic fish with substantial importance in the fisheries of the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Over the past decade, this species has gained special relevance, being one of the main targets of pelagic fisheries in the NE Atlantic. Here, we sequenced and annotated the first high-quality draft genome assembly of , produced with PacBio HiFi long reads and Illumina paired-end short reads.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman pathogens have evolved to infect vertebrate hosts other than human beings without causing symptoms of the disease, thus permitting them to complete their life cycle and to develop into infectious forms. The identification and management of infected animals are alternatives to control dissemination of the disease and to prevent human illness. In the current study, the potential use of staphylococcal A or streptococcal G proteins was evaluated with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) for seroepidemiological studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Soc Bras Med Trop
July 2007
Triatoma sordida is the most frequent vector for Trypanosoma cruzi, Chagas, 1909, in Uberaba, State of Minas Gerais. The objective of this study was to construct a dynamic life table for Triatoma sordida with the aim of supplying support data for controlling its populations.
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