Publications by authors named "Melanie Gaillard"

Article Synopsis
  • Scientists are studying how to see alizarin dye in fish fins, especially in eels, because it can be tricky due to a special protein called eelGFP.
  • They tested three new methods to see how well they could detect the dye in living European glass eels.
  • The best results came from a method called epifluorometry, which was able to find 100% of the marked eels without too much interference from other signals.
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Variation in gene regulation may be involved in the differences observed for life history traits within species. American eel (Anguilla rostrata) is well known to harbor distinct ecotypes within a single panmictic population. We examined the expression of genes involved in the regulation of appetite as well as lipid and glycogen among glass eels migrating to different locations on the Canadian east coast and captured at two different periods of upstream migration.

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Energy status was analyzed in glass eels captured during two early waves of arrival at the mouths of the Mersey River, Nova Scotia, Canada (MR), and Grande-Rivière-Blanche, Québec, Canada (GRB), and according to their salinity preference (freshwater, brackish, or saltwater). Glass eels captured in the GRB estuary were larger, more pigmented, and exhibited higher whole-body glycogen, phospholipid, and sterol and wax ester contents. Those from MR had a higher condition index and a higher whole-body triacylglycerol content, suggesting different patterns of storage and/or use of energy reserves.

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