321 results match your criteria: "-Central Inland Fisheries Research Institute[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study analyzed the effects of inland heat waves (IHW) on the ecological health of the Bhomra wetland and the Ganga River stretch in India, finding significant temperature and humidity impacts during summer months (March-June).
  • - The research utilized principal component analysis (PCA) to understand how IHW influenced various water quality parameters like dissolved oxygen, nutrients, and plankton abundance, revealing a strong correlation between IHW and changes in these factors.
  • - Results indicated that IHW negatively affects water quality and primary producers, which can disrupt food availability for local fish populations, emphasizing the need for effective mitigation strategies to protect these ecosystems.
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  • The study investigates phytoplankton patterns and ecohydrological interactions in two distinct wetlands in the Teesta-Torsa basin, India, highlighting significant seasonal variations in various water quality parameters.
  • A total of 128 phytoplankton species were identified, with dominant groups including Cyanophyceae and Bacillariophyceae, and the species Aulacoseira granulata indicating high organic pollution levels in both wetlands.
  • Major indicator taxa across the seasons suggest pollution pressure, and phytoplankton assemblage structure correlates with key environmental factors like transparency and nutrient concentrations (NO-N, PO-P).
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Essential Oils Improve the Survival of Gnotobiotic Brine Shrimp () Challenged With .

Front Immunol

January 2022

Laboratory of Aquaculture & Artemia Reference Center, Department of Animal Science and Aquatic Ecology, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.

The halophilic aquatic bacterium is an important aquatic pathogen, capable of causing vibriosis in shrimp and fish resulting in significant economic losses. In a previous work, essential oils (EOs) extracts from , , and were found to inhibit the growth of . This study aimed to determine EOs' potential protective effect towards gnotobiotic brine shrimp , challenged with .

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Gel electrophoresis (GE) is the most preferred and adapted technique for the separation and identification of biological molecules like proteins/peptides and nucleic acids from diverse types of organisms. All over the world, researchers, educators, and students aspiring to work in biochemistry and molecular biology disciplines use the polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) technique for resolving proteins/nucleic acids for understanding the structure and function of any cell. A simple PAGE technique requires a wide range of chemicals/reagents along with a well-equipped and well-spaced laboratory.

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Background: The taxonomic status and geographical distribution of M. tengara are vague. No genetic diversity and phylogenetic study have been done till now to resolve its identity and distribution.

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Biodiesel production from microalgae has gained significant interest recently due to the growing energy demand and non-renewable nature of petroleum. However, high cost of production and environmental health related issues like excess use of inorganic fertilizers, eutrophication are the major constraints in commercial-scale biodiesel production. Besides this, solid wastes (garden-based) management is also a global concern.

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Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a gram-negative halophilic bacterium responsible for gastrointestinal infection in human and vibriosis in aquatic animals. The thermostable direct hemolysin (tdh), tdh-related hemolysin (trh) and thermolabile hemolysin (tlh) positive strains of V. parahaemolyticus were identified from brackishwater aquaculture farms of West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh, India.

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Article Synopsis
  • The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a major health crisis in India, leading to a two-month emergency lockdown that disrupted fish catch, demand, and supply, greatly affecting floodplain wetland fishers.
  • A study surveyed 176 fishers in Bihar, West Bengal, and Assam, revealing significant losses in fishing days (20-25), production (32-44% lower), and income (INR 4,500 to 12,500).
  • Many fishers reported psychological impacts such as anxiety, and the lockdown created a demand-supply gap that resulted in a 20-40% increase in fish prices at the wetland level; the study is the first in India to assess these impacts comprehensively.
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Biogeochemical release of soil-bound arsenic (As) governs mobilization of the toxic metalloid into the groundwater. The present study has examined As-reduction ability of bacteria from anoxic aquatic sediments that might contribute to arsenic mobilization in the Bengal Delta. Arsenic-reducing bacteria from deep layers of pond sediment were enriched and isolated in anaerobic environments and As reduction was assessed in culture medium.

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Arsenic-contaminated food including farmed fish is one of the main routes of human exposure. Fish farmed in contaminated environment accumulates arsenic in different tissues with great variability. Thus, it is utmost important to quantify the risk associated with different farmed fish species in arsenic-contaminated aquaculture systems.

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Shrimp, as a high-protein animal food commodity, are one of the fastest growing food producing sectors in the world. It has emerged as a highly traded seafood product, currently exceeding 8 MT of high value. However, disease outbreaks, which are considered as the primary cause of production loss in shrimp farming, have moved to the forefront in recent years and brought socio-economic and environmental unsustainability to the shrimp aquaculture industry.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how prokaryotic communities (bacteria and archaea) function as decomposers in different wetland ecosystems by comparing their community structure and diversity using three universal primers.
  • Results show that while diversity indices were similar across primers, significant differences in community composition existed among the three wetlands: Bhomra (freshwater), Malencho (brackish), and East Kolkata (sewage-fed), with Bhomra having the highest prokaryote richness and diversity.
  • Additionally, distinct indicator genera for each wetland were identified, revealing unique microbial preferences and potential roles, suggesting that prokaryotic community composition can serve as a sensitive bioindicator for wetland ecosystem health and management.
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The adverse effect of barge movement on the river's aquatic ecosystem is of global concern. The phytoplankton community, a bioindicator, is possibly the foremost victim of the barge movement. This study hypothesized phytoplankton diversity loss induced by barge movement in a large river.

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  • An experiment was carried out for 180 days to analyze how environmental conditions and stocking density affect the growth, survival, feed utilization, and economic viability of butter catfish in floating cages in India.
  • The study found that a lower stocking density of 15 fingerlings per meter resulted in significantly better growth metrics, survival rates, and feed efficiency compared to higher densities, particularly at 35 fingerlings per meter.
  • The research concluded that maintaining lower stocking densities (15-25 fingerlings per meter) not only enhances fish growth and survival but also yields better economic returns, with the best benefit-cost ratio observed at the lowest density.
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The threat posed by invasive non-native species worldwide requires a global approach to identify which introduced species are likely to pose an elevated risk of impact to native species and ecosystems. To inform policy, stakeholders and management decisions on global threats to aquatic ecosystems, 195 assessors representing 120 risk assessment areas across all six inhabited continents screened 819 non-native species from 15 groups of aquatic organisms (freshwater, brackish, marine plants and animals) using the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit. This multi-lingual decision-support tool for the risk screening of aquatic organisms provides assessors with risk scores for a species under current and future climate change conditions that, following a statistically based calibration, permits the accurate classification of species into high-, medium- and low-risk categories under current and predicted climate conditions.

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The population structure of Barbodes carnaticus species was studied using conventional (based on body morphometrics and meristic) and image-based analysis (truss network system) methods. The study was carried out with four stocks, namely Karnataka (KA) and Tamil Nadu (TN) stocks from the River Cauvery, Kerala (KE) stock from the River Chalakudy and farm-reared stock (CI) from Central Institute of Freshwater Aquaculture, Bangalore. A total of 27 morphometric, 9 meristic and 30 truss measurements were used in the study for the stock structure.

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Invasive species exert a strong impact on the trophic structure and functioning of the ecosystem they occupy. A modeling software globally used to assess these impacts is Ecopath with Ecosim. This study measures the effects of two invasive species, African catfish Clarias gariepinus, in the food web of the Karapuzha reservoir ecosystem in India.

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Effects of the dietary therapeutic dose of oxytetracycline (OTC) at 80 mg/kg biomass/day for consecutive 10 days on the behaviour, feed intake, mortality, residue accumulation and depletion, antioxidant capacity and immune-related genes expression in juvenile Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus were evaluated. OTC-dosing caused mortalities, reduced feed intake, and biomass reduction at 24.5-28.

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Eutrophication level in lakes and reservoirs depends on both internal and external phosphorus (P) load. Characterization of sediment P fractionation and identifying the P pollution sources are important for assessing the bio-availability of P and the dominant P source, for effectively controlling the water pollution. For determining the availability and sources of sediment P and eutrophication status, spatio-temporal variation in different P fractionation of sediment of hyper-eutrophic Krishnagiri reservoir, Tamil Nadu, India, was investigated.

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Chronic diseases have been treated using the phytochemical concepts of ethnomedicinal plant-derived herbal products. Terminalia arjuna, a significant ethnomedicinal plant, was revisited and reconnoitred for antioxidant, free radical scavenging, and DNA nicking inhibiting activity under H conditions using 21 solvent extracts. Ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP), 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH), 2,2'-azino-bis-3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid, and nitrous oxide scavenging (%) were found to have a strong positive association and interaction (PCA 1 explains 84.

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Haitian variant Vibrio cholerae O1 Ogawa caused cholera outbreaks in Odisha.

Indian J Med Microbiol

December 2021

Microbiology Division, ICMR-Regional Medical Research Centre, Chandrasekharpur, Bhubaneswar, 751023, Orissa, India. Electronic address:

Purpose: Diarrheal disorders particularly cholera cause a significant threat resulting in high morbidity and mortality in the coastal and tribal areas of Odisha. Two sequential diarrheal outbreaks reported in 2016 from Balasore and Rayagada districts of Odisha were investigated to find out the causative organisms, antibiogram profile and molecular analysis of the isolated pathogens.

Method: Bacteriological analysis and antibiogram profiles of the pathogens were carried out as per the standard procedure followed.

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The present study assessed the impact of fingerling stocking of Indian major carps (Gibelion catla, Labeo rohita, and Cirrhinus mrigala) on fish yield in 24 small reservoirs of Central India. The time series data on fish stocking and yield were collected from the State Fisheries Department, Govt. of Chhattisgarh, for the year 2008 to 2016.

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Studies on organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) and heavy metals (HMs) from tidal creeks are scarce. Sixteen OCPs and seven HMs were measured in the surface water, zooplankton, two fishes (Harpadon nehereus and Pampus argenteus), and one shrimp (Penaeus indicus) collected from three tidal creeks of the Indian Sundarban. The surface water was polluted by hexachlorocyclohexane isomers (ΣHCH: 525-1581 ng l), dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane congeners (ΣDDT: 188-377 ng l), endosulfan congeners (ΣEND: 687-1474 ng l), and other OCPs (512-1334 ng l).

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Microplastics are recognized as ubiquitous pollutants in aquatic environments; however, very little study is done on their occurrence and fate at drinking water treatment plants (DWTPs). Though, the toxic effect of microplastics on human health is not yet well established; there is global concern about their possible ill effect on the human. Hence, the present study evaluates the occurrence of microplastics at different treatment stages of a typical DWTP with pulse clarification and its removal efficiency.

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The regional climate has significantly warmed with erratically declining annual rainfall and intensified downpour within a narrower span of monsoon months, which led to an increased trophic state (≈algae) in most inland waters. Freshwater clupeids vitally control the aquatic food chain by grazing on algae. Despite increasing food availability, IUCN Red List® revealed 16 freshwater clupeids with a decreasing population trend.

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