6 results match your criteria: "Coastal Marine Ecosystems Research Centre (CMERC)[Affiliation]"
J Environ Manage
October 2024
Coastal Marine Ecosystems Research Centre (CMERC), Central Queensland University, Gladstone, QLD, Australia. Electronic address:
Seagrass meadows are an essential part of the Great Barrier Reef ecosystem, providing various benefits such as filtering nutrients and sediment, serving as a nursery for fish and shellfish, and capturing atmospheric carbon as blue carbon. Understanding the phenotypic plasticity of seagrasses and their ability to acclimate their morphology in response to environ-mental stressors is crucial. Investigating these morphological changes can provide valuable insights into ecosystem health and inform conservation strategies aimed at mitigating seagrass decline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
June 2024
Laboratory of Aquatic Biodiversity and Ecophysiology, Department of Fish Biology and Genetics, Sylhet Agricultural University, Sylhet-3100, Bangladesh.
The ecological health of freshwater rivers is deteriorating globally due to careless human activities, for instance, the emission of plastic garbage into the river. The current research was the first assessment of microplastics (MPs) pollution in water, sediment, and representative organisms (fish, crustacean, and bivalve) from the Surma River. Water, sediment, and organisms were sampled from six river sites (Site 1: Charkhai; Site 2: Golapganj; Site 3: Alampur; Site 4: Kazir Bazar; Site 5: Kanishail and Site 6: Lamakazi), and major water quality parameters were recorded during sampling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioresour Technol
February 2024
Centre for Machine Learning, Networking and Education Technology (CML-NET), School of Engineering and Technology, CQUniversity, Yaamba Road, Rockhampton, Queensland 4701, Australia.
Land-based aquaculture provides dietary protein to the world's population in a sustainable way, but issues related to release of nitrogen rich wastewater limits its expansion. Sedimentation of naturally occurring microalgae that assimilate excess nitrogen, is slow and land intensive. Electro-flocculation, used in wastewater treatment processes, is a potential alternative for aquaculture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemosphere
December 2022
CQUniversity, Coastal Marine Ecosystems Research Centre (CMERC), Gladstone, QLD 4680, Australia.
Occurrence of microplastics (MPs) in freshwater environments, particularly reservoir and lakes, is an emerging concern. There are limited studies in Pakistan on microplastic pollution in the lacustrine environments and those that exist do not provide sufficient information on the spatial distribution of MPs in offshore surface water. The aims of this study were to determine microplastic abundance in Rawal Lake, Pakistan and to ascertain if sampling methodology influences microplastic counts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Pollut Bull
December 2021
International Centre for Island Technology (ICIT), Heriot-Watt University, Stromness, Orkney KW16 3AW, UK; CQUniversity, Coastal Marine Ecosystems Research Centre (CMERC), Gladstone, QLD 4680, Australia.
Microplastic (MP) ingestion has been widely recorded in aquatic organisms, but few studies focus on cnidarians and ctenophores, which form a significant contribution to marine trophic interactions. Scyphozoans (Cyanea capillata, C. lamarckii and Aurelia aurita), hydrozoan (Cosmetira pilosella) and ctenophores (Beroe cucumis and Pleurobrachia bachei) collected opportunistically from Orkney, Shetland and the North Sea were thermally disintegrated, with a subsample of ingested plastics analysed using FTIR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Parasitol
September 2020
Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture and the College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland 4811, Australia; Cawthron Institute, 98 Halifax Street East, Nelson 7010, New Zealand. Electronic address:
This study quantified the effects of temperature on reproduction and maternal provisioning of the ectoparasite, Neobenedenia girellae (Platyhelminthes: Monogenea), a species known to cause detrimental impacts to aquaculture fishes in tropical and subtropical environments worldwide. At 20 and 25 °C, parasites exhibited relatively slower production of larger eggs that were energy-dense. In contrast, parasites at 30 °C attained sexual maturity faster, were reproductively active over a shorter period, grew to a smaller size and laid smaller, less energy-rich eggs at a faster rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF