37 results match your criteria: "Mediterranean Institute of Advanced Studies[Affiliation]"

Domesticating the wild through escapees of two iconic mediterranean farmed fish species.

Sci Rep

October 2024

Queenscliff Marine Science Centre, Sustainable Aquaculture Laboratory - Temperate and Tropical (SALTT), Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC, 3225, Australia.

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the impact of escaped farmed fish, specifically Gilthead seabream and European seabass, on wild fisheries landings, using data from the FAO and previous escape rates.* -
  • Findings reveal that seabream landings correlate significantly with the biomass of escaped seabream, whereas the relationship for seabass has weakened in recent years due to drastic catch declines.* -
  • The research highlights concerns that fish escapes could confuse stock assessments, contribute to overfishing, alter genetic diversity, spread diseases, and compete with wild fish, while also potentially inflating fisheries landings.*
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Effects of the control of an invasive tree on the structure of a plant-frugivore network.

Ecol Appl

December 2024

Programa de Pós-graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Santa Catarina, Brazil.

Invasive non-native species are one of the main causes of degradation of ecosystems worldwide. The control of invasive species is key to reducing threats to ecosystem viability in the long term. Observations of structural changes in ecological interaction networks following invasive species suppression can be useful to monitor the success of ecological restoration initiatives.

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Diarrheagenic (DEC) is the main cause of diarrhea in children under five years old. The virulence of DEC is tightly regulated by environmental signals influenced by the gut microbiota and its metabolites. Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) are the main metabolic product of anaerobic fermentation in the gut, but their role in DEC diarrhea has not yet been established.

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Metabolomic and Lipidomic Tools for Tracing Fish Escapes from Aquaculture Facilities.

ACS Food Sci Technol

April 2024

Department of Marine Sciences and Applied Biology, University of Alicante, Carretera San Vicente del Raspeig s/n, 03690 Alicante, Spain.

During adverse atmospheric events, enormous damage can occur at marine aquaculture facilities, as was the case during Storm Gloria in the southeastern Spanish Mediterranean in January 2020, with massive fish escapes. Fishes that escape were caught by professional fishermen. The objective of this study was to identify biomarkers in fish that enable differentiation among wild fish, escaped farm-raised fish, and farm-raised fish kept in aquaculture facilities until their slaughter.

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Although it is well recognized that the strength of plant-herbivore interactions can vary with the plant sex, the distance, and the density of conspecific neighbors, no study has yet assessed their combined influence. Here, we filled this knowledge gap by focusing on the dioecious palm Chamaerops humilis L., and its two main herbivores, the invasive moth Paysandisia archon Burmeister and the feral goat Capra hircus L.

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Farming Sparus aurata (Teleostei: Sparidae) in marsh ponds: trophic characterization and trace metal accumulation.

Mar Environ Res

June 2023

Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar y Ambientales, Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Mar (CEIMAR), Universidad de Cádiz, Avenida República Saharaui s/n, 11510, Puerto Real, Spain.

Considering the overexploitation of fishing on most of the world coasts, the ingestion of fish and shellfish will depend mostly on aquaculture production. Since intensive mariculture usually involves environmental impact, developing sustainable cultures is a priority. In this sense, salt marshes can provide ecosystem services and incorporate both conservation and extensive aquaculture activities.

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gen. nov., sp. nov., a thermophilic chain-elongating bacterium, producing -caproate from polymeric carbohydrates.

Int J Syst Evol Microbiol

May 2023

Division of Soil and Water Management, KU Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 20, B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium.

Strain MDTJ8 is a chain-elongating thermophilic bacterium isolated from a thermophilic acidogenic anaerobic digestor treating human waste while producing the high commodity chemical -caproate. The strain grows and produces formate, acetate, -butyrate, -caproate and lactate from mono-, di- and polymeric saccharides at 37-60 °C (optimum, 50-55 °C) and at pH 5.0-7.

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Pollinator Proboscis Length Plays a Key Role in Floral Integration of Honeysuckle Flowers ( spp.).

Plants (Basel)

April 2023

CAS Key Laboratory of Aquatic Botany and Watershed Ecology, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430074, China.

Pollinator-mediated selection is supposed to influence floral integration. However, the potential pathway through which pollinators drive floral integration needs further investigations. We propose that pollinator proboscis length may play a key role in the evolution of floral integration.

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Assessment of elemental composition in commercial fish of the Bay of Cádiz, Southern Iberian Peninsula.

Mar Pollut Bull

February 2023

Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar y Ambientales, Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Mar (CEIMAR), Universidad de Cádiz, Avenida República Saharaui s/n, 11510 Puerto Real, Spain; Instituto Universitario de Investigación Marina (INMAR), Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Mar (CEI•MAR).

The assessment of trace metal content in our fish diet is important due to the adverse effect on human health. Despite the increasing interest about the fish quality, little information is available for Southern Spain, a region characterized by high seafood intake. Nine species from the Bay of Cádiz with high commercial value were selected.

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Ancient semi-natural grasslands in Europe are important for ecosystem service (ES) provision. Often, the surrounding matrix contains 'Grassland Green Infrastructure' (GGI) that contain grassland species which have the potential to supplement grassland ES provision across the landscape. Here we investigate the potential for GGI to deliver a set of complementary ES, driven by plant composition.

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Isolation and characterization of a thermophilic chain elongating bacterium that produces the high commodity chemical n-caproate from polymeric carbohydrates.

Bioresour Technol

January 2023

Division of Soil and Water Management, KU Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 20, B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium. Electronic address:

A thermophilic chain elongating bacterium, strain MDTJ8, was isolated from a thermophilic acidogenic anaerobic digestor producing n-caproate from human waste, growing optimally at 50-55 °C and pH 6.5. 16S rRNA gene analysis suggests that MDTJ8 represents a new species/genus within a group currently composed of mesophilic chain elongators of the Oscillospiraceae family.

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Most prokaryotes are not available as pure cultures and therefore ineligible for naming under the rules and recommendations of the International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes (ICNP). Here we summarize the development of the SeqCode, a code of nomenclature under which genome sequences serve as nomenclatural types. This code enables valid publication of names of prokaryotes based upon isolate genome, metagenome-assembled genome or single-amplified genome sequences.

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Development of the SeqCode: A proposed nomenclatural code for uncultivated prokaryotes with DNA sequences as type.

Syst Appl Microbiol

September 2022

Department of Biochemistry, Genetics and Microbiology, Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI), University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.

Over the last fifteen years, genomics has become fully integrated into prokaryotic systematics. The genomes of most type strains have been sequenced, genome sequence similarity is widely used for delineation of species, and phylogenomic methods are commonly used for classification of higher taxonomic ranks. Additionally, environmental genomics has revealed a vast diversity of as-yet-uncultivated taxa.

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Plant-animal interactions fall within a mutualism-antagonism continuum, exerting a wide range of effects on plant reproductive success. These effects become even more complex and diverse when several disparate animal species interact with the same plant species. Despite the increasing number of studies about the influence of herbivory on plant performance, the outcomes mediated by pollination and the combined impact of multiple herbivores on pollination-specialized plants are underexplored.

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Climate change is forcing the redistribution of life on Earth at an unprecedented velocity. Migratory birds are thought to help plants to track climate change through long-distance seed dispersal. However, seeds may be consistently dispersed towards cooler or warmer latitudes depending on whether the fruiting period of a plant species coincides with northward or southward migrations.

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Microbial communities in hypersaline underground waters derive from ancient organisms trapped within the evaporitic salt crystals and are part of the poorly known subterranean biosphere. Here, we characterized the viral and prokaryotic assemblages present in the hypersaline springs that dissolve Triassic-Keuper evaporite rocks and feed the Añana Salt Valley (Araba/Alava, Basque Country, Spain). Four underground water samples (around 23% total salinity) with different levels of exposure to the open air were analysed by means of microscopy and metagenomics.

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Tracking the global reduction of marine traffic during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Nat Commun

April 2021

Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn, UK.

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in unparalleled global impacts on human mobility. In the ocean, ship-based activities are thought to have been impacted due to severe restrictions on human movements and changes in consumption. Here, we quantify and map global change in marine traffic during the first half of 2020.

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Marine animals are increasingly instrumented with environmental sensors that provide large volumes of oceanographic data. Here, we conduct an innovative and comprehensive global analysis to determine the potential contribution of animal-borne instruments (ABI) into ocean observing systems (OOSs) and provide a foundation to establish future integrated ocean monitoring programmes. We analyse the current gaps of the long-term Argo observing system (>1.

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Intensive aquaculture and poor management practices can cause stress and compromise welfare of farmed fish. This study aimed to assess the potential links between stocking densities and feeding methods with social and individual stress responses on juvenile seabream (Sparus aurata) through risk-taking and hypoxia tests. Seabream was first experimentally reared under two different densities: high (HD: 11-65 kg m) and low (LD: 3-15 kg m).

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Epiphytic vascular plants comprise an essential part of the tropical flora and are a key component for ecosystem functioning. Some recent studies have used a network approach to investigate the interaction of epiphytes with host phorophytes at the community level. However, knowledge on commensalistic epiphyte-phorophyte network structure still lags behind with regard to other biotic interaction networks.

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Zooming into plant-flower visitor networks: an individual trait-based approach.

PeerJ

September 2018

Applied Ecology Research Group, Department of Biology, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Article Synopsis
  • Understanding ecological community structure is crucial, and current models often overlook individual variability, limiting clarity on interactions among species.
  • This study introduces an individual-trait based method that focuses on specific size traits of plants and pollinators to analyze mutualistic networks, revealing patterns that species-based models miss.
  • The results indicate that individual trait-based networks are richer and more informative, suggesting that combining both trait-based and species-based approaches will enhance our understanding of ecological interactions.
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Phenology is often identified as one of the main structural driving forces of plant - flower visitor networks. Nevertheless, we do not yet have a full understanding of the effects of phenology in basic network build up mechanisms such as ecological modularity. In this study, we aimed to identify the effect of within-season temporal variation of plant and flower visitor activity on the network structural conformation.

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Island biogeography theory is one of the most influential paradigms in ecology. That island characteristics, including remoteness, can profoundly modulate biological diversity has been borne out by studies of animals and plants. By contrast, the processes influencing microbial diversity in island systems remain largely undetermined.

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How does climate change affect regeneration of Mediterranean high-mountain plants? An integration and synthesis of current knowledge.

Plant Biol (Stuttg)

January 2018

Department Biología y Geología, Física y Química Inorgánica, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos-ESCET, C/Tulipán, Móstoles, Madrid, Spain.

Mediterranean mountains are extraordinarily diverse and hold a high proportion of endemic plants, but they are particularly vulnerable to climate change, and most species distribution models project drastic changes in community composition. Retrospective studies and long-term monitoring also highlight that Mediterranean high-mountain plants are suffering severe range contractions. The aim of this work is to review the current knowledge of climate change impacts on the process of plant regeneration by seed in Mediterranean high-mountain plants, by combining available information from observational and experimental studies.

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Effects of TiO nanoparticles and sunscreens on coastal marine microalgae: Ultraviolet radiation is key variable for toxicity assessment.

Environ Int

January 2017

Department of Ecology and Coastal Management, Institute of Marine Sciences of Andalusia (CSIC), Campus Río S. Pedro, 11510 Puerto Real, Cádiz, Spain; Department of Global Change Research, Mediterranean Institute of Advanced Studies (UIB-CSIC), Miguel Marqués, Esporles, Balearic Islands, Spain.

Given the large numbers of sunbathers on beaches, sunscreen compounds are being released into the coastal aquatic environment in significant amounts. Until now the effect of these potential pollutants on microbiota has been not well-known. Phytoplankton is a key component of the microbiota community.

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