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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
841

The Affect of Low Tide on the Digestion of Balanus glandula, the Acorn Barnacle.

Osborn, Jesse 01 May 2013 (has links)
The rocky intertidal zone, experiencing fully marine and fully terrestrial conditions, has become increasingly investigated as a model ecosystem for studying the future implications of climate change. The barnacle, Balanus glandula, a common rocky intertidal inhabitant, plays an important role as a key prey item for many organisms. Low tide can be particularly challenging for barnacles as they are marine organisms subjected to the abiotic conditions of a terrestrial environment. The most stressful of these are increased temperature and decreased oxygen availability. This study aimed to investigate how low tide impacts the energy budget, specifically the digestion, of B. glandula. Barnacles are unable to feed at low tide however, if they were able to digest at low tide, they could maximize their energy intake by emptying their stomach to prepare to feed at the next high tide. However, digestion is a metabolically costly activity, which could make it less energetically favorable to digest when there’s less oxygen available. To test for an effect of low tide on digestion, barnacles were fed, and the time to first fecal production measured as a ‘baseline’. This was repeated, but barnacles were exposed to either a 16ºC or 35 ºC low tide immediately after being fed. The change in digestion time was calculated by comparing these two times for each barnacle. It was found that regardless of temperature, barnacles delayed their digestion by about 50-60 minutes after exposure to a one hour low tide. To determine the energetic cost of digestion, the rate of oxygen consumption was compared between starved and digesting barnacles. I was unable to detect any evidence of elevated metabolic activity during digestion. Additional testing is needed to confirm these results as the barnacles may have not fed during the trial, thus had no food to digest. While it appears that increasing temperatures associated with climate change will have little impact on the digestion of barnacles at low tide, if climate change alters the duration of low tide, there could be an energetic impact to barnacles due to the slowing of their metabolism as indicated by the delay in their digestion.
842

Effects of pharmaceuticals in fish : in vitro and in vivo studies

Corcoran, Jenna Frances January 2013 (has links)
Fish may be exposed to an array of pharmaceuticals that are discharged into the aquatic environment, paralleling advances in medical knowledge, research and technology. Pharmaceuticals by their nature are designed to target specific receptors, transporters, or enzymes. Nuclear receptors (NRs) are often a key component of the therapeutic mechanism at play, and many of these are conserved among vertebrates. Consequently, fish may be affected by environmental pharmaceutical exposure, however there has been relatively little characterisation of NRs in fish compared with in mammals. In this thesis common carp (C. carpio) were exposed to selected pharmaceuticals in vitro and in vivo to investigate effects centred on the pregnane X receptor (PXR) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα), two key NRs involved in organism responses to pharmaceutical exposure. The PXR acts as a xenosensor, modulating expression of a number of xenobiotic metabolising enzymes (XMEs) in mammals. In a primary carp hepatocyte model it was shown that expression of a number of XMEs was altered on exposure to rifampicin (RIF), as occurs in mammals. This response was repressed by addition of ketoconaozle (KET; PXR-antagonist), indicating possible PXR involvement. The genes analysed showed up-regulation on exposure to ibuprofen (IBU) and clofibric acid (CFA), but not clotrimazole (CTZ) or propranolol (PRP). The lack of response to mammalian PXR-agonist CTZ was unexpected. In contrast, the same XME genes were found to be up-regulated in vivo after 10 days of exposure of carp to CTZ, although this response occurred only for a relatively high exposure concentration. CTZ was found to concentrate in the plasma (with levels up to 40 times higher than the water). Development and application of a reporter gene assay to measure PXR activation in carp (cPXR) and human PXR showed CTZ activation of cPXR, supporting data from the in vivo studies. Furthermore, activation was seen at concentrations as low as 0.01 μM. Interestingly RIF did not induce a response in the cPXR reporter gene assay, contrasting with the hepatocyte culture work. Taken together, the data presented here suggests divergence in the PXR pathway between mammals and fish in terms of ligand activation and downstream gene targets. PPARα was investigated in carp in vivo using CFA as a mammalian PPARα-agonist. Overall the resulting data suggested a broadly similar role for this NR in lipid homeostasis in fish as for mammals, with a number of PPARα-associated genes and acyl-coA oxidase (ACOX1) activity up-regulated in response to CFA exposure. A number of XMEs were also up-regulated by CFA (in vivo and in vitro), potentially extending the role of PPARα in fish (carp) to regulation of xenobiotic metabolism. The work presented has provided further characterisation of PXR and PPARα in fish. Elucidation of these pathways is vital to provide meaningful data in terms of establishing toxicity and mechanism-of-action data for pharmaceuticals and other compounds in fish, to allow validation of read-across approaches and ultimately aid in their environmental risk assessment. In vitro approaches are attractive ethically, financially and can provide useful mechanistic characterisation of compounds and the primary hepatocyte model and reporter gene assays used here show potential for the screening of pharmaceutical compounds in fish. However, further understanding of the metabolism of drugs and chemicals in fish is required to establish the true value of these methods for informing on possible effects in fish, in vivo.
843

A Physiological Age-Grading System for Female Hydrellia pakistanae Deonier (Diptera: Ephydridae)

Lenz, Jennifer Marie 12 1900 (has links)
Conflicting opinions about the effectiveness of H. pakistanae as a biological control agent for hydrilla prompt researchers to find a method for assessing the fly's success. Developing a physiological age-grading system for the fly using ovarian morphology to detect changes in reproductive activity is useful for evaluating reproductive status of the fly in field populations. Changes in the appearance of follicular relics in ovaries with oviposition provide a reliable method to estimate fecundity. Characteristics of follicular relics were used to develop a system with eight physiological age classes, three nulliparous and five parous. Changes that occur in the fat body were used to assist in classification of nulliparous females or those with low egg counts.
844

Body Shape Diversification of Pecos Pupfish (Cyprinodon Pecosensis) on Varying Habitats as Evaluated by Geometric Morphometrics

Xu, Qianna 01 April 2017 (has links)
During the 19th and 20th centuries, alterations to the Pecos River in New Mexico and Texas, USA due to anthropogenic activities, including damning and river channelization, vast water extraction for irrigation, as well as pollution of associated habitats, have greatly impacted the fish fauna within the drainage. One of the endemic fish species, the Pecos pupfish (Cyprinodon pecosensis), might be the most affected. Historically abundant and widespread large populations have been disrupted and became a series of small isolated subpopulations that persist at a few highly fragmented habitats restricted to a small area in southern New Mexico. The connectivity among these habitats is extremely low, and can potentially prevent any gene flow among subpopulations, which might eventually result in morphological divergence among subpopulations in face of different ecological conditions. Here I utilized landmark-based Geometric Morphometrics to evaluate body shape variation of the Pecos pupfish at 26 different localities categorized into four general habitat types that each differ greatly in ecological properties. Results from this study suggest that, despite significant sexual dimorphism, body shape morphology of Pecos pupfish varied in response to spatial heterogeneity and it was most intensely influenced by specific localities within habitat types. There were overlaps of the convex hull regions of morphospace among the four habitat types, implying that ecomorphological dynamics of the Pecos pupfish were rather site-specific. Moreover, temporal variation of body morphology was statistically significant but not comparable to body shape variation among different localities. The empirical data collected from this study provides preliminary evidence for phenotypic diversity of Pecos pupfish in varied ecological conditions, which has important implications for the future conservation management of Pecos pupfish diversity and viability. Such implications could be extended to other endemic desert fishes in disrupted habitats.
845

Wavelet analysis of bioacoustic scattering and marine mammal vocalizations

Scheidecker, Elizabeth M. 09 1900 (has links)
Wavelets have been used in numerous geophysical studies but few have examined their applicability to underwater acoustic signals. Wavelet transforms can remove noise from a given time series and allow data analysis at multiple levels of resolution. This unique ability is exercised as a feasible application to the signals in this thesis: a reflected scattered signal from a swimbladder-bearing fish, alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), and several Odontocetes vocalizations. Both studies reveal that wavelet-based techniques show potential in providing viable information for these acoustic signals despite the lack of statistical analysis. The alewife portion shows a reasonable first order approximation to the absolute target strength and to the time delay correlation caused by the spatial separation of scattering features in the fish. The marine mammal application shows a possible real time method to estimate the mammal's range using the root mean square (RMS) energy of the decomposed signal. Because of wavelet function mismatch, both studies conclude that more extensive research is necessary to develop these techniques into systematic processes.
846

A profile of musculoskeletal injuries in competitive swimmers in the greater Durban area

Sutherland, Kelly Michelle January 2008 (has links)
Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Master's Degree in Technology: Chiropractic, Durban Institute of Technology, 2008. / lntroduction: Swimming is one of the most popular participation sports 1 as people are drawn to swimming for leisure, cardiovascular workouts, or competition 2 . As a result, the sport of swirnrninq has improved 9reatly over the past 20 years 3 . Olbjectoves: The aim of this study was to determine a profile of musculoskeletal injuries in competitive swimmers in the greater Durban area of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa; as well as to determine whether any relationships exist between swimming injuries sustained in this study and the risk factors identified in other studies, and to compare the results with international data. Therefore; for the purpose of this study, the following information was gathered in order to build up an injury profile: o Demographics of competitive swimmers in South Africa, o The participants swimming history, o The presence of any past or current injuries and o Factors associated with current and previous injuries were also investigated. This study was a prospective, cross-sectional, questionnaire based study, investigating the profile of musculoskeletal injuries in 101 competitive swimmers in the greater Durban area. The data was collected by means of a self-administrated questionnaire, which was completed by the participants, under the supervision of the researcher, parents or coach. / M
847

Die gebruik van die Sjinese Graskarp (Tenopharyngodon idella (Val.) in die beheer van die onderwatermakrofiet Potamogeton pectinatus L. in Germistonmeer

22 September 2015 (has links)
M.Sc. / Please refer to full text to view abstract
848

Fate of pharmaceuticals in the environment - A review-

Kalyva, Maria January 2017 (has links)
The occurrence of pharmaceuticals in environment originating from human consumption has received increased scientific attention during the last decades due to concerns regarding their combined environmental effects in aquatic and terrestrial environments, in flora and biota and by extent in human health. In this review, I summarized the existing knowledge on the entire life cycle of pharmaceutical substances, from their exposure (sources) and fate to their effects on the natural environment. Since the negative effects of several drugs along with the environmental damage they entail are now known, it can be suggested that pharmaceutical companies make greener pharmaceutical products to reduce these effects to the terrestrial and aquatic environment. The present review could provide suggestions to improve the pharmaceutical environmental management globally, such as methodologies for monitoring systems, that need to be put in place for consistent data collection. Another area of research that is important is the release of pharmaceutical compounds in manufacturing plants as well as from landfill effluent. Finally, one more area with need for further research is green chemistry which could reduce or even eliminate the potential hazards of pharmaceutical compounds that enter the environment, irrespective to the source of entry.
849

Effects of Suspended Solids on Bioavailability of Chemicals to Daphnia magna and Pimephales promelas

Hall, W. Scott (Warren Scott) 12 1900 (has links)
Three suspended solids types containing a range of physicochemical characteristics were used to determine the effect of suspended solids on the bioavailability of acenaphthene, 1,2,4,5-tetrachlorobenzene, zinc, and chlordane to Daphnia magna and Pimephales promelas. Generally, the bioavailability of zinc and chlordane decreased due to interactions with all suspended solids types while bioavailability of acenaphthene and 1,2,4,5-tetrachlorobenzene were not clearly reduced. Partition coefficients and slope of dose-response curves related chemical characteristics and organism sensitivity, respectively, to experimentally determined results. It is believed that the biologically available form of these chemicals to Daphnia magna and Pimephales promelas resides in the aqueous phase.
850

Coarse Woody Debris and the Carbon Balance of a Moderately Disturbed Forest

Schmid, Amy V 01 January 2015 (has links)
Landscapes are comprised of multiple ecosystems shaped by disturbances varying in severity and source. Moderate disturbance from weather, pathogens, insects, and age-related senescence, in contrast to severe disturbances that fell trees, may increase standing woody debris and alter the contribution of coarse woody debris (CWD) to total ecosystem respiration (RE). However, woody debris dynamics are rarely examined following moderate disturbances that substantially increase standing dead wood stocks. We used an experimental manipulation of moderate disturbance in an upper Great Lakes forest to: 1) examine decadal changes in CWD stocks through a moderate disturbance; 2) quantify in situ CWD respiration during different stages of decay for downed and standing woody debris and; 3) estimate the annual contribution of CWD respiration to the ecosystem C balance through comparison with RE and net ecosystem production (NEP). We found that the standing dead wood mass of 24.5 Mg C ha-1 was an order of magnitude greater than downed woody debris stocks and a large source of ecosystem C flux six years following disturbance. Instantaneous in situ respiration rates from standing and downed woody debris in the earliest stages of decay were not significantly different from one another. Independently derived estimates of ecosystem CWD respiration of 1.1to 2.1 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 six years following disturbance were comparable in magnitude to NEP and 12.5 % to 23.8 % of RE, representing a substantial increase relative to pre-disturbance levels. Ecosystem respiration and NEP were stable following moderate disturbance even though ecosystem CWD respiration increased substantially, suggesting a reduction in the respiratory C contribution from other sources. We conclude that CWD is an essential component of the ecosystem C balance following a moderate forest disturbance.

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