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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.
1

Spawning, larval recruitment, and early life survival of Pacific lampreys in the South Fork Coquille River, Oregon /

Brumo, Abel F. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2007. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 116-124). Also available on the World Wide Web.
2

Effects of acute stress and tagging on the swimming performance and physiology of Pacific lampreys (Lampetra tridentata)

Close, David A. 19 January 2001 (has links)
Pacific lampreys (Lampetra tridentata) have declined in abundance in the Columbia River Basin. Although, the reasons for the decline are unclear, we suggest that development of hydroelectric dams and habitat alterations in tributaries as the main causes. The available knowledge of life history of Pacific lampreys and status from dam counts (trend data) in the Columbia River Basin and the Umpqua River along the Oregon Coast shows that populations have been declining over the last 30 years. Even though Pacific lampreys have been shown to have ecological importance both as predator and prey, the declines in their populations have been largely ignored by fisheries agencies and the public. Recently, the National Marine Fisheries Service initiated studies on using radio-telemetry of Pacific lampreys in order to study the impact of hydroelectric dams on migration behavior. To address one of the fundamental assumptions of radio-telemetry, namely, that tagged fish are "normal," one must be able to measure whether or not an animal is stressed. We identified clinical indicators of stress in adult Pacific lampreys. Plasma glucose became elevated soon after acute stress and remained elevated for one week. Plasma lactate also became elevated by 30 minutes; however, it decreased to resting levels by one hour after stessor. Muscle lactate was shown to have an inverse relationship with glucose. Muscle lactate levels decreased by 4 hours and remained depressed for two days. Plasma chloride ions decreased by one hour, then returned to resting levels by 8 hours; by 24 hours, levels were again decreased with recovery occurring by 48 hours. The steroid cortisol was not found in the plasma of Pacific lampreys. The swimming performance and physiological effects of surgical implantation of three different sized dummy radio transmitters in Pacific lampreys were assessed. Intraperitoneal implantations of 3.4 g transmitters had no significant effect on circulating levels of glucose (an indicator of stress) 4 months after surgery, while 10 gram transmitters showed a significant increase in plasma glucose. Lampreys implanted with 7.4 g transmitters recovered from surgery by day 4 based on levels of plasma glucose. Lampreys implanted intraperitoneally with 7.4 g dummy transmitters showed no significant differences in circulating glucose 30, 60, 90, and 180 days after surgery in comparison to sham-implant controls. Ventilation rate decreased significantly by 30 minutes after surgery and was stable by 60 minutes; suggesting initial recovery from surgery is rapid. Swimming performance was impaired immediately after surgery; however, swimming was not compromised at 1 and 7 days after surgery. Tagged fish showed a significant difference in oxygen consumption when tested immediately after surgery; however, oxygen consumption was at control levels at 1 and 7 days after surgery. / Graduation date: 2001
3

Évolution de la divergence entre la lamproie fluviatile (Lampetra fluviatilis) et la lamproie deplaner (Lampetra planeri) inférée par approches expérimentales et de génomique des populations / Evolution of divergence between the river lamprey (Lampetra fluviatilis) and the brook lamprey (L.planeri) inferred by experimental approaches and population genomics

Rougemont, Quentin 15 December 2015 (has links)
Cette thèse étudie le processus de spéciation entre la lamproie fluviatile (Lampetra fluviatilis) et la lamproie de Planer (L. planeri). Les deux espèces présentent des stratégies d'histoire de vie extrêmement différentes : L. fluviatilis est parasite et anadrome alors que L. planeri n'est pas parasite et reste strictement dulcicole. Toutefois, leur degré d'isolement reproducteur et leur histoire de divergence demeurent méconnus. Ces questions ont été abordées par des approches expérimentales, de génomique de populations et de simulations démographiques. Des croisements expérimentaux ont révélé un faible isolement reproducteur, confirmé par des degrés variables de flux géniques dans les populations naturelles. Les analyses génétiques ont montré que les deux taxons représentaient probablement des écotypes avec un isolement reproducteur partiel suggérant que les barrières reproductives endogènes ne réduisaient que partiellement la migration efficace entre écotypes. L'importance du contexte géographique actuel et passé dans l'étude de la spéciation a aussi été mise en évidence par des analyses à l'échelle du génome. Ainsi, les populations isolées de L. planeri évoluent principalement sous l'effet de la dérive génétique et ont une diversité réduite. Les inférences démographiques ont suggéré que la divergence a été initiée en allopatrie puis suivie de contacts secondaires résultant en un parallélisme génomique partiel entre réplicas de paires de populations. Une hétérogénéité de la divergence génomique a démontré que les ilots génomiques de différenciation ne résultaient pas de l'action récente de la divergence écologique. En outre, nos résultats suggèrent un impact faible de la fragmentation anthropique des cours d'eau sur la diversité génétique des populations de L. planeri. Les populations résidentes possèdent une diversité génétique plus grande lorsque le flux de gènes avec L. fluviatilis dans les parties aval des cours d'eau. Globalement cette thèse a démontré que les paires d'écotypes parasites et non-parasites de lamproies représentent un excellent modèle d'étude de la spéciation et notamment de l'architecture génomique de la divergence. / This thesis investigates the process of speciation between the European lampreys Lampetra fluviatilis and L. planeri. The two species have drastically different life history strategies: L. fluviatilis is parasitic and anadromous while L. planeri is non-parasitic and strictly freshwater resident. Yet their level of reproductive isolation and history of divergence remain poorly understood. A multidisciplinary approach including experiments, population genomics analyses and historical reconstruction was undertaken to address these issues. Experimental crosses revealed a very low level of reproductive isolation, partially mirrored by variable levels of gene flow in wild populations. Genetic analyses revealed that the two taxa were best described as partially reproductively isolated ecotypes suggesting that endogenous genetic barriers partially reduced effective migration between ecotypes. Genome wide analyses showed the importance of the current and ancient geographical context of speciation. In particular, parapatric L. planeri populations diverged mostly through drift and displayed a reduced genetic diversity . Demographic inferences suggested that divergence have likely emerged in allopatry and then secondary contacts resulted in partial parallelism between replicate population pairs. A strong heterogeneity of divergence across the genome was revealed by sympatric populations suggesting that genomic islands of differentiation were not linked to ongoing ecological divergence. Further investigations showed that the genetic diversity of L. planeri populations was weakly affected by human-induced river fragmentation. Resident populations displayed a higher diversity when gene flow was possible with L. fluviatilis populations in downstream sections of rivers. Overall this thesis showed that parasitic and non-parasitic lamprey ecotypes represent a promising model for studying speciation and notably the genomic architecture of divergence.
4

Vliv zemědělské činnosti na kvalitu vody ve vodním toku v chráněném přírodním území / The influence of agricultural activities on the stream water quality in natural reservation

NOVOMĚSTSKÁ, Markéta January 2019 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to evaluate the impact of agricultural activity on hydrochemical parameters of surface waters in connection with the occurence of specially protected species within the surface waters of a monitored area. A model was chosen for the evaluation of the situation - Bedřichovský potok, which is located in Novohradské hory. The river consists of lower and upper sub-waters. Forest management is applied within upper sub-basin, while agricultural management on arable land, meadows and pastures is used in the lower sub-basin. The monitored parameters were indicators of eutrophication of surface waters: Nitrate nitrogen (N-NO3-), Phosphate phosphorus (P-PO43-), and conductivity of undissolved material (NL105). The results showed that the agriculture management (especially on arable land) burdens the soil with nutrients and consequently erosion enters the substances, bringing them to the surface and ground water as a result. There was an increase of substances in the water after rain.
5

River Lamprey Lampetra fluviatilis (L.) Fishing in the Area around the Baltic Sea

Sjöberg, Kjell January 2011 (has links)
The river lamprey (Lampetra fluviatilis) was previously caught in large numbers in Europe when migrating up in the rivers during autumn for spawning the next spring. It was used as food and was also used as bait in cod fishing in the North Sea. Today the river lamprey has decreased in numbers over much of it’s distribution range, but in the Baltic Sea area, the population is still at a fairly good level, and fishing for lampreys as food (a tradition going back to at least the fifteenth century) is still going on in northern Swedish and Finnish rivers, as well as in coastal rivers in the southern Baltic Sea area. In this article the current situation as regards river lamprey fishing in Sweden, Finland, Latvia and, to some extent, Estonia, Lithuania and Poland is presented.
6

Intraspecific Phylogeography of the Least Brook Lamprey, (Lampetra aepyptera)

Martin, Holly Renee 18 April 2006 (has links)
No description available.
7

Passage, migration behavior, and autoecology of adult Pacific lamprey at Winchester Dam and within the North Umpqua River Basin, Oregon, USA

Lampman, Ralph Tatsuo 22 November 2011 (has links)
The extensive reduction in adult Pacific lamprey (Entosphenus tridentatus) counts at many hydroelectric dams in the northwestern USA signals a substantial decline in lamprey numbers across the entire region in the past 40 to 50 years. Among the many potential causes of this decline, obstruction of migration routes has likely played a substantial role. Within the North Umpqua River basin in southwest Oregon, USA, I focused on the following three research goals: 1) to describe the passage efficiency and migration routes of adult Pacific lamprey at Winchester Dam; 2) to evaluate the seasonal movement patterns of adult Pacific lamprey and their use of holding habitat at Winchester Dam in relation to temperature conditions; and 3) to portray the diversity of upstream migratory behaviors of adult Pacific lamprey and the environmental factors that influence these behaviors. This radio telemetry study was conducted between March 2009 and August 2011 with a combination of fixed stations and manual tracking. Passage efficiency was low in both years (8% and 19%, respectively), and all tagged lamprey that successfully passed the dam used routes other than the fish ladder. Lamprey that migrated early within the run and those with relatively small tags had higher passage rates and traveled further than the other groups of lamprey. Lamprey released above of the dam or those that passed the dam on their own distributed themselves widely in the upstream environment, suggesting that the dam deterred their upstream migration. Using mark-recapture data for the two years, the adult Pacific lamprey population upstream of Winchester Dam was estimated at 960 (95% C.I. [188, 4760]) in 2009 and 556 (95% C.I. [110, 2798]) in 2010, which was considerably lower than historical counts at the dam (between 14,532-46,785 in 1965-1971). Most tagged lamprey that did not pass the dam remained at the base of the dam at the end of the summer migration (63% in 2009 and 67% in 2010). Types of habitat most frequently used by lamprey downstream from the dam included the dam surface (wooden structures with crevices), interface zones between fast and slow water, and highway bridge pilings. The lamprey movement changed considerably between August and September, and the frequency of movements decreased sharply during this period. Tagged lamprey were detected using thermal refuges immediately downstream of the dam that were 0.4 to 2.8 C° colder than the mean river temperature at the dam, and this temperature differential increased as the season progressed. Lamprey may be seeking overwintering habitat associated with hyporheic exchange flows at the dam towards the end of the summer season after their display of heightened activity early in the summer. Ninety-five percent of the overall upstream migration took place during the first spring/summer period, and only small-scale upstream movements were observed during the winter and second spring/summer (4% and 1%, respectively). The rate of upstream migration (median) was the fastest during the initial migration phase and was 1.9 km/day (ranging from 0.3 to 11.0 km/day) for tagged lamprey released above Winchester Dam. During winter, 71% of the lamprey remained in the same location where they initiated holding. Multiple regression analysis indicated that the total upstream distance traveled by individual lamprey was most strongly related to presence/absence of Winchester Dam, relative tag size, and water temperature and photoperiod conditions at release. The presence of Winchester Dam, large relative tag size, and high water temperature / short photoperiod conditions at release significantly reduced upstream migration distance. / Graduation date: 2012
8

Temporal relationships between fish-eating birds and their prey in a north Swedish river

Sjöberg, Kjell January 1987 (has links)
The seasonal and diel feeding habits of the goosander, Mergus merganser, the red-breasted merganser, M. serrator, gulls (Larus canus, L. argentatus and L. fuscusj and terns, Sterna hirundo/paradisaea were studied at 64V05'N. Birds' activity patterns were influenced by the nocturnal spawning of the river lamprey (Lampetra fluviatilis). Food selection and food consumption by hand-raised mergansers together with aquarium studies of the diel activity patterns of their most important prey supplemented the field data. River lamprey dominated the diet of the goosander by weight and the sculpin Cottus gobio by number. The fish consumption of the goosanders was found to be about 12% of the available river lamprey biomass and about 17% of the sculpin biomass during the breeding season. In experimental situations the river lamprey was a low- pritority species compared with salmon , Salmo salar, brown trout, 53. trutta, and minnow, Phoxinus phoxinus, when presented to satiated birds of both Mergus species. When hungry, however, the birds caught the available prey irrespective of species, but they selected larger prey when two size classes were present. Experimental results were compared with field data on availability, consumption and the escape behaviour of the various fish species. The rivers emptying in the Bothnian Bay are regarded as important feeding areas for birds breeding along the coast. In early spring they get access to abundant and reliable food resources, e.g the river lamprey. Later on the three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus, supply both Mergus species with food in the river and also along the coast. From the middle of June potential food supply available to birds decreases in the rivers and becomes more abundant in the coastal area. / <p>S. 1-41: sammanfattning, s. 43-227: 7 uppsatser</p> / digitalisering@umu

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