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  • FMRFamide-related peptides (FaRPs)  (1)
  • Freshwater aquaculture  (1)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Lack of technical training has been cited as a major reason for the low output of fish ponds in Kenya. The lack was observed at all levels, from the lowest-level extension agent through university levels. The training program undertaken by the Kenya Project in Kenya seeks to improve training and to provide a cadre of trainers who have extensive practical fish-production experience. This year the Kenya Project continued scholarship support for two M.S. students, one at Moi University’s Chepkoilel Campus, Eldoret, Kenya, and the other at Auburn University, Alabama. Small stipends for student research conducted at Sagana Fish Farm have allowed undergraduate as well as graduate-level university students to remain longer to complete projects and gain valuable field experience. The series of short courses for personnel of the Kenya Fisheries Department (FD), begun in 1999 and 2000, was concluded this year with the fifth and final course planned under this activity. In this series of courses, more than 80 FD staff received two weeks of training in pond construction methods and pond management techniques, and an additional 26 persons (24 Fisheries Officers and 2 outside-funded participants) received three weeks of advanced training in pond construction, pond management, and business planning. Additional farmer field days for approximately 50 farmers are also planned for later in 2001.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Freshwater aquaculture ; Fish culture ; Extension activities ; Fishery resources ; Pond construction ; Aquaculture techniques ; Pond culture
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report Section , Not Known
    Format: pp.155-158
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1439-1104
    Keywords: Ascaris suum ; nematode ; nematode peptides ; inhibitory neuropeptides ; FMRFamide-related peptides (FaRPs) ; myoactivity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A large number of FMRFamide-related peptides (FaRPs) are found in nematodes, and some of these are known to influence tension and contractility of neuromuscular strips isolated fromAscaris suum body wall. Relaxation of these strips has been noted with five nematode FaRPs. The inhibitory actions of SDPNFLRFamide (PF1) and SADPNFLRFamide (PF2) appear to be mediated by nitric oxide, as previously demonstrated with inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase (NOS). This present study showed that the effects of PF1 were also dependent on external Ca++ and were reduced by the Ca++-channel blocker verapamil, observations consistent wirh the finding that nematode NOS is Ca++-dependent. KSAYMRFamide (PF3), KPNFIRFamide (PF4) and KNAFIRFamide (an alanine substituted analog of KNEFIRFamide, AF1, termed A3AF1) also relaxed A.suum muscle strips, but these responses were not affected by NOS inhibitors. PF3 inhibited the activity of strips prepared from the dorsal side of the worm, but contracted ventral strips. Both effects were dependent on the presence of ventral/dorsal nerve cords (unlike PF1/PF2) and were attenuated in medium which contained high K+ or low Ca++. PF4-induced muscle relaxation and hyperpolarization were independent of nerve cords, but were reversed in Cl-free medium, unlike PF1 or PF3. The PF4 effect physiologically desensitized muscle strips to subsequent treatment with PF4 and/or GABA. However, PF4 and GABA were not synergistic in this preparation. The effects of GABA, but not PF4, were reduced in muscle strips treated with the GABA antagonist, NCS 281-93. Following PF4 (or GABA) relaxation, subsequent treatment with higher doses of PF4 caused muscle strip contraction. A3AF1 was found to relax muscle strips and hyperpolarize muscle cells independently of the ventral and dorsal nerve cords, K+, Ca++, and Cl-, and mimicked the inhibitory phase associated with the exposure of these strips to AF1. On the basis of anatomical and ionic dependence, these data have delineated at least four distinct inhibitory activities attributable to nematode FaRPs. Clearly, a remarkably complex set of inhibitory mechanisms operate in the nematode neuromuscular system.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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