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  • 1
    ISSN: 1520-4995
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Ecological research 15 (2000), S. 101-106 
    ISSN: 1440-1703
    Keywords: comparative ecology ; growth ; marine fish ; patterns ; reproduction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: A number of strong regularities characterize certain very basic biological parameters in marine fishes. For example, the ovulated eggs of fish usually measure approximately 1 mm in diameter. The small, relatively uniform size of the eggs means that almost all fish larvae experience environmental variability at very similar scales, which itself establishes strong constraints for, and links between reproduction and recruitment. Additional constraints emerge from seawater being a poor medium for respiration, which establishes further linkages between growth and mortality. These constraints have produced strongly convergent features, and thence the patterns in reproduction and growth of marine fishes that are presented.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Molecular and cellular biochemistry 81 (1988), S. 121-129 
    ISSN: 1573-4919
    Keywords: Mitochondria ; respiration ; energy charge ; Ca2+ signalling ; dehydrogenase control ; muscle energetics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Control of mitochondrial respiration depends on ADP availability to the F1ATPase. An electrochemical gradient of ADP and ATP across the mitochondrial inner membrane is maintained by the adenine nucleotide translocase which provides ADP to the matrix for ATP synthesis and ATP for energy-dependent processes in the cytosol. Mitochondrial respiration is responsive to the cytosolic phosphorylation potential, ATP/ADP · Pi which is in apparent equilibrium with the first two sites in the electron transport chain. Conventional measures of free adenine nucleotides is a confounding issue in determining cytosolic and mitochondrial phosphorylation potentials. The advent of phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (P-31 NMR) allows the determination of intracellular free concentrations of ATP, creatine-P and Pi in perfused muscle in situ. In the glucose-perfused heart, there is an absence of correlation between the cytosolic phosphorylation potential as determined by P-31 NMR and cardiac oxygen consumption over a range of work loads. These data suggest that contractile work leads to increased generation of mitochondrial NADH so that ATP production keeps pace with myosin ATPase activity. The mechanism of increased ATP synthesis is referred to as ‘stimulusre-sponse-metabolism’ coupling. In muscle, increased contractility is a result of interventions which increase cytosolic free Ca2+ concentrations. The Ca2- signal thus generated increases glycogen breakdown and myosin ATPase in the cytosol. This signal is concomitantly transmitted to the mitochondria which respond to small increases in matrix Ca2+ by activation of Ca2+-sensitive dehydrogenases. The Ca2+-activated dehydrogenase activities are key rate-controlling enzymes in tricarboxylic acid cycle flux, and their activation by Ca2- leads to increased pyridine nucleotide reduction and oxidative phosphorylation. These observations which have been consistent in preparations both in vitro and in situ do not obviate a role for ADP control of muscle respiration, but do explain, in part, the lack of dramatic fluctuations in the cytosolic phosphorylation potential over a large range of contractile activities.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1435-0629
    Keywords: Key words: fisheries management; trophic models; cascades; policy evaluation; spatial dynamics; dispersal; habitat preference.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: ABSTRACT Growing disillusion with the predictive capability of single species fisheries assessment methods and the realization that the management approaches they imply will always fail to protect bycatch species has led to growing interest in the potential of marine protected areas (MPAs) as a tool for protecting such species and allowing for rebuilding populations of target species and damaged habitat. Ecospace is a spatially explicit model for policy evaluation that allows for considering the impact of MPAs in an ecosystem (that is, trophic) context, and that relies on the Ecopath mass-balance approach for most of its parameterization. Additional inputs are movement rates used to compute exchanges between grid cells, estimates of the importance of trophic interactions (top-down vs bottom up control), and habitat preferences for each of the functional groups included in the model. An application example, including the effect of an MPA, and validation against trawl survey data is presented in the form of a color map illustrating Ecospace predictions of biomass patterns on the shelf of Brunei Darussalam, Southeast Asia. A key general prediction of Ecospace is spatial “cascade” effects, wherein prey densities are low where predators are abundant, for example, in protected areas or areas where fishing costs are high. Ecospace also shows that the potential benefits of local protection can be easily negated by high movement rates, and especially by concentration of fishing effort at the edge of the MPAs, where cascade effects generate prey gradients that attract predators out of the protected areas. Despite various limitations (for example, no explicit consideration of seasonal changes or directed migration), the outward simplicity of Ecospace and the information-rich graphs it generates, coupled with the increasingly global availability of the required Ecopath files, will likely ensure a wide use for this approach, both for generating hypotheses about ecosystem function and evaluating policy choices.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1435-0629
    Keywords: Key words: trophic interactions; cascades; risk-sensitive foraging; ecosystem management.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: ABSTRACT EcoSim II uses results from the Ecopath procedure for trophic mass-balance analysis to define biomass dynamics models for predicting temporal change in exploited ecosystems. Key populations can be represented in further detail by using delay-difference models to account for both biomass and numbers dynamics. A major problem revealed by linking the population and biomass dynamics models is in representation of population responses to changes in food supply; simple proportional growth and reproductive responses lead to unrealistic predictions of changes in mean body size with changes in fishing mortality. EcoSim II allows users to specify life history mechanisms to avoid such unrealistic predictions: animals may translate changes in feeding rate into changes in reproductive rather than growth rates, or they may translate changes in food availability into changes in foraging time that in turn affects predation risk. These options, along with model relationships for limits on prey availability caused by predation avoidance tactics, tend to cause strong compensatory responses in modeled populations. It is likely that such compensatory responses are responsible for our inability to find obvious correlations between interacting trophic components in fisheries time-series data. But Ecosim II does not just predict strong compensatory responses: it also suggests that large piscivores may be vulnerable to delayed recruitment collapses caused by increases in prey species that are in turn competitors/predators of juvenile piscivores.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1573-5133
    Keywords: Length-frequency analysis ; Length-weight relationships ; Von Bertalanffy model ; Diet composition ; Anthropophagy ; Brazil ; Guyana ; Venezuela ; Amazon ; Rupununi ; Orinoco ; Characiformes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Synopsis A tentative set of growth parameters of the von Bertalanffy growth equation were estimated for the red-bellied piranha,Serrasalmus nattereri, a common characid of the Amazonas and adjacent floodplains, based on length-frequency data collected by R.H. Lowe-McConnell in Guyana. These parameters and related statistics are then used, along with published data from metabolic, field and feeding experiment data to estimate the relative food consumption of a population ofS. nattereri. This is complemented with biological data assembled from the scattered literature onS. nattereri to provide a ‘snapshot’ of this species.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Environmental biology of fishes 22 (1988), S. 261-271 
    ISSN: 1573-5133
    Keywords: Teleosts ; Early life history ; Embryology ; Environmental physiology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Synopsis The relationship between egg diameter ((π, mm), temperature (T, °C) and egg development time to hatching (D, in days) was established for approximately spherical, pelagic marine fish eggs as log10D = 7.10 + 0.608 log10 π − 4.09 log10 (T + 26), which explains 82% of the variance of a data set of 140 cases, covering 84 species of teleost fishes, for temperatures from 2.8 to 29.5° C and eggs of 0.6 to 3.4 mm diameter. From this relationship it appears that temperature has 4.7 times as much effect on development time as egg diameter when all variables are expressed in standard deviation units. A discussion of these and related factors is given.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1573-5133
    Keywords: Length-frequency analysis ; Length-weight relationships ; Von Bertalanffy model ; Diet composition ; Anthropophagy ; Brazil ; Guyana ; Venezuela ; Amazon ; Rupununi ; Orinoco ; Characiformes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Synopsis A tentative set of growth parameters of the von Bertalanffy growth equation were estimated for the red-bellied piranha,Serrasalmus nattereri, a common characid of the Amazonas and adjacent floodplains, based on length-frequency data collected by R.H. Lowe-McConnell in Guyana. These parameters and related statistics are then used, along with published data from metabolic, field and feeding experiment data to estimate the relative food consumption of a population ofS. nattereri. This is complemented with biological data assembled from the scattered literature onS. nattereri to provide a ‘snapshot’ of this species.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Reviews in fish biology and fisheries 6 (1996), S. 109-112 
    ISSN: 1573-5184
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Reviews in fish biology and fisheries 7 (1997), S. 139-172 
    ISSN: 1573-5184
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The linear equations that describe trophic fluxes in mass-balance, equilibrium assessments of ecosystems (such as in the ECOPATH approach) can be re-expressed as differential equations defining trophic interactions as dynamic relationships varying with biomasses and harvest regimes. Time patterns of biomass predicted by these differential equations, and equilibrium system responses under different exploitation regimes, are found by setting the differential equations equal to zero and solving for biomasses at different levels of fishing mortality. Incorporation of our approach as the ECOSIM routine into the well-documented ECOPATH software will enable a wide range of potential users to conduct fisheries policy analyses that explicitly account for ecosystem trophic interactions, without requiring the users to engage in complex modelling or information gathering much beyond that required for ECOPATH. While the ECOSIM predictions can be expected to fail under fishing regimes very different from those leading to the ECOPATH input data, ECOSIM will at least indicate likely directions of biomass change in various trophic groups under incremental experimental policies aimed at improving overall ecosystem management. That is, ECOSIM can be a valuable tool for design of ecosystem-scale adaptive management experiments
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