9 research outputs found

    First Occurrence Of The Tilapia Oreochromis Niloticus Niloticus (Linnaeus, 1758) In Lesina Lagoon (Eastern Italian Coast)

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    Individuals of the tilapia species Oreochromis niloticus niloticus(Linnaeus, 1758) were caught in Lesina Lagoon during experimental sampling for the shrimp Penaeus kerathurus using fyke net traps from December 1999 to September 2000. The species O. niloticusis not native in Italian coastal waters, although attempts of tilapia culture in land-based aquaculture farms were occasionally carried out in the past. The number of individuals captured in the samples suggests a colonization of the area of Lesina lagoon. The highest catches were observed during July. In July, the individuals caught represented the 22.3±4.1 % of the total catch weight. Such colonization of a marine environment byO. niloticusniloticus is the first case reported for Italy. The occurrence of the species in Lesina lagoon is attributed to fish which escaped from fish farms in the area and entered the lagoon through the numerous streams and irrigation-drainage channels that outflow along the south coastline

    Gokyo Khumbu/Ama Dablam Trek 2012

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    In the expedition Gokyo Khumbu/Ama Dablam Trek 2012, we studied the effects of two 12-day training periods performed both at sea level and at high altitude. The main results on adult women have been published in six original articles. In women, high altitude trekking induced CD69 T cell activation and promoted anti-stress effects of the immune responses and the oxidative balance (1). Low-to-moderate exercise training at s.l. improves the regenerative capacity of skeletal muscle and depicted the epigenetic signature of satellite cells. The cell differentiation was favored by increased [Ca2+]i and fusion index (2). On the contrary, the training in hypobaric-hypoxia induced oxidative stress and impaired the regenerative capacity of satellite cells (6). Although training did not significantly modify muscle phenotype , it induced beneficial adaptations of the oxygen transport-utilization systems witnessed by faster VO2 kinetics at exercise onset (3). The two training periods did not influence the postural stability (4). In young adult women, micturition physiological parameters were affected during adaptation to hypoxia; the correlation with SpO2 strongly suggests a role of hypoxia in these changes (5

    GOKIO KUMBU/AMADABLAM TREK 2012 : stabilometric adaptation in women to exercise training at low and high altitude

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    Purpose: Balance is the essential ability to maintain posture during physical activity and daily life. Exercise can have acute and chronic effects on postural stability. Individual exercise sessions can decrease postural stability, while long-term training improves balance and postural sway. Consequently, athletes and people undergoing training have better postural sway than more sedentary subjects. Hypobaric hypoxia has also been suggested to cause stress and adaptation of balance abilities. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine the effects of exercise training under normoxia and hypobaric hypoxia on postural sway. Methods: Seven adult females participated in this study. They underwent assessments of posture before and after 12 days of low-to-moderate exercise training at low altitude, and the same 4 months later, after 12 days of exercise training at high altitude. The data collected included: centre of pressure, average speed oscillation, and Romberg Quotient. This generated a total of 56 posture tests for these seven subjects. Results and conclusions: The results of this research suggest that comparing the each period of activity (pre-exercise) and after the end of each period (post-exercise), both at low and at high altitudes, did not influence the postural stability

    Anisakids: innovative approaches to manage the infections.

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    Innovative approaches to control and manage the zoonotic anisakid infections on fishery products are presented and discussed

    Alien species along the Italian coasts: an overview

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