26 research outputs found
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Effect of temperature and tissue type on fatty acid signatures of two species of North Pacific juvenile gadids: A laboratory feeding study
The utility of the fatty acid biomarker (FAB) approach in fisheries ecology is limited by our understanding of how biotic and abiotic factors determine dietary markers in fish tissues. An 8-week laboratory experiment was conducted on two species of juvenile gadids (Pacific cod, Gadus macrocephalus and walleye Pollock, Theragra chalcogramma) reared at 3 °C or 9 °C and fed a diet enriched with either oils of marine origin or terrestrial plant origin. Non-linear models were fitted to investigate how tissue type and temperature mediated the proportion of FABs in fish. Across temperatures, fatty acid (FA) profiles were similar for both species of gadids. FAs also showed high temporal sensitivity across temperatures, and were evident in fish after only one week of feeding. Pacific cod held at 9 °C and fed a terrestrial plant oil (TPO) enriched diet had significantly higher Cââ polyunsaturated FAs (PUFAs) in their liver than cod held at 3 °C after one week, but this temperature effect diminished as tissues reached equilibrium with their diet. Cââ PUFAs were significantly higher in liver than in muscle.Differential proportions of Cââ PUFAs among tissues provide temporal patterns that may help with disentangling the timing of offshoreâ inshore nursery migrations in juvenile fish. Calibration coefficients were determined to explain the relationship between FAs in the diet and FAs in fish tissues. These coefficients will support future development of quantitative estimates of diet in juvenile low-fat fish.Keywords: Juvenile, Cod, Pollock, Fatty acid, Biomarker, Temperatur
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Role of temperature on lipid/fatty acid composition in Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus) eggs and unfed larvae
During early development, oviparous fish species must use finite lipid and fatty acid (FA) reserves for both catabolism and structural components. In cold environments, developing fish have the additional constraint of maintaining membrane fluidity for metabolic efficiency (homeoviscous adaptation), resulting in further demand on lower melting point FAs like n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs). To examine whether marine fish embryos physiologically adapt to changing temperature environments, we incubated Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus) eggs at 5 temperatures (0, 2, 4, 6, and 8 °C) in the laboratory and sampled them repeatedly during development to measure changes in lipid/FA composition. Pacific cod embryos increased n-3 PUFA content during the egg stage in all temperature treatments, with the possible exception of 0 °C, where poor survival and hatch success limited our ability for continued sampling. At the beginning of the hatch cycle, free-swimming embryos shifted from lipogenesis to lipid catabolism. The rates of lipogenesis and catabolism were temperature dependent, and the distinct increase in unsaturated fatty acids at temperatures <8 °C was consistent with homeoviscous adaptation theory. However, with the possible exception of embryos at 0 °C, the relative amounts of essential fatty acids (e.g., EPA, DHA, AA) were conserved in a similar manner across incubation temperatures. Collectively, these data suggest Pacific cod are capable of homeoviscous adaptation but cannot tolerate temperatures approaching 0 °C despite their possible ability to biosynthesize PUFAs from other energetic sources
An Anthropology of Intellectual Exchange: Interactions, Transactions and Ethics in Asia and Beyond
Dialogues, encounters and interactions through which particular ways of knowing, understanding and thinking about the world are forged lie at the centre of anthropology. Such âintellectual exchangeâ is also central to anthropologistsâ own professional practice: from their interactions with research participants and modes of pedagogy to their engagements with each other and scholars from adjacent disciplines. This collection of essays explores how such processes might best be studied cross-culturally. Foregrounding the diverse interactions, ethical reasoning, and intellectual lives of people from across the continent of Asia, the volume develops an anthropology of intellectual exchange itself
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Total Lipids, Lipid Classes, and Fatty Acids of Newly Settled Red King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus): Comparison of hatchery-cultured and wild crabs
Little is known about the nutrition or lipid metabolism of cold-water crabs, particularly in the North Pacific. We undertook a 2-part study to understand more completely the energetics and nutritional requirements of juvenile red king crab (RKC; Paralithodes canusehaticus). First, we investigated changes in proximate composition, total lipids (TLs), lipid classes, and fatty acids (FAs) throughout a molt cycle (C4-C5). Trends in lipid parameters were described by a 3-pari, piecewise linear regression with 3 distinct stages: (I) a postmolt phase (similar to 0-7 days), (2) an intramolt stage (similar to 7-24 days), and (3) a premolt stage (similar to 24-33 days). Significant intramolt differences in TLs indicated that caution should be taken when comparing crabs of unknown molt stage in future aquaculture and ecological experiments. However, little variability was found in the proportional FA composition of crabs, indicating that the intramolt stage has little effect on the interpretation of FA biomarkers. During a second investigation, we examined differences in lipid classes and FAs from cultured and wild RKC. We found significantly higher proportions of the essential fatty acids (EFAs) 20:5n-3 (EPA) and 20:4n-6 (AA) in wild crabs compared with cultured animals at the same stage. Furthermore, higher proportions of bacterial markers and lower proportions of zooplankton FA markers were found in wild than in hatchery-reared crabs. Here, we provide the first baseline data for future dietary studies on juvenile cold-water crabs. We suggest that an initial EFA ratio for DHA:EPA:AA of 5:8:1 could be used as a starting point for controlled dietary studies on the effect of EFAs on juvenile growth, molt success, and survival.Keywords: Lipids, Nutrition, Red king crab, Paralithodes camtschaticus, Fatty acids, Mol
Garotas de loja, histĂłria social e teoria social [Shop Girls, Social History and Social Theory]
Shop workers, most of them women, have made up a significant proportion of Britainâs labour force since the 1850s but we still know relatively little about their history. This article argues that there has been a systematic neglect of one of the largest sectors of female employment by historians and investigates why this might be. It suggests that this neglect is connected to framings of work that have overlooked the service sector as a whole as well as to a continuing unease with the consumer societyâs transformation of social life. One element of that transformation was the rise of new forms of aesthetic, emotional and sexualised labour. Certain kinds of âshop girlsâ embodied these in spectacular fashion. As a result, they became enduring icons of mass consumption, simultaneously dismissed as passive cultural dupes or punished as powerful agents of cultural destruction. This article interweaves the social history of everyday shop workers with shifting representations of the âshop girlâ, from Victorian music hall parodies, through modernist social theory, to the bizarre bombing of the Biba boutique in London by the Angry Brigade on May Day 1971. It concludes that progressive historians have much to gain by reclaiming these workers and the service economy that they helped create
Fatty acid biomarkers in coldwater eelgrass meadows: elevated terrestrial input to the food web of age-0 Atlantic cod Gadus morhua
Lipid classes, fatty acids (FAs), and stable carbon isotopes of FAs were used to investigate
dietary sources of organic carbon for juvenile Atlantic cod Gadus morhua during settlement into
eelgrass Zostera marina. Primary producers, epibenthic prey, zooplankton, and fish were collected
from August to November 2002 in shallow (<10 m) eelgrass in Bonavista Bay, Newfoundland,
Canada. Lipid data indicated that zooplankton (>80 ÎŒm) were associated with fresh organic material,
while seston (5â80 ÎŒm) had high levels of bacterial FA and non-acyl lipids, typical of sedimentary
material. Zooplankton, mysids, and amphipods showed a seasonal decrease in 22:6n-3 with a concomitant
increased in the ubiquitous terrestrial indicators 18:2n-3 and 18:3n-3. Based on essential FA
composition of prey, there was a decrease in the quality of food available to juvenile fish from August
until November. Earlier (August) pelagic juveniles had higher levels of marine-sourced FA (22:6n-3)
than late (November) arrivers. Further, in October and November settled juveniles had higher proportions
of terrestrial FA biomarkers than pelagic cod, indicating an increased dietary terrestrial
input at settlement. Isotopic evidence demonstrated that eelgrass was the most enriched (â14â°)
source of organic carbon and supported multivariate FA analysis, confirming that eelgrass was not
incorporated into the food web of juvenile cod. Increased terrestrial input of organic carbon coupled
with low proportions of dietary essential FAs indicate that the functional significance of this habitat is
refuge and not nutrition
Rare-Earth Acetates as Alternative Precursors for Rare-Earth Cluster-Based MetalâOrganic Frameworks
RE-UiO-66 analogues are synthesized using RE acetates as precursors for the first time. These MOFs are fully characterized and the influence of the precursor on the materials obtained is studied. Additionally, the influence of water on the yield of the syntheses and the quality of the materials is explored
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CopemanLouiseHMSCEffectTemperatureTissueSupplementalMaterial.pdf
The utility of the fatty acid biomarker (FAB) approach in fisheries ecology is limited by our understanding of how
biotic and abiotic factors determine dietary markers in fish tissues. An 8-week laboratory experiment was
conducted on two species of juvenile gadids (Pacific cod, Gadus macrocephalus and walleye Pollock, Theragra
chalcogramma) reared at 3 °C or 9 °C and fed a diet enriched with either oils of marine origin or terrestrial
plant origin. Non-linear models were fitted to investigate how tissue type and temperature mediated the proportion
of FABs in fish. Across temperatures, fatty acid (FA) profiles were similar for both species of gadids. FAs also
showed high temporal sensitivity across temperatures, and were evident in fish after only one week of feeding. Pacific
cod held at 9 °C and fed a terrestrial plant oil (TPO) enriched diet had significantly higher Cââ polyunsaturated
FAs (PUFAs) in their liver than cod held at 3 °C after one week, but this temperature effect diminished as tissues
reached equilibrium with their diet. Cââ PUFAs were significantly higher in liver than in muscle.Differential proportions
of Cââ PUFAs among tissues provide temporal patterns that may help with disentangling the timing of offshoreâ
inshore nursery migrations in juvenile fish. Calibration coefficients were determined to explain the
relationship between FAs in the diet and FAs in fish tissues. These coefficients will support future development
of quantitative estimates of diet in juvenile low-fat fish.Keywords: Biomarker, Cod, Fatty acid, Pollock, Juvenile, Temperatur
Recommended from our members
CopemanLouiseHMSCEffectTemperatureTissue.pdf
The utility of the fatty acid biomarker (FAB) approach in fisheries ecology is limited by our understanding of how
biotic and abiotic factors determine dietary markers in fish tissues. An 8-week laboratory experiment was
conducted on two species of juvenile gadids (Pacific cod, Gadus macrocephalus and walleye Pollock, Theragra
chalcogramma) reared at 3 °C or 9 °C and fed a diet enriched with either oils of marine origin or terrestrial
plant origin. Non-linear models were fitted to investigate how tissue type and temperature mediated the proportion
of FABs in fish. Across temperatures, fatty acid (FA) profiles were similar for both species of gadids. FAs also
showed high temporal sensitivity across temperatures, and were evident in fish after only one week of feeding. Pacific
cod held at 9 °C and fed a terrestrial plant oil (TPO) enriched diet had significantly higher Cââ polyunsaturated
FAs (PUFAs) in their liver than cod held at 3 °C after one week, but this temperature effect diminished as tissues
reached equilibrium with their diet. Cââ PUFAs were significantly higher in liver than in muscle.Differential proportions
of Cââ PUFAs among tissues provide temporal patterns that may help with disentangling the timing of offshoreâ
inshore nursery migrations in juvenile fish. Calibration coefficients were determined to explain the
relationship between FAs in the diet and FAs in fish tissues. These coefficients will support future development
of quantitative estimates of diet in juvenile low-fat fish.Keywords: Pollock, Cod, Biomarker, Temperature, Juvenile, Fatty acidKeywords: Pollock, Cod, Biomarker, Temperature, Juvenile, Fatty aci