21 research outputs found

    Zooplankton development in two large lowland rivers, the Moselle (France) and the Meuse (Belgium), in 1993

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    Phytoplankton production, exudation and bacterial reassimilation in the River Meuse (Belgium)

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    Extracellular release of phytoplankton was investigated in the upper middle River Meuse (Belgium) in order to estimate the contribution of this process as a source of dissolved organic matter in the system. Particulate primary production, exudation and reassimilation of exudates by free-living and attached bacteria were estimated in parallel using 14C labelling and selective filtration techniques. The results showed that total phytoplanton exudation (EOCt) represented on average 7% of the particulate primary production. Of this excreted organic carbon, 77% was taken up by bacteria; attached bacteria contributed 30% of this uptake. Calculations showed that in this river system, the excretion of organic carbon by algae accounted on average for 22% of the bacterial carbon demand.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Trophic links in the lowland River Meuse (Belgium): assessing the role of bacteria and protozoans in planktonic food webs.

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    Trophic interactions within the plankton of the lowland River Meuse (Belgium) were measured in spring and summer 2001. Consumption of bacteria by protozoa was measured by monitoring the disappearance of H-3-thymidine-labelled bacteria. Metazooplankton bacterivory was assessed using 0.5-mu m fluorescent microparticles (FMPs), and predation of metazooplankton on ciliates was measured using natural ciliate assemblages labelled with FMPs as tracer food. Grazing of metazooplanklon on flagellates was determined through in situ incubations with manipulated metazooplankton densities. Protozooplankton bacterivory varied between 6.08 and 53.90 mg C m(-3) day(-1) (i.e. from 0.12 to 0.86 g C-1 bacteria g C-1 protozoa day(-1)). Metazooplankton, essentially rotfiers, grazing on bacteria was negligible compared with grazing by protozoa (similar to 1000 times lower). Predation of rotfiers on heterotrophic flagellates (HFs) was generally low (on average 1.77 mg C m(-3) day(-1), i.e. 0.084 g C-1 flagellates g C-1 rotfiers day(-1)), the higher contribution of HF in the diet of rotfiers being observed when Keratella cochlearis was the dominant metazooplankter. Predation of rotfiers on ciliates was low in spring samples (0.56 mg C m(-3) day(-1), i.e. 0.014 g C-1 ciliates g C-1 rotfiers day(-1)) in contrast to measurements performed in July (8.72 mg C m(-3) day(-1), i.e. 0.242 g C-1 ciliates g C-1 rotfiers day(-1)). The proportion of protozoa in the diet of rotfiers was low compared with that of phytoplankton (< 30% of total carbon ingestion) except when phytoplankton biomass decreased below the incipient limiting level (ILL) of the main metazooplantonic species. In such conditions, protozoa (mainly ciliates) constituted similar to 50% of total rotfier diet These results give evidence that microbial organisms play a significant role within the planktonic food web of a eutrophic lowland river, ciliates providing an alternative food for metazooplankton when phytoplankton becomes scarce.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    A customised cold-water immersion protocol favours one-size-fits-all protocols in improving acute performance recovery

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    The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether a customised cold-water immersion (CWIc) protocol was more effective in enhancing acute performance recovery than a one-size-fits-all CWI (CWIs) or active recovery (AR) protocol. On three separate testing days, 10 healthy, physically active, non-smoking males completed the same fatiguing protocol (60 squat jumps and a 2′30″ all-out cycling time-trial) followed by CWIc (12°C, 10–17 min), CWIs (15°C, 10 min) or AR (60 W, 10 min). Outcome measures to assess acute recovery were heart rate variability (HRV) as HRVrecovery, muscle power (MP) as absolute and relative decline, and muscle soreness (MS) at 0 and 24 h. HRVrecovery for CWIc was significantly higher compared to CWIs (p = .026, r = 0.74) and AR (p = .000, r = 0.95). The relative decline in MP after CWIc was significantly lower than after CWIs (p = .017, r = 0.73). MS 0 h and MS 24 h post-intervention were not different after CWIc compared to CWIs and AR (p > .05). The findings of the present study demonstrated that CWIc outperforms CWIs and AR in the acute recovery of cardiovascular (HRV) and CWIs in neuromuscular (MP) performance with no differences in MS. To optimise the effects of CWI, contributions of the protocol duration and water temperature should be considered to guarantee an optimal customised dose
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