Seasonal Variations in Biochemical Composition of the ClamDosinia corrugatein Relation to the Reproductive Cycle and Environmental Conditions

2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 369-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongtao Nie ◽  
Yao Lu ◽  
Hui Liu ◽  
Hongwei Yan ◽  
Liqiang Zhao ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Graziani de Freitas Antunes ◽  
Ana Paula Nunes do Amaral ◽  
Fabiana Pinto Ribarcki ◽  
Elenir de Fátima Wiilland ◽  
Denise Maria Zancan ◽  
...  

1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 305-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Lambert ◽  
Paul A. Dehnel

Seasonal variations in biochemical constituents of Thais lamellosa Gmelin in relation to the reproductive cycle were studied. Digestive gland, foot muscle, and gonad were analyzed for protein, glycogen, lipid, and ash for 1 year. Data on feeding and gamete maturation were obtained from histological sections of digestive gland and gonad. Major periods of feeding activity occurred in April and August. The spawning peak was in March and gametogenesis began in July. Maximum glycogen levels coincided with major feeding periods but reserves in the digestive gland were mainly lipid. This lipid reserve was used during the winter. Glycogen was at a relatively low level in all tissues and appeared to be used by the developing gonad. The foot muscle stored neither lipid nor glycogen to any appreciable extern.During winter the digestive gland index decreased as reserves were used. The ovary index held constant from October to February then dropped sharply with spawning. Animals kept for the same period under artificial summer conditions showed no decrease in the digestive gland index, but a decrease in the ovary index. Few oogonia reached maturity and many were resorbed. Starved animals used more protein from the ovary than fed animals.


Forests ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Liu ◽  
Fengri Li

Understanding the spatial and seasonal variations in leaf physiology is critical for accurately modeling the carbon uptake, physiological processes and growth of entire canopies and stands. For a 17-year-old Larix olgensis Henry plantation, vertical whorl-by-whorl sampling and analyses of seasonally repeated measurements of major photosynthetic parameters were conducted, and the correlations between photosynthetic parameters and environmental conditions, leaf morphological traits and spatial position within the crown were analyzed. According to the correlations, the photosynthetic parameters were standardized based on the environmental conditions to avoid the influence of the changing environment on the patterns of spatial and seasonal variations of photosynthetic parameters. The results showed that the standardized light-saturated net photosynthetic rate (SPmax), standardized dark respiration (SRd) and standardized stomatal conductance under saturated light (Sgs-sat) were all negatively related to the relative depth into the crown (RDINC) throughout the growing season. However, their vertical patterns were different during the development of the phenological phase. In addition, different gradients of environmental conditions also influenced the values and the range of the vertical variation in photosynthesis. High temperature and low humidity usually resulted in smaller values and weaker vertical variations of SPmax and Sgs-sat, but larger values and more obvious vertical variations in SRd. SPmax and Sgs-sat usually exhibited a parabolic seasonal pattern in different vertical positions within the crown; however, SRd generally followed a concave pattern. These seasonal patterns were all weaker with increasing RDINC. Different environments also exhibited a significant influence on the seasonal patterns of photosynthesis. We suggested that standardization is necessary before analyzing spatial and seasonal variations. A single environmental condition could not represent the spatial and seasonal patterns under all gradients of the environment. Spatial and seasonal variations should be simultaneously analyzed because they are related to each other.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 3063
Author(s):  
Anton A. Zharov ◽  
Anna N. Neretina ◽  
D. Christopher Rogers ◽  
Svetlana A. Reshetova ◽  
Sofia M. Sinitsa ◽  
...  

Pleistocene water bodies have been studied using the paleolimnological approach, which traces environmental changes using particular subfossils as ecological proxies, rather than analysis of the paleocommunities themselves. Within a given taphocoenosis, the presence and quantity of animals are related to environmental conditions rather than to community types where relationships between taxa are stabilized during their long-term co-occurrence and are (at least partially) more important than the particular environmental conditions at the time of deposition, which may have experienced significant seasonal and inter-seasonal variations. Here, we analyze Branchiopoda (Crustacea) of two paleolocalities in the Transbaikalian Region of Russia: Urtuy (MIS3) and Nozhiy (older than 1.5 million years). Cladocerans Daphnia (Ctenodaphnia) magna, D. (C.) similis, D. (Daphnia) pulex, Ceriodaphnia pulchella-reticulata, C. laticaudata, Simocephalus sp., Moina cf. brachiata, M. macropopa clade, Chydorus cf. sphaericus, Capmtocercus sp. and anostracans Branchinecta cf. paludosa, and Streptocephalus (Streptocephalus) sp. are found in two localities. With the exception of the last taxon, which now occurs in the southern Holarctic, all other taxa inhabit the Transbaikalian Region. Within Eurasia, the steppe zone has the greatest diversity of large branchiopods and a high diversity of some cladocerans, such as subgenus Daphnia (Ctenodaphnia) and Moina sp. Here we demonstrated that the branchiopod community in shallow steppe water bodies has been unchanged since at least the Pleistocene, demonstrating long-term morphological and ecological stasis.


2002 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 491-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lohengrin Dias de Almeida Fernandes ◽  
Sérgio Luiz Costa Bonecker ◽  
Jean Louis Valentin

In the present study, we observed seasonal variations in the density of decapod larvae as well as changes in density related to diurnal and tidal cycles. Among the decapod larvae collected, portunids and grapsids were the most abundant, especially during nocturnal ebb tides and near the surface. The same results were obtained in late winter (September) and late summer (March). These results demonstrated a flow of decapod larvae from Guanabara Bay to adjacent coastal waters. Luciferid (Lucifer faxoni) was the only group with high densities during flood tides and we suggest this is an evidence of L. faxoni larvae entering Guanabara Bay in late winter. Probably these changes in distribution of Lucifer faxoni among winter and summer were related to reproductive cycle in the bay. For the portunids, grapsids and ocypodids, a similar dispersion strategy was observed towards adjacent coastal waters in the surface during nocturnal ebb tides.


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