scholarly journals Comparative Analysis of Immune Function of Three Wild Mandarin Fish Populations in Yuanjiang River Basin

Author(s):  
Y Zhou ◽  
N Chen ◽  
W Wang ◽  
Y Luo ◽  
P Yang ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 3060
Author(s):  
Suelen Crispim Sutil ◽  
José Augusto Costa Gonçalves ◽  
Eliane Maria Vieira

A avaliação da fragilidade ambiental das bacias hidrográficas vem se tornando cada vez mais importante no cenário ambiental, devido ao desenvolvimento gradativo da sociedade e a expansão tecnológica e econômica ao longo dos anos. Uma estratégia adotada para amenizar a degradação e restabelecer o equilíbrio, é a formação de corredores ecológicos (CEs), que auxilia na ligação entre remanescentes naturais. A bacia do rio Piracicaba passa por um longo histórico de degradação e de fragmentação florestal, principalmente próximo às cidades devido ao desmatamento de matas ciliares. Em vista disso, este trabalho analisou e comparou a aplicação de dois diferentes modelos de fragilidade ambiental, aplicada a esta bacia e, a partir de seus produtos identificou a melhor metodologia base para a proposição de corredores ecológicos na região. Com os resultados obtidos, foi possível inferir que, além de grande parte da bacia apresentar grau de fragilidade entre fraco e médio, as áreas mais vulneráveis são aquelas mais próximas à cabeceira da bacia. O estabelecimento dos corredores ecológicos abrangeu, prioritariamente, as áreas de maior fragilidade entre a conexão dos fragmentos de vegetação e as Áreas de Preservação Permanentes (APPs), assim, verificou-se que é necessário o reflorestamento de cerca de 342,24 km² das APPs da bacia para que seja possível a conexão entre as remanescentes e 2,0 km²  de áreas de ligação. Comparative analysis of the environmental fragility of the Piracicaba river basin using two methodological models: support for the application and proposition of Biological Corridors A B S T R A C TThe assessment of a river basin’s environmental fragility has become even more important on the environmental scenery due to society’s gradual development and technological and economic expansion over the years. An adopted strategy to ease the degradation and restore the ecological balance is the establishment of biological corridors that can assist the connection between natural forest patches. The Piracicaba river basin has been going through a long history of degradation and forest fragmentation, especially near the cities because of the deforestation of riparian forests. Therefore, this paper analyzed and compared the application of two adapted environmental fragility models in this river basin and identified from their products the best base methodology for the proposition of ecological corridors. From the results, it was possible to infer that, in addition to a big part of the basin present poor and average fragility level, the most vulnerable areas are the ones close to the source of the main rivers. The biological corridors establishment covered, primarily, the most vulnerable areas between the fragments of remaining forests and the Permanent Preservation Areas (PPAs) and, from this, it was possible to verify that the reforestation of around 132,14 mi² of PPAs is necessary for the connection of patches of remaining forests and 0,77 mi² of connections areas.Keywords: environmental vulnerability, geoprocessing, environmental management.


<EM>ABSTRACT. </EM>Anadromous fish were excluded above Pelton Round Butte Hydroelectric Project (PRB Project), located midway (RM 100) on the Deschutes River in central Oregon, beginning in 1968. Reintroduction of these fish above the PRB Project is proposed to meet conservation concerns that arise from lack of natural production and separation of populations. One consideration, when moving fish groups that have been isolated one from the other for thirty years, is that of disease. The health of the fish populations above Round Butte Dam could be seriously jeopardized by the introduction of whirling disease. Straying hatchery steelhead trout <em>Oncorhynchus mykiss </em>were detected with <em>Myxobolus cerebralis </em>spores, in 1987, at Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery, below the PRB Project. <em>Myxobolus cerebralis </em>is established in tributaries of the upper Columbia River basin and of the Snake River basin, where some of these straying hatchery and wild steelhead trout may have originated. From 1997 to 2000, fish from the Deschutes River basin have been sampled for the presence of <em>M. cerebralis</em>. The parasite has been found in both straying hatchery and unmarked adult chinook salmon <em>O. tshawytscha </em>and steelhead trout. Presently there is no evidence of infection of resident fish or in returning adult fish originating from Round Butte Hatchery, although the potential for establishment of <em>M. cerebralis </em>in the Deschutes River watershed cannot be ruled out.


Gene ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 560 (2) ◽  
pp. 226-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pengfei Wang ◽  
Peng Xu ◽  
Shuang Zeng ◽  
Lei Zhou ◽  
Lei Zeng ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 15 (Z1) ◽  
pp. 115-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHEN Xi ◽  
◽  
SU Buda ◽  
JIANG Tong ◽  
SHI Yafeng

2022 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-19
Author(s):  
Satoko MISHIMA ◽  
Kenji OZAWA ◽  
Shunichi NAKAYAMA ◽  
Hiromi KIKUCHI ◽  
Ayumi NAMBA ◽  
...  

Zootaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 4272 (2) ◽  
pp. 221 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRANCISCO PROVENZANO R. ◽  
RAMIRO BARRIGA S.

At the Fish Collection of the Instituto de Ciencias Biológicas, Escuela Politécnica Nacional, Quito, three species traditionally grouped in the genus Hemiancistrus were identified: H. annectens (Regan 1904), H. landoni Eigenmann 1916, and a new specie described here. The new species inhabits exclusively in the Esmeraldas River Basin, Pacific slope, northwestern Ecuador. It is easily recognized by the completely naked abdomen, with rounded, dark spots, and a different color pattern on the dorsal and caudal fins. A comparative analysis of bones related to the opercular mobility, shows important differences between H. annectens, H. landoni, and the new species, suggesting that H. annectens does not belong to the genus Hemiancistrus or the Ancistrini group. According to the characteristics observed in these bones, H. annectens shows greater similarity to those reported in species of the Hypostomini group, supporting its inclusion in this group, but placing it in the genus Hypostomus requires further analysis. On the other hand, the conditions observed on the bones of Hemiancistrus landoni and the new species suggest that both are inside of the Ancistrini group. The new species is placed in the genus Hemiancistrus tentatively, pending future analysis.


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