35 results on '"Dove AD"'
Search Results
2. Peer Review #1 of "A comparison of blood gases, biochemistry, and hematology to ecomorphology in a health assessment of pinfish (Lagodon rhomboides) (v0.1)"
- Author
-
Dove, AD, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Peer Review #2 of "Whale shark economics: a valuation of wildlife tourism in South Ari Atoll, Maldives (v0.1)"
- Author
-
Dove, AD, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Peer Review #2 of "Diagnosing the dangerous demography of manta rays using life history theory (v0.1)"
- Author
-
Dove, AD, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Experimental infection of yellow stingrays Urobatis jamaicensis with the marine leech Branchellion torpedinis
- Author
-
Marancik, DP, primary, Dove, AD, additional, and Camus, AC, additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Probing regolith-covered surfaces in low gravity
- Author
-
Kollmer Jonathan E., Featherstone Jack, Bullard Robert, Emm Tristan, Jackson Anna, Reid Riley, Shefferman Sean, Dove Adrienne, Colwell Joshua, and Daniels Karen E.
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The surfaces of many planetary bodies, including asteroids, moons, and planets, are composed of rubble-like grains held together by varying levels of gravitational attraction and cohesive forces. Future instrumentation for operation on, and interacting with, such surfaces will require efficient and effective design principles and methods of testing. Here we present results from the EMPANADA experiment (Ejecta-Minimizing Protocols for Applications Needing Anchoring or Digging on Asteroids) which flew on several reduced gravity parabolic flights. EMPANADA studies the effects of the insertion of a flexible probe into a granular medium as a function of ambient gravity. This is done for an idealized 2D system as well as a more realistic 3D sample. To quantify the dynamics inside the 2D granular material we employ photoelasticity to identify the grain-scale forces throughout the system, while in 3D experiments we use simulated regolith. Experiments were conducted at three different levels of gravity: martian, lunar, and microgravity. In this work, we demonstrate that the photoelastic technique provides results that complement traditional load cell measurements in the 2D sample, and show that the idealized system exhibits similar behaviour to the more realistic 3D sample. We note that the presence of discrete, stick-slip failure events depends on the gravitational acceleration.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Safe Sex and the Debate over Condoms on Campus in the 1980s: Sperm Busters at Harvard and Protection Connection at the University of Texas at Austin.
- Author
-
Osseo-Asare AD
- Abstract
During the 1980s, college students in the United States helped to destigmatize the distribution and use of condoms. They shifted their aims from preventing unwanted pregnancy to stopping the spread of sexually transmitted infections including the newly identified acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Two student-led initiatives to deliver condoms after hours at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts and the University of Texas at Austin show regional and temporal differences in sexual mores as awareness of AIDS increased. These male students adopted a non-pharmaceutical intervention to prevent pregnancy and disease in the context of increased marketing of Trojan® brand condoms. Interviews with co-founders reveal how the students grappled with backlash from family members and campus administrators less enthusiastic about their popularization of condoms. Co-founders described how media attention affected their college experiences and how condom companies changed campus culture. Overall, large non-pharmaceutical companies such as Trojan® and small condom-resellers such as those at Harvard and the University of Texas at Austin reshaped cultural norms around safe sex as awareness of AIDS grew between 1985 and 1987., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. "Don't use herbs in labor!": Plants, pharmaceuticals, and the unmaking of traditional birth attendants in Ghana, 1970-2000.
- Author
-
Osseo-Asare AD
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Ghana, Retrospective Studies, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Midwifery, Plants, Medicinal, Maternal Health Services
- Abstract
This article considers efforts in the West African country of Ghana to improve maternal care through a network of trained "Traditional Birth Attendants," or TBAs in the late twentieth century. It reconsiders the rise and fall of TBAs through the lens of increasing global access to essential medicines like oxytocin and misoprostol which reduced confidence in herbal medications for pregnancy complications. Interviews with policy makers and birth attendants reflecting on their involvement in TBA programs from the 1970s as well as analysis of archival documents and training manuals shows how pharmaceuticals rose in prominence at the same time birth attendants maintained medicinal plant knowledge. Over time, Ghanaian policymakers encouraged TBAs to avoid using herbs while caring for women during pregnancy. By the early 2000s, government went so far as to ban TBAs, and urged everyone to deliver with a skilled birth attendant (SBA) such as a nurse midwife or obstetrician more conversant in biomedical interventions including pharmaceuticals. This retrospective account of TBAs across several decades suggests that once Ghanaian officials had strengthened access to standardized pharmaceuticals, they lost confidence in traditional birth attendants and the herbal remedies they cultivated. Access to pharmaceuticals shaped the difference between skilled and- "unskilled" or "traditional"-birth attendants., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The whale shark genome reveals patterns of vertebrate gene family evolution.
- Author
-
Tan M, Redmond AK, Dooley H, Nozu R, Sato K, Kuraku S, Koren S, Phillippy AM, Dove AD, and Read T
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic genetics, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic pathology, Gene Duplication, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Humans, Immunity, Innate genetics, Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasms pathology, Phylogeny, Receptors, Immunologic genetics, Sharks immunology, Whole Genome Sequencing, Evolution, Molecular, Fish Proteins genetics, Genome, Sharks genetics, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fishes) are fundamental for understanding vertebrate evolution, yet their genomes are understudied. We report long-read sequencing of the whale shark genome to generate the best gapless chondrichthyan genome assembly yet with higher contig contiguity than all other cartilaginous fish genomes, and studied vertebrate genomic evolution of ancestral gene families, immunity, and gigantism. We found a major increase in gene families at the origin of gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates) independent of their genome duplication. We studied vertebrate pathogen recognition receptors (PRRs), which are key in initiating innate immune defense, and found diverse patterns of gene family evolution, demonstrating that adaptive immunity in gnathostomes did not fully displace germline-encoded PRR innovation. We also discovered a new toll-like receptor (TLR29) and three NOD1 copies in the whale shark. We found chondrichthyan and giant vertebrate genomes had decreased substitution rates compared to other vertebrates, but gene family expansion rates varied among vertebrate giants, suggesting substitution and expansion rates of gene families are decoupled in vertebrate genomes. Finally, we found gene families that shifted in expansion rate in vertebrate giants were enriched for human cancer-related genes, consistent with gigantism requiring adaptations to suppress cancer., Competing Interests: MT, AR, HD, RN, KS, SK, AP, AD, TR No competing interests declared, SK Reviewing editor, eLife
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Ten simple rules for effective online outreach.
- Author
-
Bik HM, Dove AD, Goldstein MC, Helm RR, MacPherson R, Martini K, Warneke A, and McClain C
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Models, Organizational, Online Systems, Communication, Information Dissemination methods, Publishing organization & administration, Research Design, Science organization & administration, Social Media organization & administration
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Differential metabolite levels in response to spawning-induced inappetence in Atlantic salmon Salmo salar.
- Author
-
Cipriano RC, Smith ML, Vermeersch KA, Dove AD, and Styczynski MP
- Subjects
- Animals, Rabbits, Reproducibility of Results, Salmo salar metabolism, Appetite, Reproduction, Salmo salar physiology
- Abstract
Atlantic salmon Salmo salar undergo months-long inappetence during spawning, but it is not known whether this inappetence is a pathological state or one for which the fish are adapted. Recent work has shown that inappetent whale sharks can exhibit circulating metabolite profiles similar to ketosis known to occur in humans during starvation. In this work, metabolite profiling was used to explore differences in analyte profiles between a cohort of inappetent spawning run Atlantic salmon and captively reared animals that were fed up to and through the time of sampling. The two classes of animals were easily distinguished by their metabolite profiles. The sea-run fish had elevated ɷ-9 fatty acids relative to the domestic feeding animals, while other fatty acid concentrations were reduced. Sugar alcohols were generally elevated in inappetent animals, suggesting potentially novel metabolic responses or pathways in fish that feature these compounds. Compounds expected to indicate a pathological catabolic state were not more abundant in the sea-run fish, suggesting that the animals, while inappetent, were not stressed in an unnatural way. These findings demonstrate the power of discovery-based metabolomics for exploring biochemistry in poorly understood animal models., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Foraging and ingestive behaviors of whale sharks, Rhincodon typus, in response to chemical stimulus cues.
- Author
-
Dove AD
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Animals, Appetite Stimulants pharmacology, Eating physiology, Euphausiacea chemistry, Feeding Behavior drug effects, Sulfides pharmacology, Swimming physiology, Cues, Sharks physiology
- Abstract
Whale sharks, Rhincodon typus, display a number of behaviors that suggest these animals can locate food from afar, as well as identify and discriminate between food items. However, their intractably large size and relative rarity in the field has so far prevented direct studies of their behavior and sensory capability. A small population of aquarium-held whale sharks facilitated direct studies of behavior in response to chemical stimulus plumes. Whale sharks were exposed to plumes composed of either homogenized krill or simple aqueous solutions of dimethyl sulfide (DMS), which is associated with krill aggregations and is used by several pelagic species as a food-finding stimulus. Whale sharks exhibited pronounced ingestive and search behaviors when exposed to both types of stimuli, compared to control trials. Ingestive behaviors included open mouth swimming and active surface feeding (gulping). These behaviors were stronger and more prevalent in response to krill homogenate plumes than to DMS plumes. Both chemical stimuli also increased visitation rate, and krill homogenate plumes additionally affected swimming speed. Whale sharks use chemosensory cues of multiple types to locate and identify palatable food, suggesting that chemical stimuli can help direct long-range movements and allow discrimination of different food items. There appears to be a hierarchy of responses: krill metabolites directly associated with food produced more frequent and intense feeding responses relative to DMS, which is indirectly associated with krill. DMS is used to find food by a number of pelagic species and may be an important signaling molecule in pelagic food webs., (© 2015 Marine Biological Laboratory.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Sizing ocean giants: patterns of intraspecific size variation in marine megafauna.
- Author
-
McClain CR, Balk MA, Benfield MC, Branch TA, Chen C, Cosgrove J, Dove AD, Gaskins L, Helm RR, Hochberg FG, Lee FB, Marshall A, McMurray SE, Schanche C, Stone SN, and Thaler AD
- Abstract
What are the greatest sizes that the largest marine megafauna obtain? This is a simple question with a difficult and complex answer. Many of the largest-sized species occur in the world's oceans. For many of these, rarity, remoteness, and quite simply the logistics of measuring these giants has made obtaining accurate size measurements difficult. Inaccurate reports of maximum sizes run rampant through the scientific literature and popular media. Moreover, how intraspecific variation in the body sizes of these animals relates to sex, population structure, the environment, and interactions with humans remains underappreciated. Here, we review and analyze body size for 25 ocean giants ranging across the animal kingdom. For each taxon we document body size for the largest known marine species of several clades. We also analyze intraspecific variation and identify the largest known individuals for each species. Where data allows, we analyze spatial and temporal intraspecific size variation. We also provide allometric scaling equations between different size measurements as resources to other researchers. In some cases, the lack of data prevents us from fully examining these topics and instead we specifically highlight these deficiencies and the barriers that exist for data collection. Overall, we found considerable variability in intraspecific size distributions from strongly left- to strongly right-skewed. We provide several allometric equations that allow for estimation of total lengths and weights from more easily obtained measurements. In several cases, we also quantify considerable geographic variation and decreases in size likely attributed to humans.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The complete mitochondrial genome sequence of the world's largest fish, the whale shark (Rhincodon typus), and its comparison with those of related shark species.
- Author
-
Alam MT, Petit RA 3rd, Read TD, and Dove AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Chromosome Mapping, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Endangered Species, Fish Proteins genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Molecular Sequence Data, RNA, Ribosomal genetics, RNA, Transfer genetics, Elasmobranchii genetics, Genome, Mitochondrial genetics, Mitochondria genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA veterinary
- Abstract
The whale shark (Rhincodon typus) is the largest extant species of fish, belonging to the order Orectolobiformes. It is listed as a "vulnerable" species on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)'s Red List of Threatened Species, which makes it an important species for conservation efforts. We report here the first complete sequence of the mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) of the whale shark obtained by next-generation sequencing methods. The assembled mitogenome is a 16,875 bp circle, comprising of 13 protein-coding genes, two rRNA genes, 22 tRNA genes and a control region. We also performed comparative analysis of the whale shark mitogenome to the available mitogenome sequences of 17 other shark species, four from the order Orectolobiformes, five from Lamniformes and eight from Carcharhiniformes. The nucleotide composition, number and arrangement of the genes in whale shark mitogenome are the same as found in the mitogenomes of the other members of the order Orectolobiformes and its closest orders Lamniformes and Carcharhiniformes, although the whale shark mitogenome had a slightly longer control region. The availability of mitogenome sequence of whale shark will aid studies of molecular systematics, biogeography, genetic differentiation, and conservation genetics in this species., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Scientific equity: experiments in laboratory education in Ghana.
- Author
-
Osseo-Asare AD
- Subjects
- Curriculum, Ghana, Humans, Schools organization & administration, Students statistics & numerical data, Clinical Laboratory Techniques statistics & numerical data, Community-Institutional Relations, Health Education organization & administration, Laboratories organization & administration, Primary Health Care organization & administration
- Abstract
During the 1960s the Ministry of Education in Ghana created a network of school laboratories to increase scientific literacy among young citizens. The ministry stocked these "Science Centres" with imported beakers, Bunsen burners, and books. Education officials and university scientists worked with teachers to create lesson plans on water, air, plants, and other topics. The government hoped that scientifically minded schoolchildren would be better prepared to staff the industries of the future. The adoption of laboratory norms represented a desire for scientific equity, rather than a condition of cultural mimicry. Interviews with ministry officials and science educators, alongside letters and reports, indicate how students and teachers appropriated the laboratories in the small West African nation. Their experiences in mobilizing resources from across Ghana and around the world provide a metaphor for ongoing efforts to establish access to scientific goods in Africa.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A simple reagent-free spectrophotometric assay for monitoring metronidazole therapy in aquarium water.
- Author
-
Webb DH, Marrero C, Ellis H, Merriwether L, and Dove AD
- Subjects
- Time Factors, Water chemistry, Anti-Infective Agents chemistry, Fresh Water chemistry, Metronidazole chemistry, Seawater chemistry, Spectrum Analysis methods
- Abstract
A reagent-free spectrophotometric assay was developed to measure the concentration of metronidazole (a 5-nitroimidazole) in both freshwater and seawater matrices. This assay is simple, repeatable, sensitive, and precise and is ideal for use when a rapid, selective test to determine metronidazole concentration in aqueous matrices is necessary. The assay was practically tested on a South American fishes display during treatment with metronidazole for an outbreak of the flagellated parasite Spironucleus in a mixed cichlid (family Cichlidae) and tetra (family Characidae) community. The assay clearly illustrated the course of treatment for the system during a real clinical application. The assay is not without limitations, as interferences can occur from other drugs in the matrix with similar absorbance spectra. Nonetheless, this type of assay illustrates the potential for use of native absorbance assays in aqueous matrices for this and other therapeutic compounds.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Metabolomics has great potential for clinical and nutritional care and research with exotic animals.
- Author
-
Dove AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Mass Spectrometry methods, Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena physiology, Animals, Zoo metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Mass Spectrometry veterinary, Metabolomics methods, Metabolomics trends
- Abstract
This essay explores the potential of metabolomics for exotic animal research in a zoological setting. Metabolomics is a suite of analytical tools aimed at gaining a holistic understanding of animal metabolism without prior knowledge of the compounds to be measured. These metabolic fingerprints can be used to define normal metabolism for an unstudied species, to characterize the metabolic deviation of diseased animals from the normal state over time, to identify biomarker compounds that best capture such deviations, and to measure the metabolic impact of clinical and nutritional interventions. Two approaches, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and mass spectrometry (MS) provide large amounts of complimentary pure and applied biological data. Metabolomic methods hold great potential for researchers, clinicians, and nutritionists studying exotic and aquatic animals because they can produce a huge data return on research effort, and because they do not require much a priori knowledge of the animals' metabolism, which is so often then case in zoological settings., (© 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Baseline health parameters and species comparisons among free-ranging Atlantic sharpnose (Rhizoprionodon terraenovae), bonnethead (Sphyrna tiburo), and spiny dogfish (Squalus acanthias) sharks in Georgia, Florida, and Washington, USA.
- Author
-
Haman KH, Norton TM, Thomas AC, Dove AD, and Tseng F
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Wild blood, Blood Chemical Analysis veterinary, District of Columbia, Female, Florida, Georgia, Hematologic Tests veterinary, Male, Reference Values, Species Specificity, Squalus blood, Health Status, Sharks blood, Trace Elements blood, Vitamins blood
- Abstract
Sharks are of commercial, research, conservation, and exhibition importance but we know little regarding health parameters and population status for many species. Here we present health indicators and species comparisons for adults of three common wild-caught species: 30 Atlantic sharpnose sharks (Rhizoprionodon terraenovae) and 31 bonnethead sharks (Sphyrna tiburo) from the western Atlantic, and 30 spiny dogfish sharks (Squalus acanthias) from the eastern Pacific. All animals were captured during June-July 2009 and 2010. Median values and preliminary reference intervals were calculated for hematology, plasma biochemistry, trace nutrients, and vitamin A, E, and D concentrations. Significant differences, attributable to physiologic differences among the species, were found in the basic hematologic and plasma biochemistry variables. Significant species differences in arsenic and selenium plasma concentrations were found and appear to coincide with diet and habitat variability among these three species. Vitamin E was significantly higher in the bonnethead shark, again related to the foraging ecology and ingestion of plant material by this species. The Atlantic sharpnose had significantly higher vitamin A concentrations, supported by the higher proportion of teleosts in the diet. Vitamin D was below the limit of quantification in all three species. These preliminary reference intervals for health variables can be used to assess and monitor the population health and serve as indicators of nutritional status in these populations of wild elasmobranchs.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Biomarkers of whale shark health: a metabolomic approach.
- Author
-
Dove AD, Leisen J, Zhou M, Byrne JJ, Lim-Hing K, Webb HD, Gelbaum L, Viant MR, Kubanek J, and Fernández FM
- Subjects
- Animals, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Mass Spectrometry methods, Methylamines blood, Principal Component Analysis, Biomarkers blood, Health Status, Metabolomics methods, Picolinic Acids blood, Sharks metabolism
- Abstract
In a search for biomarkers of health in whale sharks and as exploration of metabolomics as a modern tool for understanding animal physiology, the metabolite composition of serum in six whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) from an aquarium collection was explored using (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and direct analysis in real time (DART) mass spectrometry (MS). Principal components analysis (PCA) of spectral data showed that individual animals could be resolved based on the metabolite composition of their serum and that two unhealthy individuals could be discriminated from the remaining healthy animals. The major difference between healthy and unhealthy individuals was the concentration of homarine, here reported for the first time in an elasmobranch, which was present at substantially lower concentrations in unhealthy whale sharks, suggesting that this metabolite may be a useful biomarker of health status in this species. The function(s) of homarine in sharks remain uncertain but it likely plays a significant role as an osmolyte. The presence of trimethylamine oxide (TMAO), another well-known protective osmolyte of elasmobranchs, at 0.1-0.3 mol L(-1) was also confirmed using both NMR and MS. Twenty-three additional potential biomarkers were identified based on significant differences in the frequency of their occurrence between samples from healthy and unhealthy animals, as detected by DART MS. Overall, NMR and MS provided complementary data that showed that metabolomics is a useful approach for biomarker prospecting in poorly studied species like elasmobranchs.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Disseminated fungal infection in two species of captive sharks.
- Author
-
Marancik DP, Berliner AL, Cavin JM, Clauss TM, Dove AD, Sutton DA, Wickes BL, and Camus AC
- Subjects
- Animals, Fatal Outcome, Female, Fish Diseases pathology, Mycoses microbiology, Mycoses pathology, Exophiala isolation & purification, Fish Diseases microbiology, Mucor isolation & purification, Mycoses veterinary, Paecilomyces isolation & purification, Sharks
- Abstract
In this report, two cases of systemic mycosis in captive sharks are characterized. These cases were progressive and ultimately culminated in terminal disease. Paecilomyces lilacinus, an uncommon pathogen in human and veterinary medicine, was associated with areas of necrosis in the liver, heart, and gill in a great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran). Fungal growth was observed from samples of kidney, spleen, spinal fluid, and coelomic cavity swabs. Dual fungal infection by Exophiala pisciphila and Mucor circinelloides was diagnosed in a juvenile zebra shark (Stegostoma fasciatum). Both fungi were present in the liver, with more severe tissue destruction associated with E. pisciphila. E. pisciphila also produced significant necrosis in the spleen and gill, while M. circinelloides was associated with only minimal tissue changes in the heart. Fungal cultures from liver, kidney, and spleen were positive for both E. pisciphila and M. circinelloides. Identification of P. lilacinus and M. circinelloides was based on colonial and hyphal morphology. E. pisciphila was identified by sequence analysis of the 28S rRNA D1/D2 region and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region between the 18S and 28S rRNA subunit. These cases, and a lack of information in the literature, highlight the need for further research and diagnostic sampling to further characterize the host-pathogen interaction between elasmobranchs and fungi.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Hematologic disorders of fish.
- Author
-
Clauss TM, Dove AD, and Arnold JE
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Domestic, Blood Cell Count veterinary, Cytological Techniques veterinary, Female, Fish Diseases pathology, Fishes, Hematologic Diseases blood, Hematologic Diseases diagnosis, Male, Species Specificity, Fish Diseases blood, Fish Diseases diagnosis, Hematologic Diseases veterinary, Hematologic Tests veterinary
- Abstract
Hematology can be a useful tool for monitoring health status, detecting illness, and following the progress of disease and response to therapy. Despite advances in fish medicine in recent years, interpretation of fish hematology often is hampered by a lack of meaningful reference values and the bewildering diversity of fish species. A multitude of intrinsic and extrinsic factors cause normal and abnormal variation in hematologic data. This article provides an overview of some of the hematologic abnormalities in fish induced by infectious agents and environmental, husbandry, and nutritional issues.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Naturally occurring bacteraemia in American lobsters, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards, in Long Island Sound.
- Author
-
Bartlett SL, Wooster GA, Sokolowski MS, Dove AD, and Bowser PR
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, Bacteria isolation & purification, Female, Geography, Hemolymph microbiology, Male, New York, Oxygen analysis, Seawater analysis, Temperature, Bacteria pathogenicity, Nephropidae microbiology
- Abstract
The health status of the American lobster, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards, in Long Island Sound (LIS) has been in decline, with seasonal mortality events occurring since 1998. In order to assess the potential effects of environmental conditions on lobster health via haemolymph analysis, lobsters collected from various sites in LIS were examined and sampled while concurrent environmental data (water temperature, salinity and dissolved oxygen) were recorded. The pH of the haemolymph of each lobster was tested, followed by a collection of haemolymph for serum biochemistry analysis and bacterial culture. This report focuses on the results of the bacterial sampling. The majority of bacteria cultured were opportunistic pathogens commonly found in the environment, including some that are associated with sewage and pollution. The prevalence of bacteraemia was correlated with the site of collection, the month in which the lobsters were sampled, and water temperature.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Species accumulation curves and their applications in parasite ecology.
- Author
-
Dove AD and Cribb TH
- Subjects
- Animals, Genetic Variation, Parasites genetics, Ecosystem, Parasites growth & development
- Abstract
Species accumulation curves (SACs) chart the increase in recovery of new species as a function of some measure of sampling effort. Studies of parasite diversity can benefit from the application of SACs, both as empirical tools to guide sampling efforts and predict richness, and because their properties are informative about community patterns and the structure of parasite diversity. SACs can be used to infer interactivity in parasite infracommunities, to partition species richness into contributions from different spatial scales and different levels of the host hierarchy (individuals, populations and communities) or to identify modes of community assembly (niche versus dispersal). A historical tendency to treat individual hosts as statistically equivalent replicates (quadrats) seemingly satisfies the sample-based subgroup of SACs but care is required in this because of the inequality of hosts as sampling units. Knowledge of the true distribution of parasite richness over multiple host-derived and spatial scales is far from complete but SACs can improve the understanding of diversity patterns in parasite assemblages.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Histopathological Examination of Wild American Eels Infected with Anguillicola crassus.
- Author
-
Sokolowski MS and Dove AD
- Abstract
We describe for the first time the histopathology caused in wild American eels Anguilla rostrata by the introduced nematode Anguillicola crassus. All of the American eels examined showed signs of previous or ongoing infections with A. crassus. Gross observations included opacity of the normally translucent swim bladder and dilation of blood vessels. The swim bladders of infected American eels showed focal, multifocal, and diffuse histological changes. Consistently observed pathologies included abnormal papillose appearance of the mucosa; hyperplasia of the lamina propria, muscularis mucosa, and submucosa; edema of the mucosa and muscularis mucosa; dilation of the blood vessels; and damage in the submucosa caused by migrating A. crassus L3 and L4 larvae. Less-common pathologies included fibrosis and lymphocytic aggregates around L3 and L4 larvae in the submucosa; destruction of the mucosa, which in some cases completely exposed the mucosal blood vessels; L2 larval penetration of the tissues of the swim bladder; bacterial infections in the submucosa and muscularis mucosa; and migration of an L4 larva through the rete mirabile.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Defining parasite communities is a challenge for neutral theory.
- Author
-
Dove AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, Host-Parasite Interactions physiology, Models, Biological, Parasites physiology
- Abstract
The neutral theory of biodiversity and biogeography is a null model of community structure that suggests that it may be possible to explain the richness and relative abundance of species through neutral processes of immigration, extinction, and speciation, without resort to interactive processes such as competition. There have been no attempts to fit neutral models to parasite communities to date. The nature of parasite communities, however, challenges the basic assumptions of neutral theory. In particular, the spatially dynamic relationships between hosts as habitat patches result in immigration rates that are in a constant state of flux. In addition, the partial compositional overlap of many component communities means that they can affect each other's process rates, which violates the zero-sum assumptions of neutral theory. Despite these obstacles, many of the patterns that neutral theory seeks to explain are still present in parasite communities. Far from being an esoteric special case, parasite communities are ubiquitous in nature and, therefore, any attempts to produce unified theoretical frameworks should accommodate the characteristics of parasite communities, or risk obsolescence.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Spatio-temporal variation in serum chemistry of the lobster, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards.
- Author
-
Dove AD, Sokolowski MS, Bartlett SL, and Bowser PR
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, Discriminant Analysis, Electrolytes analysis, Geography, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, New York, Principal Component Analysis, Seasons, Temperature, Time Factors, Blood Chemical Analysis, Hemolymph chemistry, Nephropidae chemistry, Proteins analysis
- Abstract
Monthly variations in serum chemistry of the American lobster, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards, were investigated at one location in Long Island Sound (LIS). Comparisons between three locations within and outside LIS were also made for a single time point. Most serum analytes displayed significant fluctuation over the study period and between locations. Temporal patterns could be classified as: low in cool months/high in warm months, i.e. Na, Cl, Na:K ratio, Ca, albumin:globulin ratio, percentage Fe saturation; high in cool months/low in warm months, i.e. pH, K, urea, total protein, albumin, globulin, alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), lipaemia; June spike, i.e. glucose, cholesterol, creatine kinase, iron, transferrin iron-binding capacity; other less obvious fluctuations, i.e. Mg, PO4; and no apparent fluctuation, i.e. HCO3, alkaline phosphatase. The proportion of samples correctly classified into month of collection by a subset of 13 analytes using discriminant analysis improved as the months progressed from May (0.75) to October (>0.95). Discriminant analysis also resolved 96.5% of samples by location. The significant depression of serum calcium at the eastern LIS site correlates with excretory calcinosis, a calcium storage disease described from lobsters at this site, but contrasts with a seasonal elevation in serum calcium recorded in the temporal component of the study. Serum proteins, the electrolytes Ca and K and the enzymes ALT and AST proved to have the strongest spatio-temporal patterns of variation. Serum chemistry is a useful research tool for lobster populations, but the dearth of information on the homology of analyte functions in this species with those in vertebrate species makes interpretation of the results challenging. Late summer/autumn water conditions appear to cause stress for lobsters in LIS.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Ultrastructural features of excretory calcinosis in the lobster, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards.
- Author
-
Dove AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Exocrine Glands ultrastructure, Gills ultrastructure, Granuloma pathology, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Calcium Carbonate metabolism, Nephropidae metabolism
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Excretory calcinosis: a new fatal disease of wild American lobsters Homarus americanus.
- Author
-
Dove AD, LoBue C, Bowser P, and Powell M
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, Calcium Carbonate pharmacokinetics, Histological Techniques, Temperature, Calcium Carbonate metabolism, Gills pathology, Granuloma pathology, Nephropidae metabolism
- Abstract
A significant number of moribund and dead lobsters Homarus americanus were reported to New York state authorities by lobster fishers in Long Island Sound (LIS) during the summer of 2002. Morbid lobsters were characterised by an orange discolouration of the abdomen, lethargy, an excess of epibionts and poor post-capture survival. On necropsy, severe extensive multifocal or diffuse mineralised granulomatous inflammation of the gills and antennal glands was the most striking pathology. In the gills, granulomas often occluded the lumen of filaments, resulting in congestion, ischemia and coagulative necrosis of gill tissues. In the antennal glands, granulomas were concentrated along the border between the coelomosac and labyrinth. No significant pathogens were recovered from diseased individuals. In prechronic individuals, however, it was evident that granulomas were focused around calcium carbonate (aragonite) crystals. This disease may result from anomalously high sea-bottom temperatures in LIS (approximately 23 degrees C) during the summer of 2002 and associated disruptions of the calcium chemistry of lobsters in favour of deposition of minerals in soft tissues. The ultimate cause of death of affected lobsters is probably respiratory failure due to reduced effective surface area of the gills, exacerbated by hypermetabolic temperatures and an abundance of epibionts.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A description of Lecithocladium invasor n.sp. (Digenea: Hemiuridae) and the pathology associated with two species of Hemiuridae in acanthurid fish.
- Author
-
Chambers CB, Carlisle MS, Dove AD, and Cribb TH
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia, Esophagus parasitology, Trematoda anatomy & histology, Trematode Infections parasitology, Trematode Infections pathology, Fish Diseases parasitology, Fish Diseases pathology, Fishes parasitology, Trematoda classification, Trematoda pathogenicity, Trematode Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Lecithocladium invasor n.sp. is described from the oesophagus of Naso annulatus, N. tuberosus and N. vlamingii on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia. The worms penetrate the oesophageal mucosa and induce chronic transmural nodular granulomas, which expand the full thickness of the oesophageal wall and protrude both into the oesophageal lumen and from the serosal surface. We observed two major types of lesions: large ulcerated, active granulomas, consisting of a central cavity containing a single or multiple live worms; and many smaller chronic fibrous submucosal nodules. Small, identifiable but attenuated, worms and degenerate worm fragments were identified within some chronic nodules. Co-infection of the posterior oesophagus of the same Naso species with Lecithocladium chingi was common. L. chingi is redescribed from N. annulatus, N. brevirostris, N. tuberosus and N. vlamingii. Unlike L. invasor n.sp., L. chingi was not associated with significant lesions. The different pathenogenicity of the two species in acanthurid fish is discussed.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Richness patterns in the parasite communities of exotic poeciliid fishes.
- Author
-
Dove AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain parasitology, Cluster Analysis, Coccidia growth & development, Coccidia isolation & purification, Crustacea growth & development, Eukaryota growth & development, Eukaryota isolation & purification, Eye parasitology, Female, Fish Diseases epidemiology, Fresh Water, Gills parasitology, Male, Models, Biological, Nematoda isolation & purification, Parasites growth & development, Parasitic Diseases, Animal parasitology, Queensland epidemiology, Regression Analysis, Skin parasitology, Cyprinodontiformes parasitology, Fish Diseases parasitology, Parasites isolation & purification, Parasitic Diseases, Animal epidemiology
- Abstract
Three species of poeciliids (Gambusia holbrooki, Xiphophorus helleri and X. maculatus) and 15 species of ecologically similar native freshwater fishes (mainly eleotrids, ambassids, melanotaeniids and retropinnids) were examined for parasite richness to investigate parasite flux, qualitative differences, quantitative differences and the structuring factors in parasite communities in the 2 fish types in Queensland, Australia. Theory suggests that poeciliids would harbour depauperate parasite communities. Results supported this hypothesis; poeciliids harboured more species-poor parasite infracommunities and regional faunas than natives (P < 0.0001), despite greater sampling effort for the former. Cluster analysis of presence/absence data for poeciliids and the 6 most-sampled native fishes revealed that parasite communities of the 2 fish groups are qualitatively distinct; the proportion of parasite species with complex life-cycles was lower in poeciliids than in native species, and Myxosporea, Microspora, Coccidia and parasitic Crustacea were all absent from poeciliids. Limited exchange of parasite species has occurred between natives and poeciliids. Logistic ordinal regression analysis revealed that fish origin (exotic or native), environmental disturbance and host sex were all significant determinants of parasite community richness (P < 0.05). Theoretical modelling suggests that poeciliids are at a competitive advantage over native fishes because of their lack of parasites.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The distribution of the introduced tapeworm Bothriocephalus acheilognathi in Australian freshwater fishes.
- Author
-
Dove AD and Fletcher AS
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia epidemiology, Carps parasitology, Fishes parasitology, Prevalence, Species Specificity, Cestoda isolation & purification, Cestode Infections epidemiology, Cestode Infections veterinary, Fish Diseases epidemiology, Fish Diseases parasitology
- Abstract
Native and exotic fishes were collected from 29 sites across coastal and inland New South Wales, Queensland and Victoria, using a range of techniques, to infer the distribution of Bothriocephalus acheilognathi (Cestoda: Pseudophyllidea) and the host species in which it occurs. The distribution of B. acheilognathi was determined by that of its principal host, carp, Cyprinus carpio; it did not occur at sites where carp were not present. The parasite was recorded from all native fish species where the sample size exceeded 30 and which were collected sympatrically with carp: Hypseleotris klunzingeri, Hypseleotris sp. 4, Hypseleotris sp. 5, Phylipnodon grandiceps and Retropinna semoni. Bothriocephalus acheilognathi was also recorded from the exotic fishes Gambusia holbrooki and Carassius auratus. Hypseleotris sp. 4, Hypseleotris sp. 5, P. grandiceps, R. semoni and C. auratus are new host records. The parasite was not recorded from any sites in coastal drainages. The only carp population examined from a coastal drainage (Albert River, south-east Queensland) was also free of infection; those fish had a parasite fauna distinct from that of carp in inland drainages and may represent a separate introduction event. Bothriocephalus acheilognathi has apparently spread along with its carp hosts and is so far restricted to the Murray-Darling Basin. The low host specificity of this parasite is cause for concern given the threatened or endangered nature of some Australian native freshwater fish species. A revised list of definitive hosts of B. acheilognathiis presented.
- Published
- 2000
32. Pomphorhynchus heronensis and restricted movement of Lutjanus carponotatus on the Great Barrier Reef.
- Author
-
Cribb TH, Anderson GR, and Dove AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Behavior, Animal, Body Constitution, Fish Diseases transmission, Helminthiasis, Animal transmission, Host-Parasite Interactions, Movement, Prevalence, Queensland epidemiology, Seasons, Acanthocephala isolation & purification, Fish Diseases epidemiology, Helminthiasis, Animal epidemiology
- Abstract
Samples of Lutjanus carponotatus (Lutjanidae) from reef flat (shallow) and reef slope (deep) sites around Heron and Wistari reefs on the southern Great Barrier Reef were examined for Pomphorhynchus heronensis (Acanthocephala). Individual fish from the reef slope had 0-9 (2.6) worms as compared with 1-122 (39.6) worms for individuals from the reef flat (P < 0.0001). Other variables (year, season, size of fish) made little contribution to the variation. Reef flat and reef slope sites were separated by as little as 300 m. These results imply both that the fish have very limited local movement and that transmission of the parasite is concentrated locally.
- Published
- 2000
33. A new index of interactivity in parasite communities.
- Author
-
Dove AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecosystem, Fishes physiology, Host-Parasite Interactions, Population Dynamics, Fish Diseases parasitology, Fishes parasitology, Parasites physiology, Parasitic Diseases, Animal parasitology
- Abstract
A new index of interactivity which allows objective evaluation and comparison of interactivity in communities between different host species is presented. The index is derived from the equations for species-accumulation curves generated using non-linear regression (with the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm) of sample infracommunity richness data. It is advantageous in that it requires only presence/absence data to calculate, is applicable to all parasite taxa (including asexual species), is largely independent of sample size and allows objective comparison of parasite communities while correcting for differences in total richness. Iterative randomisation of infracommunity richness values to generate a mean value for the index avoids spurious results which may be generated by heterogeneity in infracommunity richness and the variation this produces in the non-linear regression results.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Concurrent invaders--four exotic species of Monogenea now established on exotic freshwater fishes in Australia.
- Author
-
Dove AD and Ernst I
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia, Cestoda anatomy & histology, Cestoda isolation & purification, Female, Fresh Water, Male, Cestoda classification, Fishes parasitology
- Abstract
Four species of exotic monogeneans are reported from five species of exotic freshwater fish in Australia: Gytrodactylus bullatarudis from Poecilia reticulata and Xiphophorus helleri in Queensland; Gyrodactylus macracanthus from Misgurnus anguillicaudatus in the Australian Capital Territory; Dactylogyrus extensus from Cyprinus carpio in the Australian Capital Territory; and Dactylogyrus anchoratus from Carassius auratus in the Australian Capital Territory. This is the first published record of described species of monogeneans of the genus Dactylogyrus or Gyrodactylus from Australia and the first report of parasites of M. anguillicaudatus in Australia. The establishment of exotic monogenean populations on Australian native fishes via host-switching is considered less likely than for other parasitic groups due to the generally high host-specificity of monogeneans, combined with the phylogenetic dissimilarity of native and exotic fishes. Similar establishments have occurred elsewhere, however, and the risk of these events increases with each new fish species introduction.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Coomera: a new genus of Fellodistomidae (Digenea) from Monodactylus argenteus (Monodactylidae) of southern Queensland, Australia.
- Author
-
Dove AD and Cribb TH
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia, Female, Male, Trematoda anatomy & histology, Fishes parasitology, Trematoda classification
- Abstract
A new genus, Coomera, is erected to accommodate C. brayi new species, here described from the intestine and rectum of Monodactylus argenteus from southern Queensland, Australia. The species is characterised by a single gut caecum, conical pharynx, oblique testes, pars prostatica lined with anucleate vesicles, a large genital atrium, and a large muscular cirrus. Despite the single caecum, C. brayi is not assigned to the Monascinae for the following reasons: the sub-terminal oral sucker opens in a round aperture rather than a medial slit, the ventral sucker is larger than the oral sucker, a pre-pharynx is present, the pharynx is conical rather than elongate and the testes are symmetrical rather than tandem. These character states are shared with the Fellodistominae to which we assign this genus, suggesting that possession of a single caecum is homoplasious within the Fellodistomidae.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.