The construction of dams is a significant environmental issue due to its impacts on native fish populations and riparian animals and habitats. The response of otters Lutra lutra Linnaeus, 1758 to such disturbances was evaluated using the Aguieira reservoir (Central Portugal) and its associated tributaries as a model. Visiting rates suggested the presence of resident otters, both in the reservoir and in two of the tributaries. There was a significant negative influence of water level and precipitation in the number of spraints found around the reservoir. Nevertheless, marking behaviour was positively related to substrate and negatively related to vegetation cover, though these variables explained only a small amount of variation in otter signs. In the tributaries, although precipitation also negatively affected the number of otter signs found, the availability of rocks in the riverbed and the presence of refuge had a positive influence in marking behaviour. Prey composition and abundance differed between reservoir and tributaries, but the main otter prey in both systems was the pumpkinseed, which is very abundant in the reservoir. Results demonstrate that otters regularly use the Aguieira reservoir, which provides a good prey base, and the associated tributaries, which provide shelter.
This study appears from an experiment previously carried out in New Zealand white rabbits. Allogenic mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) were transplanted into an iatrogenically-created defect in the lateral section of the distal physis of the left femur in 10 miniature pigs. The right femur with the same defect served as a control. To transfer MSCs, a freshly prepared porous scaffold was used, based on collagen and chitosan, constituting a compact tube into which MSCs were implanted. The pigs were euthanized four months after the transplantation. On average, the left femur with transplanted MSCs grew more in length (0.56±0.14 cm) compared with right femurs with physeal defect without transplanted MSCs (0.14 ± 0.3 cm). The average angular (valgus) deformity of the left femur had an angle point of 0.78°, following measurement and X-ray examination, whereas in the right femur without transplantation it was 3.7°. The initial results indicate that preventive transplantation of MSCs into a physeal defect may prevent valgus deformity formation and probably also reduce disorders of the longitudinal bone growth. This part of our experiment is significant in the effort to advance MSCs application in human medicine by using pig as a model, which is the next step after experimenting on rabbits., L. Plánka ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Reports of wood mouse arboreality are rather scarce outside Britain. I reviewed and analysed 267 visits and 16,456 checks of glirids artificial nest-boxes mounted on trees, in twelve sample areas of Meso- and Supra-Mediterranean woodlands (Sicily, 1995–2005). The wood mouse was recorded only 65 times (0.395%) using the artificial nest-boxes in nine sample areas, and based on this low frequency, the wood mouse can be considered as an occasional dweller of artificial nest-boxes. The resource selection index allowed checking the use respect to the availability of nest-boxes placed at different heights. These were likely reached by climbing the dense understorey and low tree branches up to 5 m, but nest-boxes in the two lower classes (0.5–1.0 and 1.1–1.5 m) were used more than those in the two higher classes (1.6–2.0 and 2.1–5.0 m). ANOVA results suggested that the box use was not related to any particular habitat or sample area feature, and it was slightly more pronounced from March to May. Regardless of their age and sex, individuals mostly exploited nest-boxes placed near the ground (0.5–1.5 m) and generally for 2–3 months. Nonetheless, cases of consecutive use for longer periods and instances of reproduction inside nest-boxes showed that some individuals extended their home range also to the vertical dimension.
To estimate the size of fish taken as prey by piscivorous predators, linear or non-linear relationships between bone measures (pharyngeal, opercula, cleithra, anal and dorsal spine bones, otoliths) and body length were elaborated for eleven Eurasian cyprinid fish species captured in three lakes of Turkey: rudd Scardinius erythrophthalmus, Baltic vimba Vimba vimba, Danube bleak Chalcalburnus chalcoides, gibel carp Carassius gibelio, roach Rutilus rutilus, silver bream Blicca bjoerkna, common carp Cyprinus carpio, chub Leuciscus cephalus, Dnieper chub Petroleuciscus borysthenicus, tench Tinca tinca and tarek Alburnus tarichi (endemic species for Lake Van). All calculated regressions were highly significant, with coefficients of determination >81% in most of cases. The results suggest that the biometric relationships between fish length and some bones (pharyngeal, opercula, cleithra) are well suited for use in prey-predator studies of all the studied species, but otoliths and the dorsal and anal spines can be used for some fish species only (rudd, Baltic vimba, roach, silver bream, gibel carp).
A comparison of the effects of ultrasound produced by low- and high-frequency ultrasonic apparatuses upon biological systems is one of the basic problems when studying ultrasound cavitation effects. One possibility for how to compare these effects is the indirect method which uses well-known physical quantities characterizing the interaction of ionizing radiation with matter and which also converts these quantities to one common physical quantity. The comparison was performed with two methods applied to the chemical dosimetry of ionizing radiation. The first method employed a twocomponent dosimeter which is composed of 50 % chloroform and 50 % re-distilled water (i.e. Taplin dosimeter). The other method used a modified iodide dosimeter prepared from a 0.5 M potassium iodide solution. After irradiation or ultrasound exposure, measurable chemical changes occurred in both dosimeters. The longer the exposure, the greater the chemical changes. These effects are described by the relationship of these changes versus the exposure times in both dosimeters. The UZD 21 ultrasonic disintegrator (with a frequency of 20 kHz, 50 % power output) was used as a lowfrequency ultrasound source, and the BTL-07 therapeutic instrument (with a frequency of 1 MHz and intensity of 2 W/cm2) was used as a high-frequency cavitation ultrasound source. For comparison, a 60Co gamma source was applied (60Co, gamma energies of 1.17 and 1.33 MeV, activity of 14 PBq). Results of this study have demonstrated that the sonochemical products are generated during exposure in the exposed samples of both dosimeters for all apparatuses used. The amount of these products depends linearly upon the exposure time. The resulting cavitation effects were recalculated to a gray-equivalent dose (the proposed unit is cavitation gray [cavitGy]) based on the sonochemical effects compared to the effects of ionizing radiation from the 60Co source., B. Kratochvíl, V. Mornstein., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Electrogastrography (EGG) is a non-invasive method for the assessment of gastric myoelectrical activity. Porcine EGG is comparable with human one. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of atropine and neostigmine on the EGG in experimental pigs. Adult female pigs were administrated atropine (1.5 mg i.m., n=6) and neostigmine (0.5 mg i.m., n=6) after the baseline EGG, followed by a 90-min trial recording (MMS, Enschede, the Netherlands). Running spectral analysis was used for the evaluation. The results were expressed as dominant frequency of slow waves and EGG power (areas of amplitudes). Neostigmine increased continuously the dominant frequency and decreased significantly the EGG power. Atropine did not change the dominant frequency significantly. However, atropine increased significantly the EGG power (areas of amplitudes) from basal values to the maximum at the 10-20-min interval. After that period, the areas of amplitudes decreased significantly to the lowest values at the 60-90-min interval. In conclusion, cholinergic and anticholinergic agents affect differently EGG in experimental pigs., J. Květina, I. Tachecí, M. Pavlík, M. Kopáčová, S. Rejchrt, T. Douda, M. Kuneš, J. Bureš., and Obsahuje bibliografii
This paper reviews recent use of flow cytometry in studies on apomictic plant taxa. The most of apomictic angiosperms are polyploid, often differing in ploidy level from their sexual counterparts within the agamic complex. Flow cytometry is widely used for screening the ploidy levels of mature plants and their seed generated both in the field and in experiments. Routine ploidy screening often accompanied by molecular markers distinguishing individual genotypes are used to reveal novel insights into the biosystematics and population biology of apomictic taxa. Apomixis (asexual seed formation) is mostly facultative, operating together with other less frequent reproductive pathways within the same individual. The diversity in modes of reproduction in apomicts is commonly reflected in the ploidy structure of their progeny in mixed-cytotype populations. Thus, flow cytometry facilitates the detection and quantification of particular progeny classes generated by different reproductive pathways. The specific embryo/endosperm ploidy ratios, typical of the different reproductive pathways, result from modifications of double fertilization in sexual/apomictic angiosperms.Thus, the reproductive origin of seed can be identified, including autonomous or pseudogamous apomixis, haploid parthenogenesis and sexual reproduction, involving either reduced or unreduced gametes. Collectively, flow cytometry has been used to address the following research topics: (i) assessing the variation in ploidy levels and genome sizes in agamic complexes, (ii) detection and quantification of different reproductive modes in facultative apomicts, (iii) elucidation of processes in populations with coexisting sexual and apomictic biotypes, (iv) evolution of agamic complexes, and (v) genetic basis of apomixis. The last topic is of paramount importance to crop breeding: the search for candidate gene(s) responsible for apomixis is the main objective of many research programmes. A list of the angiosperm taxa that could provide model systems for such research is provided.
Over the last decade there has been a tremendous increase in the use of flow cytometry (FCM) in studies on the biosystematics, ecology and population biology of vascular plants. Most studies, however, address questions related to differences in genome copy number, while the value of FCM for studying homoploid plant groups has long been underestimated. This review summarizes recent advances in taxonomic and ecological research on homoploid plants that were made using FCM. A fairly constant amount of nuclear DNA within each evolutionary entity together with the often large differences between species means that genome size is a useful character for taxonomic decision-making. Regardless of the number of chromosomes, genome size can be used to delimit taxa at various taxonomic levels, resolve complex low-level taxonomies, assess the frequency of interspecific hybridization or infer evolutionary relationships in homoploid plant groups. In plant ecology and evolutionary biology, variation in genome size has been used for prediction purposes because genome size is associated with several phenotypic, physiological and/or ecological characteristics. It is likely that in the future the use ofFCM in studies on taxonomy, ecology and population biology of homoploid plants will increase both in scope and frequency. Flow cytometry alone, but especially in combination with other molecular and phenotypic approaches, promises advances in our understanding of the functional significance of variation in genome size in homoploid plants.
Modern methods of monitoring landslides are based on observations of both: direct surveying (GNSS, electronic tachymetry, geometric levelling) and remote sensing (terrestrial and aerial photogrammetry, laser scanning, interferometry), as well as surface and subsurface geotechnical observations (e.g. inclinometers, extensometers, piezometers, etc.). Due to the high cost of installation of these devices and its measurement, the implementations of these methods are usually used on well-define d objects, with established landslide activity and high risk to people’s lives. The main objective of the project was to design, create and do practical tests of simple and inexpensive measurement devices, which detect first symptoms of a potential landslide movements and alert of an existing threat. These devices would be some kind of an early warning system that would register the occurrence of the first movements of the surface layers of soil, which would be a signal to start of geodetic and geotechnical monitoring of potential landslides., Bartłomiej Ćmielewski, Bernard Kontny and Kazimierz Ćmielewski., and Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy