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Decreasing Gradient (decreasing + gradient)
Selected AbstractsEffects of Habitat Fragmentation by Damming on the Persistence of Stream-Dwelling Charr PopulationsCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2002Kentaro Morita We assessed the effect of habitat fragmentation by damming on the population persistence of a stream-dwelling fish, the white-spotted charr (Salvelinus leucomaenis), in streams of southwestern Hokkaido, Japan. We sampled for charr at 52 dammed-off sites by electrofishing or snorkeling and measured five habitat characteristics: isolation period, watershed area, gradient, elevation, distance from sea. Of the 52 study sites above dams, white-spotted charr were absent at 17 sites and were present at 35 sites. Because the charr occupied all undammed upstream reaches, the damming would cause the absence of charr upstream. Among five habitat characteristics examined, stepwise logistic-regression analysis showed that disappearance was promoted with increasing isolation period, with decreasing watershed area (i.e., habitat size), and with decreasing gradient. The resulting logistic model explained 82.7% of the present white-spotted charr occurrence and forecasted that 12 of 35 extant populations will disappear after 50 years. Our findings imply that extirpation of small, dammed-off populations is inevitable unless efficient fish ladders are installed or dams are removed. Resumen: La construcción de presas tiene serias consecuencias sobre los ecosistemas acuáticos y uno de los mas serios es el "efecto de barrera" ( la prevención de que un organismo migre a través del sistema). Evaluamos los efectos de la fragmentación del hábitat ocasionados por la construcción de presas en la persistencia de un pez morador de arroyos, la trucha de montaña de manchas blancas ( Salvelinus leucomaenis), en arroyos del suroeste de Hokkaido, Japón. Muestreamos en 52 sitios con represas empleando electropesca o buceo con esnórquel y medimos cinco características del hábitat ( periodo de aislamiento, área de la cuenca, gradiente, elevación y distancia al mar). De los 52 sitios de estudio ubicados arriba de las represas las truchas de montaña estuvieron ausentes en 17 sitios y presentes en 35 sitios. Debido a que las truchas de montaña ocupaban todos los rangos sin represas arroyo arriba, la creación de represas pudo causar la ausencia de truchas de montaña arroyo arriba. Dentro de las cinco características del hábitat examinadas, el análisis de regresión logística mostró que la desaparición era promovida por un incremento en el periodo de aislamiento, con una disminución en el área de la cuenca (i.e. tamaño del hábitat) y con una disminución del gradiente. El modelo logístico resultante explicó 82.7% de la presencia de truchas de montaña y pronosticó que 12 de la 35 poblaciones actuales desaparecerían después de 50 años. Nuestros resultados implican que la extirpación es pequeña y que la exclusión por construcción de represas es inevitable a menos que se instalen desvíos para peces o que se remuevan las presas. [source] Differential expression of RAR, isoforms in the mouse striatum during development: A gradient of RAR,2 expression along the rostrocaudal axisDEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Issue 2 2005Wen-Lin Liao Abstract The retinoic acid receptor RAR, is highly expressed in the striatum of the ventral telencephalon. We studied the expression pattern of different RAR, isoforms in the developing mouse striatum by in situ hybridization. We found a differential ontogeny of RAR,2 and RAR,1/3 in embryonic day (E) 13.5 lateral ganglionic eminence (striatal primordium). RAR,2 mRNA was detected primarily in the rostral and ventromedial domains, whereas RAR,1/3 mRNAs were enriched in the caudal and dorsolateral domains. Notably, by E16.5, a prominent decreasing gradient of RAR,2 mRNA was present in the developing striatum along the rostrocaudal axis, i.e., RAR,2 was expressed at higher levels in the rostral than the caudal striatum. No such gradient was found for RAR,1/3 and RAR,3 mRNAs. The rostrocaudal RAR,2 gradient gradually disappeared postnatally and was absent in the adult striatum. The differential expression pattern of RAR, isoforms in the developing striatum may provide an anatomical basis for differential gene regulation by RAR, signaling. Developmental Dynamics 233:584,594, 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Villin: A marker for development of the epithelial pyloric borderDEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Issue 1 2002Evan M. Braunstein Abstract In the adult gastrointestinal tract, the morphologic borders between esophagus and stomach and between stomach and small intestine are literally one cell thick. The patterning mechanisms that underlie the development of these sharp regional divisions from a once continuous endodermal tube are still obscure. In the embryonic endoderm of the developing gut, region-specific expression of certain genes (e.g., intestine-specific expression of the actin bundling protein villin) can be detected as early as 9.0 days post coitum, although the morphologic differentiation of the gut epithelium proper does not begin until 4 to 5 days later. By using a mouse model in which a ,-galactosidase marker has been inserted into the endogenous villin locus, we examined the development of the stomach/intestinal (pyloric) border during gut organogenesis. The data indicate that the border is not sharp from the outset. Rather, the initial border region is characterized by a decreasing gradient of villin/,-galactosidase expression that extends into the distal stomach. A sharp epithelial border of villin/,-galactosidase expression appears abruptly at day 16 and is further refined over the next 3 weeks to form the distinct one-cell-thick border characteristic of the adult. These results indicate that an important previously unrecognized patterning event occurs in the gut epithelium at 16 days; this event may define an epithelial compartment boundary between the stomach and the intestine. The villin/,-galactosidase mouse model characterized here provides an excellent substrate with which to further dissect the mechanisms involved in this patterning process. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Variability in the carbon isotope signature of Prochilodus lineatus (Prochilodontidae, Characiformes) a bottom-feeding fish of the Neotropical regionJOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2007C. A. Lopes The spatial and seasonal variability of stable carbon isotopes in detritivorous Prochilodus lineatus, primary producers and particulate organic carbon (POC) were examined to promote a better understanding of the trophic dynamics of food webs in Neotropical ecosystems. Spatial variability in carbon isotope composition in the species showed a decreasing gradient in the Upper Paraná River system, from the Paraná River and Itaipu Reservoir subsystems to the Baía and Ivinheima subsystems. Fish ,13C followed the isotopic trend of POC along the Paraná River and Baía subsystem. Seasonal differences were not observed in fish. The analysis of percentile contribution of C3 and C4 sources in the species diet revealed the predominance of C3 plants (phytoplanktonic and periphytic algae and riparian vegetation) in most of the analysed subsystems and seasons. Nevertheless, the considerable participation of riparian vegetation was verified, especially in the Ivinheima subsystem in the dry season. C4 macrophytes presented a maximum contribution along the Upper Paraná River. These results demonstrate the existence of specific variability for the consumer and their food sources in different environments of the same ecosystem. [source] |