نتایج جستجو برای: crassostrea sp

تعداد نتایج: 122522  

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1997
R Fayer C A Farley E J Lewis J M Trout T K Graczyk

Oysters were placed in an aquarium containing artificial seawater, and Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts were added. Oocysts were later found in the gill washings, hemocytes, and gut contents of the oysters. Hemocytes containing oocysts were intubated into four mice. C. parvum stages developed in the ileal epithelia of all of the mice, indicating that the oocysts in the hemocytes remained infective.

2015
Lionel Dégremont Jean-Baptiste Lamy Jean-François Pépin Marie-Agnès Travers Tristan Renault José A. Fernández Robledo

The Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, is the most important commercial oyster species cultivated in the world. Meanwhile, the ostreid herpesvirus 1 (OsHV-1) is one of the major pathogens affecting the Pacific oyster, and numerous mortality outbreaks related to this pathogen are now reported worldwide. To assess the genetic basis of resistance to OsHV-1 infection in spat C. gigas and to facilit...

2011
T. B. ROBINSON C. L. GRIFFITHS A. TONIN P. BLOOMER M. P. HARE Alexander Bay

The Japanese oyster Crassostrea gigas forms the mainstay of the South African oyster farming industry. Despite having been cultured along the South African coast for 30 years, this is the first record of naturalized populations of this well known global invader from the region. DNA sequence data confirmed the presence of C. gigas in the Breede and Goukou estuaries. Populations of 184,206 ± 21 0...

2014
SARA A. LOMBARDI NICOLE P. HARLAN KENNEDY T. PAYNTER HJ Patterson

The eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica has a remarkable ability to withstand low oxygen conditions; however, many of the biochemical mechanisms by which that tolerance is accomplished remain poorly understood. In addition, little is known about hypoxia tolerances and adaptations of the Asian oyster Crassostrea ariakensis. By comparing these closely related species, we may learn more about the...

Journal: :Fish & shellfish immunology 2006
Beatrice Gagnaire Heloise Frouin Kevin Moreau Helene Thomas-Guyon Tristan Renault

The Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, is extensively cultivated and represents an important economic activity. Oysters are reared in estuarine areas, subjected to various biotic and abiotic factors. One of the limiting factors in aquaculture is mortality outbreaks, which may limit oyster production, and the causes of these outbreaks are not completely understood. In this context, the effects o...

2017
Laura Landis Laura Landis Thomas Elizabeth W. North Jeffrey Cornwell

Title of Thesis: THE EFFECT OF AQUACULTURE GEAR AND TIDAL ZONE ON THE GROWTH AND SHAPE OF THE OYSTER CRASSOSTREA VIRGINICA DURING A “FINISHING PERIOD” IN CHESAPEAKE BAY. Laura Landis Thomas, Master of Science, 2016 Thesis directed by: Assistant Professor, Louis V. Plough, Marine Estuarine Environmental Science Research Professor, Jeffrey C. Cornwell, Marine Estuarine Environmental Science This ...

2007
J. F. Samain L. Dégremont P. Soletchnik J. Haure E. Bédier M. Ropert H. Bacca A. Van Wormhoudt M. Delaporte K. Costil S. Pouvreau C. Lambert V. Boulo P. Soudant J. L. Nicolas F. Le Roux T. Renault B. Gagnaire P. Boudry

Summer mortality of Pacific oysters is known in several countries. However no specific pathogen has been systematically associated with this phenomenon. A complex combination of environmental and biological parameters has been suggested as the cause and is now starting to be identified. A high genetic basis was found for survival in oysters when a first generation (G1) was tested in three sites...

Journal: :Genetics 2005
Jason P Curole Dennis Hedgecock

Although previously disregarded, polyploidy, and in particular autopolyploidy, is now believed to have played a prominent role in the evolution of plants and animals. We estimated the rate of preferential pairing in second-generation autotetraploid Pacific oysters from gametic frequencies. We found significant levels of preferential pairing in these recently generated autopolyploids, suggesting...

2014
Luke H. Hedge Emma L. Johnston

Survival of incipient non-indigenous populations is dramatically altered by early predation on new colonisers. These effects can be influenced by morphological traits, such as coloniser size and density. The Australian non-native Pacific Oyster Crassostrea gigas is generally more fecund and faster growing compared to the native Saccostrea glomerata found in the same habitat. It is therefore imp...

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