VSGCP-W-Ol-002 C2 PROCEEDINGS
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Malaysian School Engages in Bullfrog and Turtle Farming
Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center Aquaculture Department SEAFDEC/AQD Institutional Repository http://repository.seafdec.org.ph Journals/Magazines SEAFDEC Asian Aquaculture 2000 Malaysian school engages in bullfrog and turtle farming Dagoon, N.J. Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center Dagoon, N. J. (2000). Malaysian school engages in bullfrog and turtle farming. SEAFDEC Asian Aquaculture, 22(3), 16–19, 29. http://hdl.handle.net/10862/1632 Downloaded from http://repository.seafdec.org.ph, SEAFDEC/AQD's Institutional Repository Malaysian school engages in bullfrog and turtle farming By NJ Dagoon “Sepang Today Aquaculture Centre is a water at a 10 cm depth. Live food such private aquafarming training school in as fish, tadpoles, crickets, and earth- Malaysia,” says owner and president Mr. worms are given. Khoo Eng Wah. Breeding pens with 10-cm deep The school offers courses on the cul- flowing water and modified bottom (to ture of two exotic animal species: the enable about 25% to be kept dry when American bullfrog and the soft-shelled in operation) are used to spawn turtle. broodstock at a ratio of 1 male to 2 fe- What follows is a brief description males. These makeshift ponds are typi- of the culture method for each, taken cally shaded by water hyacinth from the school’s training brochures. (Eichhornia crassipes). With no feeding at all, spawning American bullfrog occurs after 3-4 days in the early morn- ing hours. A female can lay about The American bullfrog is the second larg- 10,000 eggs in a jelly-like mass or more est and heaviest of frogs. -
Thailand's Shrimp Culture Growing
Foreign Fishery Developments BURMA ':.. VIET ,' . .' NAM LAOS .............. Thailand's Shrimp ...... Culture Growing THAI LAND ,... ~samut Sangkhram :. ~amut Sakorn Pond cultivation ofblacktigerprawns, khlaarea. Songkhla's National Institute '. \ \ Bangkok........· Penaeus monodon, has brought sweep ofCoastal Aquaculture (NICA) has pro , ••~ Samut prokan ing economic change over the last2 years vided the technological foundation for the to the coastal areas of Songkhla and establishment of shrimp culture in this Nakhon Si Thammarat on the Malaysian area. Since 1982, NICA has operated a Peninsula (Fig. 1). Large, vertically inte large shrimp hatchery where wild brood grated aquaculture companies and small stock are reared on high-quality feeds in .... Gulf of () VIET scale rice farmers alike have invested optimum water temperature and salinity NAM heavily in the transformation of paddy conditions. The initial buyers ofNICA' s Thailand fields into semi-intensive ponds for shrimp postlarvae (pI) were small-scale Nakhon Si Thammarat shrimp raising. Theyhave alsodeveloped shrimp farmers surrounding Songkhla • Hua Sai Songkhla an impressive infrastructure ofelectrical Lake. .. Hot Yai and water supplies, feeder roads, shrimp Andaman hatcheries, shrimp nurseries, feed mills, Background Sea cold storage, and processing plants. Thailand's shrimp culture industry is Located within an hour's drive ofSong the fastest growing in Southeast Asia. In khla's new deep-waterport, the burgeon only 5 years, Thailand has outstripped its Figure 1.-Thailand and its major shrimp ing shrimp industry will have direct competitors to become the region's num culture area. access to international markets. Despite ber one producer. Thai shrimp harvests a price slump since May 1989, expansion in 1988 reached 55,000 metric tons (t), onall fronts-production, processingand a 320 percent increase over the 13,000 t marketing-continues at a feverish pace. -
Azorhizobium Doebereinerae Sp. Nov
ARTICLE IN PRESS Systematic and Applied Microbiology 29 (2006) 197–206 www.elsevier.de/syapm Azorhizobium doebereinerae sp. Nov. Microsymbiont of Sesbania virgata (Caz.) Pers.$ Fa´tima Maria de Souza Moreiraa,Ã, Leonardo Cruzb,Se´rgio Miana de Fariac, Terence Marshd, Esperanza Martı´nez-Romeroe,Fa´bio de Oliveira Pedrosab, Rosa Maria Pitardc, J. Peter W. Youngf aDepto. Cieˆncia do solo, Universidade Federal de Lavras, C.P. 3037 , 37 200–000, Lavras, MG, Brazil bUniversidade Federal do Parana´, C.P. 19046, 81513-990, PR, Brazil cEmbrapa Agrobiologia, antiga estrada Rio, Sa˜o Paulo km 47, 23 851-970, Serope´dica, RJ, Brazil dCenter for Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University, MI 48824, USA eCentro de Investigacio´n sobre Fijacio´n de Nitro´geno, Universidad Nacional Auto´noma de Mexico, Apdo Postal 565-A, Cuernavaca, Mor, Me´xico fDepartment of Biology, University of York, PO Box 373, York YO10 5YW, UK Received 18 August 2005 Abstract Thirty-four rhizobium strains were isolated from root nodules of the fast-growing woody native species Sesbania virgata in different regions of southeast Brazil (Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro States). These isolates had cultural characteristics on YMA quite similar to Azorhizobium caulinodans (alkalinization, scant extracellular polysaccharide production, fast or intermediate growth rate). They exhibited a high similarity of phenotypic and genotypic characteristics among themselves and to a lesser extent with A. caulinodans. DNA:DNA hybridization and 16SrRNA sequences support their inclusion in the genus Azorhizobium, but not in the species A. caulinodans. The name A. doebereinerae is proposed, with isolate UFLA1-100 ( ¼ BR5401, ¼ LMG9993 ¼ SEMIA 6401) as the type strain. -
Effects of Water Spinach Ipomoea Aquatica Cultivation on Water Quality and Performance of Chinese Soft-Shelled Turtle Pelodiscus Sinensis Pond Culture
Vol. 8: 567–574, 2016 AQUACULTURE ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS Published September 30 doi: 10.3354/aei00198 Aquacult Environ Interact OPENPEN ACCESSCCESS Effects of water spinach Ipomoea aquatica cultivation on water quality and performance of Chinese soft-shelled turtle Pelodiscus sinensis pond culture Wei Li1,2, Huaiyu Ding3, Fengyin Zhang4, Tanglin Zhang1, Jiashou Liu1, Zhongjie Li1,* 1State Key Laboratory of Freshwater Ecology and Biotechnology, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, China 2School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Box 355020, Seattle, Washington 98195-5020, USA 3Jiangsu Engineering Laboratory for Breeding of Special Aquatic Organisms, Huaiyin Normal University, Huaian 223300, China 4College of Life Sciences, Jianghan University, Wuhan 430056, China ABSTRACT: The Chinese soft-shelled turtle Pelodiscus sinensis is a highly valued freshwater spe- cies cultured in China. A 122 d experiment was conducted to assess the effects of water spinach Ipomoea aquatica cultivation in floating beds on water quality, and growth performance and eco- nomic return of P. sinensis cultured in ponds. Two treatments, each in triplicate, with and without I. aquatica cultivation were designed. Results showed that the levels of total ammonia nitrogen (TAN), total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), chlorophyll a (chl a) and turbidity in treatments with I. aquatica cultivation (IAC) were significantly (p < 0.05) lower than those in treatments with- out I. aquatica (control). Mean TN and TP concentrations in the IAC treatment were 27.9 and 42.5%, respectively, lower than in the control treatment at the end of the experiment. The pres- ence of I. aquatica also has a positive effect on the performance of P. -
Phenotypic and Microbial Influences on Dairy Heifer Fertility and Calf Gut Microbial Development
Phenotypic and microbial influences on dairy heifer fertility and calf gut microbial development Connor E. Owens Dissertation submitted to the faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In Animal Science, Dairy Rebecca R. Cockrum Kristy M. Daniels Alan Ealy Katharine F. Knowlton September 17, 2020 Blacksburg, VA Keywords: microbiome, fertility, inoculation Phenotypic and microbial influences on dairy heifer fertility and calf gut microbial development Connor E. Owens ABSTRACT (Academic) Pregnancy loss and calf death can cost dairy producers more than $230 million annually. While methods involving nutrition, climate, and health management to mitigate pregnancy loss and calf death have been developed, one potential influence that has not been well examined is the reproductive microbiome. I hypothesized that the microbiome of the reproductive tract would influence heifer fertility and calf gut microbial development. The objectives of this dissertation were: 1) to examine differences in phenotypes related to reproductive physiology in virgin Holstein heifers based on outcome of first insemination, 2) to characterize the uterine microbiome of virgin Holstein heifers before insemination and examine associations between uterine microbial composition and fertility related phenotypes, insemination outcome, and season of breeding, and 3) to characterize the various maternal and calf fecal microbiomes and predicted metagenomes during peri-partum and post-partum periods and examine the influence of the maternal microbiome on calf gut development during the pre-weaning phase. In the first experiment, virgin Holstein heifers (n = 52) were enrolled over 12 periods, on period per month. On -3 d before insemination, heifers were weighed and the uterus was flushed. -
Representatives of the Prokaryotic (Chapter 12) and Archaeal (Chapter 13) Domains (Bergey's Manual of Determinative Bacteriology
Representatives of the Prokaryotic (Chapter 12) and Archaeal (Chapter 13) Domains (Bergey's Manual of Determinative Bacteriology: Kingdom: Procaryotae (9th Edition) XIII Kingdoms p. 351-471 Sectn. Group of Bacteria Subdivisions(s) Brock Text Examples of Genera Gram Stain Morphology (plus distinguishing characteristics) Important Features Phototrophic bacteria Chromatiaceae 356 Purple sulfur bacteria Gram Anoxygenic photosynthesis Bacterial chl. a and b Purple nonsulfur bacteria; photoorganotrophic for reduced nucleotides; oxidize 12.2 Anaerobic (Chromatiun; Allochromatium) Negative Spheres, rods, spirals (S inside or outside)) H2S as electron donor for CO2 anaerobic photosynthesis for ATP Purple Sulfur Bacteria Anoxic - develop well in meromictic lakes - layers - fresh S inside the cells except for Ectothiorhodospira 354 Table 12.2 p.354 above sulfate layers - Figs. 12.4, 12.5 Major membrane structures Fig.12..3 -- light required. Purple Non-Sulfur Rhodospirillales 358 Rhodospirillum, Rhodobacter Gram Diverse morphology from rods (Rhodopseudomonas) to Anoxygenic photosynthesis Bacteria Table 12.3 p. 354, 606 Rhodopseudomonas Negative spirals Fig. 12.6 H2, H2S or S serve as H donor for reduction of CO2; 358 82-83 Photoheterotrophy - light as energy source but also directly use organics 12.3 Nitrifying Bacteria Nitrobacteraceae Nitrosomonas Gram Wide spread , Diverse (rods, cocci, spirals); Aerobic Obligate chemolithotroph (inorganic eN’ donors) 6 Chemolithotrophic (nitrifying bacteria) 361 Nitrosococcus oceani - Fig.12.7 negative ! ammonia [O] = nitrosofyers - (NH3 NO2) Note major membranes Fig. 12,7) 6 359 bacteria Inorganic electron (Table 12.4) Nitrobacterwinograskii - Fig.12.8 ! nitrite [O]; = nitrifyers ;(NO2 NO3) Soil charge changes from positive to negative donors Energy generation is small Difficult to see growth. - Use of silica gel. -
THE CAYMAN TURTLE FARM a Case for Change the World Society for the Protection of Animals
THE CAYMAN TURTLE FARM A case for change The World Society for the Protection of Animals The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) seeks to create a world where animal welfare matters and animal cruelty has ended. To achieve this vision we work directly with animals and with the people and organisations that can ensure animals are treated with respect and compassion. We campaign effectively to combat the world’s most intense and large-scale animal suffering, bringing about lasting change by: s helping people understand the critical importance of good animal welfare s encouraging nations to commit to animal-friendly practices s building the scientific case for the better treatment of animals s encouraging a worldwide movement towards better animal welfare. Locally, we improve animals’ lives and prevent cruelty by working directly with WSPA INTERNATIONAL communities and owners. Working on the ground with local partners for greatest Fifth Floor effect, we are active in more than 50 countries. 222 Gray’s Inn Road London WC1X 8HB Globally, we introduce animals into the most pressing debates and prove the United Kingdom links between animal welfare and successful sustainable development. We have consultative status at the Council of Europe and special consultative status with © WSPA 2012 the United Nations; we collaborate with national governments and global bodies www.wspa-international.org including the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE). CONTENTS 4 Executive summary 5 Background: The Cayman Turtle Farm 6 Major concerns -
Afipia Clevelandensis Sp
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY, Nov. 1991, p. 2450-2460 Vol. 29, No. 11 0095-1137/91/112450-11$02.00/0 Copyright © 1991, American Society for Microbiology Proposal of Afipia gen. nov., with Afipia felis sp. nov. (Formerly the Cat Scratch Disease Bacillus), Afipia clevelandensis sp. nov. (Formerly the Cleveland Clinic Foundation Strain), Afipia broomeae sp. nov., and Three Unnamed Genospecies DON J. BRENNER,'* DANNIE G. HOLLIS,' C. WAYNE MOSS,' CHARLES K. ENGLISH,2 GERALDINE S. HALL,3 JUDY VINCENT,4 JON RADOSEVIC,5 KRISTIN A. BIRKNESS,1 WILLIAM F. BIBB,' FREDERICK D. QUINN,' B. SWAMINATHAN,1 ROBERT E. WEAVER,' MICHAEL W. REEVES,' STEVEN P. O'CONNOR,6 PEGGY S. HAYES,' FRED C. TENOVER,7 ARNOLD G. STEIGERWALT,' BRADLEY A. PERKINS,' MARYAM I. DANESHVAR,l BERTHA C. HILL,7 JOHN A. WASHINGTON,3 TONI C. WOODS,' SUSAN B. HUNTER,' TED L. HADFIELD,2 GLORIA W. AJELLO,1 ARNOLD F. KAUFMANN,8 DOUGLAS J. WEAR,2 AND JAY D. WENGER' Meningitis and Special Pathogens Branch,' Respiratory Diseases Branch,6 and Bacterial Zoonoses Activity,8 Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, and Hospital Infections Program,7 Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia 30333; Department ofInfectious and Parasitic Diseases Pathology, Armed Forces Institute ofPathology, Washington, DC 20306-60002; Department of Microbiology, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio 441953; Department ofPediatrics, Tripler Army Medical Center, Tripler AMC, Hawaii 968594; and Indiana State Board of Health, Disease Control Laboratory Division, Indianapolis, Indiana 46206-19645 Received 3 June 1991/Accepted 5 August 1991 On the basis of phenotypic characterization and DNA relatedness determinations, the genus Afipia gen. -
Ammonia Removal: Biofilm Technologies for Rural and Urban Municipal Wastewater Treatment
Ammonia removal: biofilm technologies for rural and urban municipal wastewater treatment Xin Tian A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctorate in Philosophy degree in Environment Engineering Ottawa-Carleton Institute for Environmental Engineering Department of Civil Engineering Faculty of Engineering University of Ottawa © Xin Tian, Ottawa, Canada, 2020 I Abstract The new Canadian federal wastewater regulations, which restricts the release of ammonia from treated wastewaters, has resulted in upgrade initiatives at many water resource recovery facilities across the country to reduce the discharge of ammonia into our natural waters. The objective of this dissertation is therefore to investigate and optimize the performance of two attached growth technologies for rural and peri-urban/urban municipal ammonia removal. In particular, the first specific objective of this dissertation is to investigate the performance and microbial response of the BioCord technology as an upgrade system for the post-carbon removal nitrification of rural wastewaters. The second specific objective is to study the start-up of an attached growth anammox technology to enhance current knowledge pertaining to anammox biofilm attachment, growth and maturation. The results pertaining to the first specific objective of this research, a study of the design and optimization of the BioCord technology, demonstrates a recommended design rate for the post-carbon removal, nitrifying BioCord system of a surface area loading rate (SALR) of 1.6 + 2 + 2 NH4 -N/m ·d and up to 1.8 NH4 -N/m ·d with steady ammonia-nitrogen removal efficiencies greater than 90% and steady and low solids production rate up to 0.26 g TSS/d. -
2010.-Hungria-MLI.Pdf
Mohammad Saghir Khan l Almas Zaidi Javed Musarrat Editors Microbes for Legume Improvement SpringerWienNewYork Editors Dr. Mohammad Saghir Khan Dr. Almas Zaidi Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh Muslim University Fac. Agricultural Sciences Fac. Agricultural Sciences Dept. Agricultural Microbiology Dept. Agricultural Microbiology 202002 Aligarh 202002 Aligarh India India [email protected] [email protected] Prof. Dr. Javed Musarrat Aligarh Muslim University Fac. Agricultural Sciences Dept. Agricultural Microbiology 202002 Aligarh India [email protected] This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically those of translation, reprinting, re-use of illustrations, broadcasting, reproduction by photocopying machines or similar means, and storage in data banks. Product Liability: The publisher can give no guarantee for all the information contained in this book. The use of registered names, trademarks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. # 2010 Springer-Verlag/Wien Printed in Germany SpringerWienNewYork is a part of Springer Science+Business Media springer.at Typesetting: SPI, Pondicherry, India Printed on acid-free and chlorine-free bleached paper SPIN: 12711161 With 23 (partly coloured) Figures Library of Congress Control Number: 2010931546 ISBN 978-3-211-99752-9 e-ISBN 978-3-211-99753-6 DOI 10.1007/978-3-211-99753-6 SpringerWienNewYork Preface The farmer folks around the world are facing acute problems in providing plants with required nutrients due to inadequate supply of raw materials, poor storage quality, indiscriminate uses and unaffordable hike in the costs of synthetic chemical fertilizers. -
Isolation and Characterization of Two Novel Bacteria Afipia Cberi and Mesorhizobium Hominis from Blood of a Patient Afflicted with Fatal Pulmonary Illness
Isolation and Characterization of Two Novel Bacteria Afipia cberi and Mesorhizobium hominis from Blood of a Patient Afflicted with Fatal Pulmonary Illness Shyh-Ching Lo1*, Bingjie Li1, Guo-Chiuan Hung1, Haiyan Lei1, Tianwei Li1, Jing Zhang1, Kenjiro Nagamine1¤, Shien Tsai1, Mark J. Zucker2, Ludmilla Olesnicky3 1 Tissue Microbiology Laboratory, Division of Cellular and Gene Therapies, Office of Cellular, Tissue and Gene Therapies, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America, 2 Department of Medicine, Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, New Jersey, United States of America, 3 Department of Pathology, Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, New Jersey, United States of America Abstract We recently isolated and discovered new Bradyrhizobiaceae microbes from the cryopreserved culture broth of blood samples from 3 patients with poorly defined illnesses using modified SP4 media and culture conditions coupled with genomic sequencing. Using a similar protocol, we studied a previously cryopreserved culture broth of blood sample from a patient who had succumbed to an acute onset of fulminant pulmonary illness. We report that two phases of microbial growth were observed in the re-initiated culture. Biochemical and genomic characterization revealed microbes isolated from the first phase of growth were new Afipia species of Bradyrhizobiaceae, tentatively named A. cberi with a ~ 5 MB chromosome that was different from those of all previously known Afipia microbes including the newly discovered A. septicemium. The microbes isolated from the second phase of growth were prominent sugar assimilators, novel Phyllobacteriaceae, phylogenetically most closely related to Mesorhizobium and tentatively named M. hominis with a ~ 5.5 MB chromosome. -
A Distinct Pathway for Tetrahymanol Synthesis in Bacteria
A distinct pathway for tetrahymanol synthesis in bacteria Amy B. Banta1, Jeremy H. Wei1, and Paula V. Welander2 Department of Earth System Science, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305 Edited by John M. Hayes, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Berkeley, CA, and approved September 25, 2015 (received for review June 11, 2015) Tetrahymanol is a polycyclic triterpenoid lipid first discovered in the physiological role of tetrahymanol in bacteria is unknown. Recent ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis whose potential diagenetic product, studies have highlighted increased tetrahymanol production in gammacerane, is often used as a biomarker for water column strat- R. palustris TIE-1 under certain physiological conditions (e.g., ification in ancient ecosystems. Bacteria are also a potential source photoautotrophic growth) and also when cellular hopanoid lipid of tetrahymanol, but neither the distribution of this lipid in extant profiles are altered in gene deletion mutants (22, 23), but the bacteria nor the significance of bacterial tetrahymanol synthesis for physiological significance of these changes is not known. Further, interpreting gammacerane biosignatures is known. Here we couple the biochemical mechanism of tetrahymanol synthesis in bacteria comparative genomics with genetic and lipid analyses to link a pro- is unclear. In ciliates, squalene-tetrahymanol cyclase (Stc) cata- tein of unknown function to tetrahymanol synthesis in bacteria. This tetrahymanol synthase (Ths) is found in a variety of bacterial lyzes the cyclization of squalene directly to tetrahymanol (24), but genomes, including aerobic methanotrophs, nitrite-oxidizers, and neither of the two known bacterial tetrahymanol producers harbor sulfate-reducers, and in a subset of aquatic and terrestrial metage- a copy of Stc (10, 24).