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Publications

Below is a list of available WFRC peer reviewed and published science.

Filter Total Items: 2517

Satellite tobacco mosaic virus sequence variants with only five Nucleotide differences can interfere with each other in a cross protection-like phenomenon in plants Satellite tobacco mosaic virus sequence variants with only five Nucleotide differences can interfere with each other in a cross protection-like phenomenon in plants

The type strain of satellite tobacco mosaic virus (STMV) contains two major variants, designated type 5 (T5) and type 6 (T6), which can be easily distinguished by RNase protection analyses. Clones containing cDNA of representative T5 and T6 STMV genomes have only five single-base differences in the entire 1059-nucleotide genome, and RNA transcribed from each clone is highly infectious...
Authors
Gael Kurath, J. Allan Dodds

Pen rearing and imprinting of fall Chinook salmon Pen rearing and imprinting of fall Chinook salmon

Results of rearing upriver bright fall chinook salmon juveniles in net pens and a barrier net enclosure in two backwater areas and a pond along the Columbia River were compared with traditional hatchery methods. Growth, smoltification, and general condition of pen-reared fish receiving supplemental feeding were better than those of fish reared using traditional methods. Juvenile fish...
Authors
J.W. Beeman, J.F. Novotny

Effect of dietary vitamin E and selenium on growth, survival and the prevalence of Renibacterium salmoninarum infection in chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) Effect of dietary vitamin E and selenium on growth, survival and the prevalence of Renibacterium salmoninarum infection in chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)

Groups of juvenile spring chinook salmon naturally infected with Renibacterium salmoninarum, the causative agent of bacterial kidney disease, were fed diets containing different levels of vitamin E and selenium for 214 days in fresh water and 110 days in seawater. The fish were fed vitamin E at concentrations of either 53±3 mg (designated e) or 299±9 mg (designated E) α-tocopheryl...
Authors
Ragnar Thorarinsson, Marsha L. Landolt, Diane G. Elliott, Ronald J. Pascho, Ronald W. Hardy

Vulnerability to predation and physiological stress responses of experimentally descaled juvenile Chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha Vulnerability to predation and physiological stress responses of experimentally descaled juvenile Chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha

Juvenile salmonids,Oncorhynchus spp., commonly encounter conditions (e.g., during hatchery release and dam passage) that result in damage to the skin, scale, and slime complex. We conducted laboratory experiments to determine if descaling of juvenile chinook salmon,O. tshawytscha, increased their vulnerability to predation, and to assess the physiological stress responses elicited by...
Authors
Dena M. Gadomski, Matthew G. Mesa, Todd M. Olson

Characterization of the glycoprotein of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus using neutralizing monoclonal antibodies Characterization of the glycoprotein of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus using neutralizing monoclonal antibodies

To study the antigenic nature of the glycoprotein (G protein) of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV), 31 neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were produced against a reference isolate of the virus. The MAbs were compared using a neutralization assay, an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and by immunoblotting of the G protein in the native, reduced, and...
Authors
Chienjin Huang, Maw-Sheng Chien, Marsha Landolt, James Winton

Effects of multiple acute stressors on the predator avoidance ability and physiology of juvenile Chinook salmon Effects of multiple acute stressors on the predator avoidance ability and physiology of juvenile Chinook salmon

Northern squaw fish Ptychocheilus oregonensis are the predominant predators of juvenile Pacific salmonids Oncorhynchus spp. in the Columbia River, and their predation rates are greatest just below dams. Because juvenile salmonids are commonly subjected to multiple stressors at dams in the course of their seaward migration, high predation rates below dams may be due in part to an increase...
Authors
Matthew G. Mesa

Biological monitoring of environmental quality: The use of developmental instability Biological monitoring of environmental quality: The use of developmental instability

Distributed robustness is thought to influence the buffering of random phenotypic variation through the scale-free topology of gene regulatory, metabolic, and protein-protein interaction networks. If this hypothesis is true, then the phenotypic response to the perturbation of particular nodes in such a network should be proportional to the number of links those nodes make with...
Authors
D.C. Freeman, J.M. Emlen, J.H. Graham, R. A. Hough, T.A. Bannon

Application of the stage-projection model with density-dependent fecundity to the population dynamics of Spanish ibex Application of the stage-projection model with density-dependent fecundity to the population dynamics of Spanish ibex

A stage-class population model with density-feedback term included was used to identify the most critical parameters determining the population dynamics of female Spanish ibex (Capra pyrenaica) in southern Spain. A population in the Cazorla and Segura mountains is rapidly declining, but the eastern Sierra Nevada population is growing. The stable population density obtained using...
Authors
J. Escos, C.L. Alados, John M. Emlen
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