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1.
Mar Environ Res ; 159: 104955, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32250878

ABSTRACT

The study aimed at contributing to the knowledge of alternative stable states by evaluating the differences of mobile and sessile macro-zoobenthic assemblages between sea urchin barrens and macroalgal forests in coastal Mediterranean systems considering a large spatial scale. Six sites (100 s km apart) were selected: Croatia, Montenegro, Sicily (Italy), Sardinia (Italy), Tuscany (Italy), and Balearic Islands (Spain). A total of 531 taxa, 404 mobile and 127 sessile macro-invertebrates were recorded. Overall, 496 and 201 taxa were found in macroalgal forests and in barrens, respectively. The results of this large-scale descriptive study have met the expectation of lower macrofauna complexity and diversity in barrens rather than in macroalgal forests, and have allowed estimating the differences in levels of diversity and the consistency of variability across Mediterranean sites. Some peculiar patterns in barrens, related to both abundance of specific taxa and to high values of beta diversity, have been evidenced.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Forests , Animals , Biodiversity , Croatia , Mediterranean Sea , Sea Urchins , Sicily , Spain
2.
Mar Environ Res ; 70(1): 82-6, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20382419

ABSTRACT

In the Mediterranean, sea breams are the most effective Paracentrotus lividus and Arbacia lixula predators. Generally, seabreams dislodge adult urchins from the rocky substrate, turn them upside down and crush their tests. Sea urchins may respond to fish attacks clinging tenaciously to the substratum. This study is the first attempt to investigate sea urchin adhesion strength in two alternative algal assemblages of the rocky infralittoral and valuated its possible implication for fish predation. We hypothesized that (1) sea urchin adhesion strength is higher in rocky shores dominated by encrusting macroalgae (ECA) than in erected macroalgae (EMA); (2) predation rates upon sea urchins are lower in ECA than in EMA; and (3) predation rate on A. lixula is lower than that on P. lividus. We observed that attachment tenacity of both sea urchins was higher in ECA than EMA and that A. lixula exhibited a stronger attachment tenacity than P. lividus in ECA. Results supported the importance of adhesion strength, as efficient defence against sea bream attacks, only for, P. lividus. A. lixula adhesion strength does not seem to be an important factor in avoiding fish predation, possibly because of the low palatability of the species. These patterns may deserve particular interest in understanding the processes responsible for the maintenance of sea urchin barrens that are dominated by ECA assemblage.


Subject(s)
Eukaryota/growth & development , Predatory Behavior , Sea Urchins/physiology , Animals , Biodiversity , Environmental Monitoring , Eukaryota/chemistry , Eukaryota/classification , Sea Bream , Sea Urchins/chemistry
3.
J Inorg Biochem ; 89(3-4): 279-92, 2002 Apr 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12062133

ABSTRACT

Novel triorganotin(IV) complexes of two beta-lactamic antibiotics, 6-[D-(-)-beta-amino-p-hydroxyphenyl-acetamido]penicillin (=amoxicillin) and 6-[D-(-)-alpha-aminobenzyl]penicillin (=ampicillin), have been synthesized and investigated both in solid and solution states. The complexes corresponded to the general formula R(3)Sn(IV)antib*H(2)O (R=Me, n-Bu, Ph; antib=amox=amoxicillinate or amp=ampicillinate). Structural investigations about configuration in the solid state have been carried out by interpreting experimental IR and 119Sn Mössbauer data. In particular, IR results suggested polymeric structures both for R(3)Sn(IV)amox.H(2)O and R(3)Sn(IV)amp*H(2)O. Moreover, both antibiotics appear to behave as monoanionic bidentate ligands coordinating the tin(IV) atom through ester-type carboxylate, as well as through the beta-lactamic carbonyl. Evidence that in none of these compounds water molecules were involved in coordination, was provided by thermogravimetric investigations. On the basis of 119Sn Mössbauer spectroscopy it can be inferred that tin(IV) was pentacoordinate in all of the complexes in the solid state, showing an equatorial R(3)Sn(IV) trigonal bipyramidal (tbp) configuration. The nature of the complexes in solution state was investigated by using 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, while an 119Sn spectrum was obtained for n-Bu(3)Sn(IV)amp*H(2)O. Although 1H- and 13C-NMR measurements suggested that in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)-d(6) solution the polymeric structure collapsed, due to a solvolysis process of the beta-lactamic carbonyl bonding to the organometallic moiety, the complexes have been shown to maintain the same trigonal bipyramidal configuration at tin(IV) atom by the coordination of a DMSO molecule. Cytotoxic activity of these novel semisynthetic antibiotic derivatives has been tested towards spermatocyte chromosomes of the mussel Brachidontes pharaonis (Mollusca: Bivalvia) using two different chromosome-staining techniques such as Giemsa and CMA(3). The occurrence of typical colchicinized-like (c-like) mitoses on slides obtained from animals exposed to organotin compounds, directly confirmed the high mitotic spindle-inhibiting potency of these chemicals. In addition, by comparative analysis of spermatocyte chromosomes from untreated specimens (negative controls) and specimens treated with the triorganotin(IV) complexes, structural damages such as 'achromatic lesions' and 'chromosome breakages' have been identified.


Subject(s)
Amoxicillin/metabolism , Ampicillin/metabolism , Bivalvia/metabolism , Chromosomes/metabolism , Organotin Compounds/metabolism , Spermatocytes/metabolism , Amoxicillin/analogs & derivatives , Amoxicillin/chemistry , Ampicillin/analogs & derivatives , Ampicillin/chemistry , Animals , Bivalvia/cytology , DNA Damage , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Male , Organotin Compounds/chemistry , Solutions , Spectrophotometry, Infrared , Structure-Activity Relationship , Thermogravimetry
4.
Genetica ; 108(3): 253-7, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11294611

ABSTRACT

This paper reports on a successful application of fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) with three repetitive DNA probes (ribosomal DNA (rDNA), (GATA)n and (TTAGGG)n) in the chromosomes of Fasciolaria lignaria (Mollusca: Prosobranchia: Neogastropoda). rDNA FISH consistently identified four chromosome pairs per spread in the three examined specimens. The telomeric sequence (TTAGGG)n hybridized with termini of all chromosomes. GATA FISH revealed abundant, dispersed minisatellite regions which were not associated to the XY sex-determining mechanism as indicated by the absence of a Y specific pattern of labelling.


Subject(s)
Chromosomes/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Mollusca/genetics , Animals , Base Sequence , Chromosome Mapping , DNA Probes/genetics , Female , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Male , Minisatellite Repeats , Sex Determination Processes , Telomere/genetics
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