RESUMEN.Los langostinos del género Macrobrachium con interés económico y pesquero son bien conocidos y explotados en casi todas las comunidades ribereñas de Latinoamérica. Sin embargo no han sido estudiados apropiadamente, y su conservación está en riesgo. Las características económicas, sociales y culturales, de la mayoría de los países de la región, que se traducen en el deterioro del hábitat y la sobreexplotación pesquera, ponen en peligro de desaparición las poblaciones de este género de macroinvertebrados acuáticos. De esto, se desprende que todas estas especies están escasamente estudiadas y el estado actual de sus poblaciones no es conocido, si bien en el caso de M. amazonicum hay numerosos estudios. Las técnicas de cultivo es el rubro en que más investigación se ha realizado. En este trabajo se resume el conocimiento que se tiene sobre las especies nativas de Macrobrachium en Latinoamérica y se discute su importancia económica y necesidades de conservación.
Males and females of two syntopic phytophagous fly species (O. nitens and O. ferruginea, Diptera: Richardiidae) compete over small ephemeral feeding territories. We assessed fight frequency of both sexes of two species in the wild, and the simultaneous effects of potential fight asymmetries, sex and species, on the outcome of territorial contests in relation with resident status. Our results showed that residents won most of the fights, although the proportion of fights won by the resident depended on the sex of the resident, the interaction between the sex of the resident and size, and the year. Furthermore, even though some combinations of species and sex categories could be found on the same tree more than expected by chance, this did not imply a significantly high fight frequency for such combinations.
The effect of different lipid levels (10, 15, 20 and 25%) and oil sources (fish oil: FO and soybean lecithin oil: LO) on growth, survival, digestive enzymatic activity, gene expression acetyl CoA carboxylase (ACC1) and fatty acid synthase (FAS) of Mayan cichlid larvae Cichlasoma urophthalmus were evaluated by a bi-factorial design. The larvae were fed from hatching with eight different experimental isoproteic diets (45% protein) and a commercial diet for tilapia as a control diet. The results showed that larvae fed the LO15 diet had the highest growth in weight and total length and higher trypsin activity. The lowest values in FAS and ACC1 expression were obtained exclusively with the lipid type (soybean lecithin). It is concluded that the inclusion of soybean lecithin at a concentration of 15% allows the 100% replacement of fish oil in balanced feed for the culture of Mayan cichlid larvae.
Early maturity during tilapia culture is a recurring problem. To avoid this, a series of techniques have been developed, including the production of YY-males. This technique involves the use of hormones to produce phenotypic females (XY genotype). However, incomplete transformations are frequently observed and the produced atypical feminized males (AFM) could display an ambiguity in the phenotypic expression of behavioral patterns. The aim of this study was to measure the frequency and intensity of aggressive behavior as well as the role that initial residence plays when involving three phenotypes (males, females and AFM). The experiment consisted of three stages. Resident fish were AFM in the first stage, males in the second and females in the third. In each stage the resident fish confronted males, females and AFM acting as intruders. Aggressive behavior was exercised more frequently by resident fish. Intersexual confrontations showed higher levels of aggression compared to intrasexual confrontations. The frequency of confrontations was not significantly different in confrontations involving AFM, however, differences were observed in intensity of aggression. It is possible that an incomplete transformation at physiological level could be responsible for an inaccurate decoding of signal during confrontations.
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