The ecology of many Neotropical fishes is difficult or often impossible to study during rainy seasons. Thus, ecological studies of tropical fishes are usually performed on fish captured only during dry seasons. Because otoliths preserve a record of life history, this study evaluated the utility of otolith stable isotope values for the investigation of trophic ecology of Neotropical fishes (specifically herbivorous loricariid catfish) throughout their lives. Because plant dietary materials have d 13 C values that are determined by their photosynthetic pathways, metabolism and environmental conditions, different plants may impart different isotope values on fish otoliths that reflect consumption of these plants. The d 13 C (otolith) values of xylophagous Panaque nigrolineatus captured in the field were significantly lower than those of algivorous Hypostomus regani from a nearby region. A laboratory experiment wherein Hypostomus sp. had d 13 C (otolith) values that reflected the d 13 C values of their plant diet and additional evidence indicate that d 13 C (otolith) values in loricariid catfish otoliths can record dietary history.
Litter from the chicken industry can present several environmental challenges, including offensive odors and runoff into waterways leading to eutrophication. An economically viable solution to the disposal of waste from chicken houses is treatment to produce a natural, granulated fertilizer that can be commercially marketed for garden and commercial use. Odor of the final product is important in consumer acceptance, and an earthy odor is desirable. By understanding and manipulating the microbial processes occurring during this process, it may be possible to modify the odors produced. Geosmin and related volatiles produced by soil actinomycetes are responsible for earthy odors, and actinomycetes are likely to be present in the composting manure. Bacterial communities at each stage of the process were analyzed by culturing studies and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). The processing steps changed the culturable bacterial community, but the total community was shown by DGGE to be stable throughout the process. A local agricultural soil was analyzed in parallel as a potential source of geosmin-producing actinomycetes. This agricultural soil had higher microbial diversity than the compost at both the culturable and the molecular levels. Actinomycete bacteria were isolated and analyzed by AromaTrax, a gas chromatography-olfactometry system. This system enables the odor production of individual isolates to be monitored, allowing for rational selection of strains for augmentation experiments to improve the odor of the final fertilizer product.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.