Many freshwater fishes are imperilled globally, and there is a need for easily accessible, contemporary ecological knowledge to guide management. This compendium contains knowledge collated from over 600 publications and 27 expert workshops to support the restoration of 9 priority native freshwater fish species, representative of the range of life-history strategies and values in south-eastern Australia’s Murray–Darling Basin. To help prioritise future research investment and restoration actions, ecological knowledge and threats were assessed for each species and life stage. There is considerable new knowledge (80% of publications used were from the past 20 years), but this varied among species and life stages, with most known about adults, then egg, juvenile and larval stages (in that order). The biggest knowledge gaps concerned early life stage requirements, survival, recruitment, growth rates, condition and movements. Key threats include reduced longitudinal and lateral connectivity, altered flows, loss of refugia, reductions in both flowing (lotic) and slackwater riverine habitats, degradation of wetland habitats, alien species interactions and loss of aquatic vegetation. Examples and case studies illustrating the application of this knowledge to underpin effective restoration management are provided. This extensive ecological evidence base for multiple species is presented in a tabular format to assist a range of readers.
Cisplatin is a valuable adjuvant to radiotherapy for the treatment of cervical cancer. Because the advantage of combining cisplatin with radiotherapy is likely to be attributable to additive cell killing by these 2 agents, such protocols should primarily benefit patients who have inherently cisplatin-sensitive tumors. Development of a molecular assay to rapidly evaluate the cisplatin responsiveness of cervical tumors would thus be extremely valuable. We investigated whether high pre-treatment mRNA levels of the ERCC1 nucleotide excision repair gene are predictive of cisplatin resistance in early-passage human cervical cancer cells, as they are in several other tumor types. Expression of the ERCC1 gene at the mRNA and protein levels was established by Northern and Western blotting, respectively, in a panel of single-cell-derived cervical carcinoma cell lines that exhibited a wide range of inherent sensitivity to cisplatin. There was a significant (p = 0.011) correlation between ERCC1 mRNA levels and cisplatin resistance in these cell lines. However, there was no obvious relationship between ERCC1 protein levels and cisplatin resistance. Thus, the association between high ERCC1 mRNA levels and cisplatin resistance might be an epiphenomenon. Nonetheless, pre-treatment ERCC1 mRNA levels may be a useful molecular marker for identifying cervical tumors likely to be refractory to cisplatin, and further investigation in clinical biopsy material is warranted.
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