A metabolomics approach was used to analyze effects of salmon farming on wild saithe (Pollachius virens) populations. Saithe fish were captured at two salmon farms and at two control locations around the island of Hitra, Norway. Changes in diet seem to drive changes in metabolic status of fishes. The liver and muscle tissues, from the fishes captured around the farm, showed higher levels of lactate and certain amino acids (glutamine, glutamate, and alanine) and lower levels of glucose and choline than the fishes captured in the control locations, far from the farm locations. The higher levels of lactate and amino acids could be related to the facility of obtaining food around the farm and the deficit in choline to the deficit of this nutrient in the salmon feed. At each location the fish were captured with either benthic gill nets and automatic jigging machines, and this feature showed also variations in different metabolites.
10A combined chemometrics-metabolomics approach (EEM fluorescence spectroscopy, NMR and 11 HPLC-MS) was used to analyse the rhizodeposition of the tritrophic system: tomato, the plant-parasitic 12nematode Meloidogyne javanica and the nematode-egg parasitic fungus Pochonia chlamydosporia. 13Exudates from M. javanica roots were sampled at root penetration (early) and gall development (late). 14 EMM indicated that late root exudates from M. javanica treatments contained more aromatic amino 15 acid compounds than the rest (control, P. chlamydosporia or P. chlamydosporia and M. javanica
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