PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Atlantic salmon also show capacity to adapt to warmer waters

2014-07-17
(Press-News.org) Populations of Atlantic salmon have a surprisingly good capacity to adjust to warmer temperatures that are being seen with climate change, a group of scientists at the University of Oslo and University of British Columbia have discovered. The finding about Atlantic species adds to recent UBC-supported research on heat tolerance of Pacific salmon.

The new study, a collaboration between Norwegian and Canadian researchers, was recently published in Nature Communications. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council, it addressed questions around how climate change might affect salmon species distribution and abundance.

UBC authors of the study include Katja Anttila, a postdoctoral fellow who now works at the University of Turku in Finland, and Tony Farrell, Chair in Sustainable Aquaculture.

Scientists studied wild salmon from two European rivers. They compared a cold-water population from Norway's northern Alta River, where water temperatures have not exceeded 18 C for 30 years, with warm-water populations from France's Dordogne River, located 3,000 kilometres south, where annual water temperatures regularly exceed 20 C.

Eggs from both populations were hatched at the University of Oslo, where they were raised at 12 C or 20 C. Despite substantially different natural environments, both populations had remarkably similar capabilities when warmed.

When reared at 12 C temperatures, salmon from both populations developed cardiac arrhythmias at 21 to 23 C, after a maximum heart rate of 150 beats per minute. But those raised at 20 C developed cardiac arrhythmias at a surprising 27.5 C, after the heart reached 200 beats per minute. Researchers found that increasing the fish's acclimation temperature by 8 C raised temperature tolerance by 6 C.

"The results are surprising," Farrell said. "A fish faced with uncomfortably warm temperatures might relocate or even die if it is too extreme. Here we have evidence for warm acclimation of a commercially and culturally important fish species."

INFORMATION: END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Eating lean beef daily can help lower blood pressure

2014-07-17
Contrary to conventional wisdom, a growing body of evidence shows that eating lean beef can reduce risk factors for heart disease, according to recent research by nutritional scientists. "This research adds to the significant evidence, including work previously done in our lab, that supports lean beef's role in a heart-healthy diet," said Penny M. Kris-Etherton, Distinguished Professor of Nutrition, Penn State. "This study shows that nutrient-rich lean beef can be included as part of a heart-healthy diet that reduces blood pressure, which can help lower the risk for cardiovascular ...

Gut microbes turn carbs into colorectal cancer

2014-07-17
Colorectal cancer has been linked to carbohydrate-rich western diets, but the underlying mechanisms have been unclear. A study published by Cell Press July 17th in the journal Cell shows that gut microbes metabolize carbohydrates in the diet, causing intestinal cells to proliferate and form tumors in mice that are genetically predisposed to colorectal cancer. Treatment with antibiotics or a low-carbohydrate diet significantly reduced tumors in these mice, suggesting that these easy interventions could prevent a common type of colorectal cancer in humans. "Because hereditary ...

Brown fat found to be at the root of cancer-related wasting syndrome

Brown fat found to be at the root of cancer-related wasting syndrome
2014-07-17
VIDEO: Many patients with advanced stages of cancer, AIDS, tuberculosis, and other diseases die from a condition called cachexia, which is characterized as a "wasting " syndrome that causes extreme thinness with... Click here for more information. Many patients with advanced stages of cancer, AIDS, tuberculosis, and other diseases die from a condition called cachexia, which is characterized as a "wasting" syndrome that causes extreme thinness with muscle weakness. ...

Obese women may have learning deficit specific to food

2014-07-17
Obese women have a deficit in reward-based learning, but only when food is involved. Importantly, say researchers who report their findings in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on July 17, those same women have no trouble at all forming accurate associations when the reward is money instead of food. The findings may lead to new, gender-appropriate ways to tackle the obesity epidemic. "Our study shows that obesity may involve a specific impairment not in the processing of food itself, but rather in how obese individuals—or at least obese women—learn about cues in ...

Study identifies molecular key to healthy pregnancy

2014-07-17
Scientists have identified a crucial molecular key to healthy embryo implantation and pregnancy in a study that may offer new clues about the medical challenges of infertility/subfertility, abnormal placentation, and placenta previa. Multi-institutional teams led by researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center report their results in Cell Reports on July 17. The authors found that uterine expression of a gene called Wnt5a – a major signaling molecule in cell growth and movement in both embryo development and disease – is also critical to healthy embryo ...

First comprehensive library of master genetic switches in plants

2014-07-17
Researchers have created the first comprehensive library of genetic switches in plants, setting the stage for scientists around the globe to better understand how plants adapt to environmental changes and to design more robust plants for future food security. The collection, which took more than 8 years and $5 million to create, contains about 2,000 clones of plant transcription factors, nature's genetic on/off switches. Manipulating these transcription factors enables scientists to improve plant traits such as cold resistance or seed quantity. The research will be published ...

Faithful cell division requires tightly controlled protein placement at the centromeres

2014-07-17
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (July 17, 2014) – From fertilized egg to adult, the cells of the human body go through an astronomical number of divisions. During division of any of the body's roughly 30 trillion cells, DNA from the initial cell must be split precisely between the two resulting cells. Critical to successful cell division is the integrity of the centromere—a region of DNA on each chromosome where the cell division machinery attaches to segregate the chromosomes. For the segregation machinery to recognize this region, it must contain many copies of a pivotal protein known ...

One third of cancer patients are killed by a 'fat-burning' process termed 'cachexia'

One third of cancer patients are killed by a fat-burning process termed cachexia
2014-07-17
VIDEO: One third of cancer patients are killed by a 'fat-burning' process known as cachexia. Click here for more information. Most cancer researchers are working on the biology of the tumour. However, Michele Petruzzelli, a member of Erwin Wagner's group at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), has been looking for ways to attack the disease indirectly. He focused on the effects of tumours on the rest of the body, and not on the tumour itself. His work on the body's ...

Researchers discover new link between obesity, inflammation, and insulin resistance

Researchers discover new link between obesity, inflammation, and insulin resistance
2014-07-17
La Jolla, Calif., July 17, 2014 - A new study by researchers at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute (Sanford-Burnham) has identified a new signal that triggers the events leading to insulin resistance in obesity. The signal causes inflammation in adipose tissue and leads to metabolic disease. The study, published July 17 in Cell Metabolism, suggests that blocking this signal may protect against the development of metabolic disease, type 2 diabetes, and other disorders caused by obesity-linked inflammation. "We have uncovered a precise mechanism that explains how ...

New gene discovered that stops the spread of deadly cancer

New gene discovered that stops the spread of deadly cancer
2014-07-17
VIDEO: Salk scientists have discovered the gene responsible for the aggressive spread of a common lung cancer. Click here for more information. LA JOLLA—Scientists at the Salk Institute have identified a gene responsible for stopping the movement of cancer from the lungs to other parts of the body, indicating a new way to fight one of the world's deadliest cancers. By identifying the cause of this metastasis—which often happens quickly in lung cancer and results in a bleak ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Rice researchers develop superstrong, eco-friendly materials from bacteria

Itani studying translation potential of secure & efficient software updates in industrial internet of things architectures

Elucidating the source process of the 2021 south sandwich islands tsunami earthquake

Zhu studying use of big data in verification of route choice models

Common autoimmune drug may help reverse immunotherapy-induced diabetes, UCLA study finds

Quantum battery device lasts much longer than previous demonstrations

Gamma knife stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases from ovarian cancer

Meet the “plastivore” caterpillars that grow fat from eating plastic

Study identifies postoperative delirium as preventable “acute brain failure” with major health and financial implications

Climate change linked to decline in nutritional quality of food

Abdominal fat linked to reduced strength and mobility in adults

Mount Sinai implements Own the Bone® program for fragility fracture patients

Is Earth inside a huge void? 'Sound of the Big Bang' hints at possible solution to Hubble tension

When stem cells feel the squeeze, they start building bone

Revealing Myanmar earthquake as a unique event comprising multiple sub-events, including boomerang-like reverse rupture propagation and supershear rupture

AI helps radiologists spot more lesions in mammograms

Efficient elastic tissues may hold the secrets to Olympic success

Does exercise really improve mental health?

Behind the ballistics of the “explosive” squirting cucumber

Researchers find compound that inhibits cutaneous HPVs

City of Hope Research Spotlight, April/May 2025

The gut microbiota in elderly patients with acute hepatitis E infection

The Three Gorges region of the Yangtze River hits record high temperatures in 2024

Experts urge evidence-based regulations of 7-OH, not restriction, as new science emerges showing safe use

Genes for surviving plague in prairie dogs

New research shows AI chatbots should not replace your therapist

Pusan National University researchers reveal middle-class families hit hardest by South Korea's cost-of-living crisis

Understanding how heat stress reshapes fat metabolism in chickens

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Innovative Genomics Institute announce new Center for Pediatric CRISPR Cures

Innovative liquid biopsy test uses RNA to detect early-stage cancer

[Press-News.org] Atlantic salmon also show capacity to adapt to warmer waters