Results 131 to 140 of about 3,379 (172)
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2021
Micropterus salmoides (Lacepède, 1802). Largemouth Black Bass; Lobina Negra, Perca Americana. Distribution: Global: Eastern half of the United States of America; Atlantic drainages; introduced throughout the world; Costa Rica: Ta (Pacific), 854 m. a.s.l., Pri, Pot. Occurrence and conservation status: Exo, LC. References: Angulo et al.
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Micropterus salmoides (Lacepède, 1802). Largemouth Black Bass; Lobina Negra, Perca Americana. Distribution: Global: Eastern half of the United States of America; Atlantic drainages; introduced throughout the world; Costa Rica: Ta (Pacific), 854 m. a.s.l., Pri, Pot. Occurrence and conservation status: Exo, LC. References: Angulo et al.
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Maternally transferred mercury in wild largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides
Environmental Pollution, 2013Maternal transfer of mercury in fish represents a potential route of elimination for adult females and a risk to developing embryos. To better quantify maternal transfer, we measured Hg in female largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) muscle and eggs from six waterbodies.
Dana K, Sackett +3 more
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Dietary threonine requirement of juvenile largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides
Aquaculture, 2021Abstract Threonine is an essential amino acid in fish nutrition, but no information is available on the dietary threonine requirement in largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides. Thus, 360 fish (19.0 ± 0.1 g) were randomly divided into six experimental groups (20 fish per cage; three replicates), and offered diets supplemented with crystalline L ...
Mohammad Mizanur Rahman +6 more
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Opportunistic Foraging by Largemouth Bass (Micropterus salmoides)
American Midland Naturalist, 1987During 1980, adult largemouth bass diets in Peter and Paul lakes (Michigan's Upper Peninsula), included prey ranging in size from zooplankton (e.g., Daphnia) to vertebrates (fishes, amphibians, reptiles and small mammals). A partial winterkill in 1980-1981 reduced bass populations in both lakes by as much as 50%.
James R. Hodgson, James F. Kitchell
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Body temperatures of behaviorally thermoregulating largemouth blackbass (Micropterus salmoides)
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, 1976Abstract 1. 1. Five largemouth blackbass, ranging from 50 to 460 g body weight, were allowed to behaviorally thermoregulate in an electronic device which permitted them to regulate the water temperature. 2. 2. Mean gut temperatures over a 12-hr period did not differ significantly from mean occupied temperatures or from mean water temperatures.
W W, Reynolds +3 more
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137Cs ELIMINATION BY CHRONICALLY-CONTAMINATED LARGEMOUTH BASS (MICROPTERUS SALMOIDES)
Health Physics, 1999The temperature-dependent 137Cs biological half-times (Tb) of lifetime-exposed largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) from a nuclear cooling reservoir at the U.S. Department of Energy's Savannah River Site were calculated from whole-body measurements of live fish and compared with literature records for acutely and chronically-contaminated fish.
E L, Peters, M C, Newman
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Protective immunity by
AbstractMicropterus salmoides rhabdovirus (MSRV) is one of the common pathogens in the largemouth bass industry, which can cause lethal diseases in juvenile fish and enormous economic losses. To establish effective means to prevent MSRV infection, the pcDNA3.1‐G plasmid containing the MSRV glycoprotein gene was successfully constructed and ...
Bin Yang +7 more
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Persistence of host response against glochidia larvae in Micropterus salmoides
Fish & Shellfish Immunology, 2006Host fish acquire resistance to the parasitic larvae (glochidia) of freshwater mussels (Unionidae). Glochidia metamorphose into juvenile mussels while encysted on host fish. We investigated the duration of acquired resistance of largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides (Lacepède, 1802) to glochidia of the broken rays mussel, Lampsilis reeveiana (Call ...
Benjamin J, Dodd +4 more
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Journal of Parasitology, 2012
Two previously undescribed species of myxozoan parasites were observed in the gills of bass inhabiting the Potomac and James River basins. They are described using morphological characteristics and small-subunit (SSU) rDNA gene sequences. Both were taxonomically identified as new species of Myxobolus; Myxobolus branchiarum n. sp.
Heather L, Walsh +4 more
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Two previously undescribed species of myxozoan parasites were observed in the gills of bass inhabiting the Potomac and James River basins. They are described using morphological characteristics and small-subunit (SSU) rDNA gene sequences. Both were taxonomically identified as new species of Myxobolus; Myxobolus branchiarum n. sp.
Heather L, Walsh +4 more
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An Epizootic of Edwardsiella tarda in Largemouth Bass (Micropterus salmoides)
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1993Edwardsiella tarda, an opportunistic bacterial pathogen, was isolated from dying largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) during an epizootic in a eutrophic lake system, Lochloosa Lake, Florida, USA. Approximately 1,500 adult fish died over a 6-wk period during the late summer and early fall of 1991. A mixed population of aerobic bacteria (E.
R, Francis-Floyd +4 more
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