Conservation biology needs a microbial renaissance: a call for the consideration of host-associated microbiota in wildlife management practices

BK Trevelline, SS Fontaine… - Proceedings of the …, 2019 - royalsocietypublishing.org
The central aim of conservation biology is to understand and mitigate the effects of human
activities on biodiversity. To successfully achieve this objective, researchers must take an …

[PDF][PDF] Measures of physiological stress: a transparent or opaque window into the status, management and conservation of species?

B Dantzer, QE Fletcher, R Boonstra… - Conservation …, 2014 - academic.oup.com
Conservation physiology proposes that measures of physiological stress (glucocorticoid
levels) can be used to assess the status and future fate of natural populations. Increases in …

Biological carryover effects: linking common concepts and mechanisms in ecology and evolution

CM O'Connor, DR Norris, GT Crossin, SJ Cooke - Ecosphere, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
The term 'carryover effect'originally arose from repeated measures clinical experiments.
However, the term has more recently been applied to ecological and evolutionary studies …

Stress indicators in fish

NM Sopinka, MR Donaldson, CM O'Connor, CD Suski… - Fish physiology, 2016 - Elsevier
1. Why Do We Measure Stress? 2. Quantifying Stress 3. Specific Measures of Fish Stress
3.1. Cellular and Molecular Indicators 3.2. Primary and Secondary Physiological Indicators …

Physiological stress response, reflex impairment, and survival of five sympatric shark species following experimental capture and release

AJ Gallagher, JE Serafy, SJ Cooke… - … Ecology Progress Series, 2014 - int-res.com
In many fisheries, some component of the catch is usually released. Quantifying the effects
of capture and release on fish survival is critical for determining which practices are …

Fire and rain: A systematic review of the impacts of wildfire and associated runoff on aquatic fauna

DF Gomez Isaza, RL Cramp… - Global Change …, 2022 - Wiley Online Library
Climate and land‐use changes are expected to increase the future occurrence of wildfires,
with potentially devastating consequences for freshwater species and ecosystems. Wildfires …

Physiological responses to shifts in multiple environmental stressors: relevance in a changing world

AE Todgham, JH Stillman - Integrative and comparative biology, 2013 - academic.oup.com
Population response to global change will depend on responses to a multivariate set of
changes in abiotic habitat characteristics and biotic interactions. Organismal biologists …

Physiological basis of climate change impacts on North American inland fishes

JE Whitney, R Al-Chokhachy, DB Bunnell, CA Caldwell… - Fisheries, 2016 - Taylor & Francis
Global climate change is altering freshwater ecosystems and affecting fish populations and
communities. Underpinning changes in fish distribution and assemblage-level responses to …

A new analysis of hypoxia tolerance in fishes using a database of critical oxygen level (Pcrit)

NJ Rogers, MA Urbina, EE Reardon… - Conservation …, 2016 - academic.oup.com
Hypoxia is a common occurrence in aquatic habitats, and it is becoming an increasingly
frequent and widespread environmental perturbation, primarily as the result of …

The potential for rapid evolution under anthropogenic climate change

RA Catullo, J Llewelyn, BL Phillips, CC Moritz - Current Biology, 2019 - cell.com
Understanding how natural populations will respond to rapid anthropogenic climate change
is one of the greatest challenges for ecologists and evolutionary biologists. Much research …