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27 pages, 3008 KB  
Article
Optimal Sizing and Techno-Economic Feasibility of Hybrid Microgrid
by Hedra Saleeb, Ali M. El-Rifaie, Khairy Sayed, Oussama Accouche, Shazly A. Mohamed and Rasha Kassem
Processes 2025, 13(4), 1209; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13041209 - 16 Apr 2025
Cited by 20 | Viewed by 3576
Abstract
This study explores the energy demand planning for university loads at the new Sohag University campus in Sohag Al Gadida City, Egypt. It assesses the feasibility of establishing a microgrid on a section of the campus to determine its practicality and potential benefits. [...] Read more.
This study explores the energy demand planning for university loads at the new Sohag University campus in Sohag Al Gadida City, Egypt. It assesses the feasibility of establishing a microgrid on a section of the campus to determine its practicality and potential benefits. The existing power distribution system is analyzed, and the suitability of various distributed generation sources, including photovoltaic, battery, and hydrogen-based microgrid, is evaluated. A techno-economic analysis is conducted to optimize microgrid sizing, using MATLAB R2023a (Optimization Toolbox) to implement a sizing algorithm for a hybrid microgrid system and HOMER Pro 3.14 for component sizing. The optimal microgrid configuration is verified based on the intended power supply potential while minimizing costs. The results demonstrate that the energy costs of the proposed hybrid microgrid system align with previously published values, confirming its feasibility. Additionally, economic analysis reveals that the proposed system not only reduces carbon emissions but also achieves cost savings of 20–30% over 20 years compared to conventional grid supply, with a payback period of 8–10 years. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Renewable Energy Systems (2nd Edition))
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9 pages, 567 KB  
Communication
First Insights from On-Board Fish Gutting into the Zoonotic Nematode Burden of Pouting (Trisopterus luscus) at the Point of Sale to the Consumer
by Francisco Javier Arrebola-Casañas, Mario Garrido, Francisco Javier Adroher, Rocío Benítez and Manuel Morales-Yuste
Pathogens 2025, 14(3), 252; https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens14030252 - 4 Mar 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1314
Abstract
A survey was conducted to assess the impact of on-board gutting in the pouting fishery, Trisopterus luscus (L.), from the Bay of Biscay (area FAO 27.VIII) on the parasite burden of macroscopic ascaridoid nematodes, including anisakids (causing anisakidosis) and raphidascaridids (causing consumer rejection) [...] Read more.
A survey was conducted to assess the impact of on-board gutting in the pouting fishery, Trisopterus luscus (L.), from the Bay of Biscay (area FAO 27.VIII) on the parasite burden of macroscopic ascaridoid nematodes, including anisakids (causing anisakidosis) and raphidascaridids (causing consumer rejection) in these fish. The fish were caught in the Bay of Biscay and collected from the fish market in Granada (southern Spain). Fish larger than 25 cm were gutted on board after capture. A detailed examination of the fish revealed the presence of nematode larvae, which were identified morphologically and molecularly (PCR-RFLP: polymerase chain reaction with restriction fragment polymorphism). Results revealed that ungutted fish harbored only third-stage larvae of ascaridoids (Anisakis and Hysterothylacium) while prevalence reached up to 91%. In contrast, gutted fish exhibited a significant reduction in both the prevalence (36%) and mean abundance (MA, 4.44 vs. 0.91) of these larvae. The prevalence of Anisakis spp. larvae was reduced by over 20%, with a more pronounced reduction in abundance of more than 40% (MA, 1.56 vs. 0.91). Hysterothylacium larvae were completely absent (MA 2.88 vs. 0.00). These findings indicate that gutting, while not highly efficient, lowers Anisakis larvae presence, thereby reducing the risk of anisakiasis to consumers. Additionally, the complete removal of Hysterothylacium larvae enhances the fish’s appearance, making it more appealing and increasing its commercial value, as well as reducing the risk of seizure by health authorities. Further research on these on-board evisceration practices is needed to enhance effectiveness and reduce zoonotic nematodes in commercial fishes. Full article
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14 pages, 21258 KB  
Article
Evaluating the Sounds Produced by Pacific Cod (Gadus macrocephalus, Gadidae) During the Spawning Season
by Sungho Cho, Donhyug Kang, Hansoo Kim, Mira Kim and Sunhyo Kim
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(2), 378; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13020378 - 18 Feb 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1778
Abstract
Marine organisms produce sounds for various purposes, including spawning, avoidance, and migration, with each species exhibiting unique acoustic characteristics. This study observed the grunt sounds of Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus) during the spawning season for the first time using passive acoustic [...] Read more.
Marine organisms produce sounds for various purposes, including spawning, avoidance, and migration, with each species exhibiting unique acoustic characteristics. This study observed the grunt sounds of Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus) during the spawning season for the first time using passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) techniques. Acoustic signals were recorded continuously for about one month at an aquaculture fish farm in Korea. From these recordings, 1208 grunt sounds of Pacific cod were extracted using an automatic grunt detector, and statistical time–frequency parameters were estimated. On average, the grunt sounds consisted of 29 pulses at 6.5 ms intervals within a duration of 205 ms, with a pulse rate of 122.6 per second. The periodic pulse-type signal creates multiple harmonic frequencies on the spectrogram, characterized by time-harmonic modulation with a slope of −240 Hz/s. The mth harmonic frequency distribution ranged from 162 to 822 Hz, with a median source level of 122.6 dB re 1 μPa at 1 m. These findings provide essential scientific data for understanding Pacific cod communication during the spawning season and can aid in identifying spawning sites, conserving habitats, and managing biological resources, contributing to marine ecosystem protection and sustainable management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Research in Marine Environmental and Fisheries Acoustics)
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24 pages, 6072 KB  
Article
A Techno-Economic-Environmental Feasibility Study of Residential Solar Photovoltaic/Biomass Power Generation for Rural Electrification: A Real Case Study
by Rasha Kassem, Mohamed Metwally Mahmoud, Nagwa F. Ibrahim, Abdulaziz Alkuhayli, Usama Khaled, Abderrahmane Beroual and Hedra Saleeb
Sustainability 2024, 16(5), 2036; https://doi.org/10.3390/su16052036 - 29 Feb 2024
Cited by 42 | Viewed by 4686
Abstract
To avert climate change, there has been a rise in the usage of green energy sources that are also beneficial to the environment. To generate sustainable energy in a financially and technically efficient manner, our research attempts to close the gaps. The potential [...] Read more.
To avert climate change, there has been a rise in the usage of green energy sources that are also beneficial to the environment. To generate sustainable energy in a financially and technically efficient manner, our research attempts to close the gaps. The potential of green sources like photovoltaic (PV) and biomass for a rural community southwest of Sohag Al Gadida City, Sohag, Egypt, is examined in this research considering its techno-economic (TE) and eco-friendly feasibility. The HOMER Pro v3.14 package is used as a scaling and optimization instrument, to calculate the price of the PV/biomass setup and the size and characteristics of its parts. This is to estimate the corresponding electrical production and reduce the total annual cost for the customer. The suggested system structure is validated through the presentation of simulation outcomes and evaluations utilizing MATLAB/SIMULINK R2022a. In addition, a TE-environmental investigation of the optimized PV/biomass structure is performed. The optimum structure is carefully chosen from the best four configurations using the demand predilection by analogy to the perfect technique based on the generation cost, operation cost, energy production, and renewable fraction. The results also indicate that using hybrid PV/biomass is an attractive choice with the initial capital cost (ICC: USD 8.144), net present cost (NPC: USD 11,026), a low cost of energy (LCOE: 0.184 USD/kWh), and the high renewable fraction (RF: 99.9%) of the system. The annual CO2 emission performance of a PV/biomass system is much better than that of the grid alone and PV/diesel. This method might be applied in rural areas in other developing countries. Full article
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23 pages, 3499 KB  
Article
Whiting (Merlangius merlangus) Grows Slower and Smaller in the Adriatic Sea: New Insights from a Comparison of Two Populations with a Time Interval of 30 Years
by Federico Calì, Federica Stranci, Mario La Mesa, Carlotta Mazzoldi, Enrico Arneri and Alberto Santojanni
Fishes 2023, 8(7), 341; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes8070341 - 28 Jun 2023
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3688
Abstract
Nowadays, overexploitation and climate change are among the major threats to fish production all over the world. In this study, we focused our attention on the Adriatic Sea (AS), a shallow semi-enclosed sub-basin showing the highest exploitation level and warming trend over the [...] Read more.
Nowadays, overexploitation and climate change are among the major threats to fish production all over the world. In this study, we focused our attention on the Adriatic Sea (AS), a shallow semi-enclosed sub-basin showing the highest exploitation level and warming trend over the last decades within the Mediterranean Sea. We investigated the life history traits and population dynamics of the cold-water species whiting (Merlangius merlangus, Gadidae) 30 years apart, which is one of the main commercial species in the Northern AS. The AS represents its southern limit of distribution, in accordance with the thermal preference of this cold-water species. Fish samples were collected monthly using a commercial bottom trawl within the periods 1990–1991 and 2020–2021. The historical comparison highlighted a recent reduction in large specimens (>25 cm total length, TL), which was not associated with trunked age structures, therefore indicating a decrease in growth performance over a period of 30 years (L90–91 = 29.5 cm TL; L20–21 = 22.8 cm TL). The current size at first sexual maturity was achieved within the first year of life, at around 16 cm TL for males and 17 cm TL for females. In the AS, whiting spawns in batches from December to March, showing a reproductive investment (gonadosomatic index) one order of magnitude higher in females than in males. Potential fecundity (F) ranged from 46,144 to 424,298, with it being heavily dependent on fish size. We hypothesize that the decreased growth performance might be related to a metabolic constraint, possibly related to the increased temperature and its consequences. Moreover, considering the detrimental effects of size reduction on reproductive potential, these findings suggest a potential endangerment situation for the long-term maintenance of whiting and cold-related species in the AS, which should be accounted for in setting management strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Life History of Fish under Anthropogenic Impacts and Climate Changes)
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20 pages, 2583 KB  
Article
Antibiotic Resistance Profiles and ARG Detection from Isolated Bacteria in a Culture-Dependent Study at the Codfish Industry Level
by Gianluigi Ferri, Carlotta Lauteri, Mauro Scattolini and Alberto Vergara
Foods 2023, 12(8), 1699; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12081699 - 19 Apr 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2782
Abstract
The antibiotic resistance phenomenon horizontally involves numerous bacteria cultured from fresh or processed seafood matrix microbiomes. In this study, the identified bacteria from food-producing processes and industrial environments were screened for phenotypic and genotypic resistance determinants. A total of 684 bacterial strains [537 [...] Read more.
The antibiotic resistance phenomenon horizontally involves numerous bacteria cultured from fresh or processed seafood matrix microbiomes. In this study, the identified bacteria from food-producing processes and industrial environments were screened for phenotypic and genotypic resistance determinants. A total of 684 bacterial strains [537 from processed codfish (Gadus morhua and Gadus macrocephalus) products as salted and seasoned and soaked and 147 from environmental samples] were isolated. Antibiotic susceptibility tests showed resistance against tetracycline, oxacillin, and clindamycin in the Staphylococcus genus (both from food and environmental samples) and against beta-lactams (cefotaxime, carbapenems, etc.) and nitrofurans (nitrofurantoin) from E. coli and Salmonella enterica serovar. Enteritidis isolates. One-thousand and ten genetic determinants—tetracycline tetC (25.17%), tetK (21.06%), tetL (11.70%), clindamycin ermC (17.23%), ermB (7.60%), linezolid cfr (8.22%), optrA (3.62%), poxtA (2.05%), and oxacillin mecA (17.37%)—were amplified from Gram-positive resistant and phenotypically susceptible bacteria. Concerning Gram-negative bacteria, the beta-lactam-resistant genes (blaTEM, blaCIT, blaCTX-M, blaIMP, blaKPC, blaOXA-48-like) represented 57.30% of the amplified ARGs. This study found high antibiotic resistance genes in circulation in the fish food industry chain from the macro- to microenvironment. The obtained data confirmed the diffusion of the “antibiotic resistance phenomenon” and its repercussions on the One-health and food-producing systems. Full article
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9 pages, 638 KB  
Article
Generation and Characterization of Novel Bioactive Peptides from Fish and Beef Hydrolysates
by Mohamed Abdelfattah Maky and Takeshi Zendo
Appl. Sci. 2021, 11(21), 10452; https://doi.org/10.3390/app112110452 - 7 Nov 2021
Cited by 23 | Viewed by 4770
Abstract
Bioactive peptides were successfully produced from fish (Gadidae) and beef skeletal muscles after being hydrolyzed for 8 h with pepsin. Subsequently, they were purified using a Sep-Pak C18 cartridge and reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). The molecular weights of pure fish [...] Read more.
Bioactive peptides were successfully produced from fish (Gadidae) and beef skeletal muscles after being hydrolyzed for 8 h with pepsin. Subsequently, they were purified using a Sep-Pak C18 cartridge and reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). The molecular weights of pure fish and beef peptides were determined to be 2364.4 and 3771.8, respectively. According to Edman degradation, the fish peptide was composed of 21 amino acid residues (F21), while the beef peptide was composed of 34 amino acid residues (B34). F21 and B34 displayed angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitory activity with a half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) values of 7.3 µg/mL and 5.8 µg/mL, respectively. F21 exhibited antioxidant activity with an IC50 value of 389.9 µg/mL, whereas B34 exhibited no antioxidant activity. Moreover, F21 and B34 displayed antimicrobial effects against a wide spectrum of food-borne pathogens and spoilage bacteria. Bioactive peptides derived from muscle proteins are a promising strategy for the production of functional food materials and safe food preservatives. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Bioactive Molecules in Food)
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11 pages, 18935 KB  
Communication
A Multiplex PCR Assay Combined with Capillary Electrophoresis for the Simultaneous Identification of Atlantic Cod, Pacific Cod, Blue Whiting, Haddock, and Alaska Pollock
by Yu-Min Lee, Shinyoung Lee and Hae-Yeong Kim
Foods 2021, 10(11), 2631; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10112631 - 29 Oct 2021
Cited by 19 | Viewed by 3228
Abstract
With an increased consumption of seafood products, food fraud with fish resources has been continuously reported. In particular, codfish has been exploited worldwide as a processed product in fresh, frozen, smoked, canned, or ready-to-eat dish forms. However, it is challenging to identify processed [...] Read more.
With an increased consumption of seafood products, food fraud with fish resources has been continuously reported. In particular, codfish has been exploited worldwide as a processed product in fresh, frozen, smoked, canned, or ready-to-eat dish forms. However, it is challenging to identify processed fish products after processing because of their similar morphological characteristics. Substitution and mislabeling of codfish among different species are also happening deliberately or unintentionally. Thus, it is necessary to distinguish cod species to prevent fish adulteration and food fraud. In this study, we developed a multiplex PCR for simultaneously identifying five cod species within Gadidae using capillary electrophoresis. Then, their species-specific primer sets were designed by targeting the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. Subsequently, the amplicon sizes obtained were 237 bp, 204 bp, 164 bp, 138 bp, and 98 bp for Atlantic cod, Pacific cod, blue whiting, haddock, and Alaska pollock, respectively. The specificity of each primer was further tested using 19 fish species, and no cross-reactivity was observed. The limit of detection of this multiplex PCR assay was 1 pg. The developed multiplex PCR assay can be applied to 40 commercial food products successfully. This detection method will be efficient for managing seafood authentication by simultaneously analyzing multiple cod species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue DNA-Based Authentication of Fish and Fish Products)
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13 pages, 524 KB  
Article
Application of the Gadidae Fish Processing Waste for Food Grade Gelatin Production
by Nikita Yu. Zarubin, Elena N. Kharenko, Olga V. Bredikhina, Leonid O. Arkhipov, Konstantin V. Zolotarev, Anton N. Mikhailov, Valeriya I. Nakhod and Marina V. Mikhailova
Mar. Drugs 2021, 19(8), 455; https://doi.org/10.3390/md19080455 - 9 Aug 2021
Cited by 15 | Viewed by 3874
Abstract
Waste from fish cutting (heads, swim bladders, fins, skin, and bones) is a high-value technological raw material for obtaining substances and products with a wide range of properties. The possibility of using waste from cutting fish of the Gadidae family: the Alaska pollock [...] Read more.
Waste from fish cutting (heads, swim bladders, fins, skin, and bones) is a high-value technological raw material for obtaining substances and products with a wide range of properties. The possibility of using waste from cutting fish of the Gadidae family: the Alaska pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus) and the Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus), processed in the coastal zone, is scientifically substantiated. In this work, a technology has been developed for processing accumulated waste from fish cutting in order to obtain fish gelatin, which is characterized by high protein content (more than 80.0%) and a full set of essential and nonessential amino acids. We studied the quality of fish gelatin obtained from wastes from cutting the fish of the Gadidae family. The possibility of using fish gelatin as a component of fish products is shown; the dose of its introduction into the fish products is substantiated. The data obtained made it possible to recommend the use of fish processing waste products as a gelling component and a source of amino acids in multicomponent food systems. Full article
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18 pages, 887 KB  
Article
Consistency Is Critical for the Effective Use of Baited Remote Video
by Robyn E. Jones, Ross A. Griffin, Roger J. H. Herbert and Richard K. F. Unsworth
Oceans 2021, 2(1), 215-232; https://doi.org/10.3390/oceans2010013 - 3 Mar 2021
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 7626
Abstract
Baited remote underwater videos (BRUV) are popular marine monitoring techniques used for the assessment of motile fauna. Currently, most published studies evaluating BRUV methods stem from environments in the Southern Hemisphere. This has led to stricter and more defined guidelines for the use [...] Read more.
Baited remote underwater videos (BRUV) are popular marine monitoring techniques used for the assessment of motile fauna. Currently, most published studies evaluating BRUV methods stem from environments in the Southern Hemisphere. This has led to stricter and more defined guidelines for the use of these techniques in these areas in comparison to the North Atlantic, where little or no specific guidance exists. This study explores metadata taken from BRUV deployments collected around the UK to understand the influence of methodological and environmental factors on the information gathered during BRUV deployments including species richness, relative abundance and faunal composition. In total, 39 BRUV surveys accumulating in 457 BRUV deployments across South/South-West England and Wales were used in this analysis. This study identified 88 different taxa from 43 families across the 457 deployments. Whilst taxonomic groups such as Labridae, Gadidae and Gobiidae were represented by a high number of species, species diversity for the Clupeidae, Scombridae, Sparidae, Gasterosteidae and Rajidae groups were low and many families were absent altogether. Bait type was consistently identified as one of the most influential factors over species richness, relative abundance and faunal assemblage composition. Image quality and deployment duration were also identified as significant influential factors over relative abundance. As expected, habitat observed was identified as an influential factor over faunal assemblage composition in addition to its significant interaction with image quality, time of deployment, bait type and tide type (spring/neap). Our findings suggest that methodological and environmental factors should be taken into account when designing and implementing monitoring surveys using BRUV techniques. Standardising factors where possible remains key. Fluctuations and variations in data may be attributed to methodological inconsistencies and/or environment factors as well as over time and therefore must be considered when interpreting the data. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue ROVs and AUVs: New Technologies for the Future of Marine Research)
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13 pages, 1949 KB  
Article
Latitudinal Cline in Chromosome Numbers of Ice Cod A. glacialis (Gadidae) from Northeast Greenland
by Laura Ghigliotti, Jørgen S. Christiansen, Erica Carlig, Davide Di Blasi and Eva Pisano
Genes 2020, 11(12), 1515; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes11121515 - 18 Dec 2020
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3381
Abstract
The ice cod Arctogadus glacialis (Peters, 1872) is one of the few fish species endemic to the Arctic. With a circumpolar distribution, the species is confined to the fjords and shelves of the Arctic seas. Biological information on A. glacialis is scarce, with [...] Read more.
The ice cod Arctogadus glacialis (Peters, 1872) is one of the few fish species endemic to the Arctic. With a circumpolar distribution, the species is confined to the fjords and shelves of the Arctic seas. Biological information on A. glacialis is scarce, with genomic information restricted to microsatellites. Within the frame of the TUNU-Programme: Arctic Ocean Fishes—Diversity, Adaptation and Conservation, we studied A. glacialis at the chromosomal level to explore fish diversity and evolutionary aspects. The analysis of over 50 individuals from the Northeast Greenland fjords between latitudes 71°09′ N and 76°42′ N revealed a remarkable intraspecific diversity epitomized by chromosome numbers spanning from 28 to 33, the occurrence of putative B chromosomes, and diversified patterns of distribution of heterochromatin and rDNAs. The number of B chromosomes followed a latitudinal gradient from 0–2 in the north to 2–5 in the south. Considering the benthic and rather stationary life history of this species, the observed chromosomal differences might have arisen independently, possibly driven and/or fostered by the dynamics of repetitive sequences, and are being fixed in relatively isolated fjord populations. The resulting latitudinal cline we observe today might have repercussions on the fate of local populations facing the ongoing climate-driven environmental changes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fish Cytogenetics: Present and Future)
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24 pages, 5289 KB  
Article
Recognition and Distribution of Two North Atlantic Gadiculus Species, G. argenteus and G. thori (Gadidae), Based on Otolith Morphology, Larval Pigmentation, Molecular Evidence, Morphometrics and Meristics
by Pieter A. M. Gaemers and Jan Y. Poulsen
Fishes 2017, 2(3), 15; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes2030015 - 29 Aug 2017
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 8227
Abstract
The silvery pout genus Gadiculus consists of small aberrant codfishes with several extinct and currently only one recognized extant species. The oldest representatives of a Gadiculus lineage known from otoliths are Early Miocene in age. Fossil evidence has showed Gadiculus to originate from [...] Read more.
The silvery pout genus Gadiculus consists of small aberrant codfishes with several extinct and currently only one recognized extant species. The oldest representatives of a Gadiculus lineage known from otoliths are Early Miocene in age. Fossil evidence has showed Gadiculus to originate from older genera diverging early from other true cods of the family Gadidae. As adult specimens of different species have been found to be highly similar and difficult to distinguish based on meristic and morphometric data, the number of species in this gadid genus has been controversial since different larval morphotypes were first discovered some 100 years ago. For almost 70 years, Gadiculus thori and Gadiculus argenteus have been considered subspecies only, with a distribution in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean including the Mediterranean. In this study, we resolve the long-standing issue of extant Gadiculus not being monotypic. New results in the form of distinct adult otoliths and molecular data unambiguously show two species of Gadiculus present—in agreement with larval morphotypes. Morphometric, meristic and molecular characters, as well as larval pigmentation are discussed in addition to present and past geographic distributions of the two taxa from distributions of fossil otoliths. At present, the cold-water species Gadiculus thori (northern silvery pout) is distributed in cold-temperate and subarctic latitudes in the Northeast Atlantic, including a new range extension off Southeast Greenland. Gadiculus argenteus (southern silvery pout) occurs in warmer waters and is distributed in the warm-temperate East Atlantic and Mediterranean. Fossil otoliths show that both species often co-existed in the Mediterranean from the Late Pliocene to the Middle Pleistocene. Full article
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1 pages, 141 KB  
Correction
Pieter A. M. Gaemers. Taxonomy, Distribution and Evolution of Trisopterine Gadidae by Means of Otoliths and Other Characteristics. Fishes 2016, 1, 18–51.
by Pieter A. M. Gaemers
Fishes 2017, 2(3), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes2030011 - 17 Jul 2017
Viewed by 3652
Abstract
The author has made the following corrections to his paper [1], which has been republished in order to comply with the rules of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (I.C.Z.N.). [...]
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35 pages, 10550 KB  
Article
Taxonomy, Distribution and Evolution of Trisopterine Gadidae by Means of Otoliths and Other Characteristics
by Pieter A. M. Gaemers
Fishes 2016, 1(1), 18-51; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes1010018 - 17 Jul 2017
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 8666 | Correction
Abstract
In a greater study of the recent fossil Gadidae, the object of this paper is to better define the trisopterine species and their relationships. The taxonomy of the four recent species usually included in the genus Trisopterus is further elaborated by means of [...] Read more.
In a greater study of the recent fossil Gadidae, the object of this paper is to better define the trisopterine species and their relationships. The taxonomy of the four recent species usually included in the genus Trisopterus is further elaborated by means of published and new data on their otoliths, by published data on general external features and meristics of the fishes, and their genetics. Fossil otoliths, from the beginning of the Oligocene up to the present, reveal much of their evolution and throw more light on their relationships. Several succeeding and partly overlapping lineages representing different genera are recognized during this time interval. The genus Neocolliolus Gaemers, 1976, for Trisopterus esmarkii (Nilsson, 1855), is more firmly based. A new genus, Allotrisopterus, is introduced for Trisopterus minutus (Linnaeus, 1758). The similarity with Trisopterus capelanus (Lacepède, 1800) is an example of convergent evolution. The tribe Trisopterini Endo (2002) should only contain Trisopterus, Allotrisopterus and Neocolliolus as recent genera. Correct identification of otoliths from fisheries research and from sea bottom samples extends the knowledge of the present day geographical distribution of T. capelanus and T. luscus (Linnaeus, 1758). T. capelanus is also living along the Atlantic coast of Portugal and at least up to and including the Ría de Arosa, Galicia, Spain. There it can easily be mistaken for A. minutus that is also living there. Otoliths of T. luscus have been identified from the Evvoïkós Channel between Euboia and the mainland of Greece, thus it must live also in the Aegean Sea. Otoliths prove to be a powerful tool in taxonomy, biogeography and evolution of teleosts. Full article
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11 pages, 1851 KB  
Article
Restricted Gene Flow for Gadus macrocephalus from Yellow Sea Based on Microsatellite Markers: Geographic Block of Tsushima Current
by Na Song, Ming Liu, Takashi Yanagimoto, Yasunori Sakurai, Zhi-Qiang Han and Tian-Xiang Gao
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2016, 17(4), 467; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17040467 - 29 Mar 2016
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 6781
Abstract
The Pacific cod Gadus macrocephalus is a demersal, economically important fish in the family Gadidae. Population genetic differentiation of Pacific cod was examined across its northwestern Pacific range by screening variation of eight microsatellite loci in the present study. All four populations exhibited [...] Read more.
The Pacific cod Gadus macrocephalus is a demersal, economically important fish in the family Gadidae. Population genetic differentiation of Pacific cod was examined across its northwestern Pacific range by screening variation of eight microsatellite loci in the present study. All four populations exhibited high genetic diversity. Pairwise fixation index (Fst) suggested a moderate to high level of genetic differentiation among populations. Population of the Yellow Sea (YS) showed higher genetic difference compared to the other three populations based on the results of pairwise Fst, three-dimensional factorial correspondence analysis (3D-FCA) and STRUCTURE, which implied restricted gene flow among them. Wilcoxon signed rank tests suggested no significant heterozygosity excess and no recent genetic bottleneck events were detected. Microsatellite DNA is an effective molecular marker for detecting the phylogeographic pattern of Pacific cod, and these Pacific cod populations should be three management units. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fish Molecular Biology)
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