
António GodinhoMARE - Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, Portugal · IMAR - Instituto do Mar, at Dept. Oceanography and Fisheries - Univ. of Azores
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· Degree in Aquatic SciencesAbout
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Research Items (11)
- May 2018
Previous aquaria-based experiments have shown dissolution and leaching of metals, especially copper (Cu), from the simulated sediment plumes generated during mining activities resulting in a pronounced increase of Cu contamination in the surrounding seawater. Metals are bioavailable to corals with food, through ingestion (particulate phase) and through tissue-facilitated transport (passive diffusion). With corals being particularly vulnerable to metal contamination, resuspension of metal-bearing sediments during mining activities represents an important ecological threat. This study was undertaken to evaluate the impact of acute copper exposure (LC50;96 h) on the survival of the cold-water octocoral Dentomuricea aff. meteor. The experimental design was divided in two stages. In stage one, a Cu range-finding toxicity test was performed using Cu dilutions in filtered seawater with concentrations of 0 (control); 60; 150; 250; 450; 600 μg/L. Coral mortality was investigated visually based on the percent surface area of tissue changing from natural yellow colour to black colour indicative of tissue necrosis and death. In stage two, we used the results obtained in the range-finding experiment, to define sub-lethal Cu exposure treatments and exposed D. meteor to Cu concentration of 0 (control); 50; 100; 150; 200; 250 μg/L for 96 h. The corals physical conditions were inspected daily and seawater conditions recorded. Corals were considered dead when all of their tissue turned black. The LC50 value was calculated with regression analysis following Probits methodology. Our results indicate that Cu LC50;96 h for the octocoral D. meteor is 137 μg/L.
Question - How do I change a co-author?
![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Apr 2018
Answer
Ora essa, de nada! :)
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Question - How do I change a co-author?
![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Apr 2018
Answer
It seems Luís him self has to claim authorship of the published paper/poster, and then it will be verified and corrected.
Abraço
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Question - How do I change a co-author?
![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Apr 2018
Answer
João here are the options / steps:
Abraço
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Question - How do I change a co-author?
![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Apr 2018
Answer
Hello João,
You have the exact same problem on a previous publication:
Deleted research item The research item mentioned here has been deleted
I guess it has to be the person who created/shared the publication at ResearchGate, being able to edit it...?!
Best regards,
António
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Question - Which criteria should be adopted for lab. animal care, their use, ethical approval and ARRIVE in biomedical research, latest articles?
![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Nov 2017
Answer
European official entity on these subjects:
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![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Jul 2017
Question
Dear MERCES coordinator, may you activate my collaboration to MERCES? Thanks,
António Godinho
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![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Jul 2017
Question
Dear MERCES coordinator, may you activate my collaboration to MERCES?
Thanks,
António Godinho
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Question - Activate collaboration in MERCES?
![[object Object]](https://i1.rgstatic.net/ii/profile.image/426108115001346-1478603499226_Q64/Antonio_Godinho.jpg)
- Apr 2017
Answer
There are a few collaborators, at least from the Azores group, not yet added, such as Marina Carreiro Silva, Meri Bilan and myself.
Could some one please add us to the project?
Thank you in advance!
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Cold-water corals (CWCs) are thought to be particularly vulnerable to ocean acidification (OA) due to increased atmospheric pCO2, because they inhabit deep and cold waters where the aragonite saturation state is naturally low. Several recent studies have evaluated the impact of OA on organism-level physiological processes such as calcification and respiration. However, no studies to date have looked at the impact at the molecular level of gene expression. Here, we report results of a long-term, 8-month experiment to compare the physiological responses of the CWC Desmophyllum dianthus to OA at both the organismal and gene expression levels under two pCO2/pH treatments: ambient pCO2 (460 μatm, pHT = 8.01) and elevated pCO2 (997 μatm, pHT = 7.70). At the organismal level, no significant differences were detected in the calcification and respiration rates of D. dianthus. Conversely, significant differences were recorded in gene expression profiles, which showed an up-regulation of genes involved in cellular stress (HSP70) and immune defence (mannose-binding c-type lectin). Expression of alpha-carbonic anhydrase, a key enzyme involved in the synthesis of coral skeleton, was also significantly up-regulated in corals under elevated pCO2, indicating that D. dianthus was under physiological reconditioning to calcify under these conditions. Thus, gene expression profiles revealed physiological impacts that were not evident at the organismal level. Consequently, understanding the molecular mechanisms behind the physiological processes involved in a coral’s response to elevated pCO2 is critical to assess the ability of CWCs to acclimate or adapt to future OA conditions.
In 2010 Flying Sharks shipped 3.100 animals to the Istanbul Aquarium, filling two Airbus 300s to capacity. More than half of those animals were collected in Horta (Faial Island, Azores) and kept locally for months in three 40 ft. shipping containers. The enormous success of this transport got the Azorean team quite a bit of notoriety in Portuguese news and the Azorean Regional Government then proposed that Flying Sharks used an old whale processing plant as their facility. A deal was then made between Flying Sharks and the Regional Government, who would sponsor part of the installation of a collections and holding facility, the only condition being that the facility would have to be open to the public and also act as an education center. This presentation shows a summary time-lapse of the construction work involved to adapt an old turn-of-the-century factory to a modern facility with state of the art equipment to ensure animal well-being, as well as conveying an adequate educational message to visitors from all over the world. This was no easy task and it pushed the Azorean Flying Sharks to their very limit…
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- IMAR - Instituto do Mar, at Dept. Oceanography and Fisheries - Univ. of Azores
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- Research Assistant
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