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Dive into the research topics where Douglas M. Neil is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas M. Neil.


Journal of Invertebrate Pathology | 2012

Disease will limit future food supply from the global crustacean fishery and aquaculture sectors

Grant D. Stentiford; Douglas M. Neil; Edmund J. Peeler; Jeffrey D. Shields; Hamish J. Small; Timothy W. Flegel; Just M. Vlak; Brian Jones; F. Morado; S. Moss; Jeffrey M. Lotz; Lyric C. Bartholomay; D. C. Behringer; Chris Hauton; Donald V. Lightner

Seafood is a highly traded food commodity. Farmed and captured crustaceans contribute a significant proportion with annual production exceeding 10 M metric tonnes with first sale value of


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 1998

Accumulation of Manganese in the Haemolymph, Nerve and Muscle Tissue of Nephrops norvegicus (L.) and Its Effect on Neuromuscular Performance

Susanne Baden; Douglas M. Neil

40bn. The sector is dominated by farmed tropical marine shrimp, the fastest growing sector of the global aquaculture industry. It is significant in supporting rural livelihoods and alleviating poverty in producing nations within Asia and Latin America while forming an increasing contribution to aquatic food supply in more developed countries. Nations with marine borders often also support important marine fisheries for crustaceans that are regionally traded as live animals and commodity products. A general separation of net producing and net consuming nations for crustacean seafood has created a truly globalised food industry. Projections for increasing global demand for seafood in the face of level or declining fisheries requires continued expansion and intensification of aquaculture while ensuring best utilisation of captured stocks. Furthermore, continued pressure from consuming nations to ensure safe products for human consumption are being augmented by additional legislative requirements for animals (and their products) to be of low disease status. As a consequence, increasing emphasis is being placed on enforcement of regulations and better governance of the sector; currently this is a challenge in light of a fragmented industry and less stringent regulations associated with animal disease within producer nations. Current estimates predict that up to 40% of tropical shrimp production (>


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Genetic Relationships of Vibrio parahaemolyticus Isolates from Clinical, Human Carrier, and Environmental Sources in Thailand, Determined by Multilocus Sequence Analysis

Chonchanok Theethakaew; Edward J. Feil; Santiago Castillo-Ramírez; David M. Aanensen; Orasa Suthienkul; Douglas M. Neil; Robert L. Davies

3bn) is lost annually, mainly due to viral pathogens for which standard preventative measures (e.g. such as vaccination) are not feasible. In light of this problem, new approaches are urgently required to enhance yield by improving broodstock and larval sourcing, promoting best management practices by farmer outreach and supporting cutting-edge research that aims to harness the natural abilities of invertebrates to mitigate assault from pathogens (e.g. the use of RNA interference therapeutics). In terms of fisheries losses associated with disease, key issues are centred on mortality and quality degradation in the post-capture phase, largely due to poor grading and handling by fishers and the industry chain. Occurrence of disease in wild crustaceans is also widely reported, with some indications that climatic changes may be increasing susceptibility to important pathogens (e.g. the parasite Hematodinium). However, despite improvements in field and laboratory diagnostics, defining population-level effects of disease in these fisheries remains elusive. Coordination of disease specialists with fisheries scientists will be required to understand current and future impacts of existing and emergent diseases on wild stocks. Overall, the increasing demand for crustacean seafood in light of these issues signals a clear warning for the future sustainability of this global industry. The linking together of global experts in the culture, capture and trading of crustaceans with pathologists, epidemiologists, ecologists, therapeutics specialists and policy makers in the field of food security will allow these issues to be better identified and addressed.


Journal of Invertebrate Pathology | 2011

Diseases of Nephrops and Metanephrops: A review

Grant D. Stentiford; Douglas M. Neil

Exposure of Norway lobsters, Nephrops norvegicus (L.) for 3 weeks to manganese concentrations, (5 & 10 mg Mn l(-1) (90-180 microM)), led to its accumulation in various body tissues. The highest concentration was in nerve tissue (brain and abdominal ganglia) which had up to 6 times (on wet wt. basis) the manganese concentration of the exposure concentration, whereas the haemolymph accumulated 3 times and the muscle tissue only 0.5 times the exposure concentration. In the haemolymph the manganese was bound mainly to protein, predominantly (80-90%) to the respiratory protein haemocyanin, as the concentration was 14 times higher in the protein fraction than in the supernatant. Manganese did not substitute for copper in the haemocyanin, as the copper concentration remained constant despite the manganese exposure. The possibility that manganese exposure induced neurotoxic effects sufficient to reduce neuromuscular performance was assessed from the kinematics of free tail-flip swimming, and from measures of the forces produced by abdominal movements in tethered animals. No significant reduction in tail flip velocity or flexion force, but a significant reduction in the maximum post-flip extension force was found. No correlation was found between the manganese concentration in a single tissue or different fractions of the haemolymph and the post-flip extension, except for a weak negative correlation with the manganese concentration in the abdominal ganglion. The ecophysiological implications of these results are discussed.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2000

An analysis of swimming performance in the Norway lobster, Nephrops norvegicus L. infected by a parasitic dinoflagellate of the genus Hematodinium.

Grant D. Stentiford; Douglas M. Neil; R.J.A. Atkinson; N. Bailey

ABSTRACT Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a seafood-borne pathogenic bacterium that is a major cause of gastroenteritis worldwide. We investigated the genetic and evolutionary relationships of 101 V. parahaemolyticus isolates originating from clinical, human carrier, and various environmental and seafood production sources in Thailand using multilocus sequence analysis. The isolates were recovered from clinical samples (n = 15), healthy human carriers (n = 18), various types of fresh seafood (n = 18), frozen shrimp (n = 16), fresh-farmed shrimp tissue (n = 18), and shrimp farm water (n = 16). Phylogenetic analysis revealed a high degree of genetic diversity within the V. parahaemolyticus population, although isolates recovered from clinical samples and from farmed shrimp and water samples represented distinct clusters. The tight clustering of the clinical isolates suggests that disease-causing isolates are not a random sample of the environmental reservoir, although the source of infection remains unclear. Extensive serotypic diversity occurred among isolates representing the same sequence types and recovered from the same source at the same time. These findings suggest that the O- and K-antigen-encoding loci are subject to exceptionally high rates of recombination. There was also strong evidence of interspecies horizontal gene transfer and intragenic recombination involving the recA locus in a large proportion of isolates. As the majority of the intragenic recombinational exchanges involving recA occurred among clinical and carrier isolates, it is possible that the human intestinal tract serves as a potential reservoir of donor and recipient strains that is promoting horizontal DNA transfer, driving evolutionary change, and leading to the emergence of new, potentially pathogenic strains.


Journal of Comparative Physiology B-biochemical Systemic and Environmental Physiology | 1999

The effects of the metal ions Mn2+ and Co2+ on muscle contraction in the Norway lobster Nephrops norvegicus (L.)

J. M. Holmes; A.-S. Gräns; Douglas M. Neil; S. P. Baden

Nephrops and Metanephrops are commercially exploited genera within the family Nephropidae (clawed lobsters). Commercial fisheries for each genus exist in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres and utilise trawling or trapping for capture. Despite a relative lack of dedicated disease surveys on lobsters from these fisheries, several important symbionts and pathogens have been described. The most significant known pathogen of Metanephrops (challengeri) is a microsporidian parasite (Myospora metanephrops) which causes destruction of the skeletal and heart muscles of infected lobsters while the most significant known pathogen of Nephrops (norvegicus) is a dinoflagellate parasite assigned to the genus Hematodinium. This parasite has been responsible for an ongoing epidemic in fished populations of N. norvegicus in Northern Europe since at least the early 1980s and since then extensive studies on its life history and pathogenesis have occurred. Despite these research efforts significant gaps exist in our knowledge of the effects of parasites such as Hematodinium on the fished and non-fished portions of Nephrops populations and on the effect of fishery practices on the spread of infection. Furthermore, little is known about the effect of this (and other) pathogens on cohort survivability and the likelihood that early life stages will be effectively recruited to the fishery. This review summarises the available literature on diseases of these two lobster genera and provides an assessment of future research needs in this discipline.


Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility | 1994

Calcium-activated and stretch-induced force responses in two biochemically defined muscle fibre types of the Norway lobster

Stefan Galler; Douglas M. Neil

Various components of swimming performance were measured in uninfected Norway lobsters (Nephrops norvegicus) and compared to animals at different stages of infection by a parasitic dinoflagellate (Hematodinium sp.). Animals showed a progressive decline in overall swimming performance as infection severity increased, with reductions in the number of tail-flips performed, the number of swimming bouts and the total distance travelled by swimming. The velocity of the first (giant-fibre mediated) tail flip and average velocity over the swimming bout were also significantly reduced in infected lobsters. Possible reasons for this decreased swimming performance are suggested and the implications of this for predator avoidance of infected lobsters in the benthic habitat, and for capture of Nephrops by trawl rigs are discussed.


Marine Biology Research | 2010

The influence of defined ante-mortem stressors on the early post-mortem biochemical processes in the abdominal muscle of the Norway lobster, Nephrops norvegicus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Sebastian G. Gornik; Amaya Albalat; R.J.A. Atkinson; Graham H. Coombs; Douglas M. Neil

Abstract The effects of the metal ions manganese and cobalt on force production by the abdominal superficial flexor muscle of the Norway lobster, Nephrops norvegicus, have been studied in response to both neuronal stimulation and electrical field stimulation applied to an isolated neuromuscular preparation, and by selectively blocking synaptic transmission with ivermectin. In response to both forms of stimulation, low concentrations of manganese added to the standard N. norvegicus saline increased the contractile force produced by the muscle, whereas higher concentrations of manganese inhibited both responses in a dose-dependent manner, until force was completely abolished at concentrations above 2.9 mM manganese. Cobalt ions produced similar effects, and no significant difference was found between the concentration of the two ions at 50% force inhibition (Km) or between the two stimulation methods (manganese: 1.22 mM; cobalt: 1.29 mM, P = 0.86). This suggests that they have a similar mode of action, and a postsynaptic site of inhibition. These Km values are considerably higher than the concentrations of these ions known to accumulate in the haemolymph of N.norvegicus under eutrophic conditions, and it therefore seems unlikely that accumulations of manganese or cobalt ions under such conditions would cause any significant inhibition of muscle contraction force.


Marine Biology Research | 2009

Effect of capture method on the physiology and nucleotide breakdown products in the Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus)

Amaya Albalat; Sebastian G. Gornik; R.J.A. Atkinson; Graham H. Coombs; Douglas M. Neil

SummaryMechanical properties of thin (<80 μm) myofibrillar bundles from single rehydrated freeze-dried fibres of the superficial abdominal flexor muscle of the lobster Nephrops norvegicus have been measured, and subsequently the protein content of these fibres has been analysed by SDS-PAGE. Two slow fibre phenotypes can be distinguished on the basis of their myofibrillar assemblages and sarcomere length (type S1: 6.0–7.5 μm, type S2: 8.0–10.9 μm). Differences (means ± sd, average of seven fibres of each type) were observed in the kinetics for Ca2+ activation (half time of force development (ms); S1: 416±174; S2: 762±199 plus a delay of 280±130) and relaxation (half time of force decay (ms); S1: 162±75, S2: 257±53), for Ca2+ sensitivity of force generation (-log [Ca2+] for half maximal activation; S1: 5.40±0.12; S2: 5.55±0.08), and of the kinetics of stretch activation (delay of the peak of stretch-induced force increase (ms); S1: 91±30; S2: 493±436). From these results and partly also in combination with previously obtained mechanical data on intact fibres it can be concluded (1) that S2 fibres are specialized for long-lasting force maintenance whereas S1 fibres are adapted for slow movements; (2) intrinsic myofibrillar kinetics is not the main time-limiting factor for either activation or relaxation of intact fibres under physiological conditions; (3) processes which precede crossbridge cycling seem to be the main time-limiting factors for the Ca2+ activation of the myofibrils.


Archive | 1990

The Acoustic Response Threshold of the Norway Lobster, Nephrops Norvegicus (L.) in a Free Sound Field

Christine Goodall; Colin J. Chapman; Douglas M. Neil

Abstract The effects of four different ante-mortem stressors (exercise, emersion, starvation and a patent infection with the parasite Hematodinium sp.) on post-mortem processes have been investigated in the abdominal muscle of Norway lobster Nephrops norvegicus by measuring changes in the pH, the levels of glycogen, l-lactate, arginine phosphate, ATP, ADP, AMP, IMP, HxR, Hx and the adenylate energy charge (AEC) over a time course of 24 h with samples being taken at 0, 3, 6, 12 and 24 h. The acute stresses of intense exercise and 2 h emersion resulted in a premature onset of anaerobic glycolysis, leading both to an enhanced glycogen depletion rate and an early accumulation of l-lactate. The chronic stressors, starvation and parasite infection, resulted in a complete ante-mortem depletion of muscle glycogen and consequently the failure of post-mortem glycolytic fermentation. Post-mortem pH and ATP inter-conversion were significantly altered in chronically stressed animals. Ante-mortem, a rapid, almost complete depletion of arginine phosphate was observed in all stress groups. The AEC was altered significantly by all stresses, indicating a strong energy demand. The findings suggest that ante-mortem stressors strongly influence the post-mortem biochemical processes. The laboratory-based results are compared to ‘field’ data and effects on post-harvest product quality are discussed.

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R.J.A. Atkinson

University Marine Biological Station Millport

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Hamish J. Small

Virginia Institute of Marine Science

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