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Featured researches published by Michael Finiguerra.


Journal of Great Lakes Research | 2009

Management of Agricultural Practices Results in Declines of Filamentous Algae in the Lake Littoral

Isidro Bosch; Joseph C. Makarewicz; Theodore W. Lewis; Elizabeth A. Bonk; Michael Finiguerra; Bradley R. Groveman

ABSTRACT Filamentous algal cover was quantified during periods of peak biomass from 2001 to 2007 in six littoral macrophyte beds in Conesus Lake, New York (USA). Three of the study sites were adjacent to streams that drained sub-watersheds where extensive agricultural best management practices (BMPs) designed to reduce nutrient runoff were implemented beginning in 2003. Three other study sites were downstream from sub-watersheds where only a few or no BMPs were implemented by landowners. For the sites that received extensive management, comparisons of the Pre-BMP baseline period (2–3 yrs) to the Post-BMP period (4 yrs) revealed that algal cover was statistically lower than baseline in eight of eleven years (72.7%). For the three sites where limited or no management was implemented, the percent cover of filamentous algae was lower than Pre-BMP baseline levels in only three of twelve years (25%). Where major reductions in cover of filamentous algae occurred, positive relationships existed with summer stream loading of nitrate and soluble reactive phosphorus to the nearshore. In some cases only nitrate loading was significantly correlated with percent cover, indicating that the relative importance of nitrogen and phosphorus to algal growth near streams may be determined by the characteristics and land use within each sub-watershed. Agricultural BMPs targeting nutrient and suspended solid runoff can effectively reduce filamentous algal growth locally along the lake littoral zone on a time scale of months to a few years and with moderate commitment of resources. This work offers a new perspective for management of the growing problem of littoral algal growth in the embayments and drowned river mouths of the Great Lakes.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Determining the Advantages, Costs, and Trade-Offs of a Novel Sodium Channel Mutation in the Copepod Acartia hudsonica to Paralytic Shellfish Toxins (PST).

Michael Finiguerra; David E. Avery; Hans G. Dam

The marine copepod Acartia hudsonica was shown to be adapted to dinoflagellate prey, Alexandrium fundyense, which produce paralytic shellfish toxins (PST). Adaptation to PSTs in other organisms is caused by a mutation in the sodium channel. Recently, a mutation in the sodium channel in A. hudsonica was found. In this study, we rigorously tested for advantages, costs, and trade-offs associated with the mutant isoform of A. hudsonica under toxic and non-toxic conditions. We combined fitness with wild-type: mutant isoform ratio measurements on the same individual copepod to test our hypotheses. All A. hudsonica copepods express both the wild-type and mutant sodium channel isoforms, but in different proportions; some individuals express predominantly mutant (PMI) or wild-type isoforms (PWI), while most individuals express relatively equal amounts of each (EI). There was no consistent pattern of improved performance as a function of toxin dose for egg production rate (EPR), ingestion rate (I), and gross growth efficiency (GGE) for individuals in the PMI group relative to individuals in the PWI expression group. Neither was there any evidence to indicate a fitness benefit to the mutant isoform at intermediate toxin doses. No clear advantage under toxic conditions was associated with the mutation. Using a mixed-diet approach, there was also no observed relationship between individual wild-type: mutant isoform ratios and among expression groups, on both toxic and non-toxic diets, for eggs produced over three days. Lastly, expression of the mutant isoform did not mitigate the negative effects of the toxin. That is, the reductions in EPR from a toxic to non-toxic diet for copepods were independent of expression groups. Overall, the results did not support our hypotheses; the mutant sodium channel isoform does not appear to be related to adaptation to PST in A. hudsonica. Other potential mechanisms responsible for the adaptation are discussed.


Ecology and Evolution | 2014

No evidence for induction or selection of mutant sodium channel expression in the copepod Acartia husdsonica challenged with the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium fundyense

Michael Finiguerra; David E. Avery; Hans G. Dam

Some species in the dinoflagellate genus Alexandrium spp. produce a suite of neurotoxins that block sodium channels, known as paralytic shellfish toxins (PST), which have deleterious effects on grazers. Populations of the ubiquitous copepod grazer Acartia hudsonica that have co-occurred with toxic Alexandrium spp. are better adapted than naïve populations. The mechanism of adaptation is currently unknown. We hypothesized that a mutation in the sodium channel could account for the grazer adaptation. We tested two hypotheses: (1) Expression of the mutant sodium channel could be induced by exposure to toxic Alexandrium fundyense; (2) in the absence of induction, selection exerted by toxic A. fundyense would favor copepods that predominantly express the mutant isoform. In the copepod A. hudsonica, both isoforms are expressed in all individuals in varying proportions. Thus, in addition to comparing expression ratios of wild-type to mutant isoforms for individual copepods, we also partitioned copepods into three groups: those that predominantly express the mutant (PMI) isoform, the wild-type (PWI) isoform, or both isoforms approximately equally (EI). There were no differences in isoform expression between individuals that were fed toxic and nontoxic food after three and 6 days; induction of mutant isoform expression did not occur. Furthermore, the hypothesis that mutant isoform expression responds to toxic food was also rejected. That is, no consistent evidence showed that the wild-type to mutant isoform ratios decreased, or that the relative proportion of PMI individuals increased, due to the consumption of toxic food over four generations. However, in the selected line that was continuously exposed to toxic food sources, egg production rate increased, which suggested that adaptation occurred but was unrelated to sodium channel isoform expression.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2013

Sex-specific tolerance to starvation in the copepod Acartia tonsa

Michael Finiguerra; Hans G. Dam; David E. Avery; Zair P. Burris


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2013

An improved method for achieving high-quality RNA for copepod transcriptomic studies

Huan Zhang; Michael Finiguerra; Hans G. Dam; Yousong Huang; Donghui Xu; Guangxing Liu; Senjie Lin


Limnology and Oceanography | 2017

Realizing the potential of trait‐based aquatic ecology: New tools and collaborative approaches

Colin T. Kremer; Alicia Williams; Michael Finiguerra; Allison A. Fong; Anne M. Kellerman; Sara F. Paver; Bradley B. Tolar; Benjamin J. Toscano


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2015

A novel mutation from gene splicing of a voltage-gated sodium channel in a marine copepod and its potential effect on channel function

Lihua Chen; Huan Zhang; Michael Finiguerra; Yuriy V. Bobkov; Christelle Bouchard; David E. Avery; Peter A. V. Anderson; Senjie Lin; Hans G. Dam


Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin | 2016

A Shifting Tide: Recommendations for Incorporating Science Communication into Graduate Training

Elizabeth Hundey; Jennifer H. Olker; Cátia Carreira; Rémi M. Daigle; Ashley K. Elgin; Michael Finiguerra; Natasha J. Gownaris; Nicole M. Hayes; Leanna Heffner; N. Roxanna Razavi; Patrick D. Shirey; Bradley B. Tolar; Elisha M. Wood-Charlson


Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin | 2016

Climate Is Variable, but Is Our Science?

Ashley A. Coble; Rebecca G. Asch; Sara Rivero‐Calle; Sarah M. Heerhartz; Johnna M. Holding; Colin T. Kremer; Michael Finiguerra; Kristin E. Strock


Harmful Algae | 2014

Sodium channel expression in the copepod Acartia hudsonica as a function of exposure to paralytic shellfish toxin (PST)

Michael Finiguerra; David E. Avery; Hans G. Dam

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Hans G. Dam

University of Connecticut

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David E. Avery

University of Connecticut

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Huan Zhang

University of Connecticut

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Senjie Lin

University of Connecticut

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Ashley K. Elgin

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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