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Dive into the research topics where Mirosław Przybylski is active.

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Featured researches published by Mirosław Przybylski.


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2015

Population-specific responses to an invasive species

Martin Reichard; Karel Douda; Mirosław Przybylski; Oana Paula Popa; Eva Karbanová; Klára Matasová; Kateřina Rylková; Matej Polačik; Radim Blažek; Carl Smith

Predicting the impacts of non-native species remains a challenge. As populations of a species are genetically and phenotypically variable, the impact of non-native species on local taxa could crucially depend on population-specific traits and adaptations of both native and non-native species. Bitterling fishes are brood parasites of unionid mussels and unionid mussels produce larvae that parasitize fishes. We used common garden experiments to measure three key elements in the bitterling–mussel association among two populations of an invasive mussel (Anodonta woodiana) and four populations of European bitterling (Rhodeus amarus). The impact of the invasive mussel varied between geographically distinct R. amarus lineages and between local populations within lineages. The capacity of parasitic larvae of the invasive mussel to exploit R. amarus was higher in a Danubian than in a Baltic R. amarus lineage and in allopatric than in sympatric R. amarus populations. Maladaptive oviposition by R. amarus into A. woodiana varied among populations, with significant population-specific consequences for R. amarus recruitment. We suggest that variation in coevolutionary states may predispose different populations to divergent responses. Given that coevolutionary relationships are ubiquitous, population-specific attributes of invasive and native populations may play a critical role in the outcome of invasion. We argue for a shift from a species-centred to population-centred perspective of the impacts of invasions.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2017

Evidence of the sterility of allotetraploid Cobitis loaches (Teleostei, Cobitidae) using testes ultrastructure

Dorota Juchno; Anna Pecio; Alicja Boroń; Anna Leska; Olga Jablonska; Beata Irena Cejko; Radosław Kajetan Kowalski; Sylwia Judycka; Mirosław Przybylski

The diploid-polyploid populations of Cobitis distributed in Poland are usually composed of the spined loach Cobitis taenia or, less often, the Danubian loach C. elongatoides and their triploid (females) and tetraploid hybrids (females and males). The aim of this study was to determine whether tetraploid males participate in the reproduction process by analyzing their testis ultrastructure and the process of spermatogenesis in comparison with diploid males of both parental species. Tetraploid loaches were obtained from three different diploid-polyploid populations distributed in Poland. The structure of Cobitis testes are typical for most Teleostei fish with cystic-type spermatogenesis. The successive stages of developing germ cells are enclosed within cysts formed by the Sertoli cells. This paper morphologically describes the different germ cell stages of spermatogenesis (spermatogonia, spermatocytes, spermatids, and spermatozoa) of C. taenia and C. elongatoides and provides a pioneering ultrastructural analysis of tetraploid Cobitis testes which reveals their unusual structure for the first time. Thus, cysts with normal spermatogonia and spermatocytes (pachyten or leptoten stages) containing synaptonemal complexes were present and no spermatids or spermatozoa were observed. Moreover, in contrast to previously analyzed diploid species, single cells or all of the cells within the cysts displayed chromatin condensation and/or chromatin fragmentation. The obtained results clearly demonstrated that tetraploid males are sterile and diploids are fertile and are the only sperm donors in the reproduction processes of diploid-polyploid Cobitis populations.


The Science of Nature | 2018

Parental care compromises feeding in the pumpkinseed (Lepomis gibbosus)

Grzegorz Zięba; Małgorzata Dukowska; Mirosław Przybylski; Michael G. Fox; Carl Smith

Providing parental care is potentially costly. Costs can arise through elevated energy expenditure or from an increased risk of mortality. A cost of parental care can also occur because a parent is compromised in their ability to forage. We used pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus, a fish with an alternative male mating strategy, to test whether parental males differed in their feeding in comparison with females and cuckolder males. To address this question, we examined the stomach contents of female, cuckolder male, and parental male pumpkinseed during the breeding season over an entire diel cycle. We showed that parental males had a lower total weight of food in their stomachs in comparison with females, while cuckolder males did not. Parental males also had a lower weight and number of chironomids in their stomachs. The temporal pattern of feeding of parental males diverged from that of females, and they had a lower probability of pupal chironomids in their stomachs, which implies spatial segregation in foraging. Parental males had a greater probability of conspecific eggs in their stomachs than females, while the probability of egg cannibalism did not differ between cuckolder males and females. Overall, these finding meet predictions in accordance with an assumption that parental care and territoriality can compromise feeding.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2017

Implications of absence of seawater-type mitochondria-rich cells and results of molecular analyses for derivation of the non-parasitic Ukrainian brook lamprey Eudontomyzon mariae

Helmut Bartels; Christoph Wrede; Mirosław Przybylski; I. C. Potter; Margaret F. Docker

The Ukrainian brook lamprey Eudontomyzon mariae is the most widespread lamprey species in eastern Europe. Although E. mariae is generally considered a derivative of Eudontomyzon danfordi, an exclusively freshwater parasitic species, it has alternatively been suggested that it was recently derived from a now extinct anadromous Black Sea ancestor. Several non-parasitic lampreys and the landlocked sea lamprey, which have recently evolved from anadromous ancestors, still develop a seawater-type mitochondria-rich cell (SW-MRC) in their gills. In contrast, this cell type is not present in the gills of either Lampetra aepyptera, a non-parasitic lamprey of ancient origin, or the parasitic Ichthyomyzon unicuspis and I. castaneus that likewise have long evolutionary histories in fresh water. Eudontomyzon mariae from the Vistula River in the Baltic River basin does not possess SW-MRC, which is inconsistent with a recent origin from an anadromous ancestor. Mitochondrial DNA sequence data were thus used to infer the relationship between different populations of E. mariae and E. danfordi, and to reconstruct the transition from anadromy to freshwater residency. The results suggest that E. mariae evolved independently in the Baltic, Black, and Caspian Sea basins, and not recently from an anadromous ancestor. Although E. mariae in the Danube River may have arisen relatively recently from E. danfordi (differing by 0.7–1.1% in cytochrome b gene sequence), other E. mariae populations (including in the Vistula River) are genetically closer (0.6%) to the hypothetical ancestor of both E. mariae and E. danfordi. That ancestor was probably a freshwater resident, since SW-MRCs are not rapidly lost following confinement in fresh water.


Hydrobiologia | 2011

Erratum to: Life-history traits of Amur sleeper, Perccottus glenii

Joanna Grabowska; Dariusz Pietraszewski; Mirosław Przybylski; Ali Serhan Tarkan; Lidia Marszał; Magdalena Lampart-Kałużniacka

Due to an unfortunate turn of events, the first-and surnames of all authors were interchanged in the original publication. The correct representation of the authors and their affiliations are listed above and below and should be treated as definitive by the reader.


Biological Invasions | 2013

Competitive interactions for food resources between invasive racer goby Babka gymnotrachelus and native European bullhead Cottus gobio.

Tomasz Kakareko; Jarosław Kobak; Joanna Grabowska; Łukasz Jermacz; Mirosław Przybylski; Małgorzata Poznańska; Dariusz Pietraszewski; Gordon H. Copp


Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries | 2015

Life-history traits of non-native freshwater fish invaders differentiate them from natives in the Central European bioregion

Joanna Grabowska; Mirosław Przybylski


Folia Biologica | 2003

Microhabitat preferences of spined loach, Cobitis sp. in the Grabia River--multivariation approach.

Mirosław Przybylski; Zieba G; Marszał L; Dukowska M


Ecological Engineering | 2017

Spatially diverse recovery (1986–2012) of fish fauna in the Warta River, Poland: The role of recolonizers’ availability after large-area degradation

Andrzej Kruk; Michał Ciepłucha; Grzegorz Zięba; Dagmara Błońska; Szymon Tybulczuk; Mariusz Tszydel; Lidia Marszał; Bartosz Janic; Dariusz Pietraszewski; Mirosław Przybylski; T. Penczak


Limnologica | 2016

Interspecific competition for a shelter between non-native racer goby and native European bullhead under experimental conditions – Effects of season, fish size and light conditions

Joanna Grabowska; Tomasz Kakareko; Dagmara Błońska; Mirosław Przybylski; Jarosław Kobak; Łukasz Jermacz; Gordon H. Copp

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Carl Smith

University of Leicester

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Jarosław Kobak

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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