Project description:Transcripts of the gill epithelium from three different stocks of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) migrating from freshwater river to lake (Saimaa stock, SS), brackish water (Neva stock, NS) or seawater (Teno stock, TS) were compared at three successive developmental stages (parr, smolt and postsmolt) using the 16K GRASP cDNA microarray platform.
Project description:In order to understand how Phormidium mats establish, and the role of associated taxa in their development, we collected biofilms over a 19-day growth period during a nitrate-induced bloom event in the Wai-iti River for proteogenomics analysis. At the onset of a late summer bloom, cobbles from the Wai-iti River (Nelson, New Zealand) were removed, cleared of incipient growth with sterile sponges, and placed back into the river. Clearing was gentle as seeding from the pre-existing rock surface is important for bloom establishment [24]. Five pre-cleared cobbles were collected at each of 3 time points to capture the first 3, 6 and 9 days of growth (Table S1). Additional cobbles that contemporaneously developed biofilms were collected at days 12 and 19.