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We asked if environmental temperature alters thyroid hormone metabolism within the hypothalamus, thereby providing a neuroendocrine mechanism by which temperature could be integrated with photoperiod to regulate seasonal rhythms. We used immunohistochemistry to assess the effects of low-temperature winter dormancy at 4 °C or 12 °C on thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) within the infundibulum of the pituitary as well as deiodinase 2 (Dio2) and 3 (Dio3) within the hypothalamus of red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis). Both the duration and, in males, magnitude of low-temperature dormancy altered deiodinase immunoreactivity within the hypothalamus, increasing the area of Dio2-immunoreactivity in males and females and decreasing the number of Dio3-immunoreactive cells in males after 8–16 weeks. Reciprocal changes in Dio2/3 favor the accumulation of triiodothyronine within the hypothalamus. Whether TSH mediates these effects requires further study, as significant changes in TSH-immunoreactive cell number were not observed. Temporal changes in deiodinase immunoreactivity coincided with an increase in the proportion of males exhibiting courtship behavior as well as changes in the temporal pattern of courtship behavior after emergence. Our findings mirror those of previous studies, in which males require low-temperature exposure for at least 8 weeks before significant changes in gonadotropin-releasing hormone immunoreactivity and sex steroid hormones are observed. Collectively, these data provide evidence that the neuroendocrine pathway regulating the reproductive axis via thyroid hormone metabolism is capable of transducing temperature information. Because all vertebrates can potentially use temperature as a supplementary cue, these results are broadly applicable to understanding how environment–organism interactions mediate seasonally adaptive responses.more » « less
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Dennehy, John J (Ed.)We present the complete chloroplast genome sequence of Rhodochorton tenue from San Juan Island, Washington. The chloroplast genome of R. tenue is 192,037 bp in length, contains 244 genes, and is similar in content to Acrochaetium secundatum. Rhodochorton tenue is genetically distinct from Rhodochorton purpureum from the North Atlantic Ocean.more » « less
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null (Ed.)The manuscript assesses the current and expected future global drivers of Southern Ocean (SO) ecosystems. Atmospheric ozone depletion over the Antarctic since the 1970s, has been a key driver, resulting in springtime cooling of the stratosphere and intensification of the polar vortex, increasing the frequency of positive phases of the Southern Annular Mode (SAM). This increases warm air-flow over the East Pacific sector (Western Antarctic Peninsula) and cold air flow over the West Pacific sector. SAM as well as El Niño Southern Oscillation events also affect the Amundsen Sea Low leading to either positive or negative sea ice anomalies in the west and east Pacific sectors, respectively. The strengthening of westerly winds is also linked to shoaling of deep warmer water onto the continental shelves, particularly in the East Pacific and Atlantic sectors. Air and ocean warming has led to changes in the cryosphere, with glacial and ice sheet melting in both sectors, opening up new ice free areas to biological productivity, but increasing seafloor disturbance by icebergs. The increased melting is correlated with a salinity decrease particularly in the surface 100 m. Such processes could increase the availability of iron, which is currently limiting primary production over much of the SO. Increasing CO 2 is one of the most important SO anthropogenic drivers and is likely to affect marine ecosystems in the coming decades. While levels of many pollutants are lower than elsewhere, persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and plastics have been detected in the SO, with concentrations likely enhanced by migratory species. With increased marine traffic and weakening of ocean barriers the risk of the establishment of non-indigenous species is increased. The continued recovery of the ozone hole creates uncertainty over the reversal in sea ice trends, especially in the light of the abrupt transition from record high to record low Antarctic sea ice extent since spring 2016. The current rate of change in physical and anthropogenic drivers is certain to impact the Marine Ecosystem Assessment of the Southern Ocean (MEASO) region in the near future and will have a wide range of impacts across the marine ecosystem.more » « less
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Stajich, Jason E. (Ed.)ABSTRACT Here, we present the complete chloroplast genomes of Quercus × morehus , Q. wislizeni , and Q. kelloggii from California. The genomes are 161,119 to 161,130 bp and encode 132 genes. Quercus × morehus and Q. wislizeni are identical in sequence but differ from Q. kelloggii by three indels and eight SNPs.more » « less
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