EcoPhysiology and Conservation: The Contribution of Endocrinology and Immunology
Organizers: Robert Stevenson (UMass Boston), Shea Tuberty (Appalachian State University), John Wingfield (University of Washington) and Peter deFur (Virginia Commonwealth University; Environmental Stewardship Concepts).
From hormones to antibodies: Physiologists offer new approaches in the global biodiversity conservation effort.
Climate change, ozone depletion, habitat loss and the release of toxic chemicals are among many factors that threaten the health of our environment and directly or indirectly contribute to biodiversity loss.
This year the Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology is sponsoring a symposium titled “Ecophysiology and Conservation: The Contribution of Endocrinology and Immunology” to help address the loss of biodiversity.
Physiologists from many sub-disciplines (integrative, comparative, evolutionary, and environmental) are gathering to compare approaches and to define the unique contributions they can make in the emerging field of Conservation Physiology.
A host of conservation issues are being addressed. Scientists are developing new tools that identify stressed and unhealthy animals in the field based on immunological and endocrine signals. They are also using physiological tools to investigate the mechanistic underpinnings of behavioral choices that determine source and sink populations and the carrying capacity of specific habitats.
One of the co organizers of the symposium, Dr. Rob Stevenson of UMass Boston thinks that the presentations about amphibians will generate lots of interest because amphibian populations are so threatened. He added “Their porous skins make them especially vulnerable to many kinds of toxic chemicals.”
Another co organizer, Dr. Shea Tuberty of Appalachian State University has gathered a number of scientists working on endocrine disrupters in invertebrates. He commented, “due to their important positions in all aquatic and terrestrial food webs, invertebrate populations must be conserved to ensure the health of fish, bird, and mammal species.”
The goal of our symposium is to initiate a field the organizers have termed Conservation Physiology. Conservation physiology will help establish better mechanistic and theoretical linkages across levels of biological organization and between the ecological, behavioral, and genetic studies currently of focus in Conservation Biology.
Society president and co-organizer Professor John Wingfield of the University of Washington noted, “This symposium represents a concerted effort by our society to address the global issue of ‘ecosystem health’.” He added, “Young scientists are especially concerned about biodiversity loss and the older generation of ecophysiologists have first-hand experience with the losses of populations at their field sites.”
Dr. Stevenson hopes that papers produced from the symposium will encourages physiologists to use their knowledge in the preservation of biodiversity.
This symposium will begin the process of drawing these scientists together and identifying conservation as a new direction in physiology. This symposium is supported in part by The Crustacean Society, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the SICB Divisions of Comparative Endocrinology and Invertebrate Zoology.
Supported by a Grant (#034822) of the National Science Foundation.
Click here to download MS Word file containing all abstracts.
Schedule
Day 1 |
Session I |
Conservation Physiology: Overviews in Vertebrate Endocrinology and Immunology |
|
Chair: Rob Stevenson |
|
12:30 | Robert Stevenson | Welcome and Symposium Introduction. |
12:40 | Susumu Ishii | Endocrine Approaches to Conservation Biology using Classic and Modern Techniques. |
1:00 | Cynthia Carey | How Physiological Methods and Concepts Can Be Used in Conservation. |
1:20 | John Wingfield | Field Endocrinology and Conservation Biology. |
1:40 | Sam Wasser | Integrating Physiological and Genetic Approaches for Landscape Conservation. |
2:00 | Mickie Powell | Reproductive Hormone Concentrations in the Atlantic Hagfish Myxine glutinosa. |
2:20 | Louise Rollins-Smith | Antimicrobial Peptide Defenses in Amphibian Skin. |
2:40 | Tyrone Hayes | Conservation Physiology: The Amphibian Response to Pesticide Contamination. |
3:00 | Cathy Propper | Non-conventional Measures of Endocrine Disruption: From Orphan Nuclear Receptors to Pheromones. |
3:20 | Michael Baker | Xenobiotics and the Evolution of Multicellular Animals. |
3:40 | Lou Guillette | Aquatic Species in Ecosystems at Risk: Genomic Approaches for Assessing Normal and Abnormal Endocrine Responses. |
3:00-5:30 |
Poster Session |
|
|
|
|
Day 2 |
Session II |
Conservation Physiology: Invertebrate Endocrine Disruptors I |
|
Chair: Shea Tuberty |
|
7:50 |
Shea Tuberty |
Introduction |
8:00 |
Milton Fingerman |
A retrospective look at the development of ecotoxicology from Rachel Carson to the present. |
8:20 |
Enmin Zou |
Impact of xenobiotics on crustacean molting. |
8:40 |
Geoff Scott |
Agricultural and Urban NPS Runoff Effects on Grass Shrimp Population Life History Dynamics. |
9:00 |
Chuck McKenney |
The Influence of Insect JHA’s on Metamorphosis and Reproduction in Estuarine Crustaceans. |
9:20 |
Shea Tuberty |
Ecdysone responses of two estuarine crustaceans exposed through complete larval development to juvenile hormone agonist insecticides. |
9:40 |
Sandy Raimondo |
Population-level response of the mysid, Americamysis bahia, to varying thiobencarb concentrations based on age-structured population models. |
10:00 |
Coffee Break |
|
|
|
|
Day |
Session III |
Conservation Physiology: Invertebrate Endocrine Disruptors II |
|
Chair: Peter deFur |
|
10:20 |
Peter DeFur |
Importance of invertebrate models for EDC’s in the field. |
10:40 |
Michael Horst |
Acute Effects of Methoprene on Survival, Cuticular Morphogenesis and Shell Biosynthesis in the American Lobster, Homarus americanus. |
11:00 |
Tom Wilson |
Response of Drosophila melanogaster to insect growth regulator insecticides. |
11:20 |
Koji Arizono |
The occurrence of intersex in Japanese freshwater crab. |
11:40 |
Matthew Sanders |
Vitellin-like proteins in larval Crustacea: potential biomarkers of xeno-oestrogen exposure. |
12:00 |
Ernie Chang |
The Hormones Regulating Crustacean Growth, Metabolism, and Reproduction: Multiple Targets for Endocrine Disruption. |
12:20 |
Lunch |
|
|
|
|
Day 2 |
Session IV |
Conservation Physiology: Invertebrate Endocrine Disruptors III |
|
Chair: Shea Tuberty |
|
1:00 |
Ian Callard |
Caenorhabitis elegans and Elliptio complanata: steroid responses and potential steroid response pathways. |
1:20 |
Eva Oberdorster |
Expression of the peptide hormone APGWamide in imposex and normal snails: A neurotoxicity mechanism for imposex induction. |
1:40 |
Gerald LeBlanc |
Testosterone-Fatty Acid Esterification: A Unique Target for the Endocrine Toxicity of Tributyltin to Gastropods. |
2:00 |
Kevin Krajiniak |
A survey of invertebrate FMRFamide-Related Peptides: Annelid Endocrine Disruptors. |
2:20 |
Carsten Muller |
Pheromonal communication in Nereids and the likely intervention by petroleum derived pollutants. |
2:40 |
Ann Tarrant |
Effects of Estrogens on Reef-building Corals: Comparisons with Vertebrates. |
3:00 |
Jennifer Fox |
Non-traditional target of endocrine disrupting chemicals: the roots of hormone signaling. |
3:00-5:30 |
Poster Sessions |
|