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"Lavin, Santiago"
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Can Synbone® cylinders and deer femurs reproduce ballistic fracture patterns observed in human long bones?
2023
Whereas gunshot injuries in human craniums have been well studied, reliable data on fracture patterns in ballistic long bone trauma remains scarce. Further information useful for forensic trauma interpretation and reconstruction may be retrieved from experimentally produced gunshot fractures. In order to avoid the use of human specimens for experimental research, it is of great interest to determine whether alternative models can reproduce the ballistic fracture patterns of human long bones. To address this question, we shot seven healthy adult human femurs and humeri each, ten samples each of two different polyurethane cylinders from Synbone
®
and four femurs from female red deer. The specimens were embedded in ballistic gelatin and perpendicularly shot from a distance of 2 m, using a 9-mm full metal jacket projectile at an impact velocity of 360 m/s. The macroscopical appearance of the detailed fracture pattern considering entry, exit and general cortical traits as well as the bullet’s energy lost upon impact were compared between the models. Despite some general similarities, neither of the two alternative models entirely reproduced the fracture patterns of human long bones. Comparing the two alternative models, the surrogate model revealed more significant differences to the human fracture than the animal model. This leads to the conclusion that the polyurethane material provides a different failure mechanism than real bone, underpinning the challenge in deploying an accurate analog.
Journal Article
Assessing methods to live-capture wild boars (Sus scrofa) in urban and peri-urban environments
by
Conejero, Carles
,
López-Olvera, Jorge Ramón
,
Mentaberre, Gregorio
in
Animal Husbandry
,
animal stress
,
Animal welfare
2020
BackgroundWild boar (Sus scrofa) populations are increasing worldwide and invading urban areas. Live-capture can improve the management of this challenge, maximising efficiency, allowing scientific studies and potentially improving animal welfare. This study assesses teleanaesthesia, drop-net, corral trap and cage trap to live-capture wild boar in urban and peri-urban areas, evaluating efficiency and animal stress through haematology and serum biochemistry.MethodsFrom 2012 to 2018, 655 wild boars were captured in 279 operations (drop-net=17, teleanaesthesia=186, cage trap=66 and corral trap=10) in the urban and peri-urban areas of Barcelona (Spain). Haematological and serum biochemical variables were determined in 145 wild boars (42 drop-netted, 41 teleanaesthetised, 38 cage-trapped and 24 corral-trapped).ResultsPerformance (wild boars captured per operation) was highest for drop-net, followed by corral and cage traps, and finally teleanaesthesia. The three physical capture methods were more stressful than teleanaesthesia, causing a more intense physiological reaction, muscular damage, renal function impairment and homeostasis adaption. Stress response was predominantly adrenergic for drop-net and cortisol-induced for cage and corral traps.ConclusionTeleanaesthesia is the choice in reactive urban situations thanks to its adaptability; drop-net effectively targets wild boars in peri-urban environments; cage and corral traps are useful as long-term methods in specific areas.
Journal Article
Neutral Impact of Cattle Grazing in Pyrenean Oak Forests Integrity
by
Serrano, Emmanuel
,
Ibáñez, Miguel
,
López-Garrido, Omar
in
Beef cattle
,
Behavior
,
Biodiversity
2024
The combination of logging, burning, and livestock farming has been the main driver of European landscape sustainability for thousands of years. Whether or not livestock could keep these habitats on their own is under debate when extensive livestock grazing is kept understory in forests of high environmental value that, in turn, are affected by global warming. In this work, the impact of beef cattle on the diversity, shrub cover, and primary production of the Atlantic Pyrenean oak (Quercus pyrenaica Willd.) in northern Spain has been evaluated. The research studied their feeding habits using the faecal cuticle micro histological analysis in dung samples. Then, the effects of cattle grazing on the cover and alpha diversity of woody plants were evaluated. Finally, oaks’ primary production and phenology in grazed and control areas were compared. The results show that cattle feed on woody (an average of 30% of non-leguminous woody) and annual plant species (more than 20% of forbs) but do not affect plant cover or alpha diversity of vegetation. However, oak phenology differed between grazed and ungrazed treatments, probably due to the spatial variability of grazed forests. It can be concluded that understory grazing in Pyrenean oak forests could be considered a sustainable silvopastoral activity with a neutral impact on forest integrity.
Journal Article
Biomonitoring of metals and metalloids with raptors from Portugal and Spain: a review
by
Colaço, Bruno
,
Oliveira, Paula Alexandra
,
Faustino-Rocha, Ana I
in
adverse effects
,
aquatic environment
,
arsenic
2016
The analysis of metals in different tissues of raptors has been an important tool for assessing metal pollution. Several studies using a range of sentinel raptor species have been carried out in Portugal and Spain since the 1980s to identify the adverse effects in the animals themselves and on their populations, to identify the contamination of the food chain, to determine the levels of environmental contamination and to estimate human health risks. The aim of this work is to provide synthesized information of the studies carried out in Portugal and Spain in the direct biomonitoring of metals and metalloids using raptors, through a systematic search of the published literature. The information is summarized taking into account specific issues, such as monitored raptor species, sampling periods, monitored areas, type of samples, analytical techniques used in the determination of the metals and metalloids, the analysed metals and metalloids, and overall analysis of the concentrations obtained. There is a striking difference between the number of studies performed in Portugal and Spain, and most of them have been carried out in Spain. The eagle owl, black kite, and common buzzard were the species from which the greatest number of individuals have been analysed. Among the most analyzed biological samples, the blood and liver samples were used to measure the concentrations of all studied metals, while bone was mainly collected to evaluate chronic exposure to lead and feathers to evaluate exposure to mercury during feather growth. Atomic absorption spectrometry has been the most frequently performed technique to determine the majority of metals and arsenic. In general, the concentrations of metals detected in raptor samples from Portugal and Spain are low and insufficient to produce toxic side effects. Only lead, in certain cases, can be related with toxic side effects. However, particular attention should be given to mercury due to its high toxicity, its transport from an aquatic environment to the adjacent terrestrial food web, and because the mercury toxicity threshold has yet to be established for raptors. This work confirms the need for further biomonitoring studies of metals with raptors, especially in Portugal; the establishing of national programs to conduct long-term studies; and creating a network between Portugal and Spain to study environmental contamination using raptors.
Journal Article
Habitat and Harvesting Practices Influence Horn Growth of Male Ibex
by
OLIVÉ-BOIX, XAVIER
,
MENTABERRE, GREGORIO
,
TORRES, RITA T.
in
Annual variations
,
Capra
,
Capra pyrenaica
2020
Size-selective harvesting of wild ungulates can trigger a range of ecological and evolutionary consequences. It remains unclear how environmental conditions, including changes in habitat, climate, and local weather conditions, dilute or strengthen the effects of trophy hunting. We analyzed horn length measurements of 2,815 male ibex (Capra pyrenaica) that were harvested from 1995 to 2017 in Els Ports de Tortosa i Beseit National Hunting Reserve in northeastern Spain. We used linear mixed models to determine the magnitude of inter-individual horn growth variability and partial least square path models to evaluate long-term effects of environmental change, population size, and hunting strategy on horn growth. Age-specific horn length significantly decreased over the study period, and nearly a quarter (23%) of its annual variation was attributed to individual heterogeneity among males. The encroachment of pine (Pinus spp.) forests had a negative effect on annual horn growth, possibly through nutritional impoverishment. The harvesting of trophy and selective individuals (e.g., small-horned males) from the entire population increased horn growth, probably because it reduced the competition for resources and prevented breeding of these smaller males. Local weather conditions and population size did not influence horn growth. Our study demonstrates how habitat changes are altering the horn growth of male ibex. We suggest that habitat interventions, such the thinning of pine forests, can contribute to securing the sustainability of trophy hunting. Even in situations where size-selective harvesting is not causing a detectable phenotypic response, management actions leading to the expansion of preferred land cover types, such as grass-rich open areas, can have a positive effect on ungulate fitness. Forest encroachment on open meadows and heterogeneous grasslands is pervasive throughout Mediterranean ecosystems. Therefore, our management recommendations can be extended to the landscape level, which will have the potential to mitigate the side effects of habitat deterioration on the phenotypic traits of wild ibex.
Journal Article
Biomonitoring of heavy metals (Cd, Hg, and Pb) and metalloid (As) with the Portuguese common buzzard (Buteo buteo)
2014
The accumulation of heavy metals in the environment may have a wide range of health effects on animals and humans. Thus, in this study, the concentrations of arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), and mercury (Hg) in the blood and tissues (liver and kidney) of Portuguese common buzzards (Buteo buteo) were determined by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) in order to monitor environmental pollution to these elements. In general, Hg and As were the elements which appeared in the highest and lowest concentrations, respectively. A highest percentage of non-detected concentration was found for blood Cd (94.6 %) but, in turn, it was the only metal that was detected in all kidney samples. The kidney was the analyzed sample which showed the highest concentrations of each element evaluated. Statistically, significant differences among blood, liver, and kidney samples were observed for As and Cd (P < 0.05). Cd concentrations in kidney and liver varied significantly with age: Adults showed higher hepatic and renal Cd concentrations than juveniles. Blood Pb concentration seems to show an association with the hunting season. Although raptors are at the top of the food chain and are thus potentially exposed to any biomagnification processes that may occur in a food web, the individuals evaluated in this study generally had low levels of heavy metals in blood and tissues. However, chronic exposure to these metals was verified. The results presented here lend weight to arguments in favor of continuous biomonitoring of metals and metalloids, since heavy metals may accumulate to levels that will pose a risk to both human health and the environment.
Journal Article
Stochastic assessment of management strategies for a Mediterranean peri-urban wild boar population
by
Roldán, Joan
,
López-Martín, José María
,
López-Olvera, Jorge Ramón
in
Anthropogenic factors
,
Behavior
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2018
Wild boar (Sus scrofa) population spread into urban and periurban areas has exacerbated conflicts with humans. There is a need for planned wild boar management strategies, and Population viability analysis (PVA) combined with perturbation analyses allow the assessment of the management effort of control methods. Our study aims to develop stochastic predictive models of the increasing wild boar population of the 80 km2 peri-urban Mediterranean area of Collserola Natural Park (CNP), located near Barcelona, Spain, as well as assessing specific management measures (including reduced food availability, selective harvest, and reduction in fertility). Population parameters were estimated from previously published census and hunting data provided by the CNP and the local hunting administration. The results revealed that under the current conditions the CNP wild boar population will continue to increase. The most efficient strategy to reduce wild boar abundance was a combination of reducing supplementary anthropogenic food resources and selective removal of juvenile (<1 year) and yearling (1-2 years) wild boar. These strategies will probably be also the most efficient ones in other oversupplemented increasing wild boar populations in similar situations, although specific studies will be needed to fine-tune the best management option for each context. PVA allows the prediction of future population trends and the assessment of the efficacy and efficiency of potential management strategies before implementing management measures.
Journal Article
Predicting fiber content in herbivore fecal samples using a multispecies NIRS model
by
Garel, Mathieu
,
Serrano, Emmanuel
,
López-Olvera, Jorge R.
in
Accuracy
,
Acids
,
Analytical chemistry
2025
Fiber is essential for rumen health, microbial fermentation, and the energy supply of herbivores. Even though the study of fecal fiber contents (neutral detergent fiber NDF, acid detergent fiber ADF, and acid detergent lignin ADL) using near-infrared reflectance spectroscopy (NIRS) has allowed investigating nutritional ecology of different herbivore species, NIRS calibrations are species-specific and require a large number of samples for predictions. A multispecies calibration would be an advantage since samples from different herbivores could be used to calibrate a model capable of predicting the fecal fiber content of other herbivores. To date, however, multispecies models have not been developed to predict fiber contents in the feces of herbivores. Here, we fill this gap by calibrating three fiber multispecies models (NDF, ADF and ADL) using fecal samples from domestic and wild herbivore species. We also evaluated the effect of incorporating sodium sulfite in fiber determination protocol. The initial dataset consisting of 445 samples of six herbivore species was used to calibrate (80% of the samples) and validate (20% of the samples) the models. Subsequently, 63 samples of five herbivores not included in the calibration set were used for the external validation of the model. Since sodium sulfite did not significantly improve fecal fiber prediction, our model was developed without this compound. The multispecies models obtained were highly accurate determining NDF, ADF and ADL (R 2 CAL , coefficient of determination in calibration, ≥ 0.93, R 2 VAL , coefficient of determination in validation, ≥ 0.91) and independent of external confounders. For external validation, the accuracy in predicting fecal samples in other herbivore species was also satisfactory, with consistently better values for NDF (R 2 VAL , 0.86–0.94) and ADF (R 2 VAL , 0.80–0.95) than for ADL (R 2 VAL , 0.66–0.89). We show that multispecies NIRS calibrations can be used with high accuracy to assess fecal fiber contents across diverse herbivore species. This finding represents a significant advance in the study of the nutritional ecology of herbivores with contrasting foraging patterns. In the future, widening the data range ( e . g ., species and locations) of the initial dataset could further improve the accuracy of these models.
Journal Article
Serological survey of Coxiella burnetii at the wildlife–livestock interface in the Eastern Pyrenees, Spain
by
Cabezón, Óscar
,
López-Olvera, Jorge Ramón
,
Colom-Cadena, Andreu
in
Alpine ecosystems
,
Animal Anatomy
,
Animals
2016
Background
Coxiella burnetii
is a zoonotic bacterium that infects a wide range of animal species and causes the disease Q fever. Both wild and domestic ruminants may be relevant in the epidemiology of
C. burnetii
infection. In order to investigate the significance of the ruminant host community in the alpine and subalpine ecosystems of the Eastern Pyrenees, Northeastern Spain, in the epidemiology of Q fever, a serological survey was performed on samples from 599 wild and 353 sympatric domestic ruminants.
Results
Specific antibodies against
C. burnetii
were detected with a commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Domestic sheep showed the highest prevalence (12.7 %, CI 95 % 8.6–16.9), followed by European mouflon (
Ovis orientalis musimon
) with a 6.8 % prevalence (CI 95 % 1.6–12.1), red deer (
Cervus elaphus
) with 2.4 % (CI 95 % 0–5.6), and cattle with a prevalence of 1.1 % (CI 95 % 0–3.2). No positive domestic goats, fallow deer (
Dama dama
), roe deer (
Capreolus capreolus
) and Southern chamois (
Rupicapra pyrenaica
) were detected. Sheep flock prevalence was 75 % (nine of the 12 sheep flocks sampled were positive, within-flock prevalence ranging from 11.1 to 25.0 %), whereas cattle herd prevalence was 11.1 % (one out of the nine cattle herds sampled was positive, within-herd prevalence of 10.0 %.
Conclusions
Both domestic and wild ruminants from the alpine and subalpine ecosystems of the Eastern Pyrenees were exposed to
C. burnetii
. The higher seroprevalence in sheep and its relative abundance suggest that this species may have a major contribution to the ecology of
C. burnetii
. Conversely, wild ruminants do not seem to represent a relevant host community for
C. burnetii
maintenance in the Eastern Pyrenees.
Journal Article
Antibodies to selected pathogens in wild boar (Sus scrofa) from Catalonia (NE Spain)
by
Mentaberre, Gregorio
,
Closa-Sebastià, Francesc
,
Lavín, Santiago
in
African swine fever
,
African swine fever virus
,
Antibodies
2011
From 2004 to 2007, blood samples from 273 healthy wild boars (
Sus scrofa
), culled during the hunting season, were obtained in three areas of Catalonia (NE Spain): Pyrenees, Sant Llorenç del Munt i l’Obac Natural Park (SLM), and Ports de Tortosa i Beseit National Hunting Reserve (PTB). We investigated the presence of antibodies against classical swine fever virus (CSFV), African swine fever virus (ASFV), porcine vesicular disease virus (PVDV), porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus (PRRSV), Aujeszky’s disease virus (ADV), porcine influenza A virus (PIV), porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2), porcine parvovirus (PPV),
Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae
,
Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
,
Salmonella
spp., and
Toxoplasma gondii
. Four wild boars were suspicious for CSFV, but the infection was discarded with a virus neutralization test, and infection with a border disease virus was confirmed. Negative results were obtained against ASFV and PVDV. Antibodies were detected against PRRSV (3%), ADV (0.8%), PIV (6.4%), PCV2 (64.6%), PPV (54.7%),
M. hyopneumoniae
(26.6%),
E. rhusiopathiae
(5.3%),
Salmonella
spp. (11.3%), and
T. gondii
(43.5%). In SLM, we detected a higher seroprevalence for PIV and
M. hyopneumoniae
and a lower seroprevalence for
E. rhusiopathiae
than in the other two areas. In PTB, seroprevalence was higher for PPV,
Salmonella
spp., and PCV2. Adult wild boar displayed higher seroprevalence for PPV, PIV, and
M. hyopneumoniae
, whereas presence of antibodies for
Salmonella
spp. was higher in juveniles compared with adults and piglets.
Journal Article