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  • Wiley  (91,257)
  • 2000-2004  (91,257)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-04-25
    Description: Palaeoenvironmental records from permafrost sequences complemented by infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) and 230Th/U dates from Bol'shoy Lyakhovsky Island (73°20′N, 141°30′E) document the environmental history in the region for at least the past 200 ka. Pollen spectra and insect fauna indicate that relatively wet grasssedge tundra habitats dominated during an interstadial c. 200-170 ka BP. Summers were rather warm and wet, while stable isotopes reflect severe winter conditions. The pollen spectra reflect sparser grass-sedge vegetation during a Taz (Late Saalian) stage, c. 170-130 ka BP, with environmental conditions much more severe compared with the previous interstadial. Open Poaceae and Artemisia plant associations dominated vegetation at the beginning of the Kazantsevo (Eemian) c. 130 ka BP. Some shrubs (Alnus fruticosa, Salix, Betula nana) grew in more protected and wetter places as well. The climate was relatively warm during this time, resulting in the melting of Saalian ice wedges. Later, during the interglacial optimum, shrub tundra with Alnus fruticosa and Betula nana s.l. dominated vegetation. Climate was relatively wet and warm. Quantitative pollen-based climate reconstruction suggests that mean July temperatures were 4-5°C higher than the present during the optimum of the Eemian, while late Eemian records indicate significant climate deterioration. © 2004 Taylor & Francis.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-07-06
    Description: Late Quaternary permafrost deposits on Big Lyakhovsky Island (New Siberian Islands, Russian Arctic) were studied with the aim of reconstructing the palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental conditions of northern Siberia. Hydrogen and oxygen stable isotope analyses are presented for six different generations of ice wedges as well as for recent ice wedges and precipitation. An age of about 200 ka BP was determined for an autochtonous peat layer in ice-rich deposits by U/Th method, containing the oldest ice wedges ever analysed for hydrogen and oxygen isotopes. The palaeoclimatic reconstruction revealed a period of severe winter temperatures at that time. After a gap in the sedimentation history of several tens of thousands of years, ice-wedge growth was re-initiated around 50 ka BP by a short period of extremely cold winters and rapid sedimentation leading to ice-wedge burial and characteristic ice-soil wedges (‘polosatics’). This corresponds to the initial stage for the Late Weichselian Ice Complex, a peculiar cryolithogenic periglacial formation typical of the lowlands of northern Siberia. The Ice Complex ice wedges reflect cold winters and similar climatic conditions as around 200 ka BP. With a sharp rise in υ18O of 6‰ and υD of 40‰, the warming trend between Pleistocene and Holocene ice wedges is documented. Stable isotope data of recent ice wedges show that Big Lyakhovsky Island has never been as warm in winter as today.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 3
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    Wiley
    In:  Responding to global environmental change | Encyclopedia of global environmental change
    Publication Date: 2022-03-21
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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  • 4
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    Wiley
    In:  Responding to global environmental change. Encyclopedia of global environmental change
    Publication Date: 2022-03-21
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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  • 5
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    (FASEB) Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology | Wiley
    In:  FASEB Journal, 15 (5). A1095-A1095.
    Publication Date: 2022-01-13
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-09-07
    Description: The reproductive system is described from 15 giant squid Architeuthis sp., collected between 1972 and 2002 in South African waters. Distinctive features of the male reproductive system are the long muscular terminal organ, with elaboration of the anterior end, and modification of the tips of the ventral arms, probably hectocotilization. The spermatophoric organ has a long finishing gland that extends from the base of the gill. The terminal organ is differentiated internally into three distinct parts, involved in the guidance, storage, protection, expulsion and possibly the coating of spermatophores. Length of spermatophores in the terminal organ varied considerably. Several stages of spermatophores were found, from tentative to false to fully formed spermatophores, within a single animal. Distinctive features of the female reproductive system are a mesentery surrounding the main blood vessels of the ovary and attaching the ovary to the dorsal gladius chamber, multiple branching (at least three times) of the genital aorta that supplies the developing oocytes, high potential fecundity (3.5–6.2 ± 106 oocytes), small eggs and short oviducts that suggest intermittent (extended) spawning. Large concentrations and single spermatangia were found in various places in females, indicating non-specific deposition. The transfer of spermatophores is probably rapid, perhaps because of considerable sexual size dimorphism (at maturity, males are much smaller than females). Implants in males are probably self-induced since the majority were found within reach of the terminal organ opening (primarily on the ventral arms in males).
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  • 7
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    Wiley | The Zoological Society of London
    In:  Journal of Zoology, 252 (2). pp. 163-177.
    Publication Date: 2021-07-20
    Description: A type of apparent photoreceptor, the nuchal organ, is described in the sepiolid squid Euprymna scolopes. These vesicles are identified in a variety of other cephalopod species. The nuchal organs have specific structural similarities to the already well-described photosensitive vesicles. Both organs have a distinct vesiculate structure and possess a rind consisting of several types of cells. Certain rind cells from both organs send processes with microvilli into the lumen of the vesicle forming a core area. Within the cores of both organs numerous microvilli occupy much of the core volume. These histological similarities provide strong evidence that the nuchal organs, like the photosensitive vesicles, are photoreceptors. Three distinct differences also exist between the nuchal organs and photosensitive vesicles: (1) the location of the nuchal organs differs from that of all known photosensitive vesicles in cephalopods; (2) the location of the nuchal organs is highly conservative in decapod cephalopods compared to the varying locations of the photosensitive vesicles; (3) the degree of structural order generally found within photosensitive vesicles is not apparent in the nuchal organs. The function of the nuchal organ is probably different from previously described photoreceptors in cephalopods.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-07-15
    Description: A mature female Galiteuthis glacialis (430 mm mantle length) was caught south of the Falkland Islands (53°S, 58°W) at a depth of 976-1001 m over a bottom depth of 1582-2378 m. A total of 8 spermatangia (15-19 mm in length) were found inserted into the mantle wall, which was of gelatinous consistency. Its ovary contained 3 605±42 oocytes, mostly 2.2-2.5 mm in length, and there were 21 ripe eggs (3.0-3.2±2.2-2.7 mm) in the oviducts. Only one resorpting oocyte (1.4 mm) was found. This is the only description of a mature female of this species, though two spent females have been previously described and three more mentioned by other authors.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2021-07-14
    Description: The Patagonian longfin squid Loligo gahi undertakes horizontal ontogenetic migrations on the Falkland shelf: juveniles move from spawning grounds located in shallow, inshore waters (20–50 m depths) to feeding grounds near the shelf edge (200–350 m depths). Immature squid feed and grow in these offshore feeding grounds and, upon maturation, migrate back to inshore waters to spawn. The possible influence of environmental factors on L. gahi migrations was investigated using data from oceanographic transects, crossing the region of known L. gahi occurrence. They were made from the inshore waters of East Falkland eastwards to depths of 1250 m on a monthly basis from 1999 to 2001. Four main water types were found in the region: Shelf, Sub-Antarctic Superficial and Antarctic Intermediate water masses, and Transient Zone waters. The inshore spawning grounds occur in the Shelf Water mass, whereas the feeding squid (medium-sized immature and maturing individuals) were associated with the Transient Zone. The 5.5°C isotherm appeared to mark the limit of squid distribution into deeper waters in all seasons. Seasonal changes in water mass characteristics and location were found to be important for seasonal changes in L. gahi migrations on the Falkland shelf.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2021-07-12
    Description: A microsatellite dinucleotide-enriched library was obtained from the European squid (Loligo vulgaris) and five species-specific dinucleotide markers were optimized. These markers are highly polymorphic with average expected heterozygosity ranging from 0.706 to 0.927 and allele number ranging from 7 to 17. This set of primers is suitable for population genetic studies.
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