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  • Other Sources  (117)
  • Articles (OceanRep)  (117)
  • Wiley  (63)
  • Taylor & Francis  (49)
  • American Meteorological Society
  • Springer Nature
  • 2020-2022  (12)
  • 1995-1999  (105)
  • 1
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  Écoscience, 5 (3). pp. 361-394.
    Publication Date: 2020-04-20
    Description: It is well documented that animals take risk of predation into account when making decisions about how to behave in particular situations, often trading-off risk against opportunities for mating or acquiring energy. Such an ability implies that animals have reliable information about the risk of predation at a given place and time. Chemosensory cues are an important source of such information. They reliably reveal the presence of predators (or their presence in the immediate past) and may also provide information on predator activity level and diet. In certain circumstances (e.g., in the dark, for animals in hiding) they may be the only cues available. Although a vast literature exists on the responses of prey to predator chemosensory cues (or odours), these studies are widely scattered, from marine biology to biological control, and not well known or appreciated by behavioural ecologists. In this paper, we provide an exhaustive review of this literature, primarily in tabular form. We highlight some of the more representative examples in the text, and discuss some ecological and evolutionary aspects of the use of chemosensory information for prey decision making. Curiously, only one example illustrates the ability of birds to detect predator odours and we have found no examples for terrestrial insects, suggesting a fruitful area for future study.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  International Geology Review, 41 (3). pp. 243-262.
    Publication Date: 2017-11-24
    Description: A new image of the French continental crust between Brabant (Belgium) and the Basque province of Spain is presented on the basis of considerable recent geological and geophysical information as well as the compilation and reInterprétation of previously available data. The resulting section, which shows the main basement structures to a depth of 45 km, also is the first nonspeculative image of the westernmost part of the Variscan orogen. The French Global Geoscience Transect reveals a complete picture of this orogen between its remnant root and the surface. The divergent thrusts are bounded on the north and in the south by the old Brabant and Ebro-Aquitaine cratons, respectively; these thrusts also involve two previous plate boundaries. The lower part of the orogen is limited by a layered lower crust, probably of Permian age. Near the surface the Hercynian orogen is buried—near the northern end of the transect by the Paris Basin, which can be considered an eastward extension of the English Channel, and in the south by the South Armorican continental margin, which makes a transition between the oceanic crust of the Bay of Biscay and the axis of the Variscan orogen. In this area, the deep Parentis graben is located at the site of pronounced crustal thinning, since only 7 km of Hercynian crust are now preserved.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  South African Journal of Marine Science, 15 (1). pp. 207-223.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-26
    Description: A model is presented which tests the representation of the maturity process in terms of gonadosomatic indices (GSI) in chokka squid Loligo vulgaris reynaudii. It assumes that the true maturation process is reflected by the results of histological investigation, which cannot be used in large-scale ecological work in the field. However, the maturity scales used in ecological studies define some morphological categories which can be linked directly to microscopic development. Therefore, the overlap of GSI ranges for each morphological maturity category may be used to judge how well the GSIs represent the histological stages. Results have shown that the overlap is large and that GSI cannot be recommended as adequately reflecting the maturation process in squid. A morphological scale of maturity with possible broad applications in exploited families of squid is proposed as a better representation of the maturation process than GSI.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  South African Journal of Marine Science, 15 (1). pp. 1-7.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-26
    Description: Morphological differences between paralarvae of two loliginid squid species common in southern African waters (Loligo vulgaris reynaudii and Lolliguncula mercatoris) are described. The differences are: Loligo — "cheek patches" consisting of four dark chromatophores, nine large dark dorsal chromatophores on the mantle, tentacular clubs broad and much wider than tentacle stalks, proximal row of three club suckers with others tetraserial, suckers large enough to appear crowded on the club surface; Lolliguncula — "cheek patches" with three dark chromatophores, two pairs of" large, dark dorsal chromatophores on the mantle, tentacular clubs narrow, proximal club suckers arranged in three pairs, suckers small, not particularly crowded. Relationships with other myopsids are briefly discussed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2017-07-18
    Description: 1 Zonation is often seen in environments with a strong physico-chemical gradient, such as salt marshes. It has been hypothesized that plant species are limited in their distribution by abiotic factors towards the more extreme end of the gradient, and by competition towards the more favourable end. Invasion of the native clonal grass genus Elymus in many Wadden Sea marshes may be due to increasing atmospheric nitrogen input into a nitrogen-limited environment. However, at Thmlauer Bay, Germany, Elymus athericus does not occur in lower salt marsh communities that are dominated by a dwarf shrub (Atriplex portulacoides). We therefore hypothesized that at this site the downslope (= more extreme) distributional boundary of E. athericus is a result of competition with A. portulacoides rather than of physiological limits. 2 A factorial experiment was set up to investigate the effects of removal of each competitor and fertilization. The reciprocal effects of the species on each other were measured in terms of vegetation cover and above-ground biomass. The impact of the tidal regime on plant zonation was investigated by calculating inundation frequencies at the boundary between the two plant populations from water level recordings. 3 Elymus athericus extended its distribution into the lower salt marsh when A. portulacoides was removed. The latter increased in cover but not in biomass after the removal of E. athericus. Neither species showed a response to nitrogen fertilization. The boundary between the two species in the control plots varied considerably in elevation and inundation frequency. 4 The lower distributional boundary of E. athericus can be interpreted as the result of competition with A. portulacoides. Improvement of nitrogen availability in concentrations of the same order of magnitude as annual atmospheric input had no detectable effect on plant zonation and growth. Elevation and inundation frequency were not strictly correlated with plant zonation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2020-07-09
    Description: A study of the echo peak amplitudes from known nodule areas is initiated to observe the acoustic response for varying nodule abundances and number densities. A statistical study of the peak amplitudes from different nodule areas confirms that the coefficient of variation is the highest for medium nodule abundance and number density. Echo fluctuation study based on the Rician probability density function (PDF) establishes that the non‐nodule sediment bottom contributes to less scattering, i.e., it is a microtopographic type, whereas scattering is dominant in the nodule‐bearing areas. The spectral studies are conducted on depth data of different areas. This study ensures that the signal scattering in the nodule bottom area is due to the nodules lying on the seabed rather than the large / small‐scale topographic variations. The study based on Poisson PDF for nodule area confirms this fact again. Agreement between the nodule distribution and the Poisson distribution parameter is clearly seen. Such a relation is not observed in the case of Rician density functions.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-07-07
    Description: A new species of the holopodid genus Cyathidium was found on rocks off Grande Comore in a depth of around 200 m. Based on external morphology of resting animals, the new species Cyathidium plantei sp. n is described, with emphasis on comparison to the only other extant species (C. foresti) as well as to the four extinct representatives of the genus. Concerning morphological characters, the new species is almost identical to the Cretaceous C. depressum. A cladistic analysis of the entire family, including the genus Holopus, shares a peculiar pattern of bending of the arms, which in principle is an apomorphic character of the family and in detail shows variations within the family. In addition, stratigraphic data are used for the determination of the evolutionary direction. This analysis reveals that the two recent species are closely related to each other, and to the fossil C. depressum. from which the entire family is probably derived.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
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    Wiley
    In:  In: Marine botany. Wiley, New York, NY, pp. 45-61. 2. Ed. ISBN 0-471-19208-2
    Publication Date: 2017-07-07
    Description: The chapter gives an overview of marine plant relationships with their environment, wich is called ecology. The overview is a requirement to understanding the biology of marine plants because they do not live as isolated units. Consideration will be given to basic tenets of marine ecology including levels of organization (Populations to ecosystems), processes of community development (succession, energy transfer), strategies (evolutionary, plant responses), biological iunteractions (forms of symbiosis, competition, predation), and growth (rates and responses).
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 9
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  Environmental Technology, 18 . pp. 195-202.
    Publication Date: 2017-09-26
    Description: Plastic debris accumulates in the marine environment following its use in agricultural, industrial and social activities. Its ultimate fate is accomodation in sediments where it may persist for times up to centuries or longer. There appears to be an increasing flux of materials with time and an increased areal coverage of the benthos. Impacts upon bottom organisms can take many forms. Systematic monitoring tactics for the extent of seafloor coverage by plastics are yet to be incorporated into national programs.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2018-04-26
    Description: A protein unique to phosphorus stress observed in Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher was studied in the context of phosphate‐limited cell physiology and is a potential diagnostic indicator of phosphate deficiency in this alga. Cells were grown over a range of limited, steady‐state growth rates and at maximum (replete) and zero (phosphate‐starved) growth rates. The stress protein, absent in nutrient‐replete cells, was produced under all steady‐state phosphate‐limited conditions and increased in abundance with increasing limitation (decreasing growth rate). Cellular carbon: phosphorus ratios and the maximum uptake rate of phosphate (Vm) increased with increasing limitation, whereas the ratio of chlorophyll a: carbon decreased. Alkaline phosphatase activity did not respond to limitation but was measurable in starved, stationary‐phase cells. Fv/Fm, a measure of photochemical efficiency, was a nonlinear, saturating function of p, as commonly observed under N limitation. The maximum Fv/Fm of 0.64 was measured in nutrient‐replete cells growing at μmax, and a value of zero was measured in stationary‐phase starved cells. When physiological parameters were compared, the P‐stress protein abundance and Fv/Fm were the most sensitive indicators of the level of deficiency. The stress protein was not produced under N‐ or Fe‐limited conditions. It is of high molecular weight (〉200) and is associated with internal cell membranes. The stress protein has several characteristics that make it a potential diagnostic indicator: it is 1) unique to phosphorus limitation (i.e. absent under all other conditions), 2) present under limiting as well as starved conditions, 3) sensitive to the level of limitation, and 4) observable without time‐course incubation of live samples.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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