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  • Articles
  • Other Sources  (108)
  • Articles (OceanRep)  (108)
  • Inter Research  (46)
  • Cambridge University Press  (45)
  • Kluwer  (17)
  • 1990-1994  (83)
  • 1985-1989  (23)
  • 1950-1954  (2)
  • 1
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 106 . pp. 199-202.
    Publication Date: 2018-06-15
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  • 2
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 106 . pp. 1-9.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-09
    Description: Prey availability is one of the factors determining the distribution of seabirds at sea. Northern fulmars Fulmarus glaclalis and black-legged kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla were the most regular and frequent ship-followers across the central and northern North Sea during 2 surveys with a fishery research vessel in May-June and July-August 1992. Sixteen other species occurred less often and/or in lower numbers. Birds consumed 84 % of experimentally discarded roundfish and 8 % of discarded flatfish. On average, northern gannets Morus bassanus took the largest individuals of most fish specles, black-legged kittywakes the smallest The average size choices of herring gulls Larus argentatus, lesser black-backed gulls Larus fuscus and northern fulmars lay between these 2 extremes. The choice of fish lengths by birds vaned with different fish species. Northern gannet was the most successful species in consuming discards. Northern fulmars success rates decreased with the presence of larger ship-followers but were never high. Black-headed gull Larus ridibundus and common gull Larus canus were less successful than the more frequent typical ship-following species.
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  • 3
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Antarctic Science, 6 (02). pp. 241-247.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-15
    Description: The data presented provides new information on the distribution of Antarctic squids and on the summer diet of the emperor penguins. The diet of 58 adult emperor penguins (Aptenodytes forsteri) on the fast ice of the Drescher Inlet, Vestkapp Ice Shelf (72°52′S, 19°25′W) in the eastern Weddell Sea was investigated. Prey consisted principally of squid, fish, krill, amphipods and isopods. Squids were identified by the lower beaks and allometric equations were used to estimate the squid biomass represented. Beaks occurred in 93% of the stomach samples. Each sample contained a mean of 27 beaks (range 1–206). Ninety-two percent of the squids could be identified by the lower beaks and belonged to four families (Onychoteuthidae, Psychroteuthidae, Neoteuthidae and Gonatidae). The most abundant squid was Psychroteuthis glacialis which occurred in 52 samples with lower rostral lengths (LRL) ranging from 1.4–7.2 mm. Forty-five samples contained Alluroteuthis antarcticus (LRL range 1.8–5.8 mm), 17 Kondakovia longimana (LRL range 4–12.1 mm), and four Gonatus antarcticus (LRL range 4.1–6.1 mm). In terms of biomass K. longimana was the most important species taken by the penguins comprising 50% of total estimated squid wet mass (245348 g) in 1990 and 48% in 1992 (154873 g). However, if only fresh beaks were considered for estimations of squid consumption, i.e. beaks that have been accumulated for not longer than 5–6 days in the stomachs, squid diet was of minor importance. Then total squid wet mass accounted for only 4809 g in 1990 and 5445 g in 1992 which implies that one penguin took c.30 g squid d−1 with P. glacialis and A. antarcticus being the most important by mass. The prey composition suggests that emperor penguins take squid at the steep slope regions of the eastern Weddell Sea.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-03-22
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  • 5
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 74 (02). pp. 367-382.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: During a study based on catches taken in the northern North Sea by selected Scottish fishing boats during 1985–1992, large numbers of the normally rare short-fin squid, Todaropsis eblanae (Cephalopoda: Ommastrephidae), were recorded in 1987 and 1990. Our findings, supported by data obtained from plankton/young fish surveys in 1988 and 1989, suggest that in northern waters Todaropsis eblanae generally mates and spawns during late summer and early autumn (June-November). Successful hatching events appear to occur during October-March, producing juvenile (stage I) squid in the early part of the year (January-June). Estimations of maximum male reproductive output and female fecundity were up to 130 spermatophores and ~28,000 eggs per individual, respectively.
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  • 6
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 105 . pp. 291-299.
    Publication Date: 2018-06-18
    Description: The degradatlon of phytodetritus In the deep sea was studied in sediment samples of the NE Atlantic In spring and summer 1992 using I4C-labelled algal cells (Anacystis sp , Cyanophyceae) fed to the benthic population in ship-board experiments and measuring the liberation of labelled I4CO2 over time. The mineralization process showed a 2-step behaviour with an initial rapic rate whhich later slowed down, indicating the initial attack of easily degradable material of the complex food and the later utilization of less labile matter. The profile of degradation activity with sedimend depth showed no clear vertical gradient in March, but in August the activity in the top horizon increased by a factor of 6.1 to 7.8, which was coherent with increased bacterial numbers or biomass (factor of 1.3 to 1.7), respectively, and might be caused by the seasonal input of phytodetritus to the deep-sea bottom. The degradation measured was positively influenced by elevated incubation pressure mostly in summer, indicating that the summer stimulation of microbial activity in 1992 was based on the metabolic activation of the indigenous benthic community while surface-derived organisms attached to sedimented particles were of lesser importance whith respect to consumption of phytodetritus. Several aspects on quality of phytodetritus for nutrition of the deep-sea benthos, seasonality of detritus degradation, and influence of pressure on microbial activity are discussed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-01-03
    Description: The diadinoxanthin cycle (DD-cycle) in chromophyte algae involves the interconversion of two carotenoids, diadinoxanthin (DD) and diatoxanthin (DT). We investigated the kinetics of light-induced DD-cycling in the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum and its role in dissipating excess excitation energy in PS II. Within 15 min following an increase in irradiance, DT increased and was accompanied by a stoichiometric decrease in DD. This reaction was completely blocked by dithiothreitol (DTT). A second, time-dependent, increase in DT was detected ∼ 20 min after the light shift without a concomitant decrease in DD. DT accumulation from both processes was correlated with increases in non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. Stern-Volmer analyses suggests that changes in non-photochemical quenching resulted from changes in thermal dissipation in the PS II antenna and in the reaction center. The increase in non-photochemical quenching was correlated with a small decrease in the effective absorption cross section of PS II. Model calculations suggest however that the changes in cross section are not sufficiently large to significantly reduce multiple excitation of the reaction center within the turnover time of steady-state photosynthetic electron transport at light saturation. In DTT poisoned cells, the change in non-photochemical quenching appears to result from energy dissipation in the reaction center and was associated with decreased photochemical efficiency. D1 protein degradation was slightly higher in samples poisoned with DTT than in control samples. These results suggest that while DD-cycling may dynamically alter the photosynthesis-irradiance response curve, it offers limited protection against photodamage of PS II reaction centers at irradiance levels sufficient to saturate steady-state photosynthesis.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2017-09-18
    Description: An RMT 25 opening/closing net was used to sample the nekton comunity at 2 stations in the ice free zone (IFZ) of the Scotia Sea (Stn 1 approximately 10 nautical miles south of the Antarctic Polar Front, Stn 2 on the edge of the South Georgia Shelf Break to the northwest of the island) Oblique hauls sampled 200 m depth layers to 1000 m during both day and night. Total and individual volumes of each species in each 200 m layer were measured by displacement The data were used to generate biomass and numerical spectra for day and night at each station for the whole water column to 1000 m. At both stations the relationship between log10 biomass density (B/A) and log10 individual body mass (M) were strongly positive. Slopes of the biomass spectra were not significantly different among the day and night stations and an overall regression showed that biomass density scaled as M061. Analysis of biomass spectra revealed that although the species composition and biomass density vaned between the 2 stations, energy turnover in the nekton community in the 2 areas was similarly dominated by animals of larger size. Considering energy turnover in terms of taxonomic groups revealed that Stn 1 turnover was dominated by tunicates (salps) followed by fish and cnidarians and at Stn 2 turnover was dominated by crustaceans followed similarly by fish and cnidarians. Use of biomass spectra in this case study was shown to enhance insight into the comparative function of 2 pelaglc systems obtained using a conventional taxonomc approach The analysis of biomass spectra in the absence of taxonomic data would have had limited value as it would not have emphasised the major difference between the 2 stations: the domination by tunicates, an energetic dead end, at Stn 1 and crustaceans, which are available to predators, at Stn 2.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2017-09-18
    Description: The nekton community was sampled by a Rectangular Midwater Trawl (RMT 25) over the upper 1000 m of the Scotia Sea dunng January 1991. A total of 81 nekton and micronekton species were collected from 2 sites, one in the oceanlc western Scotia Sea (Stn 1) and the other on the northwestern slope of the South Georgia shelf (Stn 2). Species composition, abundance, biomass and day/night vertical distribution were investigated. Crustaceans were the most important group in terms of species numbers (28 species) followed by mesopelagic fish (24), molluscs (15) and coelenterates (11). Species diversity increased with depth and was higher at Stn 2 (76 species) than at Stn 1 (62 specles). Biomass in the upper 1000 m was considerably higher at Stn 1 (94.6 g wet wt m-2 during daytime, 87 g wet wt m-2 during night) than at Stn 2 (10.2 and 23.7 g wet wt m-2, respectively), mostly due to dense concentrations of the tunicate Salpa thompsoni (41.6 g wet wt m-2 during night). The other main contributors to the high biomass at Stn 1 were coelenterates (28.3 g wet wt m-2 during night) and mesopelagic fish (4.9 g wet wt m-2 during night). Euphausiids (Euphausia triacantha and E. superba) accounted for 1.5 g wet wt m-2 at Stn 2 during night, with E. triacantha the more important of the two (1.4 g wet wt m-2). Except for Bathylagus antarcticus all common mesopelagic fishes showed a marked diurnal vertical migration (i.e. Electrona antarctica, Gymnoscopelus brauen, Krefftichthys anderssoni, Protomyctophum bolini). During daylight they stayed in the core of the Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW, 400 to 800 m) and at night they were mainly distnbuted in the Antarctic Surface Water (ASW, 0 to 400 m). Other species with pronounced vertical migration were the hydromedusa Calycopsis borchgrevinki, the squid Brachioteuthis ?picta, and the euphausiid Euphausia triacantha. The scyphomedusae Atolla wyvillei and Periphylla periphylla and the crustaceans Cyphocaris richardi, Gigantocypris mulleri and Pasiphaea scotiae did not appear to migrate and remained concentrated in the CDW. Spatial variability was analysed by multivariate data analyses (clustering techniques) and related to hydrography. Four main groups, characterised by different nekton communities, were derived: (1) a lower mesopelagic nekton community from the deeper layers of the CDW, apparent at both stations, (2) an upper mesopelagic nekton community from the core of the CDW, apparent at both stations, (3) an epipelagic nekton community from the ASW over the South Georgia slope (Stn 2) and finally (4) an epipelagic nekton community from the ASW of the oceanic Scotia Sea (Stn 1). The performance of the midwater trawl is discussed as it has a substantial impact on the catchability of the nekton. The presented data provide new information on the structure and spatial variability of Antarchc nekton communities and emphasise the geographical and vertical discontinuities between communities.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2017-01-03
    Description: Iron supply has been suggested to influence phytoplankton biomass, growth rate and species composition, as well as primary productivity in both high and low NO3− surface waters. Recent investigations in the equatorial Pacific suggest that no single factor regulates primary productivity. Rather, an interplay of bottom-up (i.e., ecophysiological) and top-down (i.e., ecological) factors appear to control species composition and growth rates. One goal of biological oceanography is to isolate the effects of single factors from this multiplicity of interactions, and to identify the factors with a disproportionate impact. Unfortunately, our tools, with several notable exceptions, have been largely inadequate to the task. In particular, the standard technique of nutrient addition bioassays cannot be undertaken without introducing artifacts. These so-called ‘bottle effects’ include reducing turbulence, isolating the enclosed sample from nutrient resupply and grazing, trapping the isolated sample at a fixed position within the water column and thus removing it from vertical movement through a light gradient, and exposing the sample to potentially stimulatory or inhibitory substances on the enclosure walls. The problem faced by all users of enrichment experiments is to separate the effects of controlled nutrient additions from uncontrolled changes in other environmental and ecological factors. To overcome these limitations, oceanographers have sought physiological or molecular indices to diagnose nutrient limitation in natural samples. These indices are often based on reductions in the abundance of photosynthetic and other catalysts, or on changes in the efficiency of these catalysts. Reductions in photosynthetic efficiency often accompany nutrient limitation either because of accumulation of damage, or impairment of the ability to synthesize fully functional macromolecular assemblages. Many catalysts involved in electron transfer and reductive biosyntheses contain iron, and the abundances of most of these catalysts decline under iron-limited conditions. Reductions of ferredoxin or cytochrome f content, nitrate assimilation rates, and dinitrogen fixation rates are amongst the diagnostics that have been used to infer iron limitation in some marine systems. An alternative approach to diagnosing iron-limitation uses molecules whose abundance increases in response to iron-limitation. These include cell surface iron-transport proteins, and the electron transfer protein flavodoxin which replaces the Fe-S protein ferredoxin in many Fe-deficient algae and cyanobacteria.
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: The influence of sampler type on quantitative estimates of deep-sea meiobenthos is examined by an indirect statistical comparison of box corer and multiple corer samples collected throughout the northeast Atlantic, and by a direct comparison of contemporaneously collected multiple corer and box corer samples from a single abyssal location. The data strongly support the suggestion that the greater down-wash/bow wave associated with box corers results in displacement of surface sediments and any superfic~al detrltus layer together with thelr associated fauna. Total metazoan meiobenthos density estimates from box corer samples are about half those from corresponding multiple corer samples Sampler type may also influence the fauna1 composition of both the metazoan and protozoan components of the meiobenthos.
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  • 12
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    Inter Research
    In:  Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 18 . pp. 135-141.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-30
    Description: Bacterial epiphytes of Gracilaria conferta were quantified. Saprophytic bacteria reached 350 times and agar degraders 25000 times higher numbers g-1 algal wet wt on tissues infected with the 'white tips disease', as compared to healthy tissues. A bacterial inducing agent of the 'white tips disease' was detected. Addition of 10(2) to 10(3) cells of this isolate ml-1 medium led to increased rates of infection. This effect did not occur if the isolate was autoclaved before addition. The virulent bacteria could always be isolated from infected tissues. It frequently, but not always, infected G. conferta and should be regarded as a facultative parasite. Several factors influenced the disease development. Temperatures above 20-degrees-C, in combination with photon flux densities of more than 200 muE m-2 s-1, increased the rate of infection. Relatively low amounts (more than 25 mug ml-1) of certain organic nutrients (peptone and yeast extract) led to strong manifestations of the disease. Addition of agar did not cause any symptoms, while 5 mg l-1 of the antibiotic rifampicin prevented the alga from being infected.
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  • 13
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 104 . pp. 173-184.
    Publication Date: 2019-03-15
    Description: The responses of natural bacterial populations in the waters of the Kiel Fjord, Germany, and in Lake Kinneret, Israel, to additions of organic substrates were followed by determining changes over 24 h either in direct cell counts or in 3H-thymidine incorporation, and in the Kiel Fjord additionally in 3H-leucine incorporation. In parallel, 1 ym filtered water samples were stored for 3 or 4 d in order to starve the indigenous bacterial populations prior to repeating the substrate addition experiments. Generally, upon substrate addition, relatively higher incorporation of radiotracers was noted in the preincubated samples. Growth response to substrate addition even in starved populations was only significant after 24 h. Incorporation rates of 3H-thymidine and 3H-leucine were more sensitive indicators of bacterial response to substrate additions than cell counts. Continued cell replication in unsupplemented controls, and insignificant increase over time of radiotracer incorporation in most of the fresh samples with added supplements, indicated that the indigenous bacterial populations in Kiel Fjord and Kinneret were apparently not substrate limited. Comparison of actual bacterial production after 24 h (direct counts) to that predicted by 3H-thymidine incorporation after 1 h showed that although reasonably good predictions of daily production were obtained in the unsupplemented samples, this was usually not the case when substrates were added.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2019-03-14
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  • 15
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 74 . pp. 801-822.
    Publication Date: 2021-01-19
    Description: The functional morphology of the buccal mass of 23 species of cephalopod (Octopoda, 4 species; Teuthoidea, 17; Sepioidea, 2) was investigated by gross dissection, histology and observations on fresh preparations. Cephalopod beaks lack a joint or articulation point. The jaws slide and rotate around an area rather than a fixed point. During closing the superior mandibular muscle (SMM) provides the force of a bite and the largest movement vector, whilst the inferior mandibular muscle (IMM) acts to retract the upper beak, causing shearing action. Dorsal portions of the lateral mandibular muscles (LMM) flex the upper beak walls outwards, probably to accomodate the backwards sweep of the radula and buccal palps during closing. To open the beaks, the ventral portions to the lateral mandibular muscles pull the rear lateral walls of the two beaks towards each other, moving the lower beak back relative to the upper. The buccal mass weighs more in decapods (0.65-4.34% of body weight) than octopods (0.49-0.77%). The weight difference is mainly accounted for by the size of the superior mandibular muscle. Beak shape and muscle volume are related. Increasing the size of the upper beak hood and lateral wall area results in larger SMM and LMM respectively Increasing hood size in the lower beak increases IMM size, and altering the angle by which the wings meet the lateral wall changes the volume of the SMM and LMM. To accomodate the decapod pointed upper rostrum, the lateral walls of the lower beak have shortened in length, whilst increasing in breadth and surface relief to maintain the area available for muscle insertion. In species with a lateral wall ridge or fold (e.g. Onychoteuthis) this may mark the insertion point of the LMM.
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  • 16
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Paleobiology, 20 (1). pp. 27-39.
    Publication Date: 2021-02-22
    Description: Arm autotomy was induced in a living specimen of Metacrinus rotundus (Echinodermata: Crinoidea). An arm was autotomized at a ligamentary articulation known as a cryptosyzygy, following incision by scissors distal to the break point. Although sessile stalked crinoids cannot entirely escape from a predatory attack by arm autotomy and they do not have an active defense, arm autotomy at cryptosyzygies reduces damage and arm loss by effective distribution, and by minimizing trauma and facilitating subsequent regeneration. The paradigmatic distribution of cryptosyzygies in which arm loss is set at a minimum, compared with the actual distribution, shows that these two patterns are similar and that actual specimens successfully reduce arm loss by the effective distribution of cryptosyzygies. The crinoid branching pattern also affects arm loss, and two different paradigms are discussed: anti-predatory and harvesting. Arm branching patterns of various isocrinids have tended toward the anti-predatory configuration from the Jurassic to the Recent, suggesting that the isocrinids have coped with increased predation. Shallow-water comatulids generally adopt the anti-predatory paradigm in their branching pattern, whereas many deep-water, stalked crinoids adopt a harvesting paradigm, reflecting that shallow-water comatulids receive more predatory attacks than do deep-water crinoids.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2018-06-19
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  • 18
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Ocean processes in climate dynamics: Global and Mediterranean examples. , ed. by Rizzoli, P. and Robinson, A. Kluwer, Alphen aan den Rijn, Netherlands, pp. 203-225. ISBN 978-94-010-4376-2
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: Recent observations within deep convection regimes of the Gulf of Lions and Greenland Sea all confirm the existence of small-scale plumes of only a few 100 m horizontal scale during cooling periods, in agreement with scaling arguments and non-hydrostatic modelling results. The integral effect of the plumes is that of a mixing agent rather than carrying water downward in a mean motion. It depends on the intensity and duration of the cooling how complete the mixing within the depth range of the plumes is. In the Greenland Sea, the role of the ice through brine rejection was found to be important in the preconditioning period (November - February) rather than for the deep convection itself (March) which occurred when the water was ice-free. After the convection period water masses are exchanged with the environment through baroclinic instability, causing increased deep T,S variance on a larger scale that continues to exist well into the next summer, allowing identification of previous-winter convection activity
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  • 19
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 115 . pp. 309-315.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-07
    Description: Competition experiments were performed first with 4, then with 11 species of marine phytoplankton at various ratios of si1icate:nitrate and various light intensities. Diatoms became dominant at Si:N ratios 〉25:1 while flagellates were the superior competitors at lower ratios. The light supply did not influence the competitive position of diatoms and non-siliceous flagellates in general, while it was important in determining the outcome of competition at the species level. In the 11 species expenments, Stephanopyxis palmenana was the dominant diatom at high light intensities. It shared dominance with Lauderia annulata at medium and low light intensities and high Si.N ratios. Pseudonitzschia pungens was the dominant diatom at low light intensities and relatively low Si:N ratios. The green alga Dunaliella tertiolecta was the dominant flagellate at high light intensities, while at low light intensities the prymnesiophycean Chrysochromulina polylepis and the cryptophyte Rhodomonas sp. were also important.
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  • 20
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 73 (03). p. 571.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: The stomachsof 23 striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba Meyen, 1833, Cetacea), stranded along the Ligurian coast (western Mediterranean Sea), contained 32 species of cephalopods, crustaceans and fishes, totalling an estimated 2,723 prey specimens representing about 36 kg in weight. Cephalopods and bony fishes were equally important in the diet (50%). Todarodes sagittatus (34.5%) and Micromesistius poutassou (25.9%) were found to be the most important food species. Other species belonging to six cephalopod families, three crustacean families and nine bony fish families, contributed to the diet with variable numbers, weights, and occurrences, demonstrating the opportunistic character of striped dolphin feeding.
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
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  • 22
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 73 (04). p. 949.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Samples of two loliginid squids Alloteuthis africana and A. subulata were collected from the continental shelf off the west Sahara in August-September 1987. Statoliths were taken from 124 specimens and processed using statolith ageing techniques. Statoliths of both species were very similar in shape. In the ground statolith, growth increments were examined and grouped into four growth zones distinguished mainly by the width of the increments. Age of adult mature males of both species did not exceed eight months, that of females six months. Alloteuthis africana grew faster than A. subulata in weight and, particularly, in length. At age 180 d the mantle of A. africana was twice as long and the body weight 1·2–1·5 times as large. Both species matured over a wide range of sizes and ages (from 120 to 180 d). The life span of A. africana and A. subulata hatching between January and May on the west Saharan shelf is about six months, much shorter than that of A. subulata in its northern temperate range.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
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  • 24
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 98 . pp. 209-214.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-07
    Description: The individual marking of flying and flightless birds has a long history in ornithology. It is the only technique which is cheap, simple and effective, yielding results on bird migration, age-specific annual survival and recruitment. Consequently, hundreds of thousands of birds are annually ringed worldwide. Unfortunately, researchers all too often tend to neglect problems associated with rings and tags. In Antarctic penguins, flipper bands have been used extensively by a variety of nations, and banding is an integral part of the Council for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources' (CCAMLR) monitoring programme (Standard method A4). This programme suggests that mortality in penguins wearing bands can be attributed to either (a) prey species availability, (b) predation, (c) weather conditions or (d) other. In this paper, we have attempted to quantify energetic costs associated with wearing a flipper band. For that purpose, freshly caught Adelie penguins (n = 7) were introduced, in Antarctica, into a 21 m long still-water tunnel, where their behaviour and energy consumption were determined via observation and gas respirometry. Birds were either immediately marked with a flipper band and tested in the tunnel for ca 2 h, and then taken out and tested again after removal of the band, or vice-versa. Flipper bands significantly (ANOVA, p = 0.006) increased the power input of Adelie penguins during swimming by 24 % over the speed range of 1.4 to 2.2 m S-', from 17 W kg-' to 21.1 W kg-' (n = 115 and 157 measurements, respectively). The implications of banding on foraging performance and sunival of penguins are discussed. Implantable passive transponders could help overcome such problems.
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  • 25
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    Inter Research
    In:  Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 15 . pp. 81-86.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-23
    Description: In April 1990, 488 marine fish, belonging to 30 species from central Philippine waters, were investigated macroscopically for the occurrence of parasites in their flesh and for anisakid nematodes in their body cavity. Twenty-four fish were found to be infected by 1 of 4 different types of parasites. Unidentified Microspora were found in 4 host species from different families. Plerocercoids of the trypanorhynchid cestode Otobothrium penetrans occurred in the flesh of hemirhamphids and belonids only. Adult nematodes of the genus Philometra were found in the garfish Tylosurus crocodilus. The only parasite found which might be transferable to warm-blooded animals was the L-III stage of Anisakis sp. from the body cavity and the muscle of Muraenesox cinereus. The risk of human infections by parasites through consumption of raw marine fish in the central Philippines therefore is considered to be low.
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  • 26
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 73 (04). p. 979.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Statoliths of Loligo gahi were sampled in the fishery region 45–47°S on the Patagonian shelf during September 1989. Peculiarities of the growth zones in the ground statoliths of adults are described. Maximum age of large maturing and mature females (130–160 mm of mantle length, ML) was estimated to be 325–345 d, that of large mature males (250–290 mm ML) ranged from 360 to 396 d. The squid Loligo gahi d'Orbigny, 1835, occurs in temperate shelf and upper slope waters of the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of South America and is caught commercially by the international fleet in the southern part of the Patagonian shelf within the Falkland Islands Interim Conservation Zone (FICZ) (Roper et al., 1984; Csirke, 1987). Occasionally, dense shoals of L. gahi appear in the fishery region 45–47°S off the Exclusive Economic Zone of Argentina (EEZA) and have been caught in significant numbers by trawlers at depths of 120–150 m in September-October (Chesheva, 1990). Loligo gahi is a medium sized loliginid; in Falkland waters males attain 350 mm ML, females 210 mm ML (Hatfield, 1991), while in the fishery region 45–47°S maximum size is 260 mm and 160 mm, respectively (Chesheva, 1990). Patterson (1988) revealed two Falkland spawning stocks of L. gahi of unclear status, spring-spawners and autumn-spawners (austral seasons) and pointed out that the life span of squid of each stock lasted ~1 y. Recently Hatfield (1991) used statoliths to elucidate Patterson's (1988) estimations of age and growth of Falkland stocks of L. gahi and confirmed the 1-y duration of L. gahi's life span.
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2018-03-05
    Description: Organic material entering the oceanic mesopelagic zone may either reenter the euphotic zone or settle into deeper waters. Therefore it is important to know about mechanisms and efficiency of substrate conversion in this water layer. Bacterial biomass, bacteria secondary production (BSP). extra­cellular peptidase activity (EPA) and particulate organic nitrogen (PON) were measured in vertical pro­files of the North Atlantic (46° N 18° W; 57° N 23° W) during the Joint Global Ocean Flux Study (JGOFS) cruise in May 1989. The magnitude of these parameters decreased differently with depth. The strong­est decreases were observed for bacterial production (3H-thymidine incorporation) and peptide turn­over (using the substrate analog leucine-methylcoumarinylamide). Bacterial biomass and peptidase potential activity were not reduced as much in the mesopelagic zone. Peptidase potential per unit cell biomass of mesopelagic bacteria was 2 to 3 times higher than that of bacteria in surface water. Nevertheless bacterial growth at depth was slow, due to slow actual hydrolysis. Values of theoretical PON hydrolysis were calculated from PON measurements and protein hydrolysis rates. These corre­sponded well to bacterial production rates, and the degree of correspondence increased from a factor of 0.63 (PON hydrolysis/ESP) in the mixed surface layer to 0.87 in the mesopelagic zone. Thus we hypothesized an effective coupling between particle hydrolysis and uptake of hydrolysate by bacteria, which depletes the deeper water of easily degradable substrates as hydrolysates usually are. The low enzymatic PON turnover rate of 0.04 d- 1 in the subeuphotic zone suggests that residence time of parti­cles within a depth stratum may be important for its contribution to export. storage and recycling of organic matter.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2018-03-07
    Description: Laboratory experiments were carried out to investigate the effect of protozoan, copepod and combined grazing on Phaeocystis biomass. Phaeocystis cf. globosa single cells were offered to 3 different protozoan species, to the calanoid copepod Temora longicornis, as well as to mixtures of both grazer types. The heterotrophic dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina and the oligotrich ciliate Strombidinopsis acuminatum ingested Phaeocystis at much higher rates than did the copepod. Nevertheless, protozoan growth and ingestion rates were submaximal, indicating Phaeocystis to be suboptimal food. The oligotrich ciliate Strombidium elegans did not feed on Phaeocystis. In grazing experiments with mixtures of both predator types, the decline of Phaeocystis single cells could be explained by protozoan grazing alone, implying no grazing by the copepods on Phaeocystis. Instead, copepods ingested the protozoans at high rates. Predation on 0. marina and S. acuminatum by T. longicornis resulted in a reduction of the total grazing pressure on Phaeocystis of 21 and 67 % respectively. We conclude that mesozooplankton predation on herbivorous ciliates and heterotrophic dinoflagellates, which consumed Phaeocystis cells, can considerably reduce the overall grazing pressure and may enhance Phaeocystis bloomng.
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  • 29
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 96 . pp. 281-289.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-07
    Description: While marine snow aggregates were devoid of Phaeocystis in 1989, a large fraction of the Phaeocystis biomass was associated with aggregates two years later. This discrepancy corresponds to a significant difference in aggregate size between the two years studied, interpreted to be a consequence of different levels of turbulent mixing. Phaeocystis colonies remained freely suspended during 1989 when aggregates were small, and adhered loosely to the large aggregates observed forming during 1991. Overall, the aggregation potential of Phaeocystis was low in comparison to diatoms. Independent of the degree of aggregation, sedimentation was the dominant loss factor of Phaeocystis biomass from the upper layer
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  • 30
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 94 . pp. 35-41.
    Publication Date: 2015-08-31
    Description: Chemoautotrophic bacteria live symbiotically in gills of Lucinoma aequizonata, an infaunal clam inhabiting an oxygen-poor environment. These intracellular symbionts respire nitrate, i.e. they use nitrate instead of oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor in the respiratory chain. Nitrate is only reduced to nitrite and not further to nitrogen gas. Nitrate is respired by the symbionts under fully aerobic conditions at the same rate as under anaerobic conditions. The bacterial symbionts contain a nitrate reductase that is associated with the membrane-containing fraction of the symbiont cell and that is sensitive to respiratory inhibitors; both features are consistent with the respiratory role of this enzyme. A review of nitrate reductase in chemoautotrophic syrnbionts suggests that nitrate respiration may be common among these symbioses. Symbiont nitrate reductase may be an ecologically important factor permitting the survival of animal hosts in oxygen-poor environments.
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2016-03-08
    Description: Five Barrow Group (Berriasian to Valanginian) siliciclastic sequences are described from the North-West Shelf, Australia, and calibrated against global third-order (?eustatically-mediated) cycles. Particular emphasis is placed on the sedimentological (core, wireline log) and palaeontological (micropalaeontological, palynological) characterization of constituent systems tracts.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2020-07-24
    Description: Outer membrane (OM), cytoplasmic membrane (CM) and intracytoplasmic membranes (ICM) from the halophilic phototrophic purple sulphur bacterium Ectothiorhodospira mobilis 9903 were purified and characterized. The three membrane fractions were significantly different in regard to protein profiles on SDS-PAGE, and to the composition of amino acids, fatty acids and lipids. The presence of lipoproteins, the occurrence of lyso-phosphatidyl-ethanolamine and an increased content of saturated and short-chain fatty acids are characteristic properties of the OM. CM and ICM fractions are different on the basis of buoyant density, of protein profiles and amino acid composition, and due to the presence of succinate dehydrogenase activity in CM. In addition, CM and ICM showed significant differences in pigment content and absorption spectra.
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  • 33
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    Kluwer
    In:  , ed. by Padisak, J., Reynolds, C. S. and Sommer, U. Kluwer, Dordrecht, 199 pp. ISBN 0-7923-2097-2
    Publication Date: 2012-02-28
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  • 34
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Antarctic Science, 5 (2). pp. 143-148.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-17
    Description: Within the Western Ross Sea, there are six emperor penguin colonies of widely different size that occur exclusively on sea ice. In 1990 a survey of all six sites, two by close overflights and four from the ground, showed that the breeding habitats were highly variable. The most important physical characteristics of these habitats appear to be stable fast ice, nearby open water, access to fresh snow, and shelter from the wind.
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  • 35
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 100 . pp. 177-183.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-07
    Description: The RNA/DNA ratio is a useful indicator of the nutritional condition of fish larvae. The presented analytical procedure is an improvement of Clemmesen's (Meeresforschung 32: 134-143, 1988) methodology which involves purification of fish larvae tissue homogenates and subsequent fluorescence-photometric measurements using specific nucleic acid dyes. The modifications concern the homogenization and nucleic acid extraction procedures. A 'shaking mill' was compared to a potter Elvehjem microhomogenizer and a reduction in the washing and purification steps was achieved. Treatment of samples with ribonuclease A and subsequent fluorescence measurement using ethidium bromide was given preference compared to the DNA-bisbenzimidazole determinations due to problems arising from high self-fluorescence of the samples and the influence of 'quenching' substances disturbing the DNA-bisbenzmidazole determinations. Different RNase concentrations and their influences on RNA and DNA were checked. Recovery rates of standard RNA and DNA 'spikes' were determined. Fish larvae samples were analysed with the previous and the improved modified procedure and a correction factor to compare results measured with the 2 procedures was calculated. With the presented method the physiological condition of individual larvae and the amount of variability can be determined.
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  • 36
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Geological Magazine, 130 (01). p. 117.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: The groundmass of andesitic dykes at Sezaki, southwest Japan, has trachytic texture and contains microscopic shear zones. The shear zones comprise a conjugate pair formed by flattening of the solidifying dyke rock, probably caused by the magma pressure of the still molten part of the dyke. This pressure shortened the solidifying rock perpendicular to the dyke margins and caused it to extrude parallel to the magma flow direction. The groundmass shears indicate that locally the magma flowed 60° upward in the dykes. It is concluded that while groundmass shears are a useful indicator of flow direction in dykes, phenocryst alignment in dykes is strongly influenced by magma-pressure flattening and thus may be a poor indicator of flow direction.
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  • 37
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). p. 271.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Age and growth were estimated in the European squid, Loligo vulgaris, by examining growth increments in the statoliths of 203 specimens collected from off the French Mediterranean coast. Length and increment data were analyzed assuming that the increments were formed daily. The relationships between age and length showed that: growth rate varied considerably among individuals; growth was double exponential; the squids grew on average to 240 mm ML at 240 d from hatching, with a maximum of 350 mm at 240 d; the life span is probably about one year.
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  • 38
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (03). p. 543.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Some of the limits to the use of serology to identify prey species in the digestive tracts of cephalopods have been evaluated. Cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, were given meals of krill slurry (Euphausia superba). Protein extracts of contents from four regions of the digestive tract, stomach, caecum, digestive gland and intestine, were tested for prey antigenicity. Digestion times (loss of antigenicity) ranged from 1 to 8 h depending on sampling site. Stomach and caecum emptied rapidly, but meal antigenicity persisted longer in the digestive gland. The Sepia experiments provide a basis for interpretation of results from natural predation by cephalopods).
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  • 39
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 85 . pp. 237-243.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-09
    Description: Burrowing activities of the only European fiddler crab, Uca tangeri, and its resulting influence on biotope in mudflats were investigated during 1989-1990 at Ria Formosa, Portugal. Individuals use the same burrow for ca 1 wk, then occupy another or dig a new one. Overall a burrow is inhabited for ca 3 mo by several individuals before it is abandoned. Vacated burrows decay within 2 to 3 wk. Burrow size and number vary with the season. Burrow density was highest in spring and early summer with ca 17 burrows m-2, and then decreased. Deepest burrows (up to 90 cm long) were found in winter, the shallowest (up to 40 cm long) in summer. Volume of the sediment moved by U. tangen varied monthly between 3000 and 6000 cm3 per m2 of mudflat. Water is only found in the lower third of the burrow. Burrow water contains less oxygen and more nitrate than the surrounding water of the Ria Formosa.
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  • 40
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 88 . pp. 181-184.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: Respiration and activity of eelpouts Zoarces viviparus L. were measured in an underwater respiration chamber in Kiel Bay (Germany) under short-term hypoxia. Respiration and swimming activity both declined almost continuously with decreasing oxygen saturation...
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2018-03-16
    Description: Methane seeps in shallow waters in the northern Kattegat off the Danish coast form spectacular submarine landscapes - the 'bubbling reefs' - due to carbonate-cemented sandstone structures which are colonized by brightly coloured animals and plants. These structures may be 100 m2 in area and consist of pavements, complex formations of overlying slab-type layers, and pillars up to 4 m high. The carbonate cement (high-magnesium calcite, dolomite or aragonite) is 13C-depleted, indicating that it originated as a result of microbial methane oxidation. It is believed that the cementation occurred in the subsurface and that the rocks were exposed by subsequent erosion of the surrounding unconsolidated sediment. The formations are interspersed with gas vents that intermittently release gas, primarily methane, at up to 25 1 h-' The methane most likely originated from the microbial decomposition of plant material eposited during the Eemian and early Weichselian periods, i.e. l00 000 to 125 000 years B.P. Aerobic methane oxidation in the sediment was restricted Lo the upper 4 cm in muddy sand and to the upper 13 cm In coarse sand. Maximum aerobic methane oxidation rates ranged from 4.8 to 45.6 pm01 dm-3 d". The rock surfaces and epifauna around the seeps were also sites of methane-oxidizing activity. Integrated sulphate reduction rates for the upper 10 cm of muddy sand gave 4.2 to 26.6 mm01 m-2 d-' These rates are higher than those previously reported from similar water depths in the Kattegat but did not relate to the sediment methane content. Since gas venting occurs over several km2 of the sea floor in the Kattegat it is likely to make a significant local contribution to the cycling of elements in the sediment and the water column. The rocks support a diverse ecosystem ranging from bacteria to macroalgae and anthozoans. Many animals live within the rocks in holes bored by sponges, polychaetes and bivalves. Stable carbon isotope composition (6'") of tissues of invertebrates from the rocks were in the range -17 to -24 'A, indicating that methane-derived carbon makes little direct contribution to their nutrition. Within the sediments surrounding the seeps there is a poor metazoan fauna, in terms of abundance, diversity and biomass. This may be a result of toxicity due to hydrogen sulphide input from the gas.
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  • 42
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 91 . pp. 303-311.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-15
    Description: During the Bremerhaven Workshop in the southern North Sea, REMOTS sediment profile lmages (SPI) were recorded in order to supplement the benthic component of the workshop and other environmentally relevant parameters investigated along a spatial gradient at an abandoned exploratory drilling site off the Dutch coast. The sampling stations were in accordance with the other studies, but due to bad weather conditions only a small proportion of the intended samples were taken. The profile data were supplemented by video recordings of the sediment surface features taken on a second cruise. The results presented here have important implications for the interpretation of other benthic and sediment samples, and may help to interpret some enigmat~cw orkshop data.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2018-02-28
    Description: Plgments are frequently used as biomarkers to study the fate of primary producers in the food web. We evaluated the effectiveness of pigment analysis in the giant aquatic isopod Saduna entomon, an important link in the food chain of the Baltic Sea. Specimens were collected on a transect across Puck Bay (Gulf of Gdansk, Poland) at stations comprising different sedimentary conditions and varying supply of micro- and macroalgal material. In laboratory experiments S. entomon was fed different kinds of prey. Different marker coinbinations were found in the intestlnal tissue, resulting from predation on herbivorous and carnivorous species. Analyses of field samples revealed that S. entomon, living in the sedlment surface, ingests freshly sedimented phytoplankton as well as plant detritus ß-carotene and the xanthophyll echinenone were found in the carapax and gonads, supporting the view that these substances are assimilated and servve as antioxidant protection of lipids and other macromolecules.
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  • 44
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 90 . pp. 39-43.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-09
    Description: The quality of the food, especially origin and size, of the only European fiddler crab, Uca tangeri (Eydoux, 1835), was studied over a 2 yr period. In experiments with fluorescent microparticles, all particles smaller than 250 pm were ingested regardless of thelr chemical composition. Comparisons of sediment, feeding pellets and faeces showed that U. tangeri feeds primarily on microalgae which are completely extracted from the sediment. It also consumes vascular macrophytes (Arthrocnemum spp.), macroalgae, detritus and fish carcasses.
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  • 45
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). pp. 281-291.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Samples of female lllex argentinus were taken from the catch of a Japanese squid jigging vessel on the Patagonian Shelf during March 1986. Morphometrics of the somatic and reproductive organ systems and the histological structure of the mantle in relation to maturation were examined. The data suggest that growth and maturation occur simultaneously during most of the time that lllex argentinus females are on the feeding grounds. In a squid of a ‘standard’ mantle length the whole body mass increases relative to mantle length during maturation and growth of the reproductive organs. This is accompanied by a small but significant decrease in the relative mass of the mantle, head and viscera whilst the mass of the digestive gland remains constant. Although mantle mass of a ‘standard’ female squid decreases relative to mantle length with maturity this is not associated with degeneration of the mantle muscles. Energy and nutrient resources for maturation are apparently derived from the squid's food, not from reserves, and during the course of maturation there is an increasing shift of emphasis from somatic growth to production of gonad and accessory reproductive organs.
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  • 46
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). pp. 301-311.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: The timing of spawning and recruitment in the squid Loligo forbesi in Scottish waters is described on the basis of data from three sources: monthly samples of squid caught by commercial trawls (1986–1988), egg masses found by fishermen (1987–1991), and statistical data on animals caught by research trawls (1978–1987). Spawning females were present in samples from December to June, with peak spawning occurring in March. Most records of egg masses were from these months, but eggs were also found in August and September. These results suggest that there is an extended spawning season. Small squid (≤100 mm dorsal mantle length) were rarely present in commercial samples, but were recorded in research samples almost all year round. Thus there appears to be more or less continuous recruitment into the catchable population. The results of the present study are consistent with published data from other parts of the geographic range in that there is a regular seasonal peak in spawning, and spawning adults disappear from the population in summer. Further interpretation of the life-cycle of this species is not justified on the basis of current knowledge, and more information is needed on migrations, geographical variation, and lifespan in Loligo forbesi.
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  • 47
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (04). p. 861.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Cephalopod remains from the stomachs of a Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus Cuvier, 1812, Cetacea) entangled in a fishing net off the Ligurian coast (central Mediterranean Sea) include squids Ancistroteuthis lichtensteini, Histioteuthis bonnellii, H. reversa and Todarodes sagittatus and the sepiolid Heteroteuthis dispar. All these cephalopods live in oceanic water including water over the steep continental slope where Risso's dolphin is frequently sighted. Histioteuthis reversa contributed 78% of the cephalopods by number, 81% of the wet weight and 73% of the dry weight and calorific value. The total calorific value of the cephalopods represented by lower beaks was 17,300 kj.
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  • 48
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (04). p. 849.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: The stomach contents of 235 specimens of the squid Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis (4·3–36·5 cm mantle length, ML) were examined. A detailed list of 60 species of prey, comprising young and adult squid, is given together with their frequency of occurrence and proportional contribution. The size and number of each food item was investigated. Three ontogenetic size-groups of S. oualaniensis were distinguished: I, fry and young (4–10 cm ML), micronektonic epipelagic plankton-eaters; II, transient critical size group (10–15 cm ML), converting from feeding on planktonic crustaceans and fish larvae to myctophid fishes; III, medium-sized (adult) nyctoepipelagic nektonic predators (15–36·5 cm ML), feeding primarily on myctophids and secondarily on squid. Myctophids (genera Symbolophorus, Myctophum and Hygophum) were the most abundant prey in the diet of adult S. oualaniensis from different parts of its distribution.
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  • 49
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 86 . pp. 297-300.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-12
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2017-04-19
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2018-03-16
    Description: Occurrence of stomach wall granulomas in European smelt was studled at 6 locations along the German North Sea coast. Identification of larval nematodes inhabiting these granulomas is provided for the first time. Three species, isolated by pepsin-HC1 digestion, are involved: Hysterothylacium cf. cornutum, Cosmocephalus obvelatus and Paracuaria tridentata. 72% of all stomachs examined were affected. The ratio of number of granulomas to number of the 3 larval species free in the mesentery was 1:1.3. Differences in prevalences and intensities were significant among all locations. Granuloma abundance was highest in samples from the Elbe estuary decreasing in the other locations relative to their distance from the Elbe. There was no relationship between the number of larvae encapsulated on the stomach wall and the number of larval P decipjens in the musculature (r = 0.3). Host condition factor could not be related to number of granulomas. Smelt appaears to be an important transmitter of spiruroid nematode larvae to marine birds in this region.
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  • 52
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72 (02). p. 293.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Samples of male Illex argentinus were taken from the catch of a Japanese squid jigging vessel on the Patagonian Shelf during March 1986 and an analysis was carried out on the morphometrics of the somatic and reproductive organ systems in relation to maturation. The data show that growth and maturation occurred simultaneously during most of the time that Illex argentinus males were on the feeding grounds over the southern Patagonian Shelf. In a squid of a ‘standard’ mantle length the whole body mass increased relative to mantle length during maturation and this could be attributed to the increase in mass of the reproductive and accessory reproductive organs. During maturation the mantle and digestive gland mass showed no significant change relative to mantle length. The mass of the head increased and the mass of the viscera decreased relative to mantle length. In male Illex argentinus, as in the female, the energy and nutrient resources for maturation are derived from the squid's food and during the course of maturation there is an increasing shift of emphasis from somatic growth to production of gonad and accessory reproductive organs. The proportional investment of body mass in reproductive and accessory reproductive organs predicted for a fully mature male Illex argentinus was less than half that of the female.
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  • 53
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of The Marine Biological Association of The United Kingdom, 72 (2). pp. 417-434.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-17
    Description: The upper bathyal sea-pen Kophobelemnon stelliferum extends to depths of about 1600 m in the Porcupine Seabight, to the south-west of Ireland, but is rare below about 1150 m. Photographic data suggest that the species attains numerical abundances of more than 2 m−2and a wet weight biomass of at least 4 g m−2. The highest densities, however, do not necessarily correspond to the highest biomass values since there is a clear depth-related change in population structure. The largest sea-pens are restricted to the deeper parts of the bathymetric range of the species. There is also a marked change in the growth form at a total colony length of about 250 mm, with larger colonies having relatively more polyps than smaller ones. The sexes are separate in Kophobelemnon stelliferum and the sex ratio of colonies is about 1:1. The maximum oocyte diameter is about 800 μm, but there is no evidence of seasonal reproduction by this pennatulid in the Porcupine Seabight.
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  • 54
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 81 . pp. 51-63.
    Publication Date: 2015-10-07
    Description: ATP content and metabolic activity of benthic foraminifera were determined from deepsea sediments of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. Metabolic activity was analysed by measurements of Electron Transport System (ETS] activity and heat production. This, combined with live observations, revealed 2 survival strategies. Ruperlina stabilis, an obligate suspension feeder, is adapted to conditions in which it receives a steady input of particles throughout the year, enabling it to maintain a relatively high ATP content (153 f 23 ng ATP ind.-l) with a reduced ATP turnover rate (0.008 S-'). In contrast Cribrostomoides subglobosum, Pyrgo rotalaria and Rhabdammina abyssorum undergo large (up to 10-fold) fluctuations in seasonal values of ATP and heat production, but retain a high, relatively constant ATP turnover rate (i.e. seconds). Such a rapid turnover allows these foraminifera to take quick advantage of sudden nutrient inputs; this state of readiness, however, is maintained at the cost of the protoplasm, which benthic foraminifera are apparently capable of metabolizing in times of starvation. C. subglobosum and P rotalaria responded to several sedimentation events with an increase in ETS activ~tys;i ngle cells sometimes showed extremely high ATP values (50- to 100-fold increase), reflecting an individual physiological response to food input to the deep-sea.
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  • 55
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 88 . pp. 293-296.
    Publication Date: 2019-06-26
    Description: An association of Argonauta argo Linnaeus 1758 with Phyllorhiza punctata von Lendenfeld 1884 was observed in situ and collected north of Bohol Island in the Philippine archipelago. The argonaut held the exumbrella of the live lellyfish with its lateral and ventral arms. About half of the medusa bell surface was damaged and large pieces of mesogloea were lacking. The affected exumbrella area was charactenzed by the presence of masses of rod-like bacteria which did not occur on the undamaged ciliated surface. The center of the bell showed 2 holes interpretated as bite marks from the cephalopod. Five channels led from the holes to the medusa's gastric cavity. This connection possibly enabled the argonaut to feed on the tissue and to access particles caught by the secondary mouth papillae of the oral arms of P. punctata. Furthermore, the association could serve A. argo as protection or camouflage against predators because of the stinging capability of the scyphomedusa.
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2014-01-23
    Description: Epibiosis on the shells of Littorina littorea (L.) varies between populations. While snails from the Helgoland intertidal zone (North Sea) rarely carry any epibionts, subtidal snails from the Kiel Bight (Baltic Sea) are frequently fouled. This study shows that L. littorea lacks typical anti-fouling defence adaptations such as mechanical, physical or chemical defences. Our enclosure experiments suggest that epibiosis on the shells is inversely correlated to L. littorea population density. At high densities snails frequently pass over one another and subsequent grazing, bulldozing and/or foot mucus secretion may contribute to the inhibition of epibionts. Consequently, the observed differences in shell epibiosis between the 2 L. littorea populations may to a large extent be explained by considerably higher L. littorea abundances in the Helgoland intertidal zone. Differences in habitat conditions probably play a secondary role. We suggest that the fouling inhibiting factors associated with high population density (mucus secretion, bulldozing, mutual grazing) are to be considered as a biological disturbance which effectively blocks recruitment by most potential colonizers.
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  • 57
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 71 (01). p. 47.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: The presence of Stoloteuthis leucoptera in the Mediterranean is recorded on the basis of three specimens, including an adult male, caught by IKMT and by commercial otter-trawl in the Ligurian Sea. The hypothesis of a recent immigration is discussed. The list of Mediterranean cephalopods (Mangold Wirz, 1963; Torchio, 1968; Bello, 1986; Mangold & Boletzsky, 1987) includes the Sepiolidae of the subfamily Heteroteuthinae, whose members are supposed to be pelagic throughout their life cycle. Mangold Wirz (1963) recognizes in the Mediterranean fauna the unique species Heteroteuthis dispar, the other authors include H. atlantis Voss, which Voss himself (1955) reported at Messina. To this group may now be added Stoloteuthis leucoptera (Verrill, 1878) a species until now recorded in limited Atlantic areas. Verrill (1881) wrote “This species is an exceedingly beautiful one, when living, owing to the elegance and brilliancy of its colours and the gracefulness of its movements. In swimming it moves its fins in a manner analogous to the motion of the wings of a butterfly.”
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: A correlation of the Campanian–Maastrichtian boundary is attempted using foraminiferal and nannoplankton data from two areas: the eastern North Atlantic and northwestern Germany. The Boreal benthic and Tethyan planktonic foraminiferal zonation schemes are applied to Site 548A, where both foraminiferal groups occur frequently. A direct comparison of both biozonations reveals that the base of the Maastrichtian, according to planktonic foraminifers, has to be placed in the Upper Campanian of the Boreal benthic foraminiferal biozonation, which concurs with the nannoplankton results. The Tethyan Middle and Upper Maastrichtian are probably equivalent to the Upper Maastrichtian in the Boreal sense. The bases of the Maastrichtian substages are thus diachronous between the Boreal and Tethyan realms. Palaeotemperatures (which were estimated using the oxygen isotopic composition of the Goban Spur chalks) indicate, in combination with palaeowind directions, that the faunal and floral distribution pattern recorded is the result of a stable, warm water outflow from the northwest European epicontinental seas through the Channel area to the Celtic Shelf sea and Goban Spur. This mechanism appears to have been a dominant separating factor of the Boreal and Tethyan bioprovinces on the western European Shelf.
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  • 59
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    Kluwer
    In:  GeoJournal, 25 (4). pp. 305-358.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: The Earth's stress field is composed of 4 sub-fields that are induced by 1. the gravitational force (impacts, etc; geodynamic theories on the expansion or contraction of the globe); 2. the centrifugal force of the spinning Earth (models on continental drift explaining the equatorial Alpine-Himalayan collisional mountain belt and longitudinally orientated rifts or oceans); 3. thermal convection (plate tectonic model); 4. tidal forces (extended plate tectonic model). A standard global stress field results from a combination of these four sub-stress-fields. From the existence of six otherwise inexplicable geodynamic phenomena, it has to be concluded that the standard global stress field of the present can only be an instantaneous (still) photograph of a field that constantly migrates eastwards relative to the Earth's continents. This disclosure can be explained with an extended plate tectonic model, in which the Earth's surface is subdivided by the circum-Pacific ring of subduction zones, into a Pacific area and a continental or Pangaea area with intra-Pangaea oceans (Atlantic, Indian Ocean, etc.). The Pangaea area in turn is subdivided into a North Pangaea area and a South Pangaea area. Due to the off-centre rotation of the spinning Earth around the gravitational centre of the Earth-Moon (-Sun) system (tidal forces), the lower mantle, the Pacific basin, area or state (Pacific crust = lower mantle?), the remaining states that together with the Pacific state compose the Wilson Cycle of ocean opening and closing (Rift/Red Sea state, Atlantic state, Pacific state, Collision/Himalayas state), the ocean sequence of which is permanently arranged from E to W through 360° around the globe, and the standard global stress field as an expression of the Wilson Cycle, are constantly displaced eastwards relative to the upper mantle, the continents or the North and South Pangaea areas with Intra-Pangaea oceans, completing one full turn around the globe in 200 to 250 my (principle of hypocycloid gearing). The continents migrate westwards around the globe and around the Pacific basin in the N and S hemispheres, through sequences of plate tectonic settings of the Oceanic or Wilson Cycle that possess distinct regional stress fields as parts of the standars global stress field, or else the continents are subjected to eastward migrating sequences of settings with distinct regional stress fields as parts of the Wilson Cycle/standard global stress field. By rotations and N-S migrations of the individual continents dissected in all directions by groups of parallel structural planes (fracture systems) through the standard global stress field, the orientation of which is aligned with the spinning Earth's axis and equator and that constantly migrates eastwards relative to the continents, the amount and nature of stress (compression, tension, shearing) a given fracture system is subjected to is constantly altered and the tectonic activity may gradually be transferred from the system under consideration to another fracture system, with slightly different strike directions. Every 400 to 500 my or each Pangaea Cycle (two complete W-E/E-W displacements around the globe between the continents/Pangaea areas with Intra-Pangaea Oceans/upper mantle on the one side and the lower mantle/Pacific basin/ sequence of ocean states and local stress fields of the Wilson Cycle and the standard global stress field on the other) the inhomogeneous standard global stress field is reversed in the N-S direction. Any model proposing the long-time existence of extended lineaments or fracture systems that do not end at the margin of the respective continent or at an orogen/suture zone/former continental margin, in the event of being older than the respective orogenesis, but which cross the surrounding ocean or the younger orogen and continue in the neighbouring continents or former independent continents or even encompass the whole globe, and which puts foreward simultaneous tectonic activity along the whole length of such lineament or fracture system and proposes their longevity or permanent existence, contradicts the physical laws that are the foundation of plate tectonics and mobilism.
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  • 60
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 69 . pp. 281-291.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-07
    Description: For a 6 wk period covering the time before, during, and after the phytoplankton spring bloom, macroscopic aggregates (2 0.5 mm diameter) were repeatedly collected and water column properties simultaneously measured at a fixed station in the Southern North Sea. Distinct changes in aggregate structure and composition were observed during the study. Predominantly detrital aggregates during the early phase of the study were followed by diatom-dominated algal flocs around the peak of the bloom. Mucus-rich aggregates containing both algal and detrital components and with large numbers of attached bacteria dominated the post-bloom interval. The phytoplankton succession within the aggregates closely reflected the succession in the water column with a time delay of a few days. Algal flocculation did not occur as a simultaneous aggregation of the entire phytoplankton community, but as a successional aggregat~on of selected diatom species. Although the concentrations of inorganic nutrients diminished considerably during the development of the phytoplankton bloom, the termination of the bloom appeared to be mostly controlled by physical coagulation processes. The importance of biologically-controlled factors for physical coagulation is discussed.
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  • 61
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of The Marine Biological Association of The United Kingdom, 71 (1). pp. 1-10.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-17
    Description: The free-running locomotor activity rhythms of freshly-captured swimming crabs Liocarcinus holsatus and L. depurator have been studied in constant conditions in the laboratory. L. holsatus captured in the intertidal zone of sandy beaches showed strong circatidal activity rhythms with maximum activity at high tide. L. holsatus captured in the sublittoral zone had a clear tendency to show circadian activity rhythms with highest activity during day-time hours. L. depurator occurred only sublittorally and showed circadian activity patterns with highest activity during the night. Exposure to hydrostatic pressure cycles of tidal amplitude and periodicity, entrained strong circatidal activity rhythms in previously arhythmic L. holsatus. This activity pattern also showed a marked circadian component. Exposure to the same regime entrained a circadian rhythm, but not a circatidal rhythm in L. depurator. In the sublittoral zone L. depurator is active mainly during the night, whereas L. holsatus, is active mainly during the day. This may constitute a behavioural mechanism for minimizing competitive interactions between these two sympatric crabs
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  • 62
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    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 69 . pp. 273-280.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-07
    Description: Aggregate size and abundance were monitored in situ at a fixed station in the southern North Sea during a 6 wk investigation which covered the phytoplankton spring bloom and the pre- and post-bloom periods. Particle aggregates were abundant dunng the entire period of study. Biologically derived material, such as algal cells, played a central role in aggregate formation. Maximum total aggregate volume coincided with the peak of the bloom. Maximum aggregate size did not correlate with either phytoplankton biomass or total suspended matter Despite a distinct increase in the amount of aggregated material during the development of the bloom, maximum aggregate size remained at about 1 mm diameter during most of the investigation. The formation of large, marine-snow-sized aggregates up to 5 cm in longest dimension, which was restricted to a short period following the decline of the phytoplankton bloom, coincided with comparatively low shear rates. Results are consistent with physical coagulation models. Aggregate formation can be described by a 2-state system in which the amount of aggregated matter is low dunng the development and following the decline of a bloom, and high during the peak of a bloom.
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  • 63
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  In: Teleconnections Linking Worldwide Climate Anomalies. , ed. by Glantz, M. H. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 191-226. ISBN 978-0521364751
    Publication Date: 2019-08-07
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  • 64
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 70 (04). pp. 829-840.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Serological methods for prey identification have been applied to detection of residues ofsandeel (Ammodytidae) protein in faeces of common seals (Phoca vitulina) and grey seals(Halichoerus grypus) from the Moray Firth, north-east Scotland. Antisera raised to muscleprotein from Ammodytes marinus were evaluated by testing their reactions with proteinextracts made from a range of North Sea fish species and protein residues in in vitro digestates,seal digestive tracts and seal faeces. It was concluded that, using fused rocketimmuno-electrophoresis, linkage of precipitin peaks from unknown samples with peaksfrom standard sandeel extract was a reliable indicator of the presence of sandeel in theunknown sample. Seasonal variation in the incidence of sandeels in common seal diet in theMoray Firth was examined by identifying otoliths, bones, and proteins, and all threemethods indicated that sandeels occurred in the majority of samples tested in the summer,but were less important during the winter. Proteins were detected in fewer samples thanotoliths, particularly in February and March. Possible reasons for this difference arediscussed. Serological identification of sandeel proteins is potentially applicable to dietarystudies on all marine predators.
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  • 65
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 70 (02). p. 459.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Thirty-four adult individuals of Loligo forbesi (males and females with dorsal mantle lengths from 27–77 cm) were observed in captivity in a 3 m diameter closed sea-water system on Faial Island, Azores. Squids were caught by jigging and were fed with horse mackerel (Trachurus picturatus) and chub mackerel (Scomber japonicus), either alive or dead. The maximum survival was 73 days. Feeding behaviour was dependent upon both the size of prey and its state of preservation;e.g. the squid would eat the head of small fish (〈 about 15 cm), reject the head of medium-sized fish (about 15–35 cm) and would eat only the dorsal part of a big fish (〉 about 35 cm) or a fish poorly preserved. Seventeen chromatic, 9 postural and 6 movement components of body patterns were observed and described. Conspecific interactions considered to be aggression and dominance were observed among males; no such interactions occurred when one male and two females were kept together. Body patterns in relation to relaxation, stress, shock, feeding, locomotion and aggression are also described.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2015-03-10
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  • 67
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    In:  In: Paleoecology, Biostratigraphy, Paleoceanography and Taxonomy of Agglutinated Foraminifera. , ed. by Hemleben, C. NATO ASI Series, 327 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 661-694.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: Distribution of recent, benthic foraminifera in the silled, partly anoxic Drammensfjord, reflects the prevailing hydrographic conditions, and reveals different intra basin responses to depleted oxygen conditions. The redox cline dips from about 35 m in the northern to about 60 m in the southern part of the fjord. Sediment surface samples are strongly dominated by agglutinated taxa except in the most oxygen depleted areas (O2 〈2 ml/1) in middle and southern parts. The water masses are subdivided into three units: 1) Brackish surface layer dominated by Miliammina fusca; 2) Transitional water masses with Astrammina sphaerica, Eggerelloides scabrus, Spiroplectammina biformis, and Ammodiscus? gullmarensis as frequently occurring species; and 3) Oxygen depleted water masses (salinity max. 31.2 ‰) dominated by Stainforthia fusiformis. The thin-shelled S. fusiformis shows adaption to low oxygen (〈2 ml/1) conditions and muddy, organic rich substrate as long as salinity exceeds about 30 ‰. Species diversity decreases towards the redox cline, and no foraminifera are found in oxygen depleted areas with salinities less than about 30 ‰
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2018-09-17
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  • 69
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    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 455-473.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-27
    Description: Six sediment cores from the Eurasian Basin were studied to determine and understand climatically driven changes of Arctic Ocean basins. Detailed time control of sediments for the last 45 kyr is based on accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) C14-dating of biogenic carbonate (N. pachyderma, left coiling). The most important results from our study are summarized as follows. From 45 to 13.5 ka low sedimentation rates prevailed (0.35 cm/kyr). They increased drastically at the transition from the last glacial to interglacial (Termination Ia, 13.5 ka) leading into high Holocene sedimentation rates (1.06 cm/kyr). Low carbonate concentrations (〈 4%) prevailed from 13.5 to 9 ka at Termination I. Decreased salinities can be expected for Termination la (Zahn et al., 1985, Jones & Keigwin, 1988, Mienert et al., 1989) due to glacial meltwater influence possibly accompanied by sea ice melting. As a result of the freshwater influence, productivity of planktic foraminifers decreased and this, in turn, resulted in a drastic decrease in carbonate concentration during Termination Ia. Although carbonate concentration varies only between 0 and 9%, it distinctly changes both the compressional-wave velocity (from 1485 to 1510 m/s) and the wave attenuation (from 0.1 to 0.45 dB/m/kHz) in the sediment. Climatically driven changes in magnetic susceptibility have proved to be a valuable paleoclimatic tool for intercore correlations. Our results indicate that the same general conclusions are valid for pelagic environments of both Atlantic and Arctic Ocean basins.
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  • 70
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    In:  In: Climate-Ocean Interaction. , ed. by Schlesinger, M. Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 319-342.
    Publication Date: 2016-09-07
    Description: Based on organic carbon accumulation rates, nine time slices of oceanic export paleoproductivity (Pnew) are presented which depict the variability of Pnew on a global scale through the last 30,000 years and document that the basic distribution patterns did not change through glacial and interglacial times. However, the glacial ocean shows an increased contrast of high- versus low-productivity zones. δ13C values of near-surface-dwelling planktonic foraminifera Globigerinoides ruber suggest that the same contrast applies to the glacial nutrient inventories of the ambient surface waters, with a significant glacial transfer of PO4 from low- to high-productivity zones. In this way, glacial Pnew increased by a global average of about 2–4 Gt Cyr−1 and led, via an enhanced CaCO3 dissolution and alkalinity in the deep ocean, to a significant extraction of CO2 from the surface water and the atmosphere.
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  • 71
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Paleoecology, Biostratigraphy, Paleoceanography and Taxonomy of Agglutinated Foraminifera. , ed. by Hemleben, C. NATO ASI series: Series C, Mathematical and physical sciences, 327 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 3-11.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-03
    Description: Unicellular protozoans are among the oldest fossils which we can recognize from the Precambrian. Presumably, foraminiferal ancestors were among the earliest of them, but had not yet benefitted from being sheltered by a biomineralized test. During the earliest Cambrian the first agglutinating foraminifera made their first appearance in the geologic record. These “primitive” forms built their test of foreign particles held together by an organic cement. This organic cement may have been secreted by the foraminifer in cytoplasmic vacuoles as is the case with Recent agglutinating foraminifera. Yet, the capability to biomineralize calcite did not evolve until after another 60 million years when the fusulinids developed their microgranular wall. Calcitic cemented agglutinates occur even later, at the base of the Carboniferous. Thus, in the fossil record the agglutinated foraminifera occur as a twofold group with a rather distinct evolution.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2018-05-07
    Description: The accuracy of species-specific phytoplankton growth rates estimated by cell cycle analysis was tested with the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum minimum (Pav.) Sch. under conditions of altered nitrogen and phosphorus availability. Reduced nutrient availability caused major changes in the duration of cell cycle phases. At the nutrient level of complete f/2 media, the length of the combination of S, G2, and M phases was about 8 h at growth rates of 0.53 to 0.56 d-' A decrease in ~ 0 ,o~r N-O3 concentration extended the S+G2+M phase to about 15.5 to 17.7 h at growth rates ranging from 0.41 to 0.30 d-' Changes in phase durations dld not significantly affect growth rate estimates. In addition, a minimum growth rate, calculated from the maximum values on phase fraction curves, was shown to be usable as an error detector in some cases. Results support the validity of cell cycle analysis to measure in situ growth rates.
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  • 73
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    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. 〈https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3452-2208〉 NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 308 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 647-675.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-14
    Description: Based on accumulation rates of the bulk sediment and some pelagic components (carbonate, total organic carbon, and biogenic opal fractions) major changes in the paleoceanography of the northern North Atlantic from Miocene to Recent are discussed. Interactions of various processes could have created a stepwise evolution of cold climates in the northern hemisphere. Prominent events were the onset of deep water export across the Greenland-Scotland Ridge with the first significant overflow across the Iceland-Scotland segment occurring most probably between 13 – 11 Ma and at about 7 Ma across the Denmark Strait. Oscillations of sea-level around the critical sill depth in the early phases of the subsidence may have influenced the oceanic circulation in the North Atlantic as well as in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. Furthermore the potential of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea to form and export dense deep water, increased the meridionality in the northern hemisphere. During 10.2 – 9.3, 8.7 – 8.2, 5.8 – 5.4 and 4.8 – 3.2 Ma representing times of increased water mass exchange to the central North Atlantic, carbonate deposition occurred. On the other hand, higher opal accumulation rates and decreased water mass exchange (9.3 – 8.7 and 5.4 – 4.8 Ma) may be correlated with sea-level oscillations around the critical sill depth of the Greenland-Scotland Ridge. The build-up of northern hemisphere cooling can probably traced back to late Miocene times with modest ice-rafted debris input. A significant stepwise increase of northern hemisphere cooling occurred around 4 Ma and finally resulted in the first large extension of sea ice and ice-rafting in the entire North Atlantic at ca. 2.6 Ma.
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  • 74
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    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 308 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 489-497.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-13
    Description: A stable oxygen isotope stratigraphy for the last 150.000 yr is established in sedimentary cores from the central Fram Strait. Radiometric ages obtained by the U/Th method in one core provide an absolute time framework for the oxygen isotope stratigraphy. The oxygen isotope record from substage 5a in the central Fram Strait is represented by lighter oxygen isotope ratios than substage 5e. This probably reflects lower salinities of the uppermost water column due to intense melting of icebergs and/or the supply of meltwater from adjacent landmasses rather than higher sea surface temperatures.
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  • 75
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 308 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 187-211.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-13
    Description: Much of Arctic sea ice forms over the shallow continental shelves along the perimeter of the basin. Ice which escapes the shelf is transported several years within the Beaufort Gyre and Transpolar Drift stream, before exiting the Arctic Basin through Fram Strait. This ice, and especially that in the Siberian branch of the Transpolar Drift stream in the Eurasian Basin, may incorporate large quantities of particulate matter during formation on the shelf. Subsequent seasonal surface melting and winter freezing on the ice underside results in surface accumulation of particulate matter. Rafting of floes over and under each other results in a complex ice stratigraphy and redistribution of sediment accumulations. In contrast, Antarctic sea ice has only limited sources for sediment incorporation, and most of the ice-cover melts each year. These variations in Arctic and Antarctic ice characteristics are illustrated by analyses of ice crystal texture, c-axis orientations, salinity, δ 18O on ice cores and discussion of potential sediment input.
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  • 76
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Paleoecology, Biostratigraphy, Paleoceanography and Taxonomy of Agglutinated Foraminifera. , ed. by Hemleben, C. NATO ASI Series C: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 327 . Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 53-75.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-14
    Description: We live in a world of ever increasing complexity. In the 25 years since the publication of the Treatise volumes by Loeblich and Tappan (1964), the number of validly described foraminiferal genera has more than doubled from 1192 in 1964, to at least 2455 in 1988. Agglutinated foraminifera (including the proteinaceous allogromiids) occupy about 180 pages of the recently revised version (Loeblich and Tappan, 1988). From the astrorhizids to the chrysalidinids, there are now at least 624 valid agglutinated genera, nearly as many genera as in the hyaline calcareous benthic suborder Rotaliina.
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  • 77
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    In:  In: Phosphate Deposits of the World Vol. 3: Neogene to modern phosphorites. , ed. by Burnett, W. C. and Riggs, S. R. Cambridge University Press, Camridge, England, pp. 300-311.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-04
    Description: Organic-rich shales sampled from the aples Beach section of the Monterey Formation. Califomia. contain authigenic phosphorite phases which apparently formed within bacterial mat laminations. Light and scanning electron microscope observations show that the fossilized remains ofthese mats are similar to communities of filamentous sulfur-oxidizing bacteria found today at slope-depth, sediment, oxic anoxic interfaces. The crystal size and habits ofthe phosphatic minerals resemble contemporaf) prec1pitates in contact with pore water solutions. Mineralogical and chemical analyses ofthe most phosphatic layers show that some are a nearly pure carbonate fluorapatite (or francolite). These la)ers are lightly colored and are sandwiched between black siliceous muds with 〈0.2% CaCOJ . and organic carbon contents that excecd 25%. In othcr phosphatic intcrvals of thc Naplcs Beach section. ca leite is a major diluent oflight and dark layers. The C:P ratio of a single modern bacterial mat sample shows that these benthic communities are more enriched in phosphorus than planktonic organic matter. Thus, the generally believed premise that authigenic phosphorite formation results from organic matter diagenesis in near-surface anoxic sediments is hcre modified by the contention that such transformations are more highly favored in sediments supporting massive microbial communities.
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  • 78
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 70 . pp. 597-610.
    Publication Date: 2020-11-16
    Description: The influence of photoperiodicity on hatching of Loligo forbesi and Loligo vulgaris embryos was investigated under different experimental light-dark (LD) conditions. The transition from light to dark stimulated hatching and functions as a "Zeitgeber" or synchronizer. Independent of the timing and duration of the dark period most embryos hatched soon after termination of the light period. Embyros which had developed in constant light, showed no hatching rhythm at all. If these embryos were exposed to a dark shock most embryos hatched soon after the onset of darkness. A twilight shock, in which the light was reduced by 50% (i.e. 50 µE s -1m-²), could not simulate hatching. Embryos which were kept from stage X on in an artifically controlled LD cycle, preferentially hatch in a period which coincides with the period at which darkness usually occured when placed in constant illumination from stage XX onwards.
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  • 79
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  In: Light and life in the sea. , ed. by Herring, P. J. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 199-207. ISBN 0-521-39207-1
    Publication Date: 2021-05-04
    Description: Light absorbed by the photoreceptor membranes of the retina is transformed by a series of biochemical steps into changes in receptor potential. The visual pigment, rhodopsin, and associated enzymes which relay the visual signal belong to a widespread family of receptorenzyme complexes which transmit sensory, hormonal and neurotransmitter signals into cells. In the invertebrate visual system, rhodopsin activates enzymes which increase cytoplasmic calcium. The highly specialised and structurally ordered photoreceptors of the squid retina provide a favourable system for studying the mechanisms of these enzyme pathways.
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  • 80
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Polar Record, 26 (157). pp. 103-108.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-23
    Description: This article describes the natural history of a large colony of emperor penguins Aptenodytes for steri , its size, dispersal pattern of chicks, and associations with other bird and mammal species. A mid-season count of 19,364 chicks indicated that about 20–25,000 breeding pairs had been present in June and July. The colony was fragmented into several sub-groups which showed different mean sizes of chicks and survival to fledging. Other species observed included leopard seals Hydrurga leptonyx , the only major predators, which preyed heavily on both adults and fledging chicks. Fledgelings left the colony over a period of about 10 days; departure was an active process in which the chicks walked to the ice edge and dispersed in groups, swimming consistently southward. At this time they were still in about 60% down and weighed about 10 kg, having lost some 30% of the heaviest mass achieved during parental feeding.
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  • 81
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    In:  In: Geological History of the Polar Oceans: Arctic versus Antarctic. , ed. by Bleil, U. and Thiede, J. 〈https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3452-2208〉 Kluwer, Netherlands, pp. 475-487.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-13
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  • 82
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Polar Record, 26 (156). pp. 1-6.
    Publication Date: 2021-11-18
    Description: The deep eastern Arctic basin between the Lomonosov Ridge and the Eurasian continental margin differs from other ocean basins in the very slow spreading of its floor and unusual depositional environment under perennial sea-ice cover. The recent expedition ARK IV/3 of RV Polar stern for the first time made geoscientific investigations from the northern margin of the Barents Sea north to the Nansen-Gakkel Ridge. Much deeper than most other mid-ocean ridges, this ridge is poorly-surveyed, but has a central valley which in places is deeper than 5.5 km, 1–1.5 km below the basin floors on either side. Heat flow in the central part of the valley is very rapid; both basement rocks and overlying sediments showed unexpectedly the influence of intense and long-term hydrothermal activity. The sediments on the northern and southern flanks of the ridge are slightly calcareous pelagic mud layers alternating with carbonate-free horizons, where up to 40% of the sedimentary section is soft mud clasts. Similar mud aggregates were observed on the surface of the multi-year sea ice, appearing to represent a special type of sediment transport by sea ice in the Transpolar Drift. In contrast to the western Arctic, Fram Strait and the Norwegian-Greenland Sea, gravel is rarely found in sediment cores. Recovered cores indicate that icebergs and sea ice carrying coarse sediment seldom rafted detritus to the study area during the last approximately 300,000 years.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2023-11-16
    Description: Dissolution rates of small forsterite spheres in superheated melts of basalt, andesite and rhyolite composition have been measured at 1300°C, atmospheric pressure. The rate is constant (83 µm hr−1) in the basalt, regardless of run duration. In the andesite the initial dissolution rate is 200µm hr−1, followed by a decrease to a constant value of 16µmhr−1 in 2–3 hours. Dissolution rate in the rhyolite decreases from an initial value of 1.7 to 〈0.1 µmhr−1 over 280 hours and never reaches a constant rate. Once the rate of dissolution has become constant, the film of contaminated melt that forms in melt about a crystal does not thicken with time, indicating attainment of a steady-state condition. Steady state is attributed to natural convection arising from the difference in density between the film of contaminated melt surrounding a crystal and that beyond. The density difference is approximately 2% of the density of the rock melt.
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  • 84
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 69 (03). pp. 545-553.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: The importance of feeding pattern is well documented in fish (Jenkins & Green, 1977; Simenstad & Cailliet, 1986) but there are not many reported studies in cephalopods. Feeding patterns, as defined by Jenkins & Green (1977) have been studied, to our knowledge, only in Todarodes pacificus (Okiyama, 1965), Loligo pealei (Vovk, 1972), Loligo opalescens (Karpov & Cailliet, 1978), Illex illecebrosus (Amaratunga et ah, 1979; Amaratunga, 1980) and Nototodarus gouldi (O'Sullivan & Cullen, 1983). Boyle (1983) dealt with aspects of feeding in several cephalopod species but not specifically with feeding pattern. Aspects of feeding in Sepia officinalis have been reviewed by Nixon (1987). The present work describes the daily feeding pattern in Sepia officinalis from data collected in the field.
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  • 85
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Geological Magazine, 126 (02). p. 95.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: Santorini volcanic field has had 12 major (1–10 km3 or more of magma), and numerous minor, explosive eruptions over the last ~ 200 ka. Deposits from these eruptions (Thera Pyroclastic Formation) are well exposed in caldera-wall successions up to 200 m thick. Each of the major eruptions began with a pumice-fall phase, and most culminated with emplacement of pyroclastic flows. Pyroclastic flows of at least six eruptions deposited proximal lag deposits exposed widely in the caldera wall. The lag deposits include coarse-grained lithic breccias (andesitic to rhyodacitic eruptions) and spatter agglomerates (andesitic eruptions only). Facies associations between lithic breccia, spatter agglomerate, and ignimbrite from the same eruption can be very complex. For some eruptions, lag deposits provide the only evidence for pyroclastic flows, because most of the ignimbrite is buried on the lower flanks of Santorini or under the sea. At least eight eruptions tapped compositionally heterogeneous magma chambers, producing deposits with a range of zoning patterns and compositional gaps. Three eruptions display a silicic–silicic + mafic–silicic zoning not previously reported. Four eruptions vented large volumes of dacitic or rhyodacitic pumice, and may account for 90% or more of all silicic magma discharged from Santorini. The Thera Pyroclastic Formation and coeval lavas record two major mafic-to-silicic cycles of Santorini volcanism. Each cycle commenced with explosive eruptions of andesite or dacite, accompanied by construction of composite shields and stratocones, and culminated in a pair of major dacitic or rhyodacitic eruptions. Sequences of scoria and ash deposits occur between most of the twelve major members and record repeated stratocone or shield construction following a large explosive eruption. Volcanism at Santorini has focussed on a deep NE–SW basement fracture, which has acted as a pathway for magma ascent. At least four major explosive eruptions began at a vent complex on this fracture. Composite volcanoes constructed north of the fracture were dissected by at least three caldera-collapse events associated with the pyroclastic eruptions. Southern Santorini consists of pryoclastic ejecta draped over a pre-volcanic island and a ridge of early- to mid-Pleistocene volcanics. The southern half of the present-day caldera basin is a long-lived, essentially non-volcanic, depression, defined by topographic highs to the south and east, but deepened by subsidence associated with the main northern caldera complex, and is probably not a separate caldera.
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  • 86
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 54 . pp. 109-119.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-04
    Description: Sinking and sedimentation rates of a natural phytoplankton community were simultaneously measured during the course of a diatom winterkpring bloom in a 13m3 experimental mesocosm. Sinking rate was determined directly in settling columns and was calculated from sediment trap catches. The 2 methods yielded significantly different results. Whole-community as well as speciesspecific sinking rates varied over time. These variations were related to changes of the environmental conditions. Over a 26d study period, a total of 7.5g cm-' was collected in the sediment traps. Viable phytoplankton cells were the primary component of the sedimented matter while zooplankton fecal pellets contributed on average less than 10 %. Assuming the Redfield atomic ratio for the collected material, the amount of carbon which sedimented during the winterkpring bloom could be predicted from pre-bloom nutrient concentrations. The daily sedimentation rate varied considerably over time and displayed a characterisbc pattern. This pattern is evidently a function of both suspended phytoplankton biomass and the temporal variation in whole-community sinking rate.
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  • 87
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 55 . pp. 251-259.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-07
    Description: During the Anglo-German Antarctic expedition in February 1982 macroplankton was collected in the waters off the Antarctic Peninsula. Macroplankton compos~tions at 36 stations were compared and degrees of similarity submitted to hierarchical cluster analysis. Results demonstrate strong spatial heterogeneity, which could be attributed to the different water masses in this region. These dissimilarities demarcate 4 provinces, each characterized by a distinct macroplankton community: (l) The 'Oceanic Community' comprises the stations influenced by the Westwind Drift; oceanic forms are typical (e.g. the hyperiid amphipod Vibilia antarctica, and the polychaete Vanadis antarctica). (2) The 'Bellingshausen Water Community' is influenced by Bellingshausen Sea water and oceanic specles are scarce; large numbers of Antarctic krill Euphausja superba occur but shallow water forms are also abundant. (3) The 'Nentic Community' consists of stations in the shelf water of the southern Bransfield Strait; it is charactenzed by postlarvae of several fish species, and meroplanktonic larvae of benthic forms. Large krill concentrations, however, are also encountered. (4) A 'Transitional Community' exists in environments where various water masses mingle (e.g. at shelf slopes). This community lacks typical forms.
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  • 88
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 58 . pp. 175-189.
    Publication Date: 2014-01-23
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  • 89
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    Kluwer
    In:  In: Earthquakes at North-Atlantic Passive Margins: Neotectonics and Postglacial Rebound. , ed. by Gregersen, S. and Basham, P. W. Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 581-599.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-17
    Description: Two continent-scale ice sheets-Antarctica and Greenland currently exist on earth. The interiors of both continents are virtually aseismic. Is this coincidental or does a causal connection exist between the two observations? An examination of this question is the subject of this paper. It is concluded that with a few reasonable assumptions, ice sheets will indeed inhibit earthquakes by stabilizing potentially seismogenic faults in the underlying brittle crust. This same mechanism may also provide an explanation for the intense late-glacial faulting in Fennoscandia reported elsewhere in this volume.
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  • 90
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of Zoology, 218 (4). pp. 549-563.
    Publication Date: 2020-10-09
    Description: Cephalopod beaks recovered from stomach samples taken from l 4 sea bird species in the southern Benguela region off Southern Africa and from one species at Sub-Antarctic Marion Island, were identified as far as possible, counted and the lower rostral lengths (LRLs) measured. Dorsal mantle lengths (DMLs) and body masses of the cephalopods eaten were estimated. The results of analyses by percentage frequency of occurrence and numerical abundance are discussed with reference to present knowledge of the distribution of cephalopods eaten by sea birds in the areas studied. Division of the cephalopod component of seabird diets into species which float, and species which sink, after death indicates that the birds forage on dead or moribund cephalopods on the surface, rather than catching live bioluminescent cephalopods at night.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2021-06-21
    Description: A new species of giant unicellular parasite inhabiting the gills of squid hloroteuthis robusta is described from specimens collected from the northeastern Pacific Ocean. Hochbergia moroteuthensis gen. et sp. nov. belongs to a recently reported group of protistans whose taxonomic affinities are as yet unknown. Members of the group parasitize cephalopods and have a characteristic aspect: most of the body wall is raised into close-fitting triangular plates and there is a holdfast region, devoid of plates, by which the parasites attach to the host. H. moroteuthensis is the first species of the group to be named. The general form of the body, the precise number and arrangement of plates, and the morphology of the holdfast reglon are described.
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  • 92
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  In: Growth and reproductive strategies of freshwater phytoplankton. , ed. by Sandgren, C. D. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 227-260. ISBN 0-521-32722-9
    Publication Date: 2018-01-02
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  • 93
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 39 . pp. 153-167.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-04
    Description: A cyclonic cold-core eddy in the Northeast Atlantic of about 100 km in diameter at the sea surface was investigated in May 1985, approximately 3 wk after it had separated from the Polar Front. A strong thermocline, which was shallower but more pronounced than in the ambient water, separated a warm surface layer within the eddy from deeper cold water, while horizontal salinity gradients marked the boundary to the ambient water. The cold-core eddy could be distinguished from amblent Northeast Atlantic water in terms of its nutrient chemistry, phytoplankton species distribution and abundance, bacterial numbers and cell size. The surface layer of the eddy was distinct from deeper eddy water, and was characterized by high concentrations of chlorophyll a, total phytoplankton biomass, dinoflagellates and bacteria. At the eddy's margin diatoms were predominant. It is argued that the physical isolation of the eddy surface layer due to the formation of a shallow thermocline led to rapid utilisation of nutrients. This probably enabled the development of a dinoflagellate-dominated phytoplankton population and of organisms capable of heterotrophic regenerative processes.
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  • 94
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 67 (02). pp. 343-358.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-17
    Description: Orbulina universa d'Orbigny is a spinose planktonic foraminifer which occurs throughout surface waters of the tropical, subtropical and transition zones of the world ocean (Bé & Tolderlund, 1971). This species is unique among planktonic Foraminifera in that its life cycle is composed of two growth stages. The juvenile stage is a trochospiral form which is enclosed within a terminal spherical chamber in the adult stage. O. universa is relatively omnivorous, and consumes a variety of prey that range in size and quality from phytoplankton to copepods (Bé et al. 1977; Anderson et al. 1979; Spindler et al. 1984). In addition, each individual harbors several thousand zooxanthellae which presumably are an additional source of nutrition for the foraminifer (Be et al. 1977; Hemleben & Spindler, 1983; Spero & Parker, 1985).
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  • 95
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 38 . pp. 137-149.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-04
    Description: Time-course measurements of 15N tracer kinetics in particulate organic and in N+4 pools from tropical and temperate regions were used to test several compartmental models describing the exchange of I5N tracer in microplankton communities. Several lines of evidence suggested the involvement of a third, dissolved pool, arbitrarily labelled dissolved organic nitrogen (DON). Although the kinetic patterns of tracer movement were different between the tropical statlons and the temperate one, the same 3-compartmental model in which PON and DON can exchange material only through the intermediate of NH: gave the best fit. Only the transfer coefficients were modified. Results show that compartmental analysis is useful for the estimation of compartmental transfer rates and for testing the assumptions implicit in any given model.
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  • 96
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    Inter Research
    In:  Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 3 . pp. 119-125.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-21
    Description: Large Protista of unknown taxonomic affinities are described from 3 species of coleoid squids, and are reported from many other species of cephalopods. The white to yellow-orange, ovoid cyst-like parasites are partially embedded within small pockets on the surface of the gills, often in large numbers. Except for a holdfast region on one side of the large end, the surface of the parasite is elaborated into low triangular plates separated by grooves. The parasites are uninucleate; their cytoplasm bears lipid droplets and presumed paraglycogen granules. Trichocysts, present in a layer beneath the cytoplasmic surface, were found by transmission electron microscopy to be of the dinoflagellate type. Further studies are needed to clarify the taxonomic position of these protists.
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  • 97
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 66 . pp. 855-865.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: A survey of the ecology of the octopus Eledone cirrhosa in Scottish waters is compiled from structured interviews with fishermen, records of occurrence in traps (for lobster and crab), and a research vessel survey. This species is widespread and common throughout the inshore waters covered by fishing activity (shoreline- 140 m) on bottom types ranging through rock, stones, sand and mud. It is caught in all months of the year but is especially common inshore in the summer (July-September) and further offshore on trawling grounds in October-December. The octopus is a normal and regular predator of large Crustacea (Hotnarus, Nephrops, Cancer) caught in commercial traps but gut contents yield little identifiable dietary remains.
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  • 98
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 66 . pp. 867-879.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Serological methods for prey identification have been applied to the gut contents of a field sample of 100 Eledone cirrhosa from the Moray Firth and 7 from the Sound of Jura. Protein extracts from the crop were electrophoresed (Laurell rockets) into antisera raised against potential crustacean prey species, Cancer pagurus, Carcinus maenas, Crangon crangon, Liocarcinus spp. and Nephrops norvegicus. The strengths of the resulting reactions were evaluated on the basis of peak height, staining density and the number of homocentric peaks of immune precipitates. Sixty-two of the 100 Moray Firth animals gave a positive reaction to one or more of the antisera and the most critical assessment of the results ranked the incidence of the prey as Liocarcinus (15) 〉 Nephrops (10) 〉 Cancer (8) 〉 Crangon (2) 〉 Carcinus (0), a total of 35 reactions from 28 animals. Absence of a reaction in the 38 animals from which appreciable sample volumes were also obtained indicates that alternative prey had been consumed. Of the 7 Sound of Jura animals, 4 gave a positive reaction to Nephrops alone. A total of only 24 animals gave any indication of diet by visual recognition of remains. The value and difficulties of the methodology are discussed.
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  • 99
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 66 (02). pp. 483-496.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Recently the influence of an electric light on the capture of the main groups of deep sea animals by a midwater trawl was described and discussed (Clarke & Pascoe, 1985). With regard to fish it was shown that at depths close to 800 m the total number, the total volume, the volume of the ten largest and the volume of the single largest fish all increased significantly when an electric light was used on the headline of the trawl when compared with controls with the light off. These experiments were carried out both in the Bay of Biscay and off Madeira.
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  • 100
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 66 (02). pp. 505-526.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Growth laminations were first noted in squid statoliths by Clarke (1966), who suggested they might be useful for age determination. Spratt (1978) presented a detailed age analysis of Loligo opalescens Berry, 1911, arguing that some rings in the cephalopod statolith were deposited daily, as are fish otoliths (Panella, 1971). Growth rings in Illex illecebrosus (Lesueur, 1921) statoliths were illustrated by Lipinski (1978) with similar interpretation to that of Spratt (op. cit.). Several further attempts have been made to validate and/or to discuss age determination from statoliths (Hurley, Drew & Radtke, 1979; Hurley et al. 1983; Wiborg, 1979; Hurley & Beck, 1980; Kristensen, 1980; Lipinski, 1980, 1981; Rosenberg, Wiborg & Bech, 1981; Martins, 1982; Radtke, 1983; Dawe et al. 1984), and several other attempts are in preparation (R. J. Hanlon, G. V. Hurley, M. R. Clarke & R. L. Radtke, personal communications).
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