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  • Other Sources  (9)
  • Bornträger  (5)
  • Cambridge University Press  (4)
  • Annual Reviews
  • 1980-1984  (9)
  • 1955-1959
  • 1984  (9)
  • 1
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 64 . pp. 573-579.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Males of Eledone cirrhosa grow to a size little over 600 g and normally have well-developed, and presumably active, reproductive organs from about 200 g upwards. Total weight of the genital bag is well correlated with total body weight (r= 0·906). Growth of the testis precedes that of the spermatophoric sac, and the size of neither of these reproductive components is predictable from body weight. The sizes of these organs and the estimated number and length of stored spermatophores are given for 100 g intervals of total body weight. No evidence was obtained for a seasonal trend in male maturity.
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  • 2
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Geological Magazine, 121 (6). pp. 563-575.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-31
    Description: We present chemical data on magmatically heterogeneous pyroclastic deposits of late Quaternary age erupted from zoned magma systems underlying Tenerife (Canary Islands), Sao Miguel and Faial (Azores), and Vesuvius. The most fractionated magmas present at each centre are respectively Na-rich phonolite, trachyte, and K-rich phonolite. Within any one deposit, chemical variation is either accompanied by changes in the phenocryst assemblage (petrographic zonation) or is largely manifested in trace element abundances, unaccompanied by any petrographic change (occult zonation). Zoning is analogous to that in calc-alkaline systems where the most fractionated products are high-silica rhyolites. When a range of magma types are considered, a correlation emerges between roofward depletion of trace elements (especially REE) in the zoned system and compatability of those same trace elements in the accessory phenocryst phases present. Thus, allanite- or chevkinite-bearing rhyolitic systems are light-REE depleted roofwards, the sphene-bearing Tenerife system is middle-REE depleted roofwards, the melanite-bearing Vesuvius system is heavy-REE depleted roofwards, while the Azores systems, which lack these phases, display roofward REE enrichment. Therefore, the behaviour of trace elements may in each case be explained by fractionation of observed phenocryst assemblages. The resemblance between features of zoned magma systems and published work on the dynamic consequences of cooling saturated aqueous solutions prompts us to suggest that sidewall crystallization and consequent boundary-layer uprise to form a capping layer at top of the system may be a plausible mechanism for the generation of both petrographic and occult zonation. Reverse zoning occurs among the first-erupted tephra of some deposits, demonstrating that the most highly differentiated magma available is not always the first to be tapped during an eruption from a zoned system.
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  • 3
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 64 . pp. 581-585.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: Female Eledone cirrhosa held in aquarium conditions for periods of time of five daysand over show relatively enlarged ovary sizes. Values for ovary index considerably exceed thoseof freshly caught animals and the incidence of the final stage of maturity, in which eggs pack the oviducts, is greater. A comparison of maturity indices for fresh and aquarium males was inconclusive. The range of factors associated with aquarium conditions is briefly reviewed and it is concluded that studies of cephalopod reproductive maturation must distinguish fresh and aquarium animals. Introduction External factors effective in inducing sexual maturation in cephalopods have been suggested several times. The influence of the absence of light has been implicated since the experiments of Wells & Wells (1959) showed that blinded Octopus vulgar is matured precociously. An effect of short day length in stimulating the optic glands of Sepia has been found by Defretin & Richard (1967) and Richard (1967) but this is not clearly the case for Octopus (Buckley, 1977). Octopuses kept in aquarium conditions for lengthy periods are said to have larger relative gonad sizes than those fresh from the sea (Wells & Wells, 1975). One of the factors associated with aquarium conditions is often a degree of starvation, and this circumstance alone is held to be a factor in inducing precocious sexual maturation in Eledone (Mangold & Boucher-Rodoni, 1973). In the course of recent studies on the growth and reproduction of Eledone cirrhosa from the North Sea (Boyle & Knobloch, 1982,1983,1984) animals which had remained in aquarium conditions for 5 days or over were separated from the analysis.
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  • 4
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    Cambridge University Press
    In:  Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 64 (02). pp. 285-302.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-16
    Description: A new species of a monogenean Isancistrum subulatae (Gyrodactylidae) has been discovered on the arms and tentacles of the cephalopod mollusc Alloteuthis subulata at Plymouth and I. loliginis, on the gills of the same host, has been re-discovered for the first time since its original description in 1912. I. subulatae, like other gyrodactylids, is viviparous, and has been shown by experiments to transfer to new hosts by contagion. In nature such transfers probably take place during copulation of the hosts and since the parasite may occur in numbers of several thousands per host, it may thereby constitute a venereal disease.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-06-29
    Description: From 27 Janua1y to 23 June 1979 R. V. "Meteor" surveyed the central equatorial Atlantic on a section along 22° W from 3° N to 2° S. During the observation period, a hydrographic section down to 600 m was repeated ten times with a continuous "Howaldt-Bathysonde" CTD and a rosette sampler. The station distance was 10 to 15 nm. The water samples were used to recalibrate salinity and to determine oxygen, nutrients and chlorophyll a. An undulating CTD system ("Delphin") was towed on 11 sections. A profiling distance of one to two nautical miles and a profile depth of 90 m was obtained. Five current meter arrays were moored along 22° W between 3° N and 1° S from January to March 1979. In May and June two moorings were installed at 2° N and at the equator. On the buoys measurements of wind speed and direction were obtained. At 43 stations a wire-guided Aanderaa profiling current meter was successfully lowered. Drifting buoy experiments were repeated three times with clusters of 5 to 10 buoys. A fourth experiment took place in 1978 in the Gulf of Guinea. On the way from and to port XBT sections were carried out. The data sets obtained by these instruments are presented in this data report.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2022-07-27
    Description: Along the Sierra Leone continental shelf edge, bedded rocks, presumably mostly calcareous sandstone, calcarenites and siltstones form exposures up to 10 km long in water depths ranging from 80 to 110 m. These outcrops are found in a 6 km broad zone along the shelf edge; landward they get covered by recent shelf sands. Their apparent strike direction parallds the shelf edge indicating nearly horizontal bedding which locally is interrupted by faulting. On the middle shelf, a terrace is well developed at a water depth of 56 m. Ripples, megaripples, pockmarks 1-5 m in diameter, and canyon-heads form other significant features of the shelf.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2022-07-27
    Description: The sediments of a 10.67 m long piston core recovered from the Sierra Leone Rise ("Meteor" Core 13519) have been analysed for their paleomagnetic properties. Using detailed demagnetization techniques, the geomagnetic Brunhes/Matuyama boundary could be identified between 9.81 and 9.89 m sub-bottom. This is in excellent agreement with the oxygen isotope stratigraphy by SARNTHEIN et al., this volume. Down to this level, therefore, the average apparent accumulation rate amounts to 13.5 m/m.y. assuming an age of 0.73 m.y. for the reversal boundary (BERGGREN et al. 1983). A second transition in magnetization polarity was recognized between 10.51 and 10.54 m sub-bottom. According to its magnetic signature it was tentatively correlated to the beginning of the Jaramillo event (0.98 m.y.). This would imply that in the lowermost part of the core the apparent accumulation rate decreases to less than 20% of that found in the upper sequences. However, as obviously only a small portion of the Jaramillo event is recorded in the sediment column, a more plausible solution is to keep the overall sedimentation rate about constant by introducing a hiatus of some 2·105 years shortly after the lower Jaramillo/Matuyama reversal boundary. Alternative interpretations are also discussed.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-08-01
    Description: From a 10.7 m long gravity core from the Sierra Leone Rise (5° 39,5' N, 19° 51'W) a detailed oxygen and carbon isotope record of both planktonic and benthonic foraminifera species was obtained extending from the Recent to the Jaramillo event. The analysis yielded six major results. 1. Benthos oxygen isotopes varied by 1.8-2.2‰ from interglacial to glacial times and may indicate a synglacial cooling of North Atlantic Deep Water at 2800 m depth by 1-3° C. 2. Variable anomalies between the benthos and plankton δ18 O record indicate a cooling of sea-surface temperatures (SST) by up to 6° C during some glacial stages. 3. Southerly trade winds and equatorial upwelling may exert the primary control of SST variations, in particular of extreme values of cold and warm stages and of the abrupt character of climate transitions and their leads and lags, and finally, of variable sedimentation rates. 4. The benthos δ13C record correlates well with the flux and preservation of organic matter. 5. A new time scale, CARPOR, was established from the assumption that terrigenous sediment supply was ± constant but CaC03 varied considerably. When applied to the δ18O record, three major and numerous short-term variations of sedimentation rates (0.8 to 4.0 cm/kyr) can be distinguished. 6. The climatic record was modified by bioturbation much more strongly during cold than during warm stages.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-08-01
    Description: Planktonic foraminiferal tests of the spinose species Orbulina universa, of the non-spinose Globorotalia tumida-menardii complex, and of a mixed species assemblage (grain size fraction 200-400 μm) were isolated from Sierra Leone Rise core 13 519-2 and analyzed for free, total, and bound (by difference) amino acids to study the isoleucine epimerization mechanism in fossil foraminiferal tests and to define empirical calibration curves for dating deep-sea sediments over the past 900,000 years. Total isoleucine epimerization curves typically separate into three "linear" segments of decreasing apparent rates with increasing time and exhibit a pronounced "species effect". The degree of epimerization attained at time is considerably lower in 0. universa than in G. tumida-menardii while the mixed species results scatter between the limits delineated by the two monospecific curves. Total allo/iso ratios are closely related to the proportion of free to total isoleucine accumulating in the tests indicating that the rate of hydrolysis of matrix proteins and peptides controls the overall epimerization reaction. The results are consistent with experimental evidence (KRIAUSAKUL & M1TTERER 1978, 1980 a, b) whereupon isoleucine epimerizes at a rapid rate in terminal positions but at slow rates in interior positions as well as in the free state. Notwithstanding free isoleucine exhibits the highest degree of epimerization due to preferential hydrolysis of extensively epimerized terminal isoleucine. Species-specific hydrolysis and epimerization rates are maintained until about 50% of bound isoleucine have been hydrolyzed to the free state corresponding to a total allo/iso ratio of about 0.5. Remaining peptide units appear to be more resistent against hydrolysis and separate species then show the same apparent epimerization rate dominantly controlled by the slow conversion rate in the free state until equilibrium is achieved in Miocene samples under deep-ocean temperature conditions (KING & HARE 1972 a). The degree of epimerization attained at comparable time in separate species will, however, remain different due to different initial rates of hydrolysis. Selective leaching of free isoleucine from the tests results in a lowering of total allo/iso ratios and apparent rate constants when significant amounts have been generated by diagenetic hydrolysis. Comparison with results based on Pacific core V 28-238 (KING & NEVILLE 1977) indicates an inverse relationship between the intensity of surficial carbonate dissolution and post-depositional leaching. Tests deposited under less corrosive conditions (Atlantic core 13519-2) will more significantly deviate from a closed system during diagenesis than those deposited in more corrosive bottom waters (Pacific core V 28-238). Carbonate dissolution removes proteinaceous lamellae from more external shell structures, which otherwise - if preserved during deposition - will preferentially be subject to leaching of free amino acids during diagenesis. This effect may qualify the applicability of empirical epimerization calibration curves to different depositional environments although the general agreement of the epimerization curves obtained for both sites is promising for future research. Identical apparent epimerization rates in G. tumidamenardii tests younger than 120,000 years (when leaching is stiH insignificant) at both Atlantic and Pacific sites are not consistent with the presently different bottom water temperatures in these regions. It is concluded that glacial North Atlantic Deep Water was cooler than at the present at the Sierra Leone Rise.
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