ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • Other Sources  (23)
  • Articles (OceanRep)  (23)
  • Oxford Univ. Press  (23)
  • 1990-1994  (20)
  • 1980-1984  (3)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: An investigation was carried out on larvae of the oceanic tropical squid Sthenoteuthis pteropus in the equatorial Atlantic (2°30′N–7°S;12°W –8°30′E) The age of the larvae was calculated from the statolith microstructure of 20 larvae; mortality was estimated from the size structure of 1128 larvae. The larval stage lasts 32–38 days. At ages ranging from 14 to 38 days. the daily relative growth rates of mantle length decrease from 7.5 to 2.8% day −1 and from 14–16 to 5.8% of body weight day −1 At age 12–24 days, mortality rates were estimated using both raw catch data and corrected data accounting for net avoidance. The mean value of raw mortality rates was 0.189, the corrected value was 0.158. During the proboscis division (transformation of the larva into juvenile) at age 25–35 days, a sharp decrease in larval growth rates and a simultaneous increase in mortality rates (raw 0.443, corrected 0.379) were observed.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 49 (2). pp. 199-208.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-19
    Description: In 1988 and 1989 the occurrence of external diseases in fish from the German part of the Wadden Sea was quantified. Thirty-two stations, located along seven transects including four estuaries, were sampled monthly or at 3-month intervals with shrimp trawlers: more than 124 000 fish were studied. Six percent of the seven dominant fish species of 〉 12 cm length were diseased. In fish species which complete their life cycle in the Wadden Sea (gobies, hooknose, eelpout, sea scorpion) the total disease incidence was below 0.4%. In whiting, plaice and sole it was between 0.5 and 2.5%, while 6–8% of smelt, cod, eel, dab and flounder suffered from external lesions. The incidence of most diseases increased with increasing fish length. Similar geographical patterns in prevalence were observed for: (1) two types of skeletal deformities, (2) lymphocystis in dab and flounder, (3) papillomatosis in smelt and dab and (4) several infectious ulcerative diseases. Most of these ulcerative diseases of cod and flounder occurred on central estuarine stations, suggesting an impact of the relatively low, but greatly variable salinity on disease development. Buccal granulomatosis of smelt and papillomatosis of eels showed the highest incidence in the Elbe estuary as the most heavily polluted region of the Wadden Sea. A causal relationship between disease development and pollution, however, is not yet clear and requires experimental evidence. The disease types found are ranked into three priority groups regarding their indicator value for a pollution monitoring on the basis of fish diseases. There is evidence that the total disease load of fish in the Wadden Sea is higher than in other shallow coastal regions outside the North Sea. Little is known of the effects of these diseases on single fish and fish populations. “Yellow pest” of cod, which was recorded for the first time during this survey, and which occurred with an incidence of up to 14% in single estuarine samples, causes the most serious lesions and is supposed to be lethal. In total, however, the effects of a number of pathogenic parasites on fish survival is considered to be more serious than that of deformities and infectious diseases.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 48 . pp. 195-200.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: Earlier work by the second author on the growth of oceanic squids, based on sizefrequency distributions of beaks sampled from sperm whale stomachs and on structural marks on those beaks, showed that these squids apparently had growth rates far in excess of those reported for the fastest-growing fishes, e.g. bluefin tuna. The application of recently developed methods for analysis of length-frequency distributions to some of these earlier data, and new approaches for assessing and comparing the growth performance offish and aquatic invertebrates, suggest the need for a downward revision of these high growth estimates. This is illustrated here with data on Kondakovia longimana (Cephalopoda, Onychoteuthidae) sampled off Durban and Donkergat, South Africa, in the early to mid-1960s.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 51 (3). pp. 299-313.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: Artificial selection processes associated with harvesting may operate over relatively short time scales in short-lived semelparous species. The ommastrephid squid Illex argentinus on the Patagonian Shelf is the target of a major fishery. Recent work has provided new information on the biological characteristics of squid in this fishery. That information has been utilized in the development of a model of the cohort dynamics and some of the within-seasons selective effects considered. The model results are consistent with earlier data from the shelf fisheries, supporting suggestions that the males nature and migrate earlier towards the spawning grounds than the females. Earlier maturation results in a smaller mean size in the spawning stock, while later maturation results in greater exposure to the fishery and a reduced numbers of individuals surviving to spawn. Under the current fishing regime greater egg production and a larger spermatophoric complex mass for the whole cohort is achieved by relatively late maturation. In general, however, the earlier maturation occurs, the earlier is the peak in total egg production. The within-season pattern of effort expenditure in the fishery can affect not only yield from the fishery but also the reproductive potential of the spawning stock. The management policy adopted for this fishery is likely to be conservative in terms of maintenance of a spawning stock, however, the potential for selective effects is larger and this may affect both yield and reproductive potential. The results are discussed in relation to short- and long-term effects in the fishery and the implications for future research requirements.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  The Auk, 107 (4). pp. 678-688.
    Publication Date: 2020-05-13
    Description: Gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) feeding in the northern Bering Sea produce prey-rich mud plumes that provide ephemeral foraging opportunities for seabirds. Approximately 67% of all gray whales were attended by birds. In four whale-associating bird species (Northern Fulmar, Fulmarus glacialis; Red Phalarope, Phalaropus fulicaria; Black-legged Kitti-wake, Rissa tridactyla; and Thick-billed Murre, Uria lomvia), from 17 to 87% of all individuals that we observed on the water or foraging were in the whales' mud plumes. The combined density of these same four species was strongly correlated with whale density over a broad range of spatial scales. The whale-associating seabirds exhibited species-specific patterns of foraging behavior at plumes, including differences in mean group size, mean residence time, and patterns of movement between plumes. Birds tended to form larger groups and to form more mixed-species flocks in association with whales. The association of marine birds with gray whales in the Bering Sea provides a model system for examining seabird interactions at fine-scale oceanographic patches and demonstrates the importance of these patches in shaping patterns of seabird distribution and behavior.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 15 (7). pp. 867-872.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-05
    Description: Mortality of two dogs, after exposure to water of a brackish lake on the German North Sea coast in 1990, is considered to be caused by a toxic Nodularia spumigena Mertens bloom.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 12 (5). pp. 1045-1057.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: The Rhynchoteuthion larvae of Illex argentinus resulting from summer spawning in North Patagonic shelf waters, its distribution and abundance, are described in this paper. The material was collected in the Argentine Sea (35–55°S) by means of plankton nets. The research cruises were made by the R/V Shinkai Maru and the R/V Walther Herwig during the period April 1978 to April 1979. The most important spawning ground of the summer spawning subpopulation is found in continental-shelf waters (between 43 and 46°S) during the period December-February. This area was established on the basis of both ripe (December) and spent females (February). The larvae which were caught during the same period, especially in March, confirmed the spawning area of this demographic unit. The larvae showed the length of the mantle (ML) to be from 1.2 to 6.5 mm. Tentacles were splitting in specimens from 5.0 to 6.5 mm ML (transition stage). When 7.0 mm ML or more, all specimens were juveniles and had their tentacles completely separated. Larvae were characterized as type C, following the proposal of Sato (1973) and Sato and Sawada (1974) in the Bulletin of the Shizuoka Prefectural Fisheries Experimental Station.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 49 (2). pp. 175-183.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: A joint research cruise (Japan-Argentina-Uruguay) was carried out in the South-western Atlantic during August-September 1989 in order to study the winter-spawning and hatchery areas of Illex argentinus, and also the migration pattern of the juveniles towards the continental shelf. A few Rhynchoteuthion larvae were found in subtropical waters of the Brazil Current, next to the Brazil-Malvinas confluence, and in the frontal zone with shelf water, but never at temperatures below 14°C. Large numbers of juveniles found in subantarctic waters (6–10°C) on the shelf were probably migrating southward from their hatchery grounds following the zooplankton concentrations on which they were feeding.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 50 (4). pp. 393-403.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: Ripe egg dimensions in the squid genus Illex are close to the minimum for cephalopods. The average diameter varies significantly depending on species (0.77–0.82 mm in I. coindeti , 0.75–0.88 mm in I. illecebrosus , and 0.96–1.04 mm in I. argentinus ), on geographical distribution intraspecifically, e.g. I. argentinus (0.96–0.97 mm in the shelf groups and 1.04 mm in the slope oceanic group), and between pre-spawning and spawning females of the summer-spawning shelf group of I. argentinus (0.97 and 0.92 mm, respectively). The potential fecundity (PF), defined as total oocyte stock both in the ovary and oviducts, depends on mantle length (ML in each species. It varies from 90 000 (ML = 150–160 mm) to 800 000 (ML = 230–250 mm) in I. coindeti , from 200 000 to 630 000 (ML = 220–280 mm) in I. illecebrosus , and from 75 000 (ML = 150–170 mm) to 1 200 000 (ML = 360–380 mm) in I. argentinus . It is possible to estimate the actual value of PF shortly before vitellogenesis begins and up to a start of spawning, when the diameter of the smallest oocytes exceeds 0.05 mm. The summer-spawning shelf females of I. argentinus release about of 70% of PF. Their spawning is intermittent and ripe egg production decreases over time with only a 50% replacement of the initial stock of vitelline oocytes and a decreasing volume of eggs at each release. Feeding activity decreases and the mantle wall and internal organs shrink once spawning commences. In spent animals, a degeneration of both vitelline and protoplasmic oocytes occurs. The squids genus Illex is one of typical r-strategists among the cephalopods.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Publication Date: 2018-03-19
    Description: Total biomass and biomass of large taxonomic groups (polychaetes, molluscs, crustaceans, echinoderms) and species diversity of the macrofauna were determined for almost 200 North Sea stations sampled synoptically by seven vessels during Spring 1986 and for 120 additional stations sampled in earlier years by the Marine Laboratory in Aberdeen. There exists a clear and significant decreasing trend in biomass with latitude, both in total biomass and for the different taxonomic groups. Apart from latitude, sediment composition and chlorophyll a content of the sediment also infuence total biomass and biomass of most groups significantly. Biomass increases consistently in finer sediments and sediments with a higher chlorophyll a content. The same trends are found for the results within laboratories. Some interaction exists, indicating weak laboratory and zonal effects. Diversity, as measured by Hill's diversity index N1 = (exp H′) shows a clear and significant trend with latitude. Towards the north of the North Sea diversity increases considerably. The trend is also found for laboratories separately and is everywhere equally strong. Also longitude and depth show an effect on diversity. Sediment variables have no clear influence on diversity. Other diversity measures show the same trend but are more variable than N1,. Total density tends to increase towards the north, but sediment related variables have a larger influence. Mean individual weight becomes considerably smaller towards the northern part of the North Sea.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 11
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: In 1986 participants of the Benthos Ecology Working Group of ICES conducted a synoptic mapping of the infauna of the southern and central North Sea. Together with a mapping of the infauna of the northern North Sea by Eleftheriou and Basford (1989) this provides the database for the description of the benthic infauna of the whole North Sea in this paper. Division of the infauna into assemblages by TWINSPAN analysis separated northern assemblages from southern assemblages along the 70 m depth contour. Assemblages were further separated by the 30, 50 m and 100 m depth contour as well as by the sediment type. In addition to widely distributed species, cold water species do not occur further south than the northern edge of the Dogger Bank, which corresponds to the 50 m depth contour. Warm water species were not found north of the 100 m depth contour. Some species occur on all types of sediment but most are restricted to a special sedimentand therefore these species are limited in their distribution. The factors structuring species distributions and assemblages seem to be temperature, the influence of different water masses, e.g. Atlantic water, the type of sediment and the food supply to the benthos. Eleftheriou, A. and Basford, D. J. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK, 69: 123–143.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 12
    Publication Date: 2018-05-04
    Description: Vesteris Seamount is a solitary alkaline volcano in the Greenland Basin some 280 km NW of Jan Mayen. Topographic and geophysical studies have shown no sign of an associated plume trace. Evidence from ash layers in sediment cores around the volcano and dating of dredged samples show that it has been active in Quaternary times. The lavas from Vesteris studied here consist of basanites, tephrites, mugearite, and alkali basalts. Crystal fractionation models are consistent with the generation of the tephrites and mugearite from a basanitic parent. Extensive kaersutite fractionation is required late in the fractionation sequence to produce the extreme mugearite composition. Na-Al-Fe-rich green cores to many clinopyroxene phenocrysts at Vesteris suggest a fractionation history beginning at high pressure in the mantle. Differences between Vesteris and Jan Mayen in the ratios of highly incompatible trace elements such as Ce/Pb and Rb/Cs, which will not normally be fractionated from one another during mantle melting, suggest that the two are not derived from the same source. Relatively unradiogenic Sr isotope ratios (compared with Bulk Earth), and highly incompatible trace element patterns similar to those for St. Helena, suggest that Vesteris magmas are derived from a depleted, asthenospheric source. We propose that the Vesteris basanites are very low degree partial melts (˜1%) of this source, most probably those which give rise to the seismic low-velocity zone (LVZ). Such small-degree melts may preferentially tap small-scale heterogeneities in the asthenosphere. Vesteris lies at the intersection of two major structural trends in the Greenland Basin—(1) a zone of major reorientation of spreading direction on the Mohns Ridge north of Jan Mayen and (2) the extension of the Kolbeinsey Ridge axis. We propose that a combination of the extensional stress fields related to these two lineaments produces sufficient dilation of the lithosphere at Vesteris to allow magmas from the LVZ to reach the surface.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 13
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 15 (1). pp. 99-114.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: The abundance and sedimentation of acantharia and their cysts was recorded in the water column and sediment traps in the East Greenland Sea in August-September 1990. Although acantharia constituted 〈1% of total suspended particulate organic carbon (POC) in the water column, up to 90% (average 55%) of the POC sedimenting in 100 m was present in the form of acantharian cysts during a 9 day drift experiment. Rapid dissolution of strontium sulphate, of which their shells and spines are constructed, was evidenced by their disappearance with depth in the water column, maximum dissolution occurring between 500 and 1000 m water depth. Mass encystment and sedimentation of this single group of sarcodine protozoa can have dramatic effects on, the measurement of particulate fluxes in the open ocean, and may be a recurrent phenomenon in the eastern North Atlantic.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 14
    Publication Date: 2017-10-10
    Description: The basalt stratigraphy of the Deccan Trap between Mahabaleshwar Ghat and Belgaum over-steps the basement from north to south. Sr-isotope and Zr/Nb ratios, and Sr, Rb, and Ba concentrations correlate portions of the post-Poladpur stratigraphy over 250 km along the Western Ghats, thereby confirming a southerly component of dip of 0·06°. At the southwestern margin, the stratigraphy extends upwards from the compositionally uniform Ambenali Formation (Cox & Hawkesworth, 1984) into a sequence of grossly heterogeneous flow units which have been allocated to the Mahabaleshwar and Panhala Formations (Lightfoot & Hawkesworth, 1988). The Mahabaleshwar Formation is represented only by a sequence of highly fractionated flows (termed the Kolhapur unit) with similar 87Sr/86Sr0 to the Mahabaleshwar (0·7045), but with Sr〈240 ppm and TiO2〉2·25%. Succeeding the Kolhapur unit are a series of flows with high 87Sr/86Sr0 (0·7045-0·705), Zr/Nb 〉 13, and low Sr (〈 200 ppm), which have been allocated to the Panhala Formation, and a group of flows with high 87Sr/86Sr0 (0·707–0·708) and Sr (〉230), but trace element concentrations similar to the Mahabaleshwar Formation; these have been allocated to the Desur unit of the Panhala. Geochemical variations in flows overlying the Ambenali define two distinct trends: one is attributed to gabbro fractionation, and the other to variations in the compositions of the parental magmas, and arguably their source regions. There is little evidence for significant crustal contamination in these flows, and the degree of fractionation and the composition of the phase extract are shown to vary along strike within the Mahabaleshwar Formation. The high TiO2 content of Kolhapur unit flows is shown to be the result of shallow-level gabbro fractionation, rather than the presence of a primitive high-Ti magma. Mahabaleshwar Formation basalts exhibit a broad negative correlation between the degree of fractionation and Sr-isotopic composition. The endmember with lower 87Sr/86Sr0 has different Zr/Y from the Ambenali basalts, and would appear to have been generated by lower degrees of melting of a similar source. The other endmember has more radiogenic Sr, lower Zr/Nb, similar Zr/Y, but higher mg-number. The simplest interpretation is that these magmas were more primitive and hence hotter and more able to interact with the lithosphere en route to the surface, and that they then mixed to produce the Mahabaleshwar array. The Panhala Formation basalts plot on the Sr-Nd array defined by the Mahabaleshwar Formation, and the Desur unit basalts plot on an extension of this array; this suggests that the source characteristics are also lithospheric. The absolute elemental abundances may then be a function of melting and fractionation. We are impressed by the apparent switch from crustal lithospheric contributions to mantle lithospheric contributions through the stratigraphy, and suggest that this, together with the more protracted fractionation of the magma, reflects a change in the availability of the lithospheric components accompanying the southerly migration of the volcanic edifice.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 15
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 15 (9). pp. 1053-1074.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: The plankton multiplier is a positive feedback mechanism linking the greenhouse effect and biological pump (Woods.J.D., Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, 1990). As pollution increases the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide, the enhanced greenhouse effect induces radiative forcing of the ocean, which diminishes the depth of winter convection, reducing the annual resupply of nutrients to the euphotic zone and therefore the annual primary production. That weakens the biological pump, which contributes to oceanic uptake of CO2,. As the ocean takes up less CO2, more remains in the atmosphere, accelerating the rise in radiative forcing. We have used a mathematical model of the upper ocean ecosystem, based on the Lagrangian Ensemble method, to estimate the sensitivity of the biological pump to radiative forcing, which lies at the heart of the plankton multiplier. We conclude that increasing radiative forcing by 5 W m− (equivalent to doubling atmospheric CO2) reduces the deep flux of paniculate carbon by 10%. That sensitivity is sufficient to produce significant positive feedback in the greenhouse. It means that the plankton multiplier will increase the rate of climate change in the 21st century. It also suggests that the plankton multiplier is the mechanism linking the Milankovich effect to the enhanced greenhouse effect that produces global warming at the end of ice ages.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 16
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 4 . pp. 137-142.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: Rhodomonas minuta v. nannoplanctica Skuja and Rhodomonas lens Pascher et Ruttner were found to perform vertical migrations. From sunrise until afternoon they adjust their vertical position to an optimum light-intensity, which is for R. minuta 2.5 times higher than for R. lens. The spatial separation of both species is increasing throughout the whole light phase. The species distinction between them has been questioned recently, but can be maintained not only because of morphological differences but also because they are occupying different niches within the plankton community.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 17
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 6 (2). pp. 239-247.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: Changes of algal biomass, as carbon, cell numbers and volume were determined for phytoplankton of Lake Constance suspended in situ in 2 1 glass bottles. Phytoplankton placed at the 6% surface penetrating light level (photosynthetically available radiation) were close to the compensation depth for growth estimated as total paniculate carbon and total cell volumes. Cell counts of individual algal species however, showed appreciable growth of diatoms offset by the decline of flagellates. Bottles suspended at two shallower depths in a separate experiment showed some growth of all species and indicated a vertical niche separation of growth of Rhodomonas minuta Skuja and R. lens Dascher and Ruttner in accordance with their vertical distribution.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 18
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 6 (1). pp. 1-14.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: Sedimentation of nine phytoplankton species was studied in Lake Constance with the aid of sedimentation traps exposed at six different depths from 20 to 120 m. The study examines sedimentary fluxes at all depths, temporal variation of sinking velocities into the uppermost trap, annual averages of the sinking velocities at all depths and survival of algae during the sedimentation process. In spite of high intraspecific temporal variability of the sinking velocity there is a clear hierarchy from the pennate and the filamentous centric diatoms sinking the fastest to the Cryptomonads, nearly not at all affected by sedimentary losses. Temporal variability of the sinking velocity within species seems to be related to the ‘physiological state’, the highest velocities always occurring during stationary or decline phases of the population development. An analysis of the role of sedimentary losses in the population dynamics of Asterionella formosa, Fragilaria crotonensis, Stephanodiscus binderaniss, Melosira granulata reveals positive correlations between the sedimentation rate and cell mortality.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 19
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: We report major and trace element X-ray fluorescence (XRF) data for mafic volcanics covering the 15-Ma evolution of Gran Canaria, Canary Islands. The Miocene (12-lS^Ma) and Pliocene-Quaternary (0-6 Ma) mafic volcanics on Gran Canaria include picrites, tholeiites, alkali basalts, basanites, nephelinites, and melilite nephelinites. Olivine±clinopyroxene are the major fractionating or accumulating phases in the basalts. Plagioclase, Fe-Ti oxide, and apatite fractionation or accumulation may play a minor role in the derivation of the most evolved mafic volcanics. The crystallization of clinopyroxene after olivine and the absence of phenocrystic plagioclase in the Miocene tholeiites and in the Pliocene and Quaternary alkali basalts and basanites with MgO〉6 suggests that fractionation occurred at moderate pressure, probably within the upper mantle. The presence of plagioclase phenocrysts and chemical evidence for plagioclase fractionation in the Miocene basalts with MgO〈6 and in the Pliocene tholeiites is consistent with cooling and fractionation at shallow depth, probably during storage in lower-crustal reservoirs. Magma generation at pressures in excess of 3-0-3-5 GPa is suggested by (a) the inferred presence of residual garnet and phlogopite and (b) comparison of FeO1 cation mole percentages and the CIPW normative compositions of the mafic volcanics with results from high-pressure melting experiments. The Gran Canaria mafic magmas were probably formed by decompression melting in an upwelling column of asthenospheric material, which encountered a mechanical boundary layer at ~ 100-km depth.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 20
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: The subaerial portion of Gran Canada, Canary Islands, was built by three cycles of volcanism: a Miocene Cycle (8-5—15 Ma), a Pliocene Cycle (1-8-60 Ma), and a Quaternary Cycle (1-8-0 Ma). Only the Pliocene Cycle is completely exposed on Gran Canaria; the early stages of the Miocene Cycle are submarine and the Quaternary Cycle is still in its initial stages. During the Miocene, SiO2 saturation of the mafic volcanics decreased systematically from tholeiite to nephelinite. For the Pliocene Cycle, SiO2 saturation increased and then decreased with decreasing age from nephelinite to tholeiite to nephelinite. SiO2 saturation increased from nephelinite to basanite and alkali basalt during the Quaternary. In each of these cycles, increasing melt production rates, SiO2 saturation, and concentrations of compatible elements, and decreasing concentrations of some incompatible elements are consistent with increasing degrees of partial melting in the sequence melilite nephelinite to tholeiite. The mafic volcanics from all three cycles were derived from CO2-rich garnet lherzolite sources. Phlogopite, ilmenite, sulfide, and a phase with high partition coefficients for the light rare earth elements (LREE), U, Th, Pb, Nb, and Zr, possibly zircon, were residual during melting to form the Miocene nephelinites through tholeiites; phlogopite, ilmenite, and sulfide were residual in the source of the Pliocene-Quaternary nephelinites through alkali basalts. Highly incompatible element ratios (e.g., Nb/U, Pb/Ce, K/U, Nb/Pb, Ba/Rb, Zr/Hf, La/Nb, Ba/Th, Rb/Nb, K/Nb, Zr/Nb, Th/Nb, Th/La, and Ba/La) exhibit extreme variations (in many cases larger than those reported for all other ocean island basalts), but these ratios correlate well with degree of melting. Survival of residual phases at higher degrees of melting during the Miocene Cycle and differences between major and trace element concentrations and melt production rates between the Miocene and Pliocene tholeiites suggest that the Miocene source was more fertile than the Pliocene-Quaternary source(s). We propose a blob model to explain the multi-cycle evolution of Canary volcanoes and the temporal variations in chemistry and melt production within cycles. Each cycle of volcanism represents decompression melting of a discrete blob of plume material. Small-degree nephelinitic and basanitic melts are derived from the cooler margins of the blobs, whereas the larger-degree tholeiitic and alkali basaltic melts are derived from the hotter centers of the blobs. The symmetrical sequence of mafic volcanism for a cycle, from highly undersaturated to saturated to highly undersaturated compositions, reflects melting of the blob during its ascent beneath an island in the sequence upper margin-corelower margin. Volcanic hiatuses between cycles and within cycles represent periods when residual blob or cooler entrained shallow mantle material fill the melting zone beneath an island.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 21
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  ICES Journal of Marine Science, 51 (4). pp. 359-367.
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: The population dynamics and the trophic role of Aurelia aurita medusae in the Kiel Bight/western Baltic are described from nine years of investigation between 1978 and 1993. There is considerable yearly variation in standing stock with summer median abundance ranging from 0.2 to 16 ind. 100 m−3 and biomass from 0.2 to 4.4 g C 100 m−3. The lower variation is due to marked differences in size of adult medusae between years. In years of low abundance medusae exhibit an average dise diameter of about 30 cm and weight about 1 kg. In bloom years, however, adult size is only about 20 cm and weight ranges between 200 and 400 g. Estimates of feeding are somewhat contradictory, but feeding rates of 40–80 mg C ind.−1 day−1 seem probable. It can be concluded that Aurelia medusae consume about 2/3 of daily secondary production in years of high abundance, and are thus responsible for a decline of mesozooplankton in these years.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 22
    Publication Date: 2017-06-15
    Description: Two biochemical methods for measuring larval fish condition – tryptic enzyme activity and RNA/DNA ratio measurement - were applied to laboratory-reared and wild-caught herring larvae. The comparison of both methods when applied to laboratory-reared herring larvae showed that tryptic enzyme activity and RNA/DNA ratio are linear and positively correlated under constant nutritional conditions. Wild-caught larvae were transferred to the laboratory and used to compare both indicators in relation to shortterm changes in food availability and long-term starvation periods (13 days). In the starvation experiments with the wild-caught larvae the lowest trypsin values were obtained after 3–4 days and a significant decrease in RNA/DNA ratios was obtained after 5–6 days. Prolongation of the starvation time did not result in a further significant change in either parameter. The results of the study demonstrate the usefulness of both methods in monitoring nutritional condition offish larvae in field samples.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 23
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford Univ. Press
    In:  Journal of Plankton Research, 13 (1). pp. 61-75.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: The nutrient status of two common Antarctic diatoms (Corethron criophilum and Thalassiosira cf. antarctica) was analysed by studying the growth response in enrichment bioassays and by estimates of the cell quotas of Si, N and P after size-fractionation of net plankton samples Corethron had higher biomass-specific N-quotas; Si- and P-quotas were quite similar between both species. Corethron was Si-limited in five enrichment experiments and not nutrient limited in five experiments. Thalassiosira was not nutrient limited in six experiments, N-hmited in four experiments and Si-limited in one experiment Droop-kinetics of Si-limited growth of Corethron and of N-hmited growth of Thalassiosira were obtained by combining the growth rates in the bioassays and the cell quotas from the natural populations. The minimal Si-quota of Corethron was 0 041 mol Si/mol C, the saturating cell quota was 0.158 mol Si/mol C respectively The minimal N-quota of Thalassiosira was 0 0223 mol N/mol C, the saturating cell quota was 0.208 mol N/mol C Corethron was N-saturated at cell quotas of 〉0 106 mol N/mol C; Thalassiosira was Si-saturated at cell quotas of 〈0 132 mol Si/mol C. As the better competitor for N and the poorer one for Si, Corethron became more important with increasing Si N ratios, while Thalassiosira became more important with decreasing Si:N ratios in the water
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...