126 research outputs found

    Ăśber die Hausdorff-Dimension der Juliamenge von Funktionen endlicher Ordnung

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    Das Hauptresultat dieser Arbeit ist der Satz,dass für eine ganze transzendente Funktion endlicher Ordnung aus der sogenannten Eremenko/Lyubich-Klasse die Hausdorff-Dimension der Juliamenge dieser Funktion gleich zwei ist.Der Satz stellt eine Verallgemeinerung der Sätze von Curt McMullen (1987),Masahiko Taniguchi (2001) und Krzysztof Baranski (2006) dar

    Characeen-Wiederfunde im Bereich Teutschental - Röblingen - ein Nachtrag zur Roten Liste der Algen des Landes Sachsen-Anhalt

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    Der ehemalige Salzige See, eine natürliche Binnensalzstelle deren Geologie in HOYNINGEN-HUENE (1959) ausführlich beschrieben ist, wies offenbar bis zu seinem Verschwinden um 1890 eine reichhaltige Characeenflora auf. Belege dafür finden sich nicht nur in den regional benachbarten Herbarien der Universität Halle bzw. des Herbariums Haussknecht in Jena, auch in Kopenhagen, Stockholm, Helsinki und Montpellier sind Belege von z. B. Chara erinita (Synonym von Ch. canescens) aus dem Jahr 1853 anzutreffen, beschriftet von ALEXANDER BRAUN (1805-1877) mit "Am Mansfelder Salzsee in Thüringen". Vor allem der intensiven Sammeltätigkeit von A. BRAUN und O. BULNHEIM (1820-1865) verdanken wir eine gute Kenntnis über die ehemaligen Characeen-Vorkommen dieses Sees, der als bekannte Binnensalzstelle die Aufmerksamkeit vieler Botaniker auf sich zog und phykologisch als "locus elassieus" der Art Chara intermedia A. BRAUN in BRAUN, RABENHORST et STITZENBERGER 1859 auch eine bleibende internationale Bekanntheit erlangte (vgl. auch BLÜMEL 2004)

    Influence of Cutting Speed in Turning and Force in Subsequent Diamond Smoothing on Magnetic Properties of Steel 100Cr6

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    Magnetic properties are known to be crucial in the application of electrical steel and they are therefore covered by manifold studies. Other ferromagnetic materials are out of scope in this respect, even if the importance of magnetism of conventional steel is evident. Additionally, there is a contradiction regarding the major influence on magnetic properties. Machining, transport, and storage are possible influencing variables. In the experimental investigations, specimens consisting of the bearing steel 100Cr6 are machined by turning and partly by subsequent diamond smoothing. While machining using several cutting speeds and smoothing forces, the thermoelectrical voltage, current, and the components of the resultant force are recorded. The results show how the nearsurface plastic deformations evolve throughout the machining process. Additionally, it was found that the magnetic properties and other properties of the surface layer are influenced in different ways depending on turning and diamond smoothing parameters. Correlations between in situ and ex situ measured values are shown. This study aims to solve the aforementioned question by quantification of machining impacts of cutting speed in turning and force in diamond smoothing and its dependence on transport and storage

    Vertical migration of phytoplankton in coastal waters with different UVR transparency

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    Background: The vertical migration of phytoplankton was investigated in natural waters using in situ fluorescence profiling, chlorophyll a concentrations and life counts at two study sites differing in coloured dissolved organic matter (cDOM) concentrations. The data from the corresponding water depths (50-cm intervals down to 10 m) and times (hourly, before dawn to sunset, several days) were related to the highly resolved (2 nm) underwater ultraviolet radiation (UVR)/photosynthetic active radiation (PAR) transparency (290 to 700 nm). Results: Chlorophyll a maxima of mainly motile dinoflagellates were observed in situ at all days and at both study sites (open marine, brackish waters), independent on prevailing weather conditions or cDOM concentrations. Phytoplankton migration was triggered solely by irradiance in the 400- to 700-nm wavelength range (PAR) at the particular water depth, irrespective of PAR/UVR ratios and surface UVR (290 to 400 nm), after an illumination period of about 40 min. Interestingly, the PAR tolerance levels of the phytoplankton, which have been lower in cDOM-rich waters, matched their light acclimation values determined by parallel PAM measurements. Conclusions: The response of the phytoplankton to PAR is not a sufficient protection strategy versus increasing UVR levels, which might have wide ecological implications beyond the level of primary producers to impact important ecosystem functions such as the delicate trophic interactions

    Ecology of charophytes – permanent pioneers and ecosystem engineers

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    For almost a century, charophytes have been regarded as a group that is confined to low-nutrient-clear water conditions. In light of recent research, this generalisation of the ecological niche dimensions of charophytes has changed and now includes more facets of ecological existence. In this review, the current knowledge with respect to species-specificity as well as temporal aspects – ontogenetic and successional ones – of the ecological requirements of charophytes are presented and discussed. This review identifies new directions for ecological research on charophytes as well as knowledge gaps to be filled, not just for reasons of academic curiosity, but also for applied purposes such as lake restoration, bioremediation and bioindication of water quality and water regime

    Plastid DNA sequences and oospore characters of some European taxa of Tolypella section Tolypella (Characeae) identify five clusters, including one new cryptic Tolypella taxon from Sardinia, but they do not coincide with current morphological descriptions

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    In Europe, the genus Tolypella (Characeae) comprises four to eight Tolypella taxa in sections Rothia and Tolypella that have been distinguished by vegetative morphology and gametangial characters such as antheridial size and oospore wall ornamentation. However, morphological differentiation is difficult in some cases due to overlapping and variable vegetative features, which in many cases are difficult to observe clearly. To clarify the taxonomic status of the five European taxa of Tolypella in section Tolypella, sequence data of the plastid genes atpB, rbcL and psbC for Tolypella glomerata (Desv.) Leonh., Tolypella hispanica Allen, Tolypella nidifica (O.F. MĂĽll.) A. Braun, Tolypella normaniana (Nordst.) Nordst. and Tolypella salina Cor. were combined with data on oospore morphology, including oospore wall ornamentation. Gene sequence data identified five distinct clusters, but they were not consistent with the morphologically identified five taxa. T. glomerata consisted of some of the samples morphologically identified as T. glomerata and seven samples of T. normaniana, while the remaining T. glomerata samples clustered with specimens of unclear affiliation (Tolypella sp.). We identified two clusters of T. hispanica within the European material: cluster T. hispanica I consisted of samples from various locations, whereas the second cluster (T. hispanica II) consisted of samples of T. hispanica from Sardinia Island. The remaining cluster consisted of all the specimens that had been determined as T. salina or T. nidifica in addition to two specimens of T. normaniana. Oospore morphology was most clearly distinguishable for T. glomerata. Oospore characteristics for all other taxa were not as informative but showed some geographical and/or environmentally influenced differences, especially for T. nidifica and T. salina. Our results suggest the need to further check the different taxonomy of Tolypella sect. Tolypella in which specimens normally identified as T. glomerata might be two different taxa, T. glomerata and an unidentified taxon; T. nidifica and T. salina are not separate taxa; T. normaniana is a diminutive variant of two different Tolypella taxa; and T. hispanica comprises two different taxa, one from the Mediterranean island Sardinia.publishedVersio

    Geographic variation in fitness-related traits of the bladderwrack Fucus vesiculosus along the Baltic Sea-North Sea salinity gradient

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    In the course of the ongoing global intensification and diversification of human pressures, the study of variation patterns of biological traits along environmental gradients can provide relevant information on the performance of species under shifting conditions. The pronounced salinity gradient, co-occurrence of multiple stressors, and accelerated rates of change make the Baltic Sea and its transition to North Sea a suitable region for this type of study. Focusing on the bladderwrack Fucus vesiculosus, one of the main foundation species on hard-bottoms of the Baltic Sea, we analyzed the phenotypic variation among populations occurring along 2,000 km of coasts subjected to salinities from 4 to >30 and a variety of other stressors. Morphological and biochemical traits, including palatability for grazers, were recorded at 20 stations along the Baltic Sea and four stations in the North Sea. We evaluated in a common modeling framework the relative contribution of multiple environmental drivers to the observed trait patterns. Salinity was the main and, in some cases, the only environmental driver of the geographic trait variation in F. vesiculosus. The decrease in salinity from North Sea to Baltic Sea stations was accompanied by a decline in thallus size, photosynthetic pigments, and energy storage compounds, and affected the interaction of the alga with herbivores and epibiota. For some traits, drivers that vary locally such as wave exposure, light availability or nutrient enrichment were also important. The strong genetic population structure in this macroalgae might play a role in the generation and maintenance of phenotypic patterns across geographic scales. In light of our results, the desalination process projected for the Baltic Sea could have detrimental impacts on F. vesiculosus in areas close to its tolerance limit, affecting ecosystem functions such as habitat formation, primary production, and food supply.Peer reviewe

    Trophic redundancy in benthic fish food webs increases with scarcity of prey items, in the Southern Baltic Sea

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    Bottom trawling is one of the main pressures on benthic ecosystems, directly impacting the targeted species and physically disturbing the seabed and the benthic invertebrate communities, in turn indirectly impacting benthivorous fish and the entire benthic food web structure and functioning. To predict the cascading effect of bottom trawling on benthic and demersal fish communities, it is crucial to understand the trophic interactions between benthic and demersal fish and benthic invertebrates. Here, we assessed the diet of benthic and demersal fish and the structure and functioning of the benthic food web in two areas in the German Baltic Sea, the Fehmarnbelt and the Odra Bank. The Fehmarnbelt benthic invertebrate community is characterized by a high number of species and biomass, contrary to the one on the Odra Bank which is species poor with high individual abundance but low biomass. We used mixing models based on stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen combined with stomach content analyses to estimate the fish diet at both sites, and we used community-wide trophic indices, derived from stable isotopes to compare the structure and functioning of the fish benthic food webs. We show that fish in the Fehmarnbelt can chose preferential prey items, resulting in higher trophic diversity, contrary to fish on the Odra Bank, which feed on all available prey species, resulting in higher trophic redundancy. We found that the generalist behavior of fish on the Odra Bank is likely the result of scarcity in prey items, the benthic invertebrate community being species poor with high abundance of small individuals. We demonstrate that the differences in structure and functioning of the benthic fish food web between the two sites was mainly driven by differences in the characteristics of the benthic prey communities
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