16 research outputs found
The mass-metallicity relation at z~0.7
The ISM metallicity and the stellar mass are examined in a sample of 66
galaxies at 0.4<z<1, selected from the Gemini Deep Deep Survey (GDDS) and the
Canada-France Redshift Survey (CFRS). We observe a mass-metallicity relation
similar to that seen in z~0.1 SDSS galaxies, but displaced towards higher
masses and/or lower metallicities. Using this sample, and a small sample of
z~2.3 LBGs, a redshift dependent mass-metallicity relation is proposed which
describes the observed results.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the conference "The Spectral Energy
Distribution of Gas-Rich Galaxies", eds. C.C. Popescu & R.J. Tuffs
(Heidelberg, October 2004
Phylogeography Study of Ammodytes personatus in Northwestern Pacific: Pleistocene Isolation, Temperature and Current Conducted Secondary Contact
To assess the role of historical process and contemporary factors in shaping population structures in Northwestern Pacific, mitochondrial control region sequences were analyzed to characterize the phylogeography and population structure of the Japanese sand lance Ammodytes personatus. A total of 429 individuals sampled from 17 populations through the species' range are sequenced. Two distinct lineages are detected, which might have been divergent in the Sea of Japan and Pacific costal waters of Japanese Island, during the low sea level. Significant genetic structure is revealed between the Kuroshio and Oyashio Currents. However, significant genetic structure is also detected in the Sea of Japan, contracting expected homogenization hypothesis in Tsushima Current. The haplotype frequency of lineages in both sides of Japanese Island and significant genetic structure between north and south groups revealed that the distribution of lineage B and north group were highly limited by the annual sea temperature. The lack of lineage B in Qingdao population with low sea temperature reflects the sea temperature barrier. Lack of genetic structure in the south group and north group populations indicated that ocean currents within groups facilitated the dispersal of A. personatus