10 research outputs found

    Acidification effects on biofouling communities: winners and losers

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    How ocean acidification affects marine life is a major concern for science and society. However, its impacts on encrusting biofouling communities, that are both the initial colonizers of hard substrata and of great economic importance, are almost unknown. We showed that community composition changed significantly, from 92% spirorbids, 3% ascidians and 4% sponges initially to 47% spirorbids, 23% ascidians and 29% sponges after 100days in acidified conditions (pH 7.7). In low pH, numbers of the spirorbid Neodexiospira pseudocorrugata were reduced x5 compared to controls. The two ascidians present behaved differently with Aplidium sp. decreasing x10 in pH 7.7, whereas Molgula sp. numbers were x4 higher in low pH than controls. Calcareous sponge (Leucosolenia sp.) numbers increased x2.5 in pH 7.7 over controls. The diatom and filamentous algal community was also more poorly developed in the low pH treatments compared to controls. Colonization of new surfaces likewise showed large decreases in spirorbid numbers, but numbers of sponges and Molgula sp. increased. Spirorbid losses appeared due to both recruitment failure and loss of existing tubes. Spirorbid tubes are comprised of a loose prismatic fabric of calcite crystals. Loss of tube materials appeared due to changes in the binding matrix and not crystal dissolution, as SEM analyses showed crystal surfaces were not pitted or dissolved in low pH conditions. Biofouling communities face dramatic future changes with reductions in groups with hard exposed exoskeletons and domination by soft-bodied ascidians and sponges.EU [227799, 00415/2010]; Natural Environment Research Council [bas0100036, bas0100025

    Unexpected Fine-Scale Population Structure in a Broadcast-Spawning Antarctic Marine Mollusc

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    Several recent empirical studies have challenged the prevailing dogma that broadcast-spawning species exhibit little or no population genetic structure by documenting genetic discontinuities associated with large-scale oceanographic features. However, relatively few studies have explored patterns of genetic differentiation over fine spatial scales. Consequently, we used a hierarchical sampling design to investigate the basis of a weak but significant genetic difference previously reported between Antarctic limpets (Nacella concinna) sampled from Adelaide and Galindez Islands near the base of the Antarctic Peninsula. Three sites within Ryder Bay, Adelaide Island (Rothera Point, Leonie and Anchorage Islands) were each sub-sampled three times, yielding a total of 405 samples that were genotyped at 155 informative Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphisms (AFLPs). Contrary to our initial expectations, limpets from Anchorage Island were found to be subtly, but significantly distinct from those sampled from the other sites. This suggests that local processes may play an important role in generating fine-scale population structure even in species with excellent dispersal capabilities, and highlights the importance of sampling at multiple spatial scales in population genetic surveys

    ÎČ-Diversity and Species Accumulation in Antarctic Coastal Benthos: Influence of Habitat, Distance and Productivity on Ecological Connectivity

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    High Antarctic coastal marine environments are comparatively pristine with strong environmental gradients, which make them important places to investigate biodiversity relationships. Defining how different environmental features contribute to shifts in ÎČ-diversity is especially important as these shifts reflect both spatio-temporal variations in species richness and the degree of ecological separation between local and regional species pools. We used complementary techniques (species accumulation models, multivariate variance partitioning and generalized linear models) to assess how the roles of productivity, bio-physical habitat heterogeneity and connectivity change with spatial scales from metres to 100's of km. Our results demonstrated that the relative importance of specific processes influencing species accumulation and ÎČ–diversity changed with increasing spatial scale, and that patterns were never driven by only one factor. Bio-physical habitat heterogeneity had a strong influence on ÎČ-diversity at scales <290 km, while the effects of productivity were low and significant only at scales >40 km. Our analysis supports the emphasis on the analysis of diversity relationships across multiple spatial scales and highlights the unequal connectivity of individual sites to the regional species pool. This has important implications for resilience to habitat loss and community homogenisation, especially for Antarctic benthic communities where rates of recovery from disturbance are slow, there is a high ratio of poor-dispersing and brooding species, and high biogenic habitat heterogeneity and spatio-temporal variability in primary production make the system vulnerable to disturbance. Consequently, large areas need to be included within marine protected areas for effective management and conservation of these special ecosystems in the face of increasing anthropogenic disturbance

    Growth rate and its variability in erect Antarctic bryozoans

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    Climate is altering rapidly in parts of the Arctic and Antarctic but we know little about how marine organisms are responding to, or might respond to such changes. Knowledge of within-taxon variability is the vital context (currently missing) to interpretation of environmental signals. We investigated growth in six species and three genera of erect Antarctic bryozoans, an ideal model taxon to investigate such response. Cellarinella margueritae, C. nodulata, C. rogickae, C. watersi, Melicerita obliqua and Stomhypselosaria watersi, extended 3.4, 5.2, 4.6, 4.1, 4.9 and 4.5 mm year−1 and synthesised 24, 55, 45, 176, 34 and 46 mg CaCO3 year−1, respectively. The maximum ages of these species ranged from 11 to 15 years except M. obliqua, which reached 32 years. This is the first investigation of growth rates of closely related Antarctic invertebrate species and reports the slowest growth rates of bryozoans known from anywhere to date. Our data coupled with that from literature shows that Antarctic bryozoan growth varies <<101 between species, 101 between genera, 102 between morphologies and is ∌101 slower than in tropical or temperate regions. However, within encrusting types the slowest growing species grow at similar rates from poles to tropics. Age was a strong confounding factor across our Antarctic study species but age-standardised data showed a possible decline in annual growth from 1992 to 2003. We identify several factors increasing this environmental signal strength, including (1) the importance of generic (though not necessarily species) identification and (2) use of dry-mass or ash-free dry-mass as the measures of growth

    Very slow development in two Antarctic bivalve molluscs, the infaunal clam Laternula elliptica and the scallop Adamussium colbecki

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    Embryos of the large infaunal clam Laternula elliptica and the scallop Adamussium colbecki, from Antarctica, were cultured over an 18-month period. Their development rates were extremely slow, taking 240 and 177 h, respectively, to reach the trochophore stage. This is x4 to x18 slower than related clams and scallops from temperate latitudes. The relationship between temperature and development rate for bivalve molluscs shows the expected slowing with reduced temperature (Q(10) in the range 2-4) for temperate and tropical species. However, the slowing at polar latitudes is much stronger than at warmer waters, and all of the limited data for Antarctic species are well above the Arrhenius plot for the overall bivalve data, and the Q(10) value for Antarctic to cool temperate species is 11.8, well outside the expected range for biological systems. Either the relationships describing the effects of temperature on the kinetics of biological systems do not apply to Antarctic bivalve molluscs, or some other factor that cannot be compensated for becomes important at low temperature. In the laboratory, L. elliptica embryos stayed viable in very sticky egg capsules for up to 18 months without hatching. However, even the disturbance of removing eggs using a pipette ruptured some egg capsules allowing embryo release. Gametogenesis in Antarctic marine invertebrates is almost universally slowed compared to temperate species, with nearly all cases documented requiring more than 1 year to complete oogenesis. The only exception so far appears to be A. colbecki, which has a 1-year gametogenic cycle. The data here indicate that it has been unable to adapt embryonic development in a similar way, and we are not aware of any exceptions to the markedly slowed development at low temperature rule

    The urban question in Harvey and Castells: Political economy vision and its constraints

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    Bu yazıda, kent sosyolojisinin en temel yöntem sorunsalı olan ‘kentin teorik bir nesne(obje) olarak’ kabul edilip edilemeyeceği konusu; Marksçı kentsel teorinin politik ekonomi vizyonunun yaklaĆŸÄ±mları temelinde ele alınmaktadır. Marksçı kentsel teorinin içerisinde çeƟitli varyantlar bulunmakla beraber, politik ekonomi vizyonu olarak adlandırılan yaklaĆŸÄ±mın, bu teorinin genel eğilimlerini yansıtabilme noktasında yalnızca bir “ideal tip” oluƟturduğu belirtilmelidir. Politik ekonomi vizyonunun temsilcileri olan Harvey ve Castells’in klasik çalÄ±ĆŸmalarında ise kent, teorik bir öneme sahip değildir. Kendisini kuƟatan sosyal sĂŒreçlere bağlı olumsal(contingent) bir değiƟkendir. Bu yazıda, Harvey ve Castells’in kente yaklaĆŸÄ±mları ele alınarak teorik kısıtları gösterilmeye çalÄ±ĆŸÄ±lmakta ve Marksçı yöntem için söz konusu edilen kısıtların Weberci yöntemle aĆŸÄ±labileceği ileri sĂŒrĂŒlmektedir.This article deals with the most essential methodological issue of the urban sociology, i.e. the question whether "the urban can be considered as a theoretical object or not", based on the approaches of political economy vision of the Marxist urban theory. While there are various variants in Marxist urban theory, it should be pointed out that the approach referred to as political economy vision constitutes only an "ideal type" in reflecting the general tendency of this theory. The classical studies of Harvey and Castells, being the representatives of political economy vision, do not attribute a theoretical importance on 'urban'. It is rather considered as a contingent variable depending upon surrounding social processes. This article discusses the urban approaches of Harvey and Castells with an effort to reveal their theoretical constraints, and puts forward that the constraints applying to Marxist methodology can be overcome by Weber's methodology

    Passive Smoking

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