1,512 research outputs found

    An analysis of the meroplankton assemblages of Station L4 and the development and application of molecular techniques to aid taxonomic resolution.

    Get PDF
    ABSTRACT Zooplankton data from the 1988-2007 Station L4 time-series were used to determine inter-and intra-annual patterns of meroplankton community change at Station L4, Plymouth, UK. Abundances were calculated for five groups: Cirripedia, Decapoda, Polychaeta, Echinodermata and Bivalvia. Analyses showed that, while there is some annual variability, seasonal variation accounts for the major changes in the meroplanktonic community composition throughout the time-series. Cirripedia were the only group to show any significant change in abundance over the time-series. Further sampling at the study site produced data at a finer taxonomic resolution allowing for the analyses of the seasonal cycles of abundance of previously unresolved families and genera from the 1988-2007 time-series. A similar pattern was shown to that seen in the earlier time-series with no evidence of major changes in the meroplanktonic community being found. Comparison with historical data taken from Lebour (1947) showed little evidence of major variation in meroplanktonic species composition. The limitations of traditional methods of taxonomic resolution were highlighted during these analyses and led to the investigation of molecular techniques as a viable aid to identification. Bivalve larval samples were identified to species in many cases using PCR and sequencing reactions focussing on the 18S rRNA gene. Larvae of Phaxas pellucidus were shown to be the most common, and further analysis revealed the presence of two groups of species within the data over the time sampled, comprising the larvae of several hard-substrata species. Development of an RFLP technique focussing on the mtCOI gene, allowed for the successful discrimination of porcellanid larvae to species that were unable to be resolved morphologically. Long-term data-sets play an important role in revealing the long-term patterns of community composition and abundance of meroplanktonic larvae and should be continued to identify those patterns not evident over the time-period studied. Molecular techniques were valuable in aiding the taxonomic resolution of meroplanktonic larvae, allowing previously unknown patterns of species diversity and richness to be ascertained

    Center of Twisted Graded Hecke Algebras for Homocyclic Groups

    Full text link
    We determine explicitly the center of the twisted graded Hecke algebras associated to homocyclic groups. Our results are a generalization of formulas by M. Douglas and B. Fiol in [J. High Energy Phys. 2005 (2005), no. 9, 053, 22 pages, hep-th/9903031]

    Program: Featured Lecture, The Faithful Creator: Affirming Creation and Providence in an Age of Anxiety.

    Get PDF
    Program for the Thirty-Seventh Annual William M. Green Distinguished Christian Lecture Program with featured lecturer Dr. Ron Highfield, Professor of Religion at Seaver College, Pepperdine University

    All Things Work Together For Good

    Get PDF

    The God We Worship: Encountering His Person

    Get PDF

    Be Still My Soul: The Christian and the Providence of God

    Get PDF

    Theology and the Ministry of the Word

    Get PDF

    Theological Anthropology in the Restoration Movement

    Get PDF

    Professional Books of Interest

    Get PDF

    Children\u27s Education and the Kingdom of God in America

    Get PDF
    corecore