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  • Springer  (414,312)
  • 1990-1994  (246,210)
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  • 1
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    Springer
    In:  Marine Biology, 117 . pp. 495-500.
    Publication Date: 2017-04-28
    Description: The accumulation of parasites in a fish host is modelled as a function of the total amount of prey consumed. The accumulated parasite load is then expressed as a function of fish length so that the asymptotic growth, L∞, of any population of commonly infected fish can be estimated. Estimates of L∞ are obtained for orange roughy (Hoplostethus atlanticus), albacore tuna (Thunnus alalunga) and the New Zealand southern arrow squid (Nototodarus sloanii).
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
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    Springer
    In:  Marine Biology, 120 (2). pp. 171-180.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-03
    Description: The home range system of the coelacanth Latimeria chalumnae was investigated along 11 km coastline at Grande Comore, Western Indian Ocean, between 1987 and 1991. 67 individuals were identified on individual white dot patterns. The home range consisted of daytime caves where fish aggregated in groups of up to 14 individuals while at night individuals moved singly downwards to a depth of 250 to 300 m in search of food. Site fidelity of at least 5 yr was found. The coelacanths used several caves within their home ranges. Cave size, cave occupation rate, average and maximum group size and cave preferences were studied. Tracking experiments with ultrasonic transmitters revealed horizontal home ranges of at least 8 km width. Population estimates of 200 to 230 individuals at Grande Comore confirm earlier counts. Large home ranges and highly mobility in a topographically narrow habitat apparently favoured inbreeding of the small local island population.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    Springer
    In:  Naturwissenschaften, 79 (10). pp. 476-479.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-22
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    Springer
    In:  Environmental Biology of Fishes, 34 (4). pp. 329-356.
    Publication Date: 2017-08-03
    Description: Locomotion and fin coordination of the only living crossopterygian fish Latimeria chalumnae were studied with submersibles in the fish's natural habitat at around 200 m depth off Grand Comoro, western Indian Ocean. Latimeria is a highly specialized predatory fish adapted for nocturnal drift hunting with good fast start capability. Twelve different forward movements and manoeuvres were found and described. The movements of the paired and unpaired fins were analysed. Propulsion was accomplished with downstrokes of the pectoral fins and right-left or left-right strokes of the unpaired lobed fins. The paired fins were not used for walking on the bottom. Swimming velocity, stroke amplitudes and stroke duration were analysed from films and videos taken in the wild. Stroke duration of the paired and unpaired lobed fins was similar and varies between 1.9 to 5.8 sec. Paired fins alternated synchronously. The coordination at approximately ø = 180° between opposite paired fins is stable and independent of locomotory pattern and velocity. A phase deviation of about 90°–100° exists between paired and unpaired fins. A model is developed that describes the functional implication of this deviation as a method of producing a steady swimming performance which smooths recoil movements and prevents rotation of the body. The novel slow and fast swimming mode of Latimeria is named in accordance with Breder's (1926) descriptive nomenclature as ‘coelacanthiform’. This study indicates a primary swimming function for the primitive sarcopterygian fin and confirms earlier evolutionary assumptions of a more open-water life style of coelacanth fishes. Paleoethological models of the walking habits of Latimeria have to be rejected. Synchronous alternation of paired fins originating from hydrodynamic demands could be a pre-adaptation and a shared derived character in sarcopterygian fishes that facilitated the fish-tetrapod transition.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2017-08-03
    Description: We report first observations on social behavior ofLatimeria chalumnae in its natural environment at around 200 m depth in the Comoro Archipelago, Western Indian Ocean. Coelacanths aggregate in small nonaggressive groups in sheltered lava-caves. They live in open site-attached social systems with individuals occupying large overlapping home ranges of more than 8 km coastline, some for a period of at least 2 years.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
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    Springer
    In:  Marine Biology, 115 (1). pp. 143-150.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: Lower and upper survival temperatures of microthalli of 25 species of South American Phaeophyceae isolated from central Peru (14°S) to the Canal Beagle (55°S) were determined using 2-wk exposure for the upper and 4-wk exposure for the lower limit. All species survive 4 wks at -2°C. With respect to the upper limit, species reported only from southernmost South America tolerate 19.9 to 24.5°C (n=8), and species occurring from Cape Horn to central Chile 24.6 to 27.4°C (n=7). Three species that occurred as far north as northern Chile and Peru before the 1982–1983 El Niño event, and whose northern limit was dramatically shifted southwards in 1983, tolerate 20.8 to 25.3°C, whereas five species that have survived in Peru tolerate 25.6 to 28.5°C. Tinocladia falklandica which tolerates 27.8 to 28.1°C but lives only in southernmost South America and Striaria attenuata, which tolerates 31.6 to 31.9°C but occurs at ca. 42°S, are exceptional. Their high temperature tolerance may have no adaptive value in South America. They are restricted to the cold-temperate region due to low temperature requirements for reproduction or for reasons yet unknown. In general, the northern distributional limits of the Phaeophyceae studied along the temperate Pacific coast of South America are reproduction boundaries, except in El Niño years when they are redefined according to the species' upper suvival limits. Temperature tolerance of isolates from northern Chile and Peru agrees well with maximum temperatures reached during the 1983 El Niño.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
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    Springer
    In:  Hydrobiologia, 260/261 . pp. 263-267.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-07
    Description: The objective of the study was to produce a size-based matrix model of a Laminaria digitata (L.) Lamour. population. ‘Hard’ data for insertion in the matrix were collected in a 9 year cohort analysis of size and age specific survival and fertility for a stand in south west Nova Scotia, Canada. The product of the square matrix containing these values and a column vector containing the densities of size classes was used to project the size class structure one year later. The projected estimates were found to fit empirical estimates with some confidence. In contrast, an age-based fertility life table wrongly predicted a population declining in density by 45% per year. The study supports, in theory, the use of size-based matrix models for management of harvested stands. In reality, the amount of work required to obtain ‘hard’ data and the site specific nature of the projections may preclude the use of such an approach to broad scale management.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
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    Springer
    In:  Deutsche Hydrographische Zeitschrift, 44 (5-6). pp. 321-327.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-05
    Description: In den 1980er Jahren wurden umfangreiche Bestandsaufnahmen zur Formenvielfalt der Fischkrankheiten sowie der saisonalen und regionalen Fluktuation ihrer Befallsraten in deutschen Küstengewässern angestellt. Sowohl Formenvielfalt als auch viele der Befallsraten scheinen im Wattenmeer und insbesondere in den dortigen Flußmündungen größer zu sein als in Vergleichsgewässern. Drei “neue” Krankheitsformen werden vorgestellt: die nahrungsinduzierte Maulgranulomatose des Stints, die vermutlich durch Flexibacter-Bakterien verursachte Gelbe Pest des Kabeljaus und eine Fibrom des Steinpickers, in dem lentivirusähnliche Partikel nachgewiesen wurden. Das Schwergewicht der bisherigen Forschungsvorhaben lag auf dem Sammeln von Felddaten. Mangels experimenteller Arbeitsansätze müssen viele wichtige Fragen zur Bedeutung dieser Krankheiten daher heute noch unbeantwortet bleiben. So bleibt die Vermutung unbewiesen, daß ein Reihe von parasitenbedingten Krankheiten einen entscheidenden Beitrag zur natürlichen Sterblichkeit vor allem von jungen Nutzfischen im Wattenmeer liefert. Auch das komplizierte Wirkungsgefüge anthropogener und natürlicher Faktoren bei der Entstehung von Fischkrankheiten im Gebiet wird ohne gezielte experimentelle Arbeiten nicht aufzudecken sein. Das Auftreten von Gelber Pest, Ichthyophonus-Krankheit und lentivirusähnlichen Partikeln in Fischtumoren stellt ein beträchtliches Gefährungspotential für die deutsche Fischwirtschaft dar. Allgemein ist festzustellen, daß in Deutschland eine große Empfänglichkeit gegenüber Umweltproblemen auf dem Gebiet der Marinen Pathologie besteht. Die nationalen Forschungskapazitäten sind aufgrund anderer, meist kurzfristig angelegter Arbeitsschwerpunkte jedoch nicht ausreichend darauf vorbereitet, diese Probleme auch erfolgreich zu analysieren und zu bewerten. Als Konsequenz wird gefordert, der bislang vernachlässigten Grundlagenforschung auf dem Gebiet der Marinen Pathologie neben der reinen Datenerhebung auf See künftig eine größere Bedeutung zuzumessen. Das gilt insbesondere für experimentelle und für biochemisch- und mikroskopisch-diagnostische Arbeiten. Künftig auftretende Probleme werden nur dann rechzeitig zu bewerten und zu lösen sein, wenn sich ein ausreichend breit angelegtes und fundiertes Wissenspotential kontinuierlich weiterentwickeln kann.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
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    Springer
    In:  Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 65 (3). pp. 249-254.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-07
    Description: Turbulence in the Planetary Boundary Layer has been a topic of research for a long time. Its theory, however, is hampered by the fact that we have fewer fundamental equations than unknowns when dealing with turbulent motions. The search for additional “laws” to match the number of equations with the number of unknowns in turbulence theory is commonly labelled the turbulent closure problem. Despite considerable effort, this problem has not been solved. There is a variety of approaches available. However, these have not converged towards a commonly accepted PBL theory, like the Monin-Obukhov similarity for the surface layer. The Working Group on Boundary Layer Dynamics and Air-Sea interaction of ICDM/IAMAP therefore invites the scientific community to discuss these problems and possible solutions. The present paper intends to stimulate such a discussion.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
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    Springer
    In:  Journal of Comparative Physiology B - Biochemical Systemic and Environmental Physiology, 162 (6). pp. 567-573.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) carrying dummy instruments were used to determine field metabolic rates using double-labelled water. All penguins injected with double-labelled water showed a marked loss of body mass (-4.5%) during the period of the experiments (20–131 h), irrespective of the time of the breeding season. Total body water averaged 57.3% and water flux estimates of field metabolic rates correlated with double-labelled water estimates of field metabolic rate (r2=0.68), indicating that Adélie penguins do not ingest significant amounts of sea water. Brooding Adélie penguins had a mean field metabolic rate of 10.1 W·kg-1 and at sea a field metabolic rate of 13.3 W·kg-1, both of which compare well with previously published estimates based on time/activity budgets and respirometry. Mean field metabolic rate in penguins with crèching chicks was 14.1 W·kg-1, and the birds spent 65 h absent from the nest as opposed to previous estimates of 7.1 W·kg-1 and 21 h. The effects of weather, disturbance and manipulation on the behaviour and field metabolic rate of penguins late in the breeding season are discussed. Adélie penguins (crèching chicks) equipped with externally attached instruments spent more time absent from the nest than noninstrumented controls (76 vs 54 h), but had a lower field metabolic rate.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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