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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht :Springer Netherlands,
    Keywords: Ultraviolet radiation-Environmental aspects. ; Plants-Effect of ultraviolet radiation on. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (298 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9789401157186
    Series Statement: Advances in Vegetation Science Series ; v.17
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht :Springer Netherlands,
    Keywords: Microalgae -- Congresses. ; Biogeochemical cycles -- Congresses. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (327 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781402062148
    DDC: 579.8
    Language: English
    Note: 978-1-4020-6214-8_Book_OnlinePDF.pdf -- BIOG_83_1-3_bookprelim1.pdf -- BIOG_83_1-3_bookprelim2.pdf -- BIOG_83_1-3_bookprelim3.pdf -- BIOG_83_1-3_bookprelim4.pdf -- biog_83_1_Prelim_v_vi.pdf -- Introduction -- A taxonomic review of the genus Phaeocystis -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Molecular analysis -- Molecular clock -- Formally described species -- Undescribed species -- Outlook -- References -- Methods used to reveal genetic diversity in the colony-forming prymnesiophytes Phaeocystis antarctica, P. globosa and P. pouchetii-preliminary results -- Abstract -- Introduction -- AmpliWed fragment length polymorphism -- Microsatellite markers -- References -- The life cycle of Phaeocystis: state of knowledge and presumptive role in ecology -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Morphotypes among Phaeocystis species -- Morphotypes of P. globosa -- Colonial cells -- Haploid Xagellates -- Diploid Xagellates -- Morphotypes of P. pouchetii -- Colonial cells -- Flagellates -- Morphotypes of P. antarctica -- Colonial cells -- Flagellates -- Morphotypes of P. jahnii -- Colonial cells -- Flagellates -- Morphotype of P. cordata -- Morphotype of P. scrobiculata -- Synthesis of the observed morphotypes -- The Phaeocystis life cycle -- The haploid-diploid life cycle of P. globosa -- Phaeocystis globosa colony blooms result from sexual processes -- Vegetative reproduction in P. globosa -- Factors inducing phase changes within the P. globosa life cycle -- The life cycle of the other Phaeocystis species -- The haploid-diploid life cycle of Prymnesiophytes -- The ecological relevance of the haploid-diploid life cycle of P. globosa -- The advantage of haploid-diploid life cycles -- The ecology of P. globosa morphotypes -- Conclusions -- References. , Phaeocystis colony distribution in the North Atlantic Ocean since 1948, and interpretation of long-term changes in the Phaeocystis hotspot in the North Sea -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Materials and methods -- The Continuous Plankton Recorder -- Rijkswaterstaat-RIKZ survey -- Data presentation -- Results -- Discussion -- References -- Photosynthetic responses in Phaeocystis antarctica towards varying light and iron conditions -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Methods -- Culture conditions -- Photosynthetic parameters -- Sampling strategy and statistical analyses -- Results -- Discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Effects of iron concentration on pigment composition in Phaeocystis antarctica grown at low irradiance -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Methods and materials -- Isolation of Phaeocystis antarctica -- Laboratory iron-addition dose-response experiment -- Ross Sea pigment samples -- HPLC pigment analyses -- Results and discussion -- Hex:Chl a ratios -- Fuco:Chl a ratios -- Chl c3:Chl a ratios -- Hex:Chl c3 ratios -- Fuco:Hex ratios -- Physiological and ecological implications -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Evidence for high iron requirements of colonial Phaeocystis antarctica at low irradiance -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Methods -- Field collections -- Shipboard iron-light manipulation experiment -- Laboratory dose-response iron-addition experiment -- Analytical methods -- Interpretation of experimental results -- Results and discussion -- Shipboard iron-light manipulation experiment -- Laboratory dose-response iron-addition experiment -- Conclusions and directions for future research -- Acknowledgements -- References -- The carbohydrates of Phaeocystis and their degradation in the microbial food web -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Phaeocystis carbohydrates and their characteristics -- Structural polysaccharides. , Mono- and oligosaccharides -- Storage glucan -- Mucopolysaccharides -- Contribution of mucopolysaccharides-C to POC -- Extra-colonial DOM -- Mechanisms of DOM release during a Phaeocystis bloom -- Formation of hydrogels by Phaeocystis carbohydrates -- Microbial degradation -- Microbial degradation of Phaeocystis carbohydrates -- Microbial degradation of hydrogels -- Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- The role of iron in the bacterial degradation of organic matter derived from Phaeocystis antarctica -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Materials and methods -- Experimental procedure -- Phaeocystis cultures -- Bacteria cultures -- Regrowth experiments -- Analytical procedures -- Nutrients -- Chlorophyll a and Phaeocystis antarctica biomass -- Organic carbon -- Bacterial biomass and activities -- Statistical analysis -- Results -- Characteristics of LFe and HFe Phaeocystis cultures -- Bacterial regrowth experiments -- Time evolution of organic carbon -- Bacterial communities -- Bacterial activities -- Discussion -- Fe control on P. antarctica-derived organic matter concentration and quality -- Fe control on the bacterial community composition and activities -- Fe control on organic matter remineralization in a Phaeocystis-dominated ecosystem -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- The colonization of two Phaeocystis species (Prymnesiophyceae) by pennate diatoms and other protists: a signiWcant contribution to colony biomass -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Material and methods -- Results -- Discussion -- References -- Zooplankton grazing on Phaeocystis: a quantitative review and future challenges -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Grazing on Phaeocystis: quantitative patterns in published data -- Crustacean zooplankton grazing on Phaeocystis: is there a general pattern? -- Treatment of literature data -- Statistical methods. , Results from statistical analysis -- Quantitative results from data on crustacean grazing -- Grazing by protozooplankton and other microzooplankton -- Cell-type and life-stage-speciWc interactions with grazers -- Colony formation and its potential role in morphological defense -- Chemical defense -- Does DMS aVect grazing on Phaeocystis? -- Does nutritional value aVect grazing on Phaeocystis? -- Survival of gut passage? -- Conclusions and future challenges -- References -- The influence of Phaeocystis globosa on microscale spatial patterns of chlorophyll a and bulk-phase seawater viscosity -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Materials and methods -- Study site -- Microscale sampling device -- Chlorophyll a analysis -- Bulk-phase seawater viscosity measurements -- Potential biases and limitations -- Data analyses -- Identifying spatial structure -- Statistical analyses -- Results -- Environmental conditions -- Microscale spatial variability -- Microscale spatial correlation -- Microscale spatial structure -- Discussion -- Microscale spatial patterns and Phaeocystis globosa bloom dynamics -- Type of spatial patterns and patch sizes -- Small-scale versus microscale variability -- On the potential role of biologically increased seawater viscosity in P. globosa ecology -- Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Haemolytic activity of live Phaeocystis pouchetii during mesocosm blooms -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Material and methods -- Mesocosm set up -- Sampling -- Phytoplankton analysis -- Erythrocyte lysis analysis (ELA) -- Data analysis -- Results -- Bloom description -- Haemolytic activity -- Correlation of haemolysis with phytoplankton groups -- Dose response curves at diVerent temperatures -- Light eVects -- Discussion -- References -- Phaeocystis and its interaction with viruses -- Abstract -- Introduction. , Isolation and characterization of viruses infecting Phaeocystis -- Occurrence and dynamics of Phaeocystis viruses -- Diversity of Phaeocystis viruses and its ecological role -- Resistance to viral infection -- Environmental factors inXuencing virus-host interactions -- Virally induced mortality of Phaeocystis -- Impact of viral lysis of Phaeocystis on the microbial food web and element cycling -- Future perspectives -- References -- Does Phaeocystis spp. contribute significantly to vertical export of organic carbon? -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Methods -- Sampling sites and sediment trap measurements -- Analysis and calculations -- Results and discussion -- How to define vertical export of Phaeocystis-derived matter? -- The morphological challenge: cells and colonies -- The relative importance of Phaeocystis spp. cell carbon to vertical POC export -- Does mucus contribute significantly to the vertical export of Phaeocystis spp-derived C? -- Mucus carbon estimates -- Estimated mucus contribution to carbon export -- Fate of Phaeocystis colonies visualised through TEP -- Mechanisms for vertical export -- Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgement -- References -- Vernal sedimentation trends in north Norwegian fjords: temporary anomaly in 234Th particulate fluxes related to Phaeocystis pouchetii proliferation -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Material and methods -- Study area -- Measurements -- Irreversible scavenging model of 234Th -- Results -- Hydrography, Phaeocystis and DMSP distribution in the three fjords -- Vertical distribution of 234Th -- Particulate fluxes of 234Th -- Discussion -- 234Th fluxes and trap collection efficiencies -- Impact of Phaeocystis proliferation on settling flux -- Conclusions -- Acknowledgments -- References. , Environmental constraints on the production and removal of the climatically active gas dimethylsulphide (DMS) and implications for ecosystem modelling.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Microscopic observations of Lugol-preserved samples collected near a subsurface drogue during the spring bloom of 1981 in the central North Sea suggested that the phytoplankton crop consisted mainly of diatoms. However, the relative abundance of alloxanthin among the carotenoids measured by reversed-phase, high-performance liquid chromatography indicated that in most samples Cryptophyceae were at least as abundant. On the basis of a multiple regression analysis of pigment concentrations to obtain pigment ratios, the contribution of Cryptophycean chlorophyll to total chlorophyll was calculated. The Cryptophyceae:diatom ratio appeared to be variable during the period of observations, ranging between 0 at the beginning to 1.0 ten days later. It is recommended that the classical method of counting phytoplankton for crop estimates be supplemented by chemotaxonomical studies with modern quantitative chromatographic methods such as HPLC for the measurement of algal pigments.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract From November 1980 to February 1981 the concentration of oxygen dissolved in the surface mixed layer of the oligotrophic Caribbean Sea off Curaçao was quite constant (420.77±1.98 μg at l-1). However, immediately following enclosure in 4500-1 plastic bags reaching to a depth of 5 m the oxygen concentration began to decrease, down to values below saturation (405 μg at l-1) within 48 h. Autotrophic and heterotrophic nanoplankton cell numbers and algal pigments in bags remained constant or increased slightly during the first 24 h of enclosure. The rate of decrease in oxygen concentration in bags was significantly higher during daylight hours than in the night, which suggests that photo-oxidative processes were involved in the additional daytime loss of oxygen. The dramatic “enclosure effect” on the oxygen content of the water in the bags can be taken as evidence of the dependence of the oxygen concentration near the tropical ocean's surface on supply from below: in water freely circulating in the euphotic zone deviations from the mean oxygen concentration during a diurnal cycle were 0.47% at most, differential losses near the surface being counteracted through vertical exchange; while in water separated from the rest of the mixed layer in the plastic bags losses due to respiration of the enclosed plankton community plus an even greater loss, assigned to non-biological, photosensitized oxidation processes, were up to 10 μg at O2 l-1 in 24 h. Although photo-oxidation is confined to the very surface the oxygen flux involved may be important enough to necessitate consideration of a photochemically induced loss factor in oxygen budget calculations, e.g. when primary production is to be estimated from diurnal oxygen curves.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In October and November 1988, measurements of oxygen and total dissolved inorganic carbon (TCO2) concentrations were made in the northwestern Weddell Sea to the south and north of the marginal ice edge, in order to estimate the relative importance, regarding their variations, of both biological (photosynthesis and respiration) and physical (transport of O2 and CO2 by turbulent movements and by intrusion from the atmosphere) processes. In the ice-covered region, both respiration and upwelling determined the O2 and TCO2 variations, whilst in the open water just north of the marginal ice edge, photosynthetic activity was the most important factor controlling O2 and TCO2 levels. These findings underline the importance of the activity of the pelagic ecosystem in determining the concentration of O2 and CO2 not only in the ice-free but also in the ice-covered Antarctic Ocean.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary During a cruise in the Weddell-Scotia Confluence area (EPOS Leg 2: November–January 1988/1989) nanophytoplankton composition was determined by employing taxon-specific pigment measurements with HPLC. The biomass of the most important components was estimated by using specific pigment ratios measured in cultures of two cryptomonads and a prasinophyte. Highest cryptophyte biomass was found along the retreating ice-edge; the contribution of cryptophytes to total phytoplankton crop increased with time, reaching monospecific bloom conditions at the end of the cruise. Chlorophyll b-containing organisms and Prymnesiophyceae were present everywhere and dominated in the ice-covered part of the survey area. Cryptophyte-specific pigment measurements were in reasonable agreement with cryptophyte cell numbers. Prasinophyte cell counts, however, did not match with measured chlorophyll b concentrations. The quantitative importance of the nanophytoplankton groups reported here underlines the diversity of the plankton in the Southern Ocean's marginal ice zone system which may have implications for food chain dynamics.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Aquatic ecology 17 (1983), S. 29-51 
    ISSN: 1573-5125
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1573-5125
    Keywords: copepod grazing ; chlorophyll degradation ; carotenoid enrichment
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract During grazing of the copepodTemora longicornis onThalassiosira eccentrica phaeophorbide-a and several phaeophytins-a appeared in the culture vessels. However, a variable portion of the diatom's chlorophyll-a was degraded to substances that could not be detected either spectrophotometrically or fluorometrically. Chlorophyll-c and fucoxanthin were also lost during diatom cell transit throughTemora's gut. The variability between experiments in the destruction of chl.a to colourless residues is ascribed to differences in coprophagy and in transit time through the copepod gut, processes related to filtering rate and the ambient food concentration. Because the pigment loss is variable, grazing pressure cannot be estimated by simply recording bulk phaeopigment concentrations. The net result of the appearance of a fucoxanthinol-like pigment while all other pigments disappeared is a gradual carotenoid enrichment of the samples during grazing.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 38 (1971), S. 61-66 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Description / Table of Contents: Resumen Se argumenta que Podon polyphemoides no debe colocarse más en el genero Podon, ya que solamente tiene similitud con las otras especies de este género en la configuración del cuerpo, una caracteristica de menor importancia en la distinción del Orden Polyphemoidea. Se propone el nombre nuevo Pleopis polyphemoides.
    Notes: Summary It is argued that Podon polyphemoides does not belong in the genus Podon, since the only similarity with the other species in this genus is the body outline, a characteristic of minor importance in generic distinction in the Polyphemoidea. The new name Pleopis polyphemoides is proposed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2018-02-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , peerRev
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