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  • 1
    In: Faszination Meeresforschung, Bremen : Hauschild, 2006, (2006), Seite 210-215, 3897573105
    In: 9783897573109
    In: year:2006
    In: pages:210-215
    Type of Medium: Article
    Language: German
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  • 2
    Keywords: Watt ; Miesmuschel ; Seepocken ; Epizoen ; Wechselwirkung ; Dissertation ; Sylt
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: 143 S , Ill., graph. Darst
    Language: German
    Note: Enthält: 4 Zeitschriftenaufsätze , Hamburg, Univ., FB Biologie, Diss., 2001
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Hydrobiologia 440 (2000), S. 119-128 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: grazing ; direct and indirect effects ; barnacles ; algae ; mussel bed
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract On the extensive sedimentary tidal flats of the Wadden Sea, beds of the blue mussel Mytilus edulis represent the only major hard substratum and attachment surface for sessile organisms. On this substratum, the barnacle Semibalanus balanoides is the most frequent epibiont. In summer 1998, it occurred on over 90% of the large mussels (〉45 mm shell length) and the dry weight of barnacles reached 65% of mussel dry weight. However, the extent of barnacle overgrowth is not constant and differs widely between years. Periwinkles (Littorina littorea) may reach densities 〉2000 m−2 on intertidal mussel beds. Field experiments were conducted to test the effect of periwinkle grazing on barnacle densities. An experimental reduction of grazing and bulldozing pressure by periwinkles resulted in increased recruitment of barnacles, while barnacle numbers decreased with increasing snail density. The highest numbers of barnacles survived in the absence of L. littorea. However, a lack of periwinkle grazing activity also facilitated settlement of ephemeral algae which settled later in the year. Field experiments showed that the growth rate of barnacles decreased in the presence of these ephemeral algae. Thus, L. littorea may reduce initial barnacle settlement, but later may indirectly increase barnacle growth rate by reducing ephemeral algae. It is suggested that periwinkle density may be a key factor in the population dynamics of S. balanoides on intertidal mussel beds in the Wadden Sea.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Introduced Marine Pests (IMP, = non-indigenous marine species) prevention, early detection and risk-based management strategies have become the priority for biosecurity operations worldwide, in recognition of the fact that, once established, the effective management of marine pests can rapidly become cost prohibitive or impractical. In Western Australia (WA), biosecurity management is guided by the " Western Australian Prevention List for Introduced Marine Pests " which is a policy tool that details species or genera as being of high risk to the region. This list forms the basis of management efforts to prevent introduction of these species, monitoring efforts to detect them at an early stage, and rapid response should they be detected. It is therefore essential that the species listed can be rapid and confidently identified and discriminated from native species by a range of government and industry stakeholders. Recognising that identification of these species requires very specialist expertise which may be in short supply and not readily accessible in a regulatory environment, and the fact that much publicly available data is not verifiable or suitable for regulatory enforcement, the WA government commissioned the current project to collate a reference collection of these marine pest specimens. In this work, we thus established collaboration with researchers worldwide in order to source representative specimens of the species listed. Our main objective was to build a reference collection of taxonomically vouchered specimens and subsequently to generate species-specific DNA barcodes suited to supporting their future identification. To date, we were able to obtain specimens of 75 species (representative of all but four of the pests listed) which have been identified by experts and placed with the WA Government Department of Fisheries and, where possible, in accessible museums and institutions in Australasia. The reference collection supports the fast and reliable taxonomic and molecular identification of marine pests in WA and constitutes a valuable resource for training of stakeholders with interest in IMP recognition in Australia. The reference collection is also useful in supporting the development of a variety of DNA-based detection strategies such as real-time PCR and metabarcoding of complex environmental samples (e.g. biofouling communities). The Prevention List is under regular review to ensure its continued relevance and that it remains evidence and risk-based. Similarly, its associated reference collection also remains to some extent a work in progress. In recognition of this fact, this report seeks to provide details of this continually evolving information repository publicly available to the biosecurity management community worldwide
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Predators can affect parasite–host interactions when directly preying on hosts or their parasites. However, predators may also have non-consumptive indirect effects on parasite–host interactions when hosts adjust their behaviour or physiology in response to predator presence. In this study, we examined how chemical cues from a predatory marine crab affect the transmission of a parasitic trematode from its first (periwinkle) to its second (mussel) intermediate host. Laboratory experiments revealed that chemical cues from crabs lead to a threefold increase in the release of trematode cercariae from periwinkles as a result of increased periwinkle activity. This positive effect on transmission was contrasted by a 10-fold reduction in cercarial infection rates in the second intermediate host when we experimentally exposed mussels to cercariae and predator cues. The low infection rates were caused by a substantial reduction in mussel filtration activity in the presence of predator cues, preventing cercariae from entering the mussels. To assess the combined net effect of both processes, we conducted a transmission experiment between infected periwinkles and uninfected mussels. Infection levels of mussels in the treatments with crab cues were sevenfold lower than in mussels without crab chemical cues. This suggests that predation risk effects on mussel susceptibility can counteract the elevated parasite release from first intermediate hosts, with negative net effects on parasite transmission. These experiments highlight that predation risk effects on parasite transmission can have opposing directions at different stages of the parasite's life cycle. Such complex non-consumptive predation risk effects on parasite transmission may constitute an important indirect mechanism affecting prevalence and distribution patterns of parasites in different hosts across their life cycle.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Description: A shallow subtidal area in the northern Wadden Sea was monitored over 17 years for sediment parameters and macrobenthic fauna using stratified random sampling of a grid of 50 sampling positions. Samples were collected with a Reineck-type box-corer of 0.02 m² surface area, always during preceeded high tide. Granulometric sediment composition was analysed from a sub-sample of each box-core using a diffraction laser particle-size analyser. Macrobenthos (sieved through 1 mm square meshes and fixed in buffered formalin solution) was counted, identified to species level, and the size of hard-shelled individuals measured. The amount of shell detritus was quantified as wet-weight in the benthos samples. From 2003 to 2007 sampling was approximatively monthly and from 2008 to 2013 seasonally. When a new ship with larger drought was put into operation, the number of sampling sites needed to be reduced to 33 from 2014 onwards and sampling frequency was only once per year in autumn.
    Keywords: AWI_Coast; Coastal Ecology @ AWI; Macrobenthos; sediment analysis; Time-Series Data; Wadden Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 34 datasets
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Description: A shallow subtidal area in the northern Wadden Sea was monitored for sediment parameters and macrobenthic fauna using stratified random sampling of a grid of 50 sampling positions. Samples were collected with a Reineck-type box-corer of 0.02 m² surface area, macrobenthos (sieved through 1 mm square meshes and fixed in buffered formalin solution) was counted, identified to species level, and the size of hard-shelled individuals measured. This dataset contains the size measurements of 1098 individuals from the five sampling dates in 2012.
    Keywords: AWI_Coast; Body length; Carapace width; Coastal Ecology @ AWI; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Diameter, including arms; Disc diameter; German Bight Wadden Sea; LATITUDE; List_Reede; Lister_Ley; Location; LONGITUDE; Long-term time series Sylt; Macrobenthos; MULT; Multiple investigations; Number of individuals per size class; Sample code/label; Shell diameter; Shell length; Species; Time-Series Data; Wadden Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5490 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Description: A shallow subtidal area in the northern Wadden Sea was monitored for sediment parameters and macrobenthic fauna using stratified random sampling of a grid of 50 sampling positions. Samples were collected with a Reineck-type box-corer of 0.02 m² surface area, macrobenthos (sieved through 1 mm square meshes and fixed in buffered formalin solution) was counted, identified to species level, and the size of hard-shelled individuals measured. This dataset contains the size measurements of 669 individuals from the three sampling dates in 2013.
    Keywords: AWI_Coast; Body length; Carapace width; Coastal Ecology @ AWI; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Diameter, including arms; Disc diameter; German Bight Wadden Sea; LATITUDE; List_Reede; Lister_Ley; Location; LONGITUDE; Long-term time series Sylt; Macrobenthos; MULT; Multiple investigations; Number of individuals per size class; Sample code/label; Shell diameter; Shell length; Species; Time-Series Data; Wadden Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2370 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Description: A shallow subtidal area in the northern Wadden Sea was monitored for sediment parameters and macrobenthic fauna using stratified random sampling of a grid of 50 sampling positions. Samples were collected with a Reineck-type box-corer of 0.02 m² surface area, macrobenthos (sieved through 1 mm square meshes and fixed in buffered formalin solution) was counted, identified to species level, and the size of hard-shelled individuals measured. This dataset contains the size measurements of 259 individuals from the 2017 sampling.
    Keywords: AWI_Coast; Body length; Carapace width; Coastal Ecology @ AWI; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; German Bight Wadden Sea; LATITUDE; List_Reede; Lister_Ley; Location; LONGITUDE; Long-term time series Sylt; Macrobenthos; MULT; Multiple investigations; Number of individuals per size class; Sample code/label; Shell diameter; Shell length; Species; Time-Series Data; Wadden Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1160 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-03-16
    Description: A shallow subtidal area in the northern Wadden Sea was monitored for sediment parameters and macrobenthic fauna using stratified random sampling of a grid of 50 sampling positions. Samples were collected with a Reineck-type box-corer of 0.02 m² surface area, macrobenthos (sieved through 1 mm square meshes and fixed in buffered formalin solution) was counted, identified to species level, and the size of hard-shelled individuals measured. This dataset contains the size measurements of 253 individuals from the 2016 sampling.
    Keywords: AWI_Coast; Body length; Carapace width; Coastal Ecology @ AWI; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Diameter, including arms; German Bight Wadden Sea; LATITUDE; List_Reede; Lister_Ley; Location; LONGITUDE; Long-term time series Sylt; Macrobenthos; MULT; Multiple investigations; Number of individuals per size class; Sample code/label; Shell diameter; Shell length; Species; Time-Series Data; Wadden Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1070 data points
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