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  • 1
    Keywords: Sea cucumbers ; Seegurken
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: 69 S.
    Series Statement: Bulletin / New Zealand Department of Scientific and Industrial Research 201
    DDC: 551.4/6/008
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Keywords: Echinodermata ; Echinodermata
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: 34 S.
    Series Statement: Bulletin / New Zealand Department of Scientific and Industrial Research 187
    DDC: 607
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Keywords: Sea cucumbers Behavior ; Sea cucumbers Locomotion
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: III, 18 S. , Ill.
    Series Statement: Smithsonian contributions to the marine sciences 35
    DDC: 593.9/6
    Language: English
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. 16-18)
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  • 4
    Keywords: Echinodermata Identification ; Echinodermata Identification
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: XI, 390 S , Ill. (farb.), graph. Darst., Kt , 27 cm
    ISBN: 1560984503
    DDC: 593.9/09759
    Language: English
    Note: Literaturverz. S. 343-382 , Enth. Index S. 383 - 390
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Palo Alto, Calif. : Annual Reviews
    Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 32 (2001), S. 51-93 
    ISSN: 0066-4162
    Source: Annual Reviews Electronic Back Volume Collection 1932-2001ff
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Most of our knowledge of biodiversity and its causes in the deep-sea benthos derives from regional-scale sampling studies of the macrofauna. Improved sampling methods and the expansion of investigations into a wide variety of habitats have revolutionized our understanding of the deep sea. Local species diversity shows clear geographic variation on spatial scales of 100-1000 km. Recent sampling programs have revealed unexpected complexity in community structure at the landscape level that is associated with large-scale oceanographic processes and their environmental consequences. We review the relationships between variation in local species diversity and the regional-scale phenomena of boundary constraints, gradients of productivity, sediment heterogeneity, oxygen availability, hydrodynamic regimes, and catastrophic physical disturbance. We present a conceptual model of how these interdependent environmental factors shape regional-scale variation in local diversity. Local communities in the deep sea may be composed of species that exist as metapopulations whose regional distribution depends on a balance among global-scale, landscape-scale, and small-scale dynamics. Environmental gradients may form geographic patterns of diversity by influencing local processes such as predation, resource partitioning, competitive exclusion, and facilitation that determine species coexistence. The measurement of deep-sea species diversity remains a vital issue in comparing geographic patterns and evaluating their potential causes. Recent assessments of diversity using species accumulation curves with randomly pooled samples confirm the often-disputed claim that the deep sea supports higher diversity than the continental shelf. However, more intensive quantitative sampling is required to fully characterize the diversity of deep-sea sediments, the most extensive habitat on Earth. Once considered to be constant, spatially uniform, and isolated, deep-sea sediments are now recognized as a dynamic, richly textured environment that is inextricably linked to the global biosphere. Regional studies of the last two decades provide the empirical background necessary to formulate and test specific hypotheses of causality by controlled sampling designs and experimental approaches.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The deep ocean is home to a group of broad-collared hemichordates—the so-called ‘lophenteropneusts’—that have been photographed gliding on the sea floor but have not previously been collected. It has been claimed that these worms have collar tentacles and blend ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
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    Florida Department of Natural Resources, Marine Research Laboratory | St. Petersburg, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/746 | 97 | 2020-08-24 03:23:42 | 746 | Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: A total of 213 holothurians, representing 16 species, was collected during Project Hourglass, a28-month systematic survey of ten stations along two transects (6-73 m) off central western Florida.This material, supplemented with 8 1 additional Gulf of Mexico specimens supplied by the FloridaDepartment of Natural Resources, brings the total number of species reported in this paper to 20. Ofthese species, 19 have previously been reported from the Gulf of Mexico. One, Allothyone mexicana,can be considered endemic to the Gulf of Mexico, and another, Thyone crassidisca, was recentlydescribed from material including Hourglass specimens. Systematic accounts, pertinent ecologicaldata and line drawings of taxonomically important skeletal elements are included for each species.Keys to all 60 holothurian species known from the Gulf of Mexico are provided. Range extensionsfor several species are noted. (Document contains 79 pages.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Biology ; Gulf of Mexico ; Florida ; Echinodermata:Holothuroidea ; Holothurians
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-09-07
    Description: The deep ocean is home to a group of broad-collared hemichordates—the so-called ‘lophenteropneusts’—that have been photographed gliding on the sea floor1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 but have not previously been collected. It has been claimed that these worms have collar tentacles and blend morphological features of the two main hemichordate body plans, namely the tentacle-less enteropneusts and the tentacle-bearing pterobranchs. Consequently, lophenteropneusts have been invoked as missing links to suggest that the former evolved into the latter5. The most significant aspect of the lophenteropneust hypothesis is its prediction that the fundamental body plan within a basal phylum of deuterostomes was enteropneust-like. The assumption of such an ancestral state influences ideas about the evolution of the vertebrates from the invertebrates9,10,11,12,13,14. Here we report on the first collected specimen of a broad-collared, deep-sea enteropneust and describe it as a new family, genus and species. The collar, although disproportionately broad, lacks tentacles. In addition, we find no evidence of tentacles in the available deep-sea photographs (published and unpublished) of broad-collared enteropneusts, including those formerly designated as lophenteropneusts. Thus, the lophenteropneust hypothesis was based on misinterpretation of deep-sea photographs of low quality and should no longer be used to support the idea that the enteropneust body plan is basal within the phylum Hemichordata.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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