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VIMS Articles

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

2003

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Abundance And Distribution Of Planktonic Archaea And Bacteria In The Waters West Of The Antarctic Peninsula, Matthew Church, Edward F. Delong, Hugh Ducklow, Markus Karner, Christian Preston, David M. Karl Sep 2003

Abundance And Distribution Of Planktonic Archaea And Bacteria In The Waters West Of The Antarctic Peninsula, Matthew Church, Edward F. Delong, Hugh Ducklow, Markus Karner, Christian Preston, David M. Karl

VIMS Articles

Polyribonucleotide probes targeting planktonic archaeal (Group I and II) and bacterial rRNA revealed that Archaea comprised a significant fraction of total prokaryote cell abundance in the marine waters west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Determinations of Archaea and Bacteria cell abundances were made during two research cruises to the Palmer Long‐Term Ecological Research region during the austral winter and summer of 1999. During the austral summer, surface water abundances of Group I (GI) Archaea were generally low, averaging 4.7 x 103 cells ml−1 and accounting for 1% of the total picoplankton assemblage. The abundance of GI Archaea increased significantly with depth, …


Salinity Tolerance Of Larval Rapana Venosa: Implications For Dispersal And Establishment Of An Invading Predatory Gastropod On The North American Atlantic Coast, Roger L. Mann, Juliana M. Harding Feb 2003

Salinity Tolerance Of Larval Rapana Venosa: Implications For Dispersal And Establishment Of An Invading Predatory Gastropod On The North American Atlantic Coast, Roger L. Mann, Juliana M. Harding

VIMS Articles

The lack of quantitative data on the environmental tolerances of the early life-history stages of invading species hinders estimation of their dispersal rates and establishment ranges in receptor environments. We present data on salinity tolerance for all stages of the ontogenetic larval development of the invading predatory gastropod Rapana venosa, and we propose that salinity tolerance is the dominant response controlling the potential dispersal ( = invasion) range of the species into the estuaries of the Atlantic coast of the United States from the current invading epicenter in the southern Chesapeake Bay. All larval stages exhibit 48-h tolerance to salinities …