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Marine Biology

1999

Fisheries Science Peer-Reviewed Articles

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Fish Species Richness In Relation To Restored Oyster Reefs, Piankatank River, Virginia, Jm Harding, Roger L. Mann Jun 1999

Fish Species Richness In Relation To Restored Oyster Reefs, Piankatank River, Virginia, Jm Harding, Roger L. Mann

VIMS Articles

Fish assemblages in relation to “reef” structures in marine habitats have been and continue to be topics for research addressing ecological and management questions. Much effort has been spent describing and defining fish assemblages, or groups of species, associated with tropical coral reefs (e.g., Sale 1991 and chapters therein), temperate hard bottom or rocky reefs (e.g., Sedberry and Van Dolah, 1984; Ambrose and Swarbrick, 1989), tropical lava flows (e.g., Godwin and Kosaki, 1989), and artificial “fishing” reefs (e.g., Chandler et al., 1985; Hueckel and Buckley, 1987; Bohnsack, 1989; Feigenbaum et al., 1989; Rountree, 1989; Stephan and Lindquist, 1989). Temperate oyster …


Ontogenetic Changes In Habitat Use By Postlarvae And Young Juveniles Of The Blue Crab, Ra Pardieck, R J. Orth, R. J. Diaz, Rom Lipcius Jan 1999

Ontogenetic Changes In Habitat Use By Postlarvae And Young Juveniles Of The Blue Crab, Ra Pardieck, R J. Orth, R. J. Diaz, Rom Lipcius

VIMS Articles

Changing habitat requirements are evident during the developmental cycles of many species. In this field investigation, we attempted to distinguish between depth (shallow vs deep), habitat structure (seagrass species), and study site as factors influencing the distribution and abundance of postlarvae and juvenile blue crabs Callinectes sapidus in the Chesapeake Bay. Deep (greater than or equal to 70 cm mean low water [MLW]) and shallow (less than or equal to 50 cm MLW) suction samples in monospecific Zostera marina and Ruppia maritima beds were taken in the York River, a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay. Our studies revealed ontogenetic changes …


Correspondence Between Environmental Gradients And Summer Littoral Fish Assemblages In Low Salinity Reaches Of The Chesapeake Bay, Usa, Cm Wagner, Hm Austin Jan 1999

Correspondence Between Environmental Gradients And Summer Littoral Fish Assemblages In Low Salinity Reaches Of The Chesapeake Bay, Usa, Cm Wagner, Hm Austin

VIMS Articles

Patterns in the assemblage structure of littoral fishes occupying the gradient between riverine and estuarine ecosystems were revealed through multivariate analysis of 5 annual summer seine surveys in 4 tributary systems of the lower Chesapeake Bay. Catch per unit effort of fishes was quantified and environmental variables measured to characterize assemblage structure and population responses along large-scale (km) environmental gradients. Results of two-way indicator species analysis (TWINSPAN), detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) and detrended canonical correspondence analysis (DCCA) suggested the presence of 4 intergrading assemblages of littoral beach fishes: permanent tidal freshwater, lower tidal freshwater, oligohaline estuary and mesohaline estuary. Littoral …


Observations On The Biology Of The Veined Rapa Whelk, Rapana Venosa (Valenciennes, 1846) In The Chesapeake Bay, Juliana Harding, Roger L. Mann Jan 1999

Observations On The Biology Of The Veined Rapa Whelk, Rapana Venosa (Valenciennes, 1846) In The Chesapeake Bay, Juliana Harding, Roger L. Mann

VIMS Articles

The recent discovery of the Veined Rapa whelk (Rapana venosa, Valenciennes, 1846) in the lower Chesapeake Bay provides an opportunity to observe the initial biological and ecological consequences of a novel bioinvasion. These large predatory gastropods occur in subtidal, hard bottom habitats in the lower Bay and are capable of feeding, mating, and moving while completely burrowed. Hard clams (Mercenaria mercenaria) are consumed preferentially in the laboratory when offered concurrently with oysters (Crassostrea virginica), soft clams (Mya arenaria), and mussels (Mytilus edulis). Chesapeake Bay R. venosa readily open and consume large hard clams (30 to 85 mm SH) leaving no …


Phylogenetic Analysis Of Cytochrome C Oxidase I Sequences To Determine Higher-Level Relationships Within The Coleoid Cephalopods, Db Carlin, John Graves Jan 1999

Phylogenetic Analysis Of Cytochrome C Oxidase I Sequences To Determine Higher-Level Relationships Within The Coleoid Cephalopods, Db Carlin, John Graves

VIMS Articles

Until recently, the higher-level phylogenetic relationships of coleoid cephalopods have remained unclear. A thorough knowledge of the higher-level phylogeny of the group has been limited by the paucity of paleontological data for this poorly-fossilized group and the lack of cladistic analyses of developmental, morphological, and molecular data applied to the coleoids. In this study we analyzed a 657 base pair portion of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) gene from 48 cephalopod species representing a broad spectrum of coleoid diversity to examine higher-level phylogenetic relationships within the group. The COI gene exhibited a high degree of nucleotide sequence variability, …