首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 990 毫秒
1.
The hypothesis that lower retention efficiencies of filter-feeding copepods for small particles should result in different ingestion rate versus food concentration curves for different-sized foods was tested using Temora longicornis (Müller) fed natural phytoplankton. The copepods were fed different natural phytoplankton assemblages, which varied in their species and size distribution. Volume ingestion rates were an asymptotic function of food concentration, with maximum ingestion rates measured at food concentrations exceeding 5 to 10x 106 m3 ml-1, which were less than those occurring in the natural waters in which the copepods and phytoplankton were collected. Maximum volume ingestion rates increased linearly by a factor of 3.5, as the diameter of the particle forming the peak in the food size distribution increased fron 5 m (primarily microflagellates) to 30 m (mostly large diatoms). These results suggest that natural and pollutant-induced size reductions in natural phytoplankton could markedly decrease the volume of food consumed by filter-feeding copepods.Contribution No. 243 of the Marine Sciences Research Center  相似文献   

2.
I investigated selective particle ingestion by oyster larvae (Crassostrea virginica) feeding on natural seston from Chesapeake Bay and laboratory-cultured algae of different sizes or chemical content. In 15 of 16 experiments with complex natural suspensions as food, small(<150 m) and large (>150 m) larvae selected most strongly for small (2 to 4 m) food particles, but in the presence of a large (>10 m)-cell dinoflagellate bloom, large larvae strongly selected much larger (22 to 30 m) food material (presumably dinoflagellates). When fed simplified mixtures of four cultured algal species (Synechococcus bacillaris, Isochrysis sp., Dunaliella tertiolecta, and Prorocentrum minimum) ranging in size from 1 to 11 m, small larvae preferred 1 m algae while large larvae preferred 11 m algae. In experiments with algal mixtures, and with suspensions of natural particles and added algae, large larvae preferred algal species harvested from exponential-phase cultures over other species from stationary-phase cultures. Larval ingestion rates of the cultured alga Thalassiosira pseudonana were about three times higher for cells with a low carbon:nitrogen ratio (7.2:1) than for high C:N ratio (16.2:1) cells when these cells were offered separately in suspensions of equal concentration. As a result, more algal cells, algal C, and algal N was ingested by larvae fed low C:N cells. However, larvae did not show a significant preference for either type of cell when they were offered in a 1:1 cell mixture. Feeding patterns of C. virginica larvae in natural food suspensions can vary with the composition of these complex suspensions, and ingestion seems dependent not only on the size, but on the growth rate and chemical quality of food particles.  相似文献   

3.
Cadmium (Cd) added to normal media and to magnesium (Mg)-deficient media produced inhibitory effects on cell division and cell calcification in the marine coccolithophorid alga Cricosphaera (Hymenomonas) carterae. Compared with controls in normal media (with 25 mM Mg), cell growth decreased progressively with Cd at concentrations of 5–20 M. In Mg-deficient media (with 6 mM and 0.08 mM Mg) the inhibitory effects were more pronounced with complete arrest of cell division at 20 M Cd. The greatest Cd inhibition occurred in media with the lowest Mg concentration (0.08 mM). Cadmium (5–40 M) also decreased recalcification (coccolith formation) in cells previoasly decalcified with CO2 with complete inhibition at 40 M Cd. Inhibition of recalcification in various Cd concentrations (5–40 M) was more pronounced in low-Mg medium (with 6 mM and 0.08 mM Mg) compared with normal medium (25 mM Mg). Partial or complete reversal of the inhibitory effects of Cd and low Mg media on cell division and calcification occurred following a wash and resuspension of the cells in normal control medium (25 mM Mg).  相似文献   

4.
Orthophosphate uptake by a natural estuarine phytoplankton population was estimated using two methods: (1) 32P uptake experiments in which filters of different pore sizes were used to separate plankton size-fractions; (2) 33P autoradiography of phytoplankton cells. Results of the first method showed that plankton cells larger than 5 m were responsible for 2% of the total orthophosphate uptake rate. 98% of the total uptake rate occurred in plankton composed mostly of bacteria, which passed the 5 m screen and were retained by the 0.45 m pore-size filter. There was no orthophosphate absorption by particulates in a biologically inhibited control containing iodoacetic acid. Orthophosphate uptake rates of individual phytoplankton species were obtained using 33P autoradiography. The sum of these individual rates was very close to the estimated rate of uptake by particulates larger than 5 m in the 32P labelling experiment. Generally, smaller cells were found to have a faster uptake rate per m3 biomass than larger cells. Although the nannoplankton constituted only about 21% of the total algal biomass, the rate of phosphate uptake by the nannoplankton was 75% of the total phytoplankton uptake rate. Results of the plankton autoradiography showed that the phosphate uptake rate per unit biomass is a power function of the surface: volume ratio of a cell; the relationship is expressed by the equation Y=2x10-11 X 1.7, where Y is gP m-3 h-1 and X is the surface: volume ratio. These results lend support to the hypothesis that smaller cells have a competitive advantage by having faster nutrient uptake rates.  相似文献   

5.
E. Paasche 《Marine Biology》1973,19(3):262-269
The variation of the rate of silicate uptake with varying silicate concentration in the medium was investigated in short-term experiments with the following marine diatom species:Skeletonema costatum, Thalassiosira pseudonana, T. decipiens, Ditylum brightwellii, andLicmophora sp. The uptake conformed to Michaelis-Menten kinetics only after a correction had been made for reactive silicate that apparently could not be utilized by the diatoms. The magnitude of this correction was in the range of 0.3 to 1.3 g-at Si/l. Mean values of the half-saturation constant of silicate uptake were calculated for the different species. The lowest value was found inS. costatum (0.80 g-at Si/l) and the highest inT. decipiens (3.37 g-at Si/l). Growth limitation by low silicate concentrations could be a cause of species succession in marine plankton-diatom blooms.  相似文献   

6.
The average grazing and ingestion rates of all stages of the marine planktonic copepod Calanus helgolandicus (Calanoida) from nauplius stage IV to adults were measured experimentally at 15°C in agitated cultures. The chain-forming diatom Lauderia borealis and the unarmoured dinoflagellate Gymnodinium splendens were offered as food. The food concentrations were close to natural conditions and ranged from 36 to 101 g of organic carbon per liter. The medium body weights expressed in g of organic carbon of almost all larval stages raised at 49 g C/1 were identical with the weight of the same stages caught in the Pacific Ocean off La Jolla, California, USA. In a log-log system, grazing and ingestion rates increased almost linearly with increasing body weight. Grazing rates ranged from 4 to 21 ml/day/nauplius stage IV to 286 ml to 773 ml/day/female. Ingestion rates increased from 0.2 g to 0.8 g C/day/nauplius stage IV to 18 g to 69 g C/day/female. Grazing and ingestion rates per unit body weight decreased gradually with increasing body weight. The daily ingested amount of food decreased from 292 to 481% of the body weight (g C) of nauplius stage V to 28–85% of the body weight of adult females. Grazing and ingestion performances of all stages increased with increasing particle size. Grazing rates decreased and ingestion rates increased with increasing food concentrations. The published data on food intake of the different age groups of C. helgolandicus show that the young stages of herbivorous planktonic copepods can play a major part in the consumption of phytoplankton in the sea due to their high grazing and ingestion rates.  相似文献   

7.
The photosynthetic characteristics of prokaryotic phycoerythrin-rich populations of cyanobacteriaSynechococcus spp. and larger eukaryotic algae were compared at a neritic frontal station (Pl), in a warm-core eddy (P2), and at Wilkinson's Basin (P3) during a cruise in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean in the summer of 1984.Synechococcus spp. numerically dominated the 0.6 to 1 m fraction, and to a lesser extent the 1 to 5 m size fractions, at most depths at all stations. At P2 and P3, all three size categories of phytoplankton (0.6 to 1 m, 1 to 5 m, and >5 m) exhibited similar depth-dependent chages in both the timing and amplitude of diurnal periodicities of chlorophyllbased and cell-based photosynthetic capacity. Midday maxima in photosynthesis were observed in the upper watercolumn which damped-out in all size fractions sampled just below the thermocline. For all size fractions sampled near the bottom of the euphotic zone, the highest photosynthetic capacity was observed at dawn. At all depths, theSynechococcus spp.-dominated size fractions had lower assimilation rates than larger phytoplankton size fractions. This observation takes exception with the view that there is an inverse size-dependency in algal photosynthesis. Results also indicated that the size-specific contribution to potential primary production in surface waters did not vary appreciably over the day. However, estimates of the percent contribution ofSynechococcus spp. to total primary productivity in surface waters at the neritic front were significantly higher when derived from short-term incubator measurements of photosynthetic capacity rather than from dawn-to-duskin situ measurements of carbon fixation. The discrepancy was not due to photoinhibitory effects on photosynthesis, but appeared to reflect increased selective grazing pressure onSynechococcus spp. in dawn-to-dusk samples. Low-light photoadaptation was evident in analyses of the depth-dependency ofP-I parameters (photosynthetic capacity,P max; light-limited slope, alpha;P max alpha,I k ; light-intensity beyond which photoinhibition occurs,I b ) of the > 0.6 m communities at all three stations and was attributable to stratification of the water column. There was a decrease in assimilation rates andI k with depth that was associated with increases in light-limited rates of photosynthesis. No midday photoinhibition ofP max orI b was observed in any surface station. Marked photoinhibition was detected only in the chlorophyll maximum at the neritic front and below the surface mixed-layer at Wilkinson's Basin, where susceptibility to photoinhibition increased with the depth of the collected sample. The 0.6 to 1 m fraction always had lower light requirements for light-saturated photosynthesis than the > 5 m size fraction within the same sample. Saturation intensities for the 1 to 5 m and 0.6 to 1 m size fractions were more similar whenSynechococcus spp. abundances were high in the 1 to 5 m fraction. The > 5 m fraction appeared to be the prime contributor to photoinhibitory features displayed in mixed samples (> 0.6 m) taken from the chlorophyll maxima. InSynechococcus spp.-dominated 0.6 to 1 and 1 to 5 m size fractions, cellular chlorophylla content increased 50- to 100-fold with depth and could be related to increases in maximum daytime rates of cellularP max at the base of the euphotic zone. Furthermore, the 0.6 to 1 m and > 5 m fractions sampled at the chlorophyll maximum in the warm-core eddy had lower light requirements for photosynthesis than comparable surface samples from the same station. Results suggest that photoadaptation in natural populations ofSynechococcus spp. is accomplished primarily by changing photosynthetic unit number, occuring in conjuction with other accommodations in the efficiency of photosynthetic light reactions.  相似文献   

8.
Feeding, growth and bioluminescence of the thecate heterotrophic dinoflagellate Protoperidinium huberi were measured as a function of food concentration for laboratory cultures grown on the diatom Ditylum brightwellii. Ingestion of food increased with food concentration. Maximum ingestion rates were measured at food concentrations of 600 g C l-1 and were 0.7 g C individual-1 h-1 (1.8 D. brightwelli cells individual-1 h-1). Clearance rates decreased asymptotically with increasing food concentration. Maximum clearance rates at low food concentration were ca. 23 l ind-1 h-1, which corresponds to a volume-specific clearance rate of 5.9x105 h-1. Cell size of P huberi was highly variable, with a mean diameter of 42 m, but no clear relationship between cell size and food concentration was evident. Specific growth rates increased with food concentration until maximum growth rates of 0.7 d-1 were reached at a food concentration of 400 g C l-1 (1000 cells ml-1). Food concentrations as low as 10 g C l-1 of D. brightwellii (25 cells ml-1) were able to support growth of P. huberi. The bioluminescence of P. huberi varied with its nutritional condition and growth rate. Cells held without food lost their bioluminescence capacity in a matter of days. P. huberi raised at different food concentrations showed increased bioluminescence capacity, up to food concentration that supported maximum growth rates. The bioluminescence of P. huberi varied over a diel cycle, and these rhythmic changes persisted during 48 h of continuous darkness, indicating that the rhythm was under endogenous control.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of sublethal additions of mercuric chloride on the marine diatomSkeletonema costatum (Grev.) Cleve grown in NH4-limited chemostats and batch cultures was assessed. In short-term Hg exposure experiments (up to 5 h), the effect of Hg on ammonium uptake rates was studied by simulatneously perturbing the culture with 5 M NH4 Cl and Hg concentrations ranging from 0.04 to 5.52 nM HgCl2. The threshold of Hg toxicity occurred between 1.8 and 3.7 nM, based on a decrease in ammonium uptake rates. When the NH4-limited culture was starved of ammonium for 30 h, the threshold of Hg toxicity decreased about an order of magnitude to 0.2 nM. In long-term Hg exposure experiments (679.5 h), NH4-limited continuous cultures were semi-continuously exposed to 0.37 and 3.68 nM HgCl2. After 4 days, the cell density in the Hg-treated chemostats began to drastically decline. After about 16 days these populations recovered, even though Hg additions continued. At the end of the experiment (26 days), cell densities had reached the levels observed at the beginning of the experiment. The reason for the recovery is unknown, but several possibilities are discussed. Ammonium uptake rates determined during the time-course of this long-term Hg exposure, indicated that these NH4-limited cultures exhibited a significant loss in their ability to take up ammonium at low concentrations (e.g. 1 M). Thus, mercury pollution may seriously decrease the ability of a species to utilize the limiting nutrient during periods of seasonal nutrient limitation.  相似文献   

10.
Feeding behaviors of the gastropods Batillaria zonalis, a suspension and deposit feeder, and Cerithideopsilla cingulata, an obligate deposit feeder, were studied to examine their effect on dynamics of suspended materials, total nitrogen (TN) and total organic carbon (TOC) in sediments. Suspension feeding in B. zonalis was observed in detail visually, as it had been previously unreported. An experimental system where B. zonalis and C. cingulata were cultured for 10 weeks, using previously frozen microalgae Nannochloropsis oculata as food, was then constructed. During feeding observations, the suspension-feeding B. zonalis formed a mucus food cord to entangle particulate materials, which were subsequently ingested. The feeding mode of B. zonalis is hence categorized as ctenidial filter feeding. For the culture experiments, decreases in suspended materials were seen only in the B. zonalis cultures, while the control (no gastropods) and C. cingulata cultures remained nearly unchanged. Sediment TN and TOC showed no significant differences between B. zonalis (with mean TN at 0.0345% and mean TOC at 0.261%) and control cultures (with TN at 0.0389% and TOC at 0.331%), but the sediments in C. cingulata cultures had lower levels (with TN at 0.0204% and TOC at 0.156%). The C/N ratios were similar for both B. zonalis (7.55) and C. cingulata (7.68) cultures, and both were lower than the control cultures (8.55). The filtration rate for B. zonalis was lower than that previously observed in bivalves inhabiting the same intertidal flat (e.g. Cyclina sinensis, Grafrarium tumidum and Barbatia virescens). However, Batillaria zonalis occurs at higher abundances than these bivalves. Therefore, it is expected that this species has a large affect upon the transport of suspended materials to the sediments. The addition of TN and TOC to sediments in B. zonalis cultures was probably caused by biodeposition, but deposit feeding by B. zonalis may have restrained the accumulation of those components. The impact of deposit feeding in Cerithideopsilla cingulata cultures was most probably stronger than sedimentation and biodeposition, because of the lower sediment TN and TOC. Bioturbation by both B. zonalis and C. cingulata yields the same effect on sediment quality, as indicated by the low C/N in the culture sediment of both treatments, despite difference in feeding modes. This paper demonstrates, for the first time, the importance of gastropods in bioturbation and removal of suspended materials in subtropical tidal flat habitats.Communicated by T. Ikeda, Hakodate  相似文献   

11.
In vivo chlorophyll fluorescence is particularly interesting ot ecologists because of various concepts (biomass, productivity, physiological state) associated with it. Using a modified spectrophotofluorometer, we have studied the kinetics of fluorescence in unialgal cultures and in a natural population of marine phytoplankton. Our apparatus did not achieve satisfactory results with cell suspensions having a chlorophyll concentration less than 10 g l-1. We have also tested a method for estimating kinetics of diluted cultures and marine phytoplankton using cells collected on glass-fibre filters. For unialgal cultures in the exponential growth phase, the method proved satisfactory, and results obtained from both cell suspensions and filters were in good agreement. However, for aged cultures (principally diatoms) and natural marine phytoplankton the method proved unsuitable. The kinetics of fluorescence induction vary according to taxonomic position of the cells, light intensity of the measuring excitation beam and productiveness of the culture medium. The importance of the kinetics of fluorescence induction for characterization of phytoplankton activity is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Four endosymbiotic diatoms were isolated from 2 species of larger foraminifera collected in the Red Sea and Hawaii. The photoadaptive responses of the cultured diatoms were measured at 312, 19 and 7 W cm-2. Two of the diatoms (Fragilaria shiloi and Nitzschia laevis), both isolated from Amphistegina lessonii, grew fastest at 312 W cm-2. The other two diatoms (N. valdestriata and N. panduriformis) which were isolated from Heterostegina depressa, grew best at 19 W cm-2. Of the four diatoms, F. shiloi grew best at high light levels. Also in F. shiloi, chlorophyll c content per cell was directly proportional to light intensity; in contrast chlorophyll a and carotenoids increased to maxima at 19 W cm-2. The chlorophyll a and c and carotenoid content of N. valdestriata were also maximal at 19 W cm-2. Photosynthetic rates, measured by respirometry, suggested that the diatoms were photoinhibited at higher light intensities and did well at moderately low light intensities (175W cm-2). The photocompensation points of all 4 diatoms were about 2% of the light available in the spring at 1-m depth at Elat on the Red Sea. At Elat the photocompensation point would lie between 40 and 50 m if the algae were free in nature. The amount of attenuation of light by the shells of the host has not yet been measured. Presumably photocompensation of the algae within hosts is reached at depths less than 40 m.  相似文献   

13.
L. S. Peck 《Marine Biology》1993,116(2):301-310
Embryonic and larval development were followed from fertilisation to settlement in the Antarctic heteronemertean Parborlasia corrugatus (McIntosh, 1876). The first cleavage occurred 10 to 15 h after fertilisation, and the second at 17 h. Larvae hatched at the gastrula stage, between 170 and 200 h post-fertilisation, and were 150 m in diameter. Early larval stages aggregated in dense groups near the surface of incubation vessels and were positively phototactic. Early pilidium larvae were recognisable 435 h post-fertilisation. They were 155×152 m in size, and possessed a complete apical tuft of cilia and a full marginal band of locomotory cilia. At this stage, the gust was visible through the body wall, and the mouth was open and was 40 m in diameter. Late pilidia, 222×193 m in size, were helmet-shaped. They had an apical tuft over 100 m long, and possessed a lobed marginal band of locomotory cilia. Pilidia were observed aggregating close to the bottom of incubation vessels 1200 to 1350 h (50 to 56 d) after fertilisation, and this was interpreted as settlement behaviour. At this stage, the apical tuft had been lost and they were highly contractile, being capable of compressing their bodies. However, neither developing juveniles within the larval envelope nor hatched juveniles were observed. Pilidia consumed the microalgae Tetraselmis suecica, Thalassiosira pseudonana and Isochrysis galbana. They also fed on particulate organic material < 1 m in size, as shown by the presence of material in the guts of larvae offered filtered extracts of algal cultures. There was some indication that larvae could use dissolved organic material, since pilidia held in seawater with organic material removed did not survive as long as those in filtered seawater or in filtered water with added amino acids. However, the only larvae to exhibit settlement behaviour in the feeding experiments were those offered Tetraselmis succica and Thalassiosira pseudonana, and these required a longer development time to reach this stage than pilidia in the standard cultures, where a mixed algal diet was offered.  相似文献   

14.
The substrate analogue [14C]-methylammonium was used to study ammonium/methylammonium uptake by Symbiodinium microadriaticum (zooxanthellae). The value of the Michaelis constant (K m) for the uptake system was approximately 35 M with methylammonium as substrate; ammonium was a competitive inhibitor of methylammonium uptake, and the K m for ammonium uptake (determined as the inhibition constant, K i, for methylammonium) was 6.6 M. Methylammonium uptake by zooxanthellae was light-dependent. Methylammonium uptake rates of zooxanthellae which had been freshly isolated from the hermatypic coral Acropora formosa (0.85±0.05x10-10 mol min-1 cell-1) were lower than those of axenic cultures of the zooxanthellae from Montipora verrucosa (Acroporidae) grown under various nitrogen regimes (1.6 to 12x10-10 mol min-1 cell-1). Maximum uptake rates were found for ammonium-starved cultured M. verrucosa zooxanthellae (10.2 to 12x10-10 mol min-1 cell-1); M. verrucosa zooxanthellae growing with ammonium as nitrogen source and zooxanthellae which had been freshly isolated from A. formosa gave similar and considerably lower uptake rates (0.85 to 1.6x10-1 mol min-1 cell-1). These results suggest that either coral tissue contains sufficient ammonium to repress synthesis of the uptake system of the algal symbionts or, alternatively, there are additional barriers to ammonium transport for zooxanthellae in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
The reef coral Pocillopora damicornis (Linnaeus) was grown for 8 wk in four nutrient treatments: control, consisting of ambient, unfiltered Kaneohe Bay seawater [dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN, 1.0 M) and dissolved inorganic phosphate (DIP, 0.3 M)]; nitrogen enrichment (15 M DIN as ammonium); phosphorus enrichment (1.2 M DIP as inorganic phosphate); and 15 M DIN+1.2 M DIP. Analyses of zooxanthellae for C, N, P and chlorophyll a after the 8 wk experiment indicated that DIN enrichment increased the cellular chlorophyll a and excess nitrogen fraction of the algae, but did not affect C cell-1. DIP enrichment decreased both C and P cell-1, but the decrease was proportionally less for C cell-1. the response of cellular P to both DIN and DIP enrichment appeared to be in the same direction and could not be explained as a primary effect of external nutrient enrichment. The observed response of cellular P might be a consequence of in situ CO2 limitation. DIN enrichment could increase the CO2 (aq) demand by increasing the net production per unit area. DIP enrichment could slow down calcification, thus decreasing the availability of CO2 (aq) in the coral tissue.Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology Contribution No. 920  相似文献   

16.
Beryllium and aluminium contents in uncontaminated soils from six countries are reported. The means and ranges of beryllium in the surface soils were as follows: 1.43(0.20–5.50)g g–1 in Thailand (n=28), 0.7 (0.31–1.03) g g–1 in Indonesia (n=12), 0.99(0.82–1.32) g g–1 in New Zealand (n=3), 0.58(0.08-1.68)g g–1 in Brazil (n=16), 3.52(2.49–4.97)g g–1 in the former Yugoslavia (n=10), and 1.56(1.01–2.73) g g–1 in the former USSR (n=8). The mean and range of beryllium contents of the surface soils in Japan (1.17(0.27–1.95)g g–1 n=27) are situated within the values of the soils from these countries except for the Yugoslav soils derived from limestones. The mean of the mean beryllium contents of the surface soils in all these countries is 1.42 g g–1 which will be used as a tentative average content of beryllium in uncontaminated surface soils, except for the soils derived from parent materials high in beryllium content. The beryllium contents of the subsoils were higher than those of the surface soils in New Zealand and Yugoslavia as is the case with Japan. The correlation coefficient between the contents of beryllium and aluminium in all the soil samples (n=113) including surface soils and subsoils was 0.505 (p < 0.001).  相似文献   

17.
Captan did not affect the survival of Dungeness crab (Cancer magister Dana) zoea exposed to 30 g l-1 during a chronic toxicity test lasting 69 days, but larvae were quickly killed (mean survival time = 9 days) in the same test by exposure to 450 g l-1 of the fungicide. Delay of molting occurred, however, for later stages at 30 g l-1. Survival of juvenile crabs was not reduced by exposure to captan for 36 days at 510 g l-1 or, in a second test, for 80 days at 290 g l-1. No deaths of adults exposed for 75 days to 340 g l-1 of captan were observed. Captan appeared to accelerate hatching of eggs at all concentrations tested from 100 to 10,000 g l-1. The development from prezoeae during a 24-h period was not inhibited by the fungicide, but at 3,300 and 10,00 g l-1, the two highest concentrations tested, developing zoeae exhibited a morphological deformity and were largely inactive. Under the prevailing conditions in the toxicity tests, the half-life of captan was estimated to be from 23 to 54 h. Because of the relatively low toxicity of captan to crab stages and its high rate of degradation in sewater, it is suggested that the agricultural application of captan near marine waters is not likely to affect natural crab populations or crabs in laboratory culture. Further-more, the prophylactic use of captan as a fungicidal treatment for Lagenidium sp. in larval crab cultures is considered safe when used at recommended dosages.Technical Paper No. 4131, Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station.  相似文献   

18.
Two species of small gastropods (<6 mm in length), Amphissa acutecostata (Philippi, 1844) and Gymnobela subaraneosa (Dautzenberg and Fischer, 1896), widely distributed in the northeast Atlantic, were found in large numbers in the Porcupine Seabight (Northeast Atlantic). Except for some aspects of taxonomy and distribution, as well as some data on larval development, the biology of these species is unknown. This study describes basic aspects of the life-history strategies of both species. Histological studies showed that oocyte and sperm development in both species was similar to the gametogenetic patterns observed in other deep-sea gastropods. In females, oogonia proliferated in the germinal epithelium and developed into previtellogenic oocytes (30–40 m), which grew into vitellogenic primary oocytes. Vitellogenic oocytes were covered by a thin layer of follicle cells involved in the vitellogenic processes. The maximum size for mature oocytes was 99.06 m for A. acutecostata and 114.82 m for G. subaraneosa. In A. acutecostata most of the volume of the ovary was occupied by previtellogenic and early vitellogenic oocytes, whereas in G. subaraneosa most of the volume was filled by large vitellogenic oocytes. Both species showed quasi-continuous production of oocytes. The oocyte size-frequency diagrams suggested a continuous release of a small number of oocytes throughout the year for A. acutecostata, and asynchronous periodic spawning events for G. subaraneosa. Gonad development and gametogenesis could be strongly affected by presence of parasites in one of the populations of G. subaraneosa.Communicated by J.P. Thorpe, Port Erin  相似文献   

19.
Gonyaulax poledra Stein was transferred at different cell densities from increasingly nutrient-limited low-light (LL, 80 E m-2 s-1) batch-cultures to high-light (HL, 330 E m-2 s-1) growth conditions. Several age-dependent differences in HL-adaptation strategies were apparent. Short-term (3h) susceptibility to photosynthetic photoinhibition increased with culture age, with light-limited rates of photosynthesis exhibiting greater photosuppression than light-saturated rates at all stages of growth. These shortterm changes were not accompanied by photobleaching of chlorophyll but were directly related to age-dependent photoinactivation of Photosystem II electron-transport rates. The capacity of electron transport by Photosystem I was only slightly affected. Prolonged exposure of LL log-phase cells to HL conditions did induce photobleaching of chlorophyll associated with increased cell volume, a transient decrease of organic carbon and nitrogen content, enhanced cellular-, carbon-and chlorophyll-based rates of light-saturated photosynthesis (P max) and suppressed cellular rates of light-limited photosynthesis. As a result, the density of LL log-phase cells doubled and their cellular photosynthetic performance nearly tripled within 1 d of HL exposure while cellular respiratory demands remained unchanged. By contrast, prolonged HL incubation of LL stationary populations induced a transitory burst in cell division and a large reduction in cell volume, leading to a short-term increase in volume-based organic carbon and nitrogen content. Despite reduced cell volume and lowered carbon demand, the cellular-, carbon-and chlorophyll-based rates of P max in nondividing populations fell by 64, 48 and 27%, respectively, over a 4 d exposure to HL, while light-limited rates were almost fully suppressed within 1 d and chlorophyll a content was reduced by 56%. As a result, the photosynthetic performance of LL-aged cells declined immediately under HL conditions. Addition of inorganic nutrients to LL stationary cultures at the time of HL transfer led to immediate and complete suppression of photosynthesis and cell lysis within 1 d. Addition of nutrients following transfer to HL induced cell responses intermediate to those described for LL log and aged cells exposed to HL. Results support the view that declining nutrient-status impairs HL photoadaptive responses in phytoplankton populations and that the rate and pattern of photoadaptive responses may be used as physiological growth indicators in field studies. The study was conducted from March 1981 to May 1983.  相似文献   

20.
Bottle incubations were conducted in March, July/August and October 1992. to measure the daily rations (R) and objectively characterize the diets of the calanoid copepodsEucalanus elongatus, Undinula vulgaris, Centropages velificatus andTemora stylifera from the west Florida continental shelf. Daily rations,R, were clustered around two, order-of-magnitude different means, 1.3 and 11.2% of body C d–1, representative of quiescent and active feeding modes, respectively. The food concentration at which the transition from quiescent to active mode occurred was influenced by food particle size. In the quiescent mode, diets were dominated by nanoplankton, whereas no food type dominated the diet in the active mode. Selective feeding, defined as a statistically significant difference between the frequency distributions of foods in the diet and environment, occurred in both quiescent and active copepods. However, what appeared to be selective feeding in quiescent copepods could be explained by processes that passively modified the distribution of the diet relative to that of the food supply. Conversely, selective feeding in active copepods apparently resulted from foraging for particles >5 m in diameter in food environments dominated by nanoplankton (<5 m).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号