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Azuma Takashi Arima Natsumi Tsukada Ai Hirami Satoru Matsuoka Rie Moriwake Ryogo Ishiuchi Hirotaka Inoyama Tomomi Teranishi Yusuke Yamaoka Misato Ishida Mao Hisamatsu Kanae Yunoki Ayami Mino Yoshiki 《Environmental science and pollution research international》2017,24(23):19021-19030
Environmental Science and Pollution Research - The distributions of 31 pharmaceuticals grouped into nine therapeutic classes, including six anticancer drugs, were investigated in the waters and... 相似文献
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Jun Yamamoto Miyuki Hirose Tetsuya Ohtani Katashi Sugimoto Kazue Hirase Nobuo Shimamoto Tsuyoshi Shimura Natsumi Honda Yasuzumi Fujimori Tohru Mukai 《Marine Biology》2008,153(3):311-317
The fate of the giant jellyfish Nemopilema nomurai after death was examined in the southwest Sea of Japan. The density of dead jellyfish was greater than that of live animals.
The dead animals are heavier than the Japan Sea Proper Water which occurs deeper than 200 m, suggesting that dead jellyfish
sink to the sea floor. The sea floor survey, conducted with a towed video tape recorder (VTR) monitoring system between mid
September and mid October, observed a total of 138 jellyfish during 28 of 29 operations. The density of carrion ranged between
0.2 and 5.1 individuals/1,000 m2 (mean ± SE = 1.1 ± 0.2). Ophiuroids occurred abundantly at 23 jellyfish carcasses and a sea anemone was observed attached
to five carcasses. The VTR surveys confirmed that carrion sinks to the sea floor not only during the winter, the normal end
of life for medusae, but also during the fall. A trap survey baited with medusae was also employed, and four different species
were sampled with the traps: the snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio), a shrimp (Pandalopsis japonica), the ivory shell (Buccinum striatissimum) and an ophiuroid (Ophiura sarsii). Much of the trap bait remained (49–68% weight-mean = 60.3%) during the 23 h soak-time, and the reduction in weight was
greater than that observed by bacterial decomposition, suggesting benthic animals consume dead organisms. The present study
indicates that dead N. nomurai sink to the sea floor continuously and were subsequently consumed by benthic scavengers. 相似文献
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