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INTRODUCCIÓN<br />
De acuerdo a los principales objetivos <strong>de</strong> la biblioteca “Dra. Ma. Elena Caso Muñoz”,<br />
Unidad Académica Mazatlán <strong>de</strong>l ICML, U.N.A.M. <strong>de</strong> apoyar la investigación y docencia a<br />
nivel regional y nacional en las áreas <strong>de</strong> ciencias <strong>de</strong>l mar y limnología el poner a<br />
disposición <strong>de</strong> todos lo usuarios la información <strong>de</strong>l acervo <strong>de</strong> la Biblioteca, se ha visto la<br />
necesidad <strong>de</strong> dar mayor difusión a nuestro acervo a través <strong>de</strong> la elaboración <strong>de</strong>l Boletín<br />
Electrónico <strong>de</strong> Material Reciente <strong>de</strong> la Biblioteca.<br />
Este boletín preten<strong>de</strong> dar la información <strong>de</strong>l acervo <strong>de</strong> reciente ingreso, ya sea por compra,<br />
donación y/o canje, a través <strong>de</strong> la referencia bibliográfica y tabla <strong>de</strong> contenido en forma<br />
más eficiente, ya que este formato <strong>de</strong> documento nos permite a<strong>de</strong>más realizar búsquedas<br />
<strong>de</strong>ntro <strong>de</strong>l mismo boletín (botón arriba, FIND). Asimismo <strong>de</strong>l lado izquierdo <strong>de</strong> la<br />
referencia bibliográfica po<strong>de</strong>mos dar un clic y nos lleva directamente a la tabla <strong>de</strong><br />
contenido <strong>de</strong> esta.<br />
Estamos seguros que teniendo este boletín en forma electrónica, el cual se enviara por<br />
correo electrónico a las instituciones a nivel nacional, será colocado en nuestra pagina web<br />
<strong>de</strong> la biblioteca: http://ola.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio para que a través <strong>de</strong> internet, todos los<br />
usuarios puedan consultarlo y buscar en él los temas <strong>de</strong> su interés. De esta forma la difusión<br />
<strong>de</strong> nuestro acervo ira en constante aumento.<br />
Para cualquier consulta, dudas o comentarios, favor <strong>de</strong> enviarnos un correo a la cuenta <strong>de</strong><br />
biblio@ola.icmyl.unam.mx, don<strong>de</strong> con mucho gusto aten<strong>de</strong>remos su solicitud. Estamos en<br />
la mejor disposición <strong>de</strong> enviar a todo usuario que solicite esta información a las cuentas <strong>de</strong><br />
correo respectivas.<br />
Se les recuerda que nuestra biblioteca tiene los catálogos <strong>de</strong> libros, tesis, revistas,<br />
memorias, informes y <strong>de</strong> reimpresos en nuestra página web.<br />
Compilación: Ma. Clara Ramírez Jáuregui<br />
Edición: Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz.
LIBROS<br />
ALONSO-RODRÍGUEZ, ROSALBA, FEDERICO PÁEZ –OSUNA E ISMAEL GÁRATE-<br />
LIZÁRRAGA, 2004. El Fitoplancton en la camaronicultura y larvicultura:<br />
importancia <strong>de</strong> un buen manejo. <strong>Instituto</strong> <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong>, Universidad<br />
Nacional Autónoma <strong>de</strong> México y Comité Estatal <strong>de</strong> Sanidad Acuícola <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa,<br />
México, 147 p.<br />
BRITTON, JOSEPH C. AND BRIAN MORTON, 1989. Shore Ecology of the Gulf of<br />
Mexico.—Austin, Tx., University of Texas Press, 387 p.<br />
BUDYKO, M.I., G.S. GOLITSYN AND Y.A. IZRAEL, 1988. Global Climatic<br />
Catastrophes.—Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 99 p.<br />
<strong>de</strong> BLIJ, H.J. AND PETER O. MULLER, 1993. Physical Geography of the Global<br />
Environment.—New York: John Wiley & Sons, 576 p.<br />
HAAS, ANTONIO, JAIME MARTUSCELLI Y FEDERICO PÁEZ OSUNA, 2005. La<br />
importancia <strong>de</strong> la Geoquímica en el Contexto Global y Regional. Ingreso <strong>de</strong><br />
Fe<strong>de</strong>rico Páez Osuna a El Colegio <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa.-- Culiacán, Sinaloa, El Colegio <strong>de</strong><br />
Sinaloa, (Serie Cua<strong>de</strong>rnos, No. 76), 77 p.<br />
HILL, M.N., Ed., 1963. The Sea. I<strong>de</strong>as and Observations on Progress in the Study of<br />
The Seas. Volume 2. The composition of Sea-Water Comparative and Descriptive<br />
Oceanography.—New York: Interscience Publishers/John Wiley & Sons, 554 p.<br />
HILL, M.N., Ed., 1963. The Sea. I<strong>de</strong>as and Observations on Progress in the Study of<br />
The Seas. Volume 3: The Earth Beneath the Sea History.-- New York:<br />
Interscience Publishers/John Wiley & Sons, 963 p.<br />
JPOTS Editorial Panel, 1991. Processing of Oceanographic Station Data.—France:<br />
UNESCO, 238 p.<br />
MAXWELL, ARTHUR E., Ed., 1970. The Sea. I<strong>de</strong>as and Observations on Progress in<br />
the Study of The Seas. Volume 4. New Concepts of Sea Floor Evolution. Part I.<br />
Regional Observations Concepts.-- New York: Interscience Publishers/John Wiley<br />
& Sons, 791 p.<br />
MAXWELL, ARTHUR E., Ed., 1970. The Sea. I<strong>de</strong>as and Observations on Progress in<br />
the Study of The Seas. Volume 4. New Concepts of Sea Floor Evolution. Part II:<br />
Regional Observations Concepts.-- .-- New York: Interscience Publishers/John<br />
Wiley & Sons, 664 p.<br />
MICHAEL, R. GEORGE, Ed., 1987.: Managed Aquatic Ecosystems.—Amsterdam:<br />
Elsevier; 166 p. (Ecosystems of the World 29).<br />
1
ROBINSON, ALLAN R. AND KENNETH H. BRINK, Eds., 1998. The Sea. I<strong>de</strong>as and<br />
Observations on Progress in the Study of the Seas. Volume 11: The Global<br />
Coastal Ocean. Regional Studies and Syntheses.—New York: John Wiley & Sons,<br />
Inc., 1062 p.<br />
SALONEN, K., T. KAIRESALO AND R.I. JONES, 1992. Dissolved Organic Matter in<br />
Lacustrine Ecosystems: Energy Source and System Regulator.—Dordrecht:<br />
Kluwer Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Publishers, 291 p. (Developments in Hydrobiology 73, H.J.<br />
Dumont, Series editor),<br />
SELLEY, RICHARD D., L. ROBIN M. COCKS AND IAN R. PLIMER, Eds., 2005.<br />
Encyclopedia of Geology. Volumes I, II, III, IV y V.—Amsterdan, Elsevier, p. var.<br />
SORENSEN, JENS, FRANK GABLE AND FRACESCO BANDARIN, Eds., 1993. The<br />
Management of Coastal Lagoons and Enclosed Bays. – New York: American<br />
Society of Civil Engineers. ( Symposium on Coastal and Ocean Management (8 th ,<br />
1993, New Orleans, La.), 293 p.<br />
STANLEY, DANIEL JEAN AND GEORGE T. MOORE, 1983. The Shelfbreak: Critical<br />
Interface on Continental <strong>Mar</strong>gins.—Tulsa, Oklahoma, Society of Economic<br />
Paleontologists and Mineralogists, 467 p.<br />
INFORMES<br />
ACADEMIA MEXICANA DE CIENCIAS, 2005. Informe 2004.—México: Aca<strong>de</strong>mia<br />
Mexicana <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong>, 151 p.<br />
PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />
BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN, THE:<br />
Vol. 208, No. 1, February 2005.<br />
BOTÁNICA MARINA:<br />
Vol. 48, No. 1, 2005.<br />
BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />
Vol. 74, No. 2, February 2005.<br />
BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />
Vol. 76, No. 1, January 2005.<br />
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES:<br />
Vol. 61, No. 10, October 2004.<br />
2
CIENCIAS MARINAS:<br />
Vol. 31, No. 1A, marzo <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />
No. 02/05, February 2005.<br />
No. 03/05, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
COAST & SEA:<br />
Vol. 13, No. 1, Spring 2005.<br />
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY:<br />
Vol. 19, No. 1, February 2005.<br />
COPEIA:<br />
No. 1, February 24, 2005.<br />
CRUSTACEANA:<br />
Vol. 77, Part. 10, November 2004.<br />
Vol. 77, Part. 11, December 2004.<br />
DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />
Vol. 11, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL:<br />
Vol. 31, No. 3, April 2005.<br />
Vol. 31, No. 4, May 2005.<br />
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />
Vol. 135, No. 2, May 2005.<br />
Vol. 135, No. 3, June 2005.<br />
ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />
Vol. 24, No. 4, April 2005.<br />
FARO, EL:<br />
No. 49, abril 7 <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />
Vol. 14, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
FISHERY BULLETIN:<br />
Vol. 103, No. 1, January 2005.<br />
GACETA BIOMEDICAS, U.N.A.M.:<br />
No. 2, febrero <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3, marzo <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
3
GACETA U.N.A.M.:<br />
No. 3,795, 31 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3,796, 4 <strong>de</strong> abril <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3,797, 7 <strong>de</strong> abril <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3,798, 11 <strong>de</strong> abril <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3,799, 14 <strong>de</strong> abril <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3,800, 18 <strong>de</strong> abril <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3,801, 21 <strong>de</strong> abril <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
No. 3,802, 25 <strong>de</strong> abril <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
GEOS (Unión Geofísica Mexicana):<br />
Vol. 24, No. 1, octubre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />
Vol. 24, No. 2, noviembre <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />
Vol. 14, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
HARMFUL ALGAE NEWS:<br />
No. 27, December 2004.<br />
HIDROBIOLÓGICA:<br />
Vol. 14, No. 2, 2004.<br />
JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />
Vol. 32, No. 2, February 2005.<br />
Vol. 32, No. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:<br />
Vol. 25, No. 1, February 2005.<br />
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY:<br />
Vol. 34, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch-April 2005.<br />
JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />
Vol. 27, No. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
JOURNAL OF SHELLFISH RESEARCH:<br />
Vol. 23, No. 4, December, 2004.<br />
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />
Vol. 50, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />
Vol. 287, 2005.<br />
Vol. 288, 2005.<br />
4
METEORITO:<br />
No. 47, abril-junio <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
NEW SCIENTIST:<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2486, February 12-18, 2005.<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2487, February 19-25, 2005.<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2488, February 26-<strong>Mar</strong>ch 4, 2005.<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2489, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 5-11, 2005.<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2490, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 12-18, 2005.<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2491, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 19-25, 2005.<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2492, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 26-April 1, 2005.<br />
OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT:<br />
Vol. 47, No. 11-12, 2004.<br />
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN:<br />
Vol. 292, NO. 2, February 2005.<br />
SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLOGICA:<br />
Vol. 84, No. 1-2, December 2004.<br />
TROPINET (Supplement to Biotropica Vol. 37, No. 1):<br />
Vol. 16, No. 1, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
U2000. Crónica <strong>de</strong> la Educación Superior:<br />
No. 454, 14 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
ZOOLÓGICA SCRIPTA:<br />
Vol. 34, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
5
PUBLICACIONES PERIODICAS<br />
THE BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN<br />
Vol. 208, No. 1 February 2005.<br />
Henry Trapido-Rosenthal, Sandra Zielke, Richard Owen, Lucy Buxton, Brian<br />
Boeing, Ranjeet Bhagooli, and Jessica Archer<br />
Increased Zooxanthellae Nitric Oxi<strong>de</strong> Synthase Activity Is Associated With Coral<br />
Bleaching.....................................................................................................................3-6.<br />
Chuan-Chin Chiao, Emma J. Kelman, and Roger T. Hanlon<br />
Disruptive Body Patterning of Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) Requires Visual<br />
Information Regarding Edges and Contrast of Objects in Natural Substrate<br />
Backgrounds..............................................................................................................7-11.<br />
Neurobiology and Behavior:<br />
Michiya Kamio, Makoto Araki, Toshiki Nagayama, Shigeki Matsunaga, and<br />
Nobuhiro Fusetani<br />
Behavioral and Electrophysiological Experiments Suggest That the Antennular<br />
Outer Flagellum Is the Site of Pheromone Reception in the Male Helmet Crab<br />
Telmessus cheiragonus...........................................................................................12-19.<br />
Development and Reproduction:<br />
Ana Hilário, Craig M. Young, and Paul A. Tyler<br />
Sperm Storage, Internal Fertilization, and Embryonic Dispersal in Vent and Seep<br />
Tubeworms (Polychaeta: Siboglinidae: Vestimentifera)...........................................20-28.<br />
Physiology and Biomechanics:<br />
Nobuhiro Takemae and Tatsuo Motokawa<br />
Mechanical Properties of the Isolated Catch Apparatus of the Sea Urchin Spine<br />
Joint: Muscle Fibers Do Not Contribute to Passive Stiffness Changes....................29-35.<br />
Danielle Johnston and Joel Freeman<br />
Dietary Preference and Digestive Enzyme Activities as Indicators of Trophic<br />
Resource Utilization by Six Species of Crab............................................................36-46.<br />
Michelangelo von Dassow<br />
Effects of Ambient Flow and Injury on the Morphology of a Fluid Transport System<br />
in a Bryozoan...........................................................................................................47-59.<br />
Ecology and Evolution:<br />
John P. Wares and Clifford W. Cunningham<br />
Diversification Before the Most Recent Glaciation in Balanus glandula...................60-68.<br />
Systematics:<br />
Fredrik Pleijel and Greg W. Rouse<br />
Reproductive Biology of a New Hesionid Polychaete From the Great Barrier Reef.69-76.<br />
BOTÁNICA MARINA<br />
Vol. 48, No. 1, 2005<br />
RESEARCH ARTICLES<br />
Shoot growth and nitrogen responses to simulated herbivory in Kenyan seagrasses<br />
Teresa Alcoverro and Simone <strong>Mar</strong>iani.............................................................................1<br />
6
Seasonal patterns of biomass, growth and reproduction in Dictyota cervicornis and<br />
Stoechospermum polypodioi<strong>de</strong>s (Dictyotales, Phaeophyta) on a shallow reef flat in<br />
the southern Red Sea (Eritrea)<br />
Mebrahtu Ateweberhan, J. Henrich Bruggemann and Anneke M. Breeman...................8<br />
Seasonal variations in growth and reproduction of Sargassum orotavicum<br />
(Fucales, Phaeophyceae) from the Canary Islands<br />
Tania Díaz-Villa, <strong>Mar</strong>ta Sansón and Julio Afonso-Carrillo.............................................18<br />
Analysis of geographical variation in species richness within the genera<br />
Audouinella (Rhodophyta), Cystoseira (Phaeophyceae) and Cladophora<br />
(Chlorophyta) in the western Mediterranean Sea<br />
José C. Báez, Jesús Olivero, Raimundo Real, J. <strong>Mar</strong>io Vargas and Antonio Flores-<br />
Moya..............................................................................................................................30<br />
A survey of the benthic flora in the National <strong>Mar</strong>ine Park of Zakynthos (Greece)<br />
Anastasia Tsirika and Savvas Haritonidis......................................................................38<br />
Ulva fasciata Delile (Ulvaceae, Chlorophycota): a species newly introduced into<br />
Pacific Mexico<br />
Raúl Aguilar-Rosas, Luis E. Aguilar-Rosas and Francisco F. Pedroche........................46<br />
Morphology of Chrysochromulina planisquama sp. nov. (Haptophyta,<br />
Prymnesiophyceae) isolated from Jiaozhou Bay, China<br />
Xiao Yan Hu, Ming Yan Yin and Cheng Kui Tseng........................................................52<br />
Bellerochea horologicalis and Litho<strong>de</strong>smioi<strong>de</strong>s polymorpha var. tunisiense var.<br />
nov. (Coscinodiscophyceae, Bacillariophyta) in the Bay of Tunis: ultrastructural<br />
observations and spatio-temporal distribution<br />
Ons Daly Yahia-Kéfi, Sami Souissi, <strong>Mar</strong>io De Stefano and Mohamed Néjib Daly<br />
Yahia .............................................................................................................................58<br />
Melanized halophilic fungi are eukaryotic members of microbial communities in<br />
hypersaline waters of solar salterns<br />
Lorena Butinar, Silva Sonjak, Polona Zalar, Ana Plemenitaš and Nina Gun<strong>de</strong>-<br />
Cimerman......................................................................................................................73<br />
SHORT COMMUNICATIONS<br />
Phenology of a <strong>de</strong>ep-water population of Caulerpa racemosa var. cylindracea in<br />
the northwestern Mediterranean Sea<br />
Anne Capiomont, Emilie Breugnot, <strong>Mar</strong>tien <strong>de</strong>n Haan and Alexandre Meinesz............80<br />
In vivo antiviral activity of an interferon β production-promoting fraction from the<br />
marine brown alga, Sargassum hemiphyllum (Turner) C. Agardh<br />
Takanari Nakano and Yuto Kamei.................................................................................84<br />
BOOK REVIEW<br />
Handbook of Mangroves in The Philippines - Panay<br />
Nora Fung-yee Tam.......................................................................................................87<br />
MEETINGS<br />
8th International Phycological Congress 13–19 August 2005, Durban, South Africa ....88<br />
BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY<br />
Vol. 74, no. 2, February 2005.<br />
Screening of Copper Tolerant Bacterial Strains and Their Potential to Remove<br />
Copper from the Environment .......................................................................... 219 - 226<br />
N. Ahmed, A. Nawaz, U. Badar<br />
7
Effects of Cadmium and Zinc on the Growth, Food Consumption, and Nutritional<br />
Conditions of the White Shrimp, Litopenaeus vannamei (Boone) .................... 234 - 241<br />
J.-P. Wu and H.-C. Chen<br />
Toxicity of Fluori<strong>de</strong> to the Endangered Unionid Mussel, Alasmidonta raveneliana,<br />
and Surrogate Species .................................................................................... 242 - 249<br />
A. E. Keller and T. Augspurger<br />
Cholinesterase Activity in Clam Meretrix casta: Possible Biomarker for<br />
Organophosphate Pestici<strong>de</strong> Pollution .............................................................. 250 - 255<br />
K. P. Devi, S. K. Pandian, N. S. S. Kumar<br />
Regression Comparisons of Aquatic Toxicity of Benzene Derivatives: Tetrahymena<br />
pyriformis and Rana japonica .......................................................................... 256 - 262<br />
S. R. Gagliardi and T. W. Schultz<br />
Effects of Dysprosium on the Species-Defined Microbial Microcosm .............. 263 - 272<br />
S. Fuma, H. Takeda, Y. Takaku, et al.<br />
Multimedia Evaluation of Trace Metal Distribution Within Stormwater Retention<br />
Ponds in Suburban <strong>Mar</strong>yland, USA ................................................................. 273 - 280<br />
R. E. Casey, A. N. Shaw, L. R. Massal, et al.<br />
Differences in δ13C and δ15N of Particulate Organic Matter from the Deep<br />
Oligotrophic Lake Fuxian Connected with the Shallow Eutrophic Lake Xingyun,<br />
People’s Republic of China .............................................................................. 281 - 285<br />
J. Xu, S. Li, P. Xie<br />
Assessment of Heavy Metal Residues in the Sediment and Water Samples of<br />
Uluabat Lake, Turkey ....................................................................................... 286 - 293<br />
N. Barlas, N. Akbulut, M. Aydoğan<br />
Mercury in Fish and Shark Tissues from Two Coastal Lagoons in the Gulf of<br />
California, Mexico ............................................................................................ 294 - 300<br />
J. Ruelas-Inzunza and F. Páez-Osuna<br />
Limpet, Patella caerulea Linnaeus, 1758 and Barnacle, Balanus sp., as<br />
Biomonitors of Trace Metal Availabilities in İsken<strong>de</strong>run Bay, Northern East<br />
Mediterranean Sea .......................................................................................... 301 - 307<br />
M. Türkmen, A. Türkmen, İ. Akyurt, et al.<br />
Trace Elements in Cultured Tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus): Results from a<br />
Farm in Southern Taiwan ................................................................................ 308 - 313<br />
T.-S. Lin, C.-S. Lin, C.-L. Chang<br />
Environmental Lead Exposure in the European Kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) from<br />
Southeastern Spain: The Influence of Lea<strong>de</strong>d Gasoline Regulations .............. 314 - 319<br />
A. J. García-Fernán<strong>de</strong>z, D. Romero, E. <strong>Mar</strong>tínez-López, et al.<br />
Bioaccumulation of Heavy Metals in Vegetables from Selected Agricultural Areas 320 - 327<br />
B. S. Ismail, K. Farihah, J. Khairiah<br />
Dietary Influences on the Bioaccumulation of Pollutants by the Annelid,<br />
Lumbriculus variegatus: Experiments Comparing Artificial Particles and Natural<br />
Sediments ........................................................................................................ 328 - 334<br />
P. A. Edwards and K. Simkiss<br />
Detection and Quantification of Insectici<strong>de</strong>s in Shrimp Grown in a Coastal Farm in<br />
Sonora, Mexico ................................................................................................ 335 - 341<br />
A. Burgos-Hernán<strong>de</strong>z, C. O. García-Sifuentes, M. L. Aldana-Madrid, et al.<br />
Multiresidue Analysis of Pestici<strong>de</strong>s in Animal Feed Concentrate ..................... 342 - 349<br />
8
V. Sharma, B. K. Wadhwa, H. J. Stan<br />
Bio<strong>de</strong>gradation of Imazapyr by Free Cells of Pseudomonas fluorescene Biotype II<br />
and Bacillus cereus Isolated from Soil ............................................................. 350 - 355<br />
W. Xuedong, W. Huili, F. Defang<br />
Natural Bio<strong>de</strong>gradation of MTBE Un<strong>de</strong>r Different Environmental Conditions:<br />
Microcosm and Microbial I<strong>de</strong>ntification Studies ............................................... 356 - 364<br />
K. F. Chen, C. M. Kao, C. Y. Hsieh, et al.<br />
Photo<strong>de</strong>gradation of 1,3,5-Trichlorobenzene in Aqueous Surfactant Solutions 365 - 372<br />
Y. Itoh, T. Kaneko, E. Akahane, et al.<br />
Phthalate Levels in Baby Milk Pow<strong>de</strong>rs Sold in Several Countries .................. 373 - 379<br />
K. Yano, N. Hirosawa, Y. Sakamoto, et al.<br />
Urinary 3,5,6-Trichloro-2-pyridinol Levels of Chlorpyrifos in Nicaraguan Applicators<br />
and Small Farm Families ................................................................................. 380 - 386<br />
K. C. Dowling, L. E. Blanco R., I. <strong>Mar</strong>tínez M., et al.<br />
Area and Personal Exposure Measurements During Asbestos Abatement of a<br />
Crawl Space and Boiler Room ......................................................................... 388 - 390<br />
J. H. Lange, M. Wang, A. Buja, et al.<br />
Worker Exposure to Diazinon During Flea Control Operations in Response to a<br />
Plague Epizootic .............................................................................................. 391 - 398<br />
A. C. Gerry, X. Zhang, T. Walker, et al.<br />
Environmental Exposure to Nitrated Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in the<br />
Taiwanese Temple .......................................................................................... 399 - 406<br />
H.-W. Chen<br />
DDT in Human Milk from Chiang Mai Mothers: A Public Health Perspective on<br />
Infants’ Exposure ............................................................................................. 407 - 414<br />
E. Zimmermann, J. Ø. Pe<strong>de</strong>rsen, K. Saraubon, et al.<br />
Human Head Hair as a Tool in Environmental Pollution Monitoring of Agra City 415 - 420<br />
R. Sharma and A. Kumar<br />
Air Quality Status and Sources of PM10 in Kanpur City, India ........................ 421 - 428<br />
A. B. Chelani, D. G. Gajghate, K. M. Phadke, et al.<br />
Wind Effects on Passive Air Sampling of PAHs and PCBs .............................. 429 - 436<br />
H. S. Sö<strong>de</strong>rström and P.-A. Bergqvist<br />
BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE<br />
Vol. 76, No. 1 January 2005<br />
New Fission Processes in the Zoanthid Palythoa caribaeorum: Description and<br />
Quantitative Aspects........................................................................................... 1-26(26)<br />
Alberto Acosta; Paul W. Sammarco; Luiz F. Duarte<br />
The Distribution and Abundance of Sphaeroma terebrans, a Wood-boring Isopod<br />
of Red Mangrove (Rhizophora mangle) Habitat within Tampa Bay.................. 27-46(20)<br />
R. Allen Brooks; Susan S. Bell<br />
A Tag and Recapture Study of Gag, Mycteroperca microlepis, off the Southeastern<br />
U.S.................................................................................................................... 47-59(13)<br />
John C. McGovern; George R. Sedberry; H. Scott Meister; T. <strong>Mar</strong>k Westendorff;<br />
David M. Wyanski; Patrick J. Harris<br />
Iodate Reduction Activity in Nitrate Reductase Extracts from <strong>Mar</strong>ine Phytoplankton 61-72(12)<br />
Chin-Chang Hung; George T.F. Wong; William M. Dunstan<br />
9
Age and Growth of White Grunt (Haemulon plumieri): a Comparison of Two<br />
Populations Along the West Coast of Florida ................................................... 73-93(21)<br />
Debra J. Murie; Daryl C. Parkyn<br />
Von Bertalanffy Growth Mo<strong>de</strong>ls for Hatchery-reared Aplysia californica......... 95-104(10)<br />
Lynne A. Fieber; Michael C. Schmale; Nathalie Jordi; Eric Orbesen; Guillermo A.<br />
Diaz; Thomas R. Capo<br />
Inci<strong>de</strong>nce of Partial Mortality and Other Health Indicators in Hard-Coral<br />
Communities of Four Southwestern Caribbean Atolls.................................. 105-122(18)<br />
Jaime Garzón-Ferreira; Sven Zea; Juan Manuel Díaz<br />
The Relation of Microhabitat to Variation in Recruitment of Young-of-Year Coral<br />
Reef Fishes .................................................................................................. 123-142(20)<br />
Peter F. Sale; Bret S. Danilowicz; Peter J. Doherty; David Mcb. Williams<br />
Sexual Reproduction of the Alcyonacean Coral Lobophytum pauciflorum in<br />
Southern Taiwan........................................................................................... 143-154(12)<br />
Tung-Yung Fan; Yu-Hsiang Chou; Chang-Feng Dai<br />
Gorgonian Mortality During a Thermal Event in the Bahamas........................ 155-162(8)<br />
Author: H.R. Lasker<br />
Reviews.......................................................................................................... 163-164(2)<br />
Editorial News and Notes ............................................................................... 165-166(2)<br />
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES<br />
Vol. 61, No. 10, October 2004.<br />
A fossil record of colonization and response of lacustrine fish populations to climate<br />
change...................................................................................................... 1807-1816(10)<br />
Michael G. Newbrey; Allan C. Ashworth<br />
Influence of nontrophic interactions between benthic invertebrates on river<br />
sediment processes: a microcosm study.................................................. 1817-1831(15)<br />
Florian Mermillod-Blondin; Magali Gérino; Sabine Sauvage; Michel<br />
C.r.e.u.z.é.d.e.s. Châtelliers<br />
Interpopulation variation in early growth of threespine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus<br />
aculeatus) un<strong>de</strong>r laboratory conditions....................................................... 1832-1838(7)<br />
Hazel A. Wright; Robert J. Wootton; Iain Barber<br />
Acoustic characteristics of forage fish species in the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea<br />
based on Kirchhoff-approximation mo<strong>de</strong>ls................................................ 1839-1850(12)<br />
Stéphane Gauthier; John K. Horne<br />
Multivariate analysis of stable-isotope ratios to infer movements and utilization of<br />
estuarine organic matter by juvenile weakfish (Cynoscion regalis)........... 1851-1861(11)<br />
Steven Y. Litvin; Michael P. Weinstein<br />
Effects of clay turbidity and light on the predator–prey interaction between smelts<br />
and chaoborids........................................................................................... 1862-1870(9)<br />
Jukka Horppila; Anne Liljendahl-Nurminen; Tommi Malinen<br />
Copper inhibition of phytoplankton in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron ............. 1871-1880(10)<br />
John T. Lehman; Ali Bazzi; Todd Nosher; Jerome O. Nriagu<br />
Nonparametric estimates of age misclassification from paired readings .... 1881-1889(9)<br />
Author: William G. Clark<br />
A genetic perspective on management and recovery of fe<strong>de</strong>rally endangered trout<br />
(Oncorhynchus gilae) in the American Southwest.................................... 1890-1899(10)<br />
10
John P. Wares; Dominique Alò; Thomas F. Turner<br />
Deriving condition indices from standard fisheries databases and evaluating their<br />
sensitivity to variation in stored energy reserves...................................... 1900-1917(18)<br />
C T. <strong>Mar</strong>shall; Coby L. Needle; Nathalia A. Yaragina; Adnan M. Ajiad; Evgeny<br />
Gusev<br />
Optimum sampling levels in discard sampling programs.......................... 1918-1928(11)<br />
Lisa Borges; Alain F. Zuur; Emer Rogan; Rick Officer<br />
Discharge-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt covariation patterns in the population dynamics of brown<br />
trout (Salmo trutta) within a Cantabrian river drainage............................. 1929-1939(11)<br />
Javier Lobón-Cerviá<br />
Seasonal changes in the lipids of Mysis mixta (Mysidacea) from the hyperbenthos<br />
of a cold-ocean environment (Conception Bay, Newfoundland)............... 1940-1953(14)<br />
Nicole B. Richoux; Don Deibel; Raymond J. Thompson; Christopher C. Parrish<br />
Long-term survival of adult Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) in the Kuparuk<br />
River, Alaska............................................................................................. 1954-1964(11)<br />
Karen M. Buzby; Linda A. Deegan<br />
Past and future chemistry changes in acidified Nova Scotian Atlantic salmon<br />
(Salmo salar) rivers: a dynamic mo<strong>de</strong>ling approach................................. 1965-1975(11)<br />
Thomas A. Clair; Ian F. Dennis; Peter G. Amiro; B J. Cosby<br />
Movement of Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) as <strong>de</strong>termined by satellite<br />
tagging experiments initiated off New England......................................... 1976-1987(12)<br />
Michael J. Stokesbury; Steven L.H. Teo; Andrew Seitz; Ronald K. O'Dor; Barbara<br />
A. Block<br />
Reconstructing the salinity and environment of the Limfjord and Vejlerne Nature<br />
Reserve, Denmark, using a diatom mo<strong>de</strong>l for brackish lakes and fjords.. 1988-2006(19)<br />
David B. Ryves; Annemarie L. Clarke; Peter G. Appleby; Susanne L. Amsinck; Erik<br />
Jeppesen; Frank Landkil<strong>de</strong>hus; N J. An<strong>de</strong>rson<br />
Slow initial <strong>de</strong>composition and fungal colonization of pine branches in a nutrientrich<br />
lowland stream..................................................................................... 2007-2013(7)<br />
Bernd Spänhoff; <strong>Mar</strong>k O. Gessner<br />
Coupling of methyl and total mercury in a minerotrophic peat bog in southeastern<br />
Swe<strong>de</strong>n..................................................................................................... 2014-2023(10)<br />
O Regnell; T Hammar<br />
CIENCIAS MARINAS<br />
Vol. 31, No.1ª, <strong>Mar</strong>zo <strong>de</strong> 2005.<br />
Respuestas inmunológicas y cicatrización en el poliqueto Eurythoe complanata<br />
(Annelida: Amphinomidae) expuesto a cobre.<br />
Immunological responses and wound healing in the polychaete Eurythoe<br />
complanata (Annelida: Amphinomidae) exposed to copper.<br />
Edgar Zapata-Vívenes, Osmar A. Nusetti, Leida <strong>Mar</strong>cano, <strong>Mar</strong>ía M. Esclapés y<br />
Luis Arredondo...........................................................................................................1-10<br />
Distribución <strong>de</strong> clorofila y producción primaria por clases <strong>de</strong> tamaño en la costa <strong>de</strong>l<br />
Pacífico mexicano.<br />
Distribution of chlorophyll and primary production by size classes along the<br />
Mexican Pacific coast.<br />
José Rubén Lara-Lara y Carmen Bazán-Guzmán....................................................11-21<br />
11
Presence of cytochrome P450 in the Caribbean corals Si<strong>de</strong>rastrea si<strong>de</strong>rea and<br />
Montastraea faveolata.<br />
Presencia <strong>de</strong>l citocromo P450 en las especies <strong>de</strong> coral Si<strong>de</strong>rastrea si<strong>de</strong>rea y<br />
Montastraea faveolata <strong>de</strong>l Caribe.<br />
E. García, R. Ramos y C. Bastidas...........................................................................23-30<br />
Estomatópodos <strong>de</strong>l género Squilla (Hoplocarida: Stomatopoda: Squillidae)<br />
recolectados frente a la costa <strong>de</strong> Sinaloa, en el SE <strong>de</strong>l golfo <strong>de</strong> California, México,<br />
en los cruceros CEEMEX C1-C2-C3.<br />
Stomatopods of the genus Squilla (Hoplocarida: Stomatopoda: Squillidae)<br />
collected off the coast of Sinaloa, SE Gulf of California, Mexico, during the<br />
CEEMEX C1-C2-C3 cruises.<br />
Michel E. Hendrickx y Patricia Sánchez-Vargas.......................................................31-41<br />
Assessing the potential toxicity of marine sediments found in petroleum industry<br />
areas: A new approach based on responses of postlarval shrimp.<br />
Evaluación <strong>de</strong>l potencial <strong>de</strong> toxicidad <strong>de</strong> sedimentos marinos en áreas <strong>de</strong> la<br />
industria petrolera: Un nuevo método basado en respuestas <strong>de</strong> postlarvas <strong>de</strong><br />
camarones.<br />
A.J.A. Evangelista, I.A. Nascimento, S.A. Pereira, M.B.N.L. Lopes, L.K.P. <strong>Mar</strong>tins y<br />
G. Fillmann...............................................................................................................43-55<br />
Simulación numérica <strong>de</strong> la hidrodinámica <strong>de</strong> un puerto y el efecto <strong>de</strong> un sistema<br />
<strong>de</strong> bombeo por energía <strong>de</strong> oleaje.<br />
Numerical simulation of the hydrodynamics of a port and effect of a wave-driven<br />
seawater pump.<br />
Xavier Flores-Vidal, Isabel Ramírez-Aguilar y Steven Czitrom-Baus........................57-77<br />
Crecimiento, consumo <strong>de</strong> nutrientes y composición próximal <strong>de</strong> Rhodomonas sp.<br />
cultivada con medio f/2 y fertilizantes agrícolas.<br />
Growth, nutrient uptake and proximate composition of Rhodomonas sp. cultured<br />
using f/2 media and agricultural fertilizers.<br />
Enrique Valenzuela-Espinoza, Fabiola Lafarga-De la Cruz, Roberto Millán-Nuñez y<br />
Filiberto Núñez-Cebrero ...........................................................................................79-89<br />
Incorporación, <strong>de</strong>puración y efecto <strong>de</strong>l cadmio en el mejillón ver<strong>de</strong> Perna viridis (L.<br />
1758) (Mollusca: Bivalvia).<br />
Uptake, <strong>de</strong>puration and effect of cadmium on the green mussel Perna viridis (L.<br />
1758) (Mollusca: Bivalvia).<br />
Noelis Narváez, César Lo<strong>de</strong>iros, Osmar Nusetti, Mairin Lemus y Alfonso N.<br />
Maeda-<strong>Mar</strong>tínez......................................................................................................91-102<br />
Reclutamiento <strong>de</strong> Porites (Scleractinia) sobre sustrato artificial en arrecifes<br />
afectados por El Niño 1997–98 en Bahía <strong>de</strong> Ban<strong>de</strong>ras, Pacífico mexicano.<br />
Recruitment of Porites (Scleractinia) on artificial substrate in reefs affected by the<br />
1997–98 El Niño in Ban<strong>de</strong>ras Bay, Mexican Pacific.<br />
Pedro Medina-Rosas, José D. Carriquiry y Amílcar L. Cupul-Magaña.................103-109<br />
Ciclo reproductivo <strong>de</strong> Geukensia <strong>de</strong>missa (Bivalvia: Mytilidae) en la playa <strong>de</strong><br />
Nazaret, El Moján, Estado Zulia, Venezuela.<br />
Reproductive cycle of Geukensia <strong>de</strong>missa (Bivalvia: Mytilidae) on a beach at<br />
Nazaret, El Moján, Zulia State, Venezuela.<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>ía Báez, Yajaira García <strong>de</strong> Severeyn y Héctor Severeyn ..............................111-118<br />
Notas <strong>de</strong> Investigación / Research Notes<br />
12
Microgasterópodos asociados con el banco natural <strong>de</strong> la pepitona Arca zebra<br />
(Swainson, 1833; Mollusca: Bivalvia) ubicado en la localidad <strong>de</strong> Chacopata,<br />
Estado Sucre, Venezuela.<br />
Microgastropods associated with the natural bank of Arca zebra (Swainson, 1833;<br />
Mollusca: Bivalvia) located in Chacopata, Sucre State, Venezuela.<br />
Samuel Narciso, Antulio Prieto-Arcas y Vanessa Acosta-Balbás.........................119-124<br />
CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN<br />
No. 02/05, February 2005.<br />
TROPICS<br />
Highlights<br />
Table of Atmospheric Indices Table<br />
T1<br />
Table of SST Indices Table T2<br />
Time Series<br />
Southern Oscillation In<strong>de</strong>x (SOI)<br />
Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies<br />
OLR Anomalies T1<br />
Equatorial SOI T2<br />
200-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies<br />
500-mb Temperature Anomalies<br />
30-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T3<br />
850-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T4<br />
Equatorial Pacific SST Anomalies T5<br />
Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections<br />
Mean and Anomalous Sea Level<br />
Pressure T6<br />
Mean and Anomalous 850-mb Zonal<br />
Wind T7<br />
Mean and Anomalous OLR T8<br />
Mean and Anomalous SST T9<br />
Pentad SLP Anomalies T10<br />
Pentad OLR Anomalies T11<br />
Pentad 250-mb Velocity Potential<br />
Anomalies T12<br />
Pentad 850-mb Zonal Wind<br />
AnomaliesT 13<br />
Anomalous Equatorial Zonal Wind<br />
T14<br />
Anomalous and Mean Depth of the<br />
20C Isotherm T15<br />
Mean & Anomaly Fields<br />
Depth of the 20C Isotherm T16<br />
Subsurface Equatorial Pacific<br />
Temperatures T17<br />
Tropical Strip SST T18<br />
SLP T19<br />
850-mb Vector Wind T20<br />
200-mb Vector Wind T21<br />
200-mb Streamfunction T22<br />
200-mb Divergence T23<br />
200-mb Velocity Potential and<br />
Divergent Wind T24<br />
OLR T25<br />
SSM/I Satellite Tropical<br />
Precipitation Estimates T26<br />
Cloud Liquid Water T27<br />
Precipitable Water T28<br />
Mean and Anomalous RH and<br />
Divergent Circulation (Pacific sector)<br />
T29<br />
Mean and Anomalous RH and<br />
Divergent Circulation (Atlantic sector)<br />
T30<br />
Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />
and Divergent Circulation (Western<br />
Pacific sector) T31<br />
Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />
and Divergent Circulation (Eastern<br />
Pacific sector) T32<br />
Appendix 1: Outsi<strong>de</strong> Contributions<br />
Tropical Drifting Buoys A1.1<br />
Thermistor Chain Data A1.2<br />
TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong><br />
Section Mean A1.3<br />
TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong><br />
Section Anomalies A1.4<br />
East Pacific SST and Sea Level A1.5<br />
Pacific Wind Stress and Anomalies<br />
A1.6<br />
Satellite-Derived Surface Currents -<br />
Pacific A1.7<br />
Satellite-Derived Surface Currents -<br />
Atlantic/Indian A1.8<br />
FORECAST FORUM<br />
13
Discussion<br />
Canonical Correlation Analysis<br />
Forecasts<br />
Canonical Correlation Analysis SST<br />
anomaly prediction F1<br />
Canonical Correlation ENSO Forecast<br />
F2<br />
NCEP Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts<br />
Forecast SST ANOMALY F3<br />
Forecast SST NINO 3 F4a<br />
Forecast SST NINO 3.4 F4b<br />
NCEP <strong>Mar</strong>kov Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts<br />
Forecast SST Anomalies F5<br />
Forecast SST Nino 3.4 F6<br />
LDEO Forecast<br />
Forecast of SST and Wind Stress F7<br />
Forecast of Nino 3 SSTA F8<br />
Linear Inverse Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Forecasts<br />
Predicted SST Anomalies F9<br />
Forecasts of NINO 3 Anomalies F10<br />
Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l<br />
(HMC-3) F11<br />
ENSO-CLIPER Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecast F12<br />
IRI Niño 3.4 Summary F13<br />
EXTRATROPICS<br />
Highlights<br />
Table of Teleconnection Indices -<br />
Table E1<br />
Surface Temperature - Anomalies<br />
and Percentiles E1<br />
Monthly Temperature Time Series E2<br />
Surface Precipitation (CAMSOPI)-<br />
Anomaly and Percentiles E3<br />
Time Series of Selected Global<br />
Precipitation Estimates (CAMSOPI)<br />
E4<br />
Time Series of U. S. Precipitation<br />
Estimates (CAMSOPI) E5<br />
U. S. Precipitation E6<br />
THESE TWO MAPS ARE NOT IN<br />
THE BULLETIN<br />
United States Surface Temperature -<br />
Anomalies and Percentiles<br />
CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN<br />
No. 03/05, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
TROPICS<br />
United States Surface Precipitation -<br />
Total and Percentiles<br />
Northern Hemisphere<br />
Standardized Monthly Amplitu<strong>de</strong>s of<br />
Selected Teleconnection Indices E7<br />
Mean and Anomalous SLP E8<br />
Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights<br />
E9<br />
Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind<br />
Vectors E10<br />
500-mb Persistence E11<br />
Time -Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections of 500-mb<br />
Height Anomalies E12<br />
700-mb Storm Track E13<br />
Southern Hemisphere<br />
Troposphere<br />
Mean and Anomalous SLP E14<br />
Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights<br />
E15<br />
Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind<br />
Vectors E16<br />
500-mb Persistence E17<br />
Time -Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections of 500-mb<br />
Height Anomalies E18<br />
Stratosphere<br />
Height Anomalies at selected levels<br />
S1<br />
Height-longitu<strong>de</strong> section S2<br />
50-hPa Temperature Anomalies S3<br />
2 & 10-hPa Temperature Anomalies<br />
S4<br />
Total Ozone Anomalies (Time Series)<br />
S5<br />
Hemispheric Ozone Anomalies (Map)<br />
S6<br />
Daily vertical component of EP flux<br />
S7<br />
Appendix 2: Additional Figures<br />
Arctic Oscillation and 500-hPa<br />
Anomalies A2.1<br />
Northern Hemisphere Snow Cover<br />
A2.2<br />
Highlights<br />
14
Table of Atmospheric Indices Table<br />
T1<br />
Table of SST Indices Table T2<br />
Time Series<br />
Southern Oscillation In<strong>de</strong>x (SOI)<br />
Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies<br />
OLR Anomalies T1<br />
Equatorial SOI T2<br />
200-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies<br />
500-mb Temperature Anomalies<br />
30-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T3<br />
850-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T4<br />
Equatorial Pacific SST Anomalies T5<br />
Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections<br />
Mean and Anomalous Sea Level<br />
Pressure T6<br />
Mean and Anomalous 850-mb Zonal<br />
Wind T7<br />
Mean and Anomalous OLR T8<br />
Mean and Anomalous SST T9<br />
Pentad SLP Anomalies T10<br />
Pentad OLR Anomalies T11<br />
Pentad 250-mb Velocity Potential<br />
Anomalies T12<br />
Pentad 850-mb Zonal Wind<br />
AnomaliesT 13<br />
Anomalous Equatorial Zonal Wind<br />
T14<br />
Anomalous and Mean Depth of the<br />
20C Isotherm T15<br />
Mean & Anomaly Fields<br />
Depth of the 20C Isotherm T16<br />
Subsurface Equatorial Pacific<br />
Temperatures T17<br />
Tropical Strip SST T18<br />
SLP T19<br />
850-mb Vector Wind T20<br />
200-mb Vector Wind T21<br />
200-mb Streamfunction T22<br />
200-mb Divergence T23<br />
200-mb Velocity Potential and<br />
Divergent Wind T24<br />
OLR T25<br />
SSM/I Satellite Tropical<br />
Precipitation Estimates T26<br />
Cloud Liquid Water T27<br />
Precipitable Water T28<br />
Mean and Anomalous RH and<br />
Divergent Circulation (Pacific sector)<br />
T29<br />
Mean and Anomalous RH and<br />
Divergent Circulation (Atlantic sector)<br />
T30<br />
Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />
and Divergent Circulation (Western<br />
Pacific sector) T31<br />
Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />
and Divergent Circulation (Eastern<br />
Pacific sector) T32<br />
Appendix 1: Outsi<strong>de</strong> Contributions<br />
Tropical Drifting Buoys A1.1<br />
Thermistor Chain Data A1.2<br />
TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong><br />
Section Mean A1.3<br />
TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong><br />
Section Anomalies A1.4<br />
East Pacific SST and Sea Level A1.5<br />
Pacific Wind Stress and Anomalies<br />
A1.6<br />
Satellite-Derived Surface Currents -<br />
Pacific A1.7<br />
Satellite-Derived Surface Currents -<br />
Atlantic/Indian A1.8<br />
FORECAST FORUM<br />
Discussion<br />
Canonical Correlation Analysis<br />
Forecasts<br />
Canonical Correlation Analysis SST<br />
anomaly prediction F1<br />
Canonical Correlation ENSO Forecast<br />
F2<br />
NCEP Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts<br />
Forecast SST ANOMALY F3<br />
Forecast SST NINO 3 F4a<br />
Forecast SST NINO 3.4 F4b<br />
NCEP <strong>Mar</strong>kov Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts<br />
Forecast SST Anomalies F5<br />
Forecast SST Nino 3.4 F6<br />
LDEO Forecast<br />
Forecast of SST and Wind Stress F7<br />
Forecast of Nino 3 SSTA F8<br />
Linear Inverse Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Forecasts<br />
Predicted SST Anomalies F9<br />
Forecasts of NINO 3 Anomalies F10<br />
15
Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l<br />
(HMC-3) F11<br />
ENSO-CLIPER Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecast F12<br />
IRI Niño 3.4 Summary F13<br />
EXTRATROPICS<br />
Highlights<br />
Table of Teleconnection Indices -<br />
Table E1<br />
Surface Temperature - Anomalies<br />
and Percentiles E1<br />
Monthly Temperature Time Series E2<br />
Surface Precipitation (CAMSOPI)-<br />
Anomaly and Percentiles E3<br />
Time Series of Selected Global<br />
Precipitation Estimates (CAMSOPI)<br />
E4<br />
Time Series of U. S. Precipitation<br />
Estimates (CAMSOPI) E5<br />
U. S. Precipitation E6<br />
Northern Hemisphere<br />
Standardized Monthly Amplitu<strong>de</strong>s of<br />
Selected Teleconnection Indices E7<br />
Mean and Anomalous SLP E8<br />
Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights<br />
E9<br />
Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind<br />
Vectors E10<br />
500-mb Persistence E11<br />
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY<br />
Time -Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections of 500-mb<br />
Height Anomalies E12<br />
700-mb Storm Track E13<br />
Southern Hemisphere<br />
Troposphere<br />
Mean and Anomalous SLP E14<br />
Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights<br />
E15<br />
Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind<br />
Vectors E16<br />
500-mb Persistence E17<br />
Time -Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections of 500-mb<br />
Height Anomalies E18<br />
Stratosphere<br />
Height Anomalies at selected levels<br />
S1<br />
Height-longitu<strong>de</strong> section S2<br />
50-hPa Temperature Anomalies S3<br />
2 & 10-hPa Temperature Anomalies<br />
S4<br />
Total Ozone Anomalies (Time Series)<br />
S5<br />
Hemispheric Ozone Anomalies (Map)<br />
S6<br />
Daily vertical component of EP flux<br />
S7<br />
Appendix 2: Additional Figures<br />
Arctic Oscillation and 500-hPa<br />
Anomalies A2.1<br />
Vol. 19, No. 1, february 2005.<br />
Society<br />
Paul Beier<br />
Society for Conservation Biology Co<strong>de</strong> of Ethics.............................................................3<br />
Letters<br />
Science and Society at the World Parks Congress..........................................................4<br />
Germán I. Andra<strong>de</strong><br />
Letters: 2..........................................................................................................................5<br />
John Terborgh<br />
Conservation Education<br />
Structure and Content of Graduate Wildlife Management and Conservation Biology<br />
Programs: an International Perspective...........................................................................7<br />
Yolanda Van Heezik, Philip John Seddon<br />
Issues in International Conservation<br />
Protected Areas of the Democratic Republic of Congo..................................................15<br />
Bila-Isia Inogwabini, Omari Ilambu, Mbayma Atalia Gbanzi<br />
16
Conservation Forum<br />
Sustainability: a Dissent.................................................................................................23<br />
JULIANNE LUTZ NEWTON, ERIC T. FREYFOGLE<br />
Sustainability: Living with the Imperfections ..................................................................33<br />
DAVID EHRENFELD<br />
Sustainability as a Bridging Concept.............................................................................36<br />
ROBERT PAEHLKE<br />
Conserving Concepts: in Praise of Sustainability...........................................................39<br />
CHRISTINE PADOCH, ROBIN R. SEARS<br />
All About Nature.............................................................................................................40<br />
JULIANNE LUTZ NEWTON, ERIC T. FREYFOGLE<br />
Review<br />
Conservation Biology of Caecilian Amphibians .............................................................45<br />
DAVID J. GOWER, MARK WILKINSON<br />
Essays<br />
A Framework for Improved Monitoring of Biodiversity: Responses to the World ..........56<br />
Summit on Sustainable Development<br />
RHYS E. GREEN, ANDREW BALMFORD, PETER R. CRANE, GEORGINA M.<br />
MACE, JOHN D. REYNOLDS, R. KERRY TURNER<br />
Increasing the Accuracy of Productivity and Survival Estimates in Assessing<br />
Landbird Population Status............................................................................................66<br />
ANGELA D. ANDERS, MATTHEW R. MARSHALL<br />
Conservation in Practice<br />
Environmental Education as a Component of Multidisciplinary Conservation<br />
Programs: Lessons from Conservation Initiatives for Critically Endangered Fruit<br />
Bats in the Western Indian Ocean.................................................................................75<br />
W. J. TREWHELLA, K. M. RODRIGUEZ-CLARK, N. CORP, A. ENTWISTLE, S. R.<br />
T. GARRETT, E. GRANEK, K. L. LENGEL, M. J. RABOUDE, P. F. REASON, B. J.<br />
SEWALL<br />
Sensitivity and Vulnerability in <strong>Mar</strong>ine Environments: an Approach to I<strong>de</strong>ntifying<br />
Vulnerable <strong>Mar</strong>ine Areas...............................................................................................86<br />
MARK A. ZACHARIAS, EDWARD J. GREGR<br />
Experimental Assessment of Coral Reef Rehabilitation Following Blast Fishing...........98<br />
HELEN E. FOX, PETER J. MOUS, JOS S. PET, ANDREAS H. MULJADI, ROY L.<br />
CALDWELL<br />
Contributed Papers<br />
Effects of Habitat Loss and Fragmentation on Population Dynamics..........................108<br />
THORSTEN WIEGAND, ELOY REVILLA, KIRK A. MOLONEY<br />
Measuring and Mapping Threats to a Wildlife Sanctuary in Southern India.................122<br />
N. BARVE, M. C. KIRAN, G. VANARAJ, N. A. ARAVIND, D. RAO, R. UMA<br />
SHAANKER, K. N. GANESHAIAH, J. G. POULSEN<br />
Demographic Mo<strong>de</strong>ls and Reality in Reintroductions: Persian Fallow Deer in Israel...131<br />
SHIRLI BAR-DAVID, DAVID SALTZ, TAMAR DAYAN, AMIR PERELBERG, AMIT<br />
DOLEV<br />
Structure and Operation of a Bushmeat Commodity Chain in Southwestern Ghana...139<br />
GUY COWLISHAW, SAMANTHA MENDELSON, J. MARCUS ROWCLIFFE<br />
17
Estimating Population Size of Elusive Animals with DNA from Hunter-Collected<br />
Feces: Four Methods for Brown Bears........................................................................150<br />
EVA BELLEMAIN, JON E. SWENSON, DAVID TALLMON, SVEN BRUNBERG,<br />
PIERRE TABERLET<br />
Effects of Wi<strong>de</strong>spread Fish Introductions on Paedomorphic Newts in Europe............162<br />
MATHIEU DENOEL, GEORG DZUKIC, MILOS L. KALEZIC<br />
Individual- and Assemblage-Level Effects of Anthropogenic Sedimentation on<br />
Snails in Lake Tanganyika...........................................................................................171<br />
PETER B. McINTYRE, ELLINOR MICHEL, KRISTIN FRANCE, ADAM RIVERS,<br />
PAUL HAKIZIMANA, ANDREW S. COHEN<br />
Beetle Responses to Habitat Fragmentation Depend on Ecological Traits, Habitat<br />
Condition, and Remnant Size......................................................................................182<br />
DON A. DRISCOLL, TOM WEIR<br />
Conservation Genetics of Potentially Endangered Mutualisms: Reduced Levels of<br />
Genetic Variation in Specialist versus Generalist Bees...............................................195<br />
LAURENCE PACKER, AMRO ZAYED, JENNIFER C. GRIXTI, LUISA RUZ,<br />
ROBIN E. OWEN, FELIPE VIVALLO, HAROLDO TORO<br />
Effects of Human Exclusion on Parasitism in Intertidal Food Webs of Central Chile...203<br />
GÉRALDINE LOOT, MARCELA ALDANA, SERGIO A. NAVARRETE<br />
Assessing the Risk of Introducing Exotic Species via the Live <strong>Mar</strong>ine Species<br />
Tra<strong>de</strong>...........................................................................................................................213<br />
SHANNON M. WEIGLE, L. DAVID SMITH, JAMES T. CARLTON, JUDITH<br />
PEDERSON<br />
Genetic Differences between Wild and Artificial Populations of Metasequoia<br />
glyptostroboi<strong>de</strong>s: Implications for Species Recovery...................................................224<br />
YUAN-YUAN LI, XIAO-YONG CHEN, XIN ZHANG, TIAN-YI WU, HUI-PING LU,<br />
YUE-WEI CAI<br />
Higher Taxa as Surrogates of Plant Biodiversity in a Megadiverse Country................232<br />
JOSE L. VILLASEÑOR, GUILLERMO IBARRA-MANRÍQUEZ, JORGE A. MEAVE,<br />
ENRIQUE ORTÍZ<br />
Relative Importance of Reproductive Biology and Establishment Ecology for<br />
Persistence of a Rare Shrub in a Fragmented Landscape..........................................239<br />
COLIN J. YATES, PHILIP G. LADD<br />
Effects of Forest Edges on the Distribution, Abundance, and Regional Persistence<br />
of Wood-Rotting Fungi.................................................................................................250<br />
PAULA SIITONEN, ANTTI LEHTINEN, MIKKO SIITONEN<br />
Research Notes<br />
Judicious Use of Multiple Hypothesis Tests.................................................................261<br />
PAUL J. ROBACK, ROBERT A. ASKINS<br />
Role of Prices and Wealth in Consumer Demand for Bushmeat in Gabon, Central<br />
Africa ...........................................................................................................................268<br />
DAVID S. WILKIE, MALCOLM STARKEY, KATE ABERNETHY, ERNESTINE<br />
NSTAME EFFA, PAUL TELFER, RICARDO GODOY<br />
Diversity<br />
Engineering Hope........................................................................................................275<br />
CAMPBELL O. WEBB<br />
Challenging the We-Know-Best Approach...................................................................278<br />
18
David Barton Bray<br />
Making Parks Work: a Thought-Provoking Argument, but Not a Gui<strong>de</strong>.......................279<br />
CenTREAD Working Group<br />
More than a Conservation Assessment.......................................................................281<br />
Kamaljit S. Bawa<br />
Human Dimensions and then Some...........................................................................282<br />
Larry D. Harris<br />
COPEIA<br />
No. 1 February 24, 2005.<br />
Morphological Divergence of Native and Recently Established Populations of White<br />
Sands Pupfish (Cyprinodon tularosa). Michael L. Collyer, James M. Novak, and<br />
Craig A. Stockwell, .................................................................................................. 1–11.<br />
Herbivory Imposes Constraints on Voluntary Hypothermia in Lizards. C. Richard<br />
Tracy, Kevin M. Flack, Linda C. Zimmerman, Robert E. Espinoza, and Christopher<br />
R. Tracy, ............................................................................................................... 12–19.<br />
Genetic Variation, Kinship, and Effective Population Size in a Captive Population of<br />
the Endangered Cape Fear Shiner, Notropis mekistocholas. Eric Saillant, John C.<br />
Patton, and John R. Gold, .................................................................................... 20–28.<br />
Two New Philautus (Anura: Ranidae: Rhacophorinae) from Ponmudi Hill in the<br />
Western Ghats of India. S. D. Biju and Franky Bossuyt, ....................................... 29–37.<br />
Habitat Use and Susceptibility to Predation of Four Prairie Stream Fishes:<br />
Implications for Conservation of the Endangered Topeka Shiner. G. Layne Knight<br />
and Keith B. Gido, ................................................................................................. 38–47.<br />
Nesting and Paternal Care in the Weakly Electric Fish Gymnotus (Gymnotiformes:<br />
Gymnotidae) with Descriptions of Larval and Adult Electric Organ Discharges of<br />
Two Species. William G. R. Crampton and Carl D. Hopkins, ................................ 48–60.<br />
Linichthys: A New Genus of Chinese Cyprinid Fishes (Teleostei: Cypriniformes). E.<br />
Zhang and Fang Fang, ......................................................................................... 61–67.<br />
New Trichomycterus (Siluriformes: Trichomycteridae) from an Offshore Island of<br />
Colombia. Luis Fernán<strong>de</strong>z and Scott A. Schaefer, ............................................... 68–76.<br />
New Species of the Ceratioid Anglerfish Genus Lasiognathus Regan<br />
(Lophiiformes: Thaumatichthyidae) from the Eastern North Atlantic off Ma<strong>de</strong>ira.<br />
Theodore W. Pietsch, ........................................................................................... 77–81.<br />
Three New Species from a Diverse, Sympatric Assemblage of the Electric Fish<br />
Gymnotus (Gymnotiformes: Gymnotidae) in the Lowland Amazon Basin, with<br />
Notes on Ecology. William G. R. Crampton, Dean H. Thorsen, and James S.<br />
Albert, ................................................................................................................... 82–99.<br />
Phreatic Catfish of the Genus Silvinichthys from Southern South America<br />
(Teleostei, Siluriformes, Trichomycteridae). Luis Fernán<strong>de</strong>z and <strong>Mar</strong>io C. C. <strong>de</strong><br />
Pinna, ............................................................................................................... 100–108.<br />
Pseudanos winterbottomi: A New Anostomine Species (Teleostei: Characiformes:<br />
Anostomidae) from Venezuela and Brazil, and Comments on Its Phylogenetic<br />
Relationships. Brian L. Sidlauskas and Geraldo Men<strong>de</strong>s dos Santos, ............. 109–123.<br />
Systematics of the Neotropical Catfish Genera Nemuroglanis Eigenmann and<br />
Eigenmann 1889, Imparales Schultz 1944, and Me<strong>de</strong>michthys Dahl 1961<br />
(Siluriformes: Heptapteridae). Flávio A. Bockmann and Carl J. Ferraris Jr., ..... 124–137.<br />
19
Symbolophorus reversus: A New Species of Lanternfish from the Eastern Pacific<br />
(Myctophiformes: Myctophidae). F. Javier Gago and Richard C. Ricord, ......... 138–145.<br />
Shorter Contributions<br />
Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for Temperature Elevation in the Aerobic Swimming Musculature of the<br />
Common Thresher Shark, Alopias vulpinus. Diego Bernal and Chugey A.<br />
Sepulveda, ........................................................................................................ 146–151.<br />
Reproductive Ecology of Western Diamond-Backed Rattlesnakes (Crotalus atrox)<br />
in the Sonoran Desert. Emily N. Taylor and Dale F. DeNardo, ......................... 152–158.<br />
Spatial-Temporal Distribution and Habitat Associations of Age-0 Splittail in the<br />
Lower San Francisco Estuary Watershed. Fre<strong>de</strong>rick Feyrer, Ted R. Sommer, and<br />
Randall D. Baxter, ............................................................................................. 159–168.<br />
Predator Cues during the Egg Stage Affect Larval Development in the Gray<br />
Treefrog, Hyla versicolor (Anura: Hylidae). M. J. Smith, M. M. Drew, M. Peebles,<br />
and K. Summers, .............................................................................................. 169–173.<br />
Montane Tadpoles in Madagascar: Molecular I<strong>de</strong>ntification and Description of the<br />
Larval Stages of Mantidactylus elegans, Mantidactylus ma<strong>de</strong>cassus, and Boophis<br />
laurenti from the Andringitra Massif. Meike Thomas, Liliane Raharivololoniaina,<br />
Frank Glaw, Miguel Vences, and David R. Vieites, ........................................... 174–183.<br />
Led by the Blind: Bandy-Bandy Snakes Vermicella annulata (Elapidae) Follow<br />
Blindsnake Chemical Trails. Matthew J. Greenlees, Jonathan K. Webb, and<br />
Richard Shine, .................................................................................................. 184–187.<br />
Larval Anurans Adjust Buoyancy in Response to Substrate Ingestion. Sylvie L.<br />
Ron<strong>de</strong>au and John H. Gee, .............................................................................. 188–195.<br />
Defensive Behavior of Free-Ranging Pygmy Rattlesnakes (Sistrurus miliarius).<br />
Xavier Glaudas, Terence M. Farrell, and Peter G. May, ................................... 196–200.<br />
Book Reviews<br />
THE LIVING MARINE RESOURCES OF THE WESTERN CENTRAL ATLANTIC.<br />
Carter R. Gilbert, ............................................................................................... 201–212.<br />
PEIXES DO RIO NEGRO. FISHES OF THE RIO NEGRO. Antony S. Harold, . 212–214.<br />
SHARKS, RAYS, AND CHIMAERAS OF CALIFORNIA. José I. Castro, .......... 214–215.<br />
INLAND FISHES OF WASHINGTON. John D. McPhail, .................................. 216–217.<br />
Editorial News and Notes. , .............................................................................. 218–219.<br />
CRUSTACEANA<br />
Vol. 77, Part. 10, November 2004<br />
Records of and observations on tanaidaceans (Peracarida) from shallow waters of<br />
the Caribbean coast of Mexico<br />
M. Garcıa-Madrigal, R. Heard & E. Suárez-Morales................................................. 1153<br />
Three new species of Macrobrachium Bate, 1868 (Decapoda, Palaemonidae) from<br />
the Western Ghats of Kerala State, India<br />
K. Jayachandran & A. Raji ........................................................................................1179<br />
Dorsal rostral spines as a hard structure to <strong>de</strong>termine age of blue shrimp,<br />
Litopenaeus stylirostris postlarvae (Decapoda, Penaeidae)<br />
E. Aragón-Noriega ....................................................................................................1193<br />
Mating without anterior pleopods in a simultaneous hermaphroditic shrimp,<br />
Lysmata wur<strong>de</strong>manni (Decapoda, Cari<strong>de</strong>a)<br />
D. Zhang & J. Lin ......................................................................................................1203<br />
20
Morphology and fine structure of the accessory glands in the female reproductive<br />
system of Saduria entomon (Linnaeus, 1758) (Isopoda, Valvifera)<br />
Z. Hryniewiecka-Szyfter & A. Babula........................................................................ 1213<br />
Description of Eodiaptomus phuvongi n. sp. (Copepoda, Calanoida) from Thailand<br />
and Laos<br />
L. Sanoamuang & N. Sivongxay ...............................................................................1223<br />
Notes on rare Pinnixa crabs (Decapoda, Brachyura, Pinnotheridae) of Japan<br />
T. Yamauchi & K. Konishi......................................................................................... 1237<br />
A comparative study of some mouthpart adaptations of Uca annulipes (H. Milne<br />
Edwards, 1837) and U. vocans (Linnaeus, 1758) (Brachyura, Ocypodidae) in<br />
relation to their habitats<br />
S. Lim ....................................................................................................................... 1245<br />
New data on the genus Niphargus (Amphipoda, Niphargidae) in Italy, with the<br />
<strong>de</strong>scription of a new species of the Orcinus group<br />
V. Iannilli & A. Taglianti .............................................................................................1253<br />
Forum........................................................................................................................1263<br />
The place of Collembola amongst the arthropods<br />
F. Schram .................................................................................................................1263<br />
Notes and News........................................................................................................1267<br />
The i<strong>de</strong>ntity and lectotype of Portunus pelagicus (L., 1758)<br />
L. Holthuis .................................................................................................................1267<br />
Physiological response of the crayfish, Astacus leptodactylus to saline water<br />
H. Yildiz, G. Köksal & A. Benli ..................................................................................1271<br />
Additional records of Acanthaxius caespitosus (Squires, 1979) (Decapoda,<br />
Thalassinoi<strong>de</strong>a, Axiidae) from the eastern tropical Pacific<br />
M. Hendrickx .............................................................................................................1277<br />
Review 1279<br />
G. A. Boxshall & S. H. Halsey, 2004. An introduction to copepod diversity, 1-2<br />
D. Danielopol & P. Pospisil .......................................................................................1279<br />
CRUSTACEANA<br />
Vol. 77, Part. 11, December 2004.<br />
Reported siphonostomatoid copepods parasitic on marine fishes of southern Africa<br />
S. Dippenaar .............................................................................................................1281<br />
Biology of a translocated population of the large freshwater crayfish, Cherax cainii<br />
Austin & Ryan, 2002 in a Western Australian river<br />
S. Beatty, D. Morgan & H. Gill.................................................................................. 1329<br />
A new species of Heteromysis (Mysida, Mysidae) associated with sponges, from<br />
the Uraga Channel, central Japan, with notes on distribution and habitats within the<br />
genus Heteromysis<br />
K. Fukuoka ...............................................................................................................1353<br />
Feeding ecology of the exotic red swamp crayfish, Procambarus clarkii (Girard,<br />
1852) in the Guadiana River (SW Iberian Peninsula)<br />
J. Pérez-Bote............................................................................................................ 1375<br />
Two new species of Nothobomolochus Vervoort, 1962 (Copepoda, Bomolochidae)<br />
parasitic on marine fishes of Taiwan<br />
J. Ho & C. Lin.............................................................................................................1389<br />
21
Notes and News .......................................................................................................1403<br />
Re<strong>de</strong>scription of the little known shrimp, Tozeuma cornutum A. Milne-Edwards,<br />
1881 (Decapoda, Hippolytidae)<br />
S. De Grave & M. Dowell ..........................................................................................1403<br />
DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS<br />
Vol. 11, No. 2 <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005.<br />
network of yellow brick roads<br />
Ran Nathan<br />
Biodiversity Research<br />
Long-distance biological transport processes through the air: can nature's<br />
complexity be unfol<strong>de</strong>d in silico?.................................................................................131<br />
Ran Nathan, Nir Sapir, Ana Trakhtenbrot, Gabriel G. Katul, Gil Bohrer, <strong>Mar</strong>tin Otte,<br />
Roni Avissar, Merel B. Soons, Henry S. Horn, <strong>Mar</strong>tin Wikelski, Simon A. Levin<br />
Propagule dispersal and the scales of marine community process.............................139<br />
Brian P. Kinlan, Steven D. Gaines, Sarah E. Lester<br />
Recent advances in the study of long-distance dispersal of aquatic invertebrates<br />
via birds.......................................................................................................................149<br />
Andy J. Green, Jordi Figuerola<br />
Using stable isotopes to trace long-distance dispersal in birds and other taxa............157<br />
Keith A. Hobson<br />
How important is long-distance seed dispersal for the regional survival of plant<br />
species? ......................................................................................................................165<br />
Merel B. Soons, Wim A. Ozinga<br />
The importance of long-distance dispersal in biodiversity conservation......................173<br />
Ana Trakhtenbrot, Ran Nathan, Gad Perry, David M. Richardson<br />
ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL<br />
Vol. 31, no. 3, april 2005.<br />
A multivariate analysis of the accumulation and fractionation of major and trace<br />
elements in agricultural soils in Hidalgo State, Mexico irrigated with raw wastewater<br />
• ARTICLE........................................................................................................... 313-323<br />
Carlos A. Lucho-Constantino, Miriam Álvarez-Suárez, Rosa I. Beltrán-Hernán<strong>de</strong>z,<br />
Francisco Prieto-García and Héctor M. Poggi-Varaldo<br />
Distribution of trace elements in tissues of two shrimp species from the Persian<br />
Gulf and roles of metallothionein in their redistribution • ARTICLE..................... 325-341<br />
N. Pourang and J.H. Dennis<br />
The effects of air pollution and meteorological parameters on respiratory morbidity<br />
during the summer in São Paulo City • ARTICLE............................................... 343-349<br />
F.L.T. Gonçalves, L.M.V. Carvalho, F.C. Con<strong>de</strong>, M.R.D.O. Latorre, P.H.N. Saldiva<br />
and A.L.F Braga<br />
Chlorpyrifos in surface waters before and after a fe<strong>de</strong>rally mandated ban •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 351-356<br />
Kenneth E. Banks, David H. Hunter and David J. Wachal<br />
The speciation and bioavailability of mercury in sediments of Haihe River, China •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 357-365<br />
Jian-bo Shi, Li-na Liang, Gui-bin Jiang and Xing-long Jin<br />
22
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers, polychlorinated biphenyls and organochlorine<br />
pestici<strong>de</strong>s in sediment cores from the Western Scheldt river (Belgium): analytical<br />
aspects and <strong>de</strong>pth profiles • ARTICLE................................................................ 367-375<br />
A. Covaci, A. Gheorghe, S. Voorspoels, J. Maervoet, E. Steen Re<strong>de</strong>ker, R. Blust<br />
and P. Schepens<br />
Causation in risk assessment and management: mo<strong>de</strong>ls, inference, biases, and a<br />
microbial risk–benefit case study • ARTICLE...................................................... 377-397<br />
L.A. Cox, Jr. and P.F. Ricci<br />
Fate of glutaral<strong>de</strong>hy<strong>de</strong> in hospital wastewater and combined effects of<br />
glutaral<strong>de</strong>hy<strong>de</strong> and surfactants on aquatic organisms • ARTICLE ..................... 399-406<br />
Evens Emmanuel, Khalil Hanna, Christine Bazin, Gérard Keck, Bernard Clément<br />
and Yves Perrodin<br />
Using the WTO/TBT enquiry point to monitor ten<strong>de</strong>ncies in the regulation of<br />
environment, health, and safety issues affecting the chemical industry • ARTICLE 407-416<br />
Rodrigo Pio Borges Menezes and A<strong>de</strong>lai<strong>de</strong> <strong>Mar</strong>ia <strong>de</strong> Souza Antunes<br />
Progress in Environmental Science Reviews<br />
Hazardous waste, impact on health and environment for <strong>de</strong>velopment of better<br />
waste management strategies in future in India • REVIEW ARTICLE................ 417-431<br />
Virendra Misra and S.D. Pan<strong>de</strong>y<br />
Ecological Sanitation—a way to solve global sanitation problems? • REVIEW<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 433-444<br />
Günter Langergraber and Elke Muellegger<br />
Pollution by nitrogen oxi<strong>de</strong>s: an approach to NOx abatement by using sorbing<br />
catalytic materials • REVIEW ARTICLE.............................................................. 445-467<br />
M.A. Gómez-García, V. Pitchon and A. Kiennemann<br />
ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL<br />
Vol. 31, No. 4, June 2005.<br />
Investigations of methane emissions from rice cultivation in Indian context •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 469-482<br />
Shalini Anand, R.P. Dahiya, Vikash Talyan and Prem Vrat<br />
Strategic environmental assessment in Hong Kong • ARTICLE......................... 483-492<br />
Kay Leng Ng and Jeffrey Philip Obbard<br />
Thallium: a review of public health and environmental concerns • ARTICLE...... 493-501<br />
A.L. John Peter and T. Viraraghavan<br />
Distribution of PCBs, HCHs and DDTs, and their ecotoxicological implications in<br />
Bay of Bengal, India • ARTICLE......................................................................... 503-512<br />
R. Babu Rajendran, T. Imagawa, H. Tao and R. Ramesh<br />
The interaction of heavy metals with urban soils: sorption behaviour of Cd, Cu, Cr,<br />
Pb and Zn with a typical mixed brownfield <strong>de</strong>posit • ARTICLE........................... 513-521<br />
Julita <strong>Mar</strong>kiewicz-Patkowska, Andrew Hursthouse and Hanna Przybyla-Kij<br />
Evaluation of the concentration of HCH, DDT, HCB, PCB and PAH in the<br />
sediments along the lower stretch of Hugli estuary, West Bengal, northeast India •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 523-534<br />
L. Guzzella, C. Roscioli, L. Viganò, M. Saha, S.K. Sarkar and A. Bhattacharya<br />
Selecting pepti<strong>de</strong> ligands of microcystin-LR from phage displayed random libraries<br />
• ARTICLE........................................................................................................... 535-541<br />
23
S.W. Zhao, P.P. Shen, Y. Zhou, Y. Wei, X.B. Xin and Z.C. Hua<br />
Effects of mo<strong>de</strong>rate pollution on toxic and trace metal levels in calves from a<br />
polluted area of northern Spain • ARTICLE........................................................ 543-548<br />
M. Miranda, M. López-Alonso, C. Castillo, J. Hernán<strong>de</strong>z and J.L. Benedito<br />
Potential human health benefits of antibiotics used in food animals: a case study of<br />
virginiamycin • ARTICLE..................................................................................... 549-563<br />
Louis Anthony (Tony) Cox, Jr.<br />
Characteristics and health implications of fine and coarse particulates at roadsi<strong>de</strong>,<br />
urban background and rural sites in UK • ARTICLE........................................... 565-573<br />
A. Nam<strong>de</strong>o and M.C. Bell<br />
World crop residues production and implications of its use as a biofuel • ARTICLE 575-584<br />
R. Lal<br />
Uptake of polychlorodibenzo-p-dioxins, polychlorodibenzofurans and coplanar<br />
polychlorobiphenyls in chickens • ARTICLE....................................................... 585-591<br />
Catherine Pirard and Edwin De Pauw<br />
Geochemistry and bioavailability of metals in sediments from northern San<br />
Francisco Bay • ARTICLE................................................................................... 593-602<br />
X.Q. Lu, I. Werner and T.M. Young<br />
Effects of dissolved organic matter on toxicity and bioavailability of copper for<br />
lettuce sprouts • ARTICLE.................................................................................. 603-608<br />
Shoko Inaba and Chisato Takenaka<br />
Cadmium phytoextraction using short-rotation coppice Salix: the evi<strong>de</strong>nce trail •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 609-613<br />
Nicholas M. Dickinson and Ian D. Pulford<br />
Daphnia emergence: a sensitive indicator of fire-retardant stress in temporary<br />
wetlands • ARTICLE........................................................................................... 615-620<br />
David G. Angeler, Silvia <strong>Mar</strong>tín and José M. Moreno<br />
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION<br />
Vol. 135, No. 2 May 2005.<br />
Decomposition in soil microcosms of leaves of the metallophyte Arabidopsis halleri:<br />
effect of leaf-associated heavy metals on bio<strong>de</strong>gradation • ARTICLE................ 187-194<br />
Uriel Boucher, May Balabane, Isabelle Lamy and Philippe Cambier<br />
Sub-cellular partitioning of Cd, Cu and Zn in tissues of indigenous unionid bivalves<br />
living along a metal exposure gradient and links to metal-induced effects •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 195-208<br />
Emmanuelle Bonneris, Olivier Perceval, Stéphane Masson, Landis Hare and Peter<br />
G.C. Campbell<br />
Metal stress consequences on frost hardiness of plants at northern high latitu<strong>de</strong>s: a<br />
review and hypothesis • ARTICLE...................................................................... 209-220<br />
Kari Taulavuori, M.N.V. Prasad, Erja Taulavuori and Kari Laine<br />
Dynamical coupling of PBPK/PD and AUC-based toxicity mo<strong>de</strong>ls for arsenic in<br />
tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus from blackfoot disease area in Taiwan •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 221-233<br />
Chung-Min Liao, Huang-Min Liang, Bo-Ching Chen, Sher Singh, Jeng-Wei Tsai,<br />
Yun-Hua Chou and Wen-Tze Lin<br />
24
Octanol-solubility of dissolved and particulate trace metals in contaminated rivers:<br />
implications for metal reactivity and availability • ARTICLE................................ 235-244<br />
Andrew Turner and Edward Mawji<br />
Dietary mercury exposure and bioaccumulation in amphibian larvae inhabiting<br />
Carolina bay wetlands • ARTICLE...................................................................... 245-253<br />
J.M. Unrine, C.H. Jagoe, A.C. Brinton, H.A. Brant and N.T. Garvin<br />
Diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in grassland spontaneously <strong>de</strong>veloped on<br />
area polluted by a fertilizer plant • ARTICLE....................................................... 255-266<br />
C. Renker, V. Blanke and F. Buscot<br />
In vitro toxicity of selected pestici<strong>de</strong>s on RTG-2 and RTL-W1 fish cell lines •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 267-274<br />
M.M. Babín and J.V. Tarazona<br />
Early-phase immuno<strong>de</strong>tection of metallothionein and heat shock proteins in<br />
extru<strong>de</strong>d earthworm coelomocytes after <strong>de</strong>rmal exposure to metal ions • ARTICLE 275-280<br />
Joanna Homa, Ewa Olchawa, Stephen R. Stürzenbaum, A. John Morgan and<br />
Barbara Plytycz<br />
Oxygen levels versus chemical pollutants: do they have similar influence on<br />
macrofaunal assemblages? A case study in a harbour with two opposing entrances<br />
• ARTICLE........................................................................................................... 281-291<br />
J.M. Guerra-García and J.C. García-Gómez<br />
The Solling roof revisited – slow recovery from acidification observed and mo<strong>de</strong>led<br />
<strong>de</strong>spite a <strong>de</strong>ca<strong>de</strong> of “clean-rain” treatment • ARTICLE....................................... 293-302<br />
Liisa <strong>Mar</strong>tinson, Norbert Lamersdorf and Per Warfvinge<br />
The effect of hydrological regime on the metal bioavailability for the wetland plant<br />
species Salix cinerea • ARTICLE........................................................................ 303-312<br />
Bart Van<strong>de</strong>casteele, Paul Quataert and Filip M.G. Tack<br />
Manganese toxicity thresholds for restoration grass species • ARTICLE........... 313-322<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>k W. Paschke, Alejandro Val<strong>de</strong>cantos and Edward F. Re<strong>de</strong>nte<br />
Decomposition of leaves of the metallophyte Arabidopsis halleri in soil microcosms:<br />
fate of Zn and Cd from plant residues • ARTICLE.............................................. 323-332<br />
Uriel Boucher, Isabelle Lamy, Philippe Cambier and May Balabane<br />
Effects of arsenic on concentration and distribution of nutrients in the fronds of the<br />
arsenic hyperaccumulator Pteris vittata L. • ARTICLE........................................ 333-340<br />
Cong Tu and Lena Q. Ma<br />
Comment on “Characterization of a reference site for quantifying uncertainties<br />
related to soil sampling” by S. • CORRESPONDENCE...................................... 341-342<br />
Philippe Baveye<br />
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION<br />
Vol. 135, No. 3, June 2005.<br />
The National Atmospheric Deposition Program: 25 years of monitoring in support<br />
of science and policy: An ammonia workshop: the state of science and future<br />
needs • EDITORIAL............................................................................................ 343-346<br />
James A. Lynch and <strong>Mar</strong>garet Kerchner<br />
Spatial and temporal trends of precipitation chemistry in the United States, 1985–<br />
2002 • ARTICLE................................................................................................. 347-361<br />
Christopher M.B. Lehmann, Van C. Bowersox and Susan M. Larson<br />
25
Trends in atmospheric ammonium concentrations in relation to atmospheric sulfate<br />
and local agriculture • ARTICLE......................................................................... 363-369<br />
Victoria R. Kelly, Gary M. Lovett, Kathleen C. Weathers and Gene E. Likens<br />
Nonlinear regression and ARIMA mo<strong>de</strong>ls for precipitation chemistry in East Central<br />
Florida from 1978 to 1997 • ARTICLE................................................................ 371-379<br />
David M. Nickerson and Brooks C. Madsen<br />
Overview and assessment of techniques to measure ammonia emissions from<br />
animal houses: the case of the Netherlands • ARTICLE..................................... 381-388<br />
J. Mosquera, G.J. Monteny and J.W. Erisman<br />
Measuring ammonia emissions from land applied manure: an intercomparison of<br />
commonly used samplers and techniques • ARTICLE........................................ 389-397<br />
T.H. Misselbrook, F.A. Nicholson, B.J. Chambers and R.A. Johnson<br />
Managing ammonia emissions from livestock production in Europe • ARTICLE 399-406<br />
J. Webb, H. Menzi, B.F. Pain, T.H. Misselbrook, U. Dämmgen, H. Hendriks and H.<br />
Döhler<br />
Spatial and temporal variability of the overall error of National Atmospheric<br />
Deposition Program measurements <strong>de</strong>termined by the USGS collocated-sampler<br />
program, water years 1989–2001 • ARTICLE..................................................... 407-418<br />
Gregory A. Wetherbee, Natalie E. Latysh and John D. Gordon<br />
Deposition monitoring networks: what monitoring is required to give reasonable<br />
estimates of ammonia/ammonium? • ARTICLE.................................................. 419-431<br />
Jan Willem Erisman, Arjan Hensen, Julio Mosquera, <strong>Mar</strong>k Sutton and David Fowler<br />
Atmospheric nitrogen inputs to the Delaware Inland Bays: the role of ammonia •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 433-443<br />
Joseph R. Scudlark, Jennifer A. Jennings, Megan J. Roadman, Karen B. Savidge<br />
and William J. Ullman<br />
Improved daily precipitation nitrate and ammonium concentration mo<strong>de</strong>ls for the<br />
Chesapeake Bay Watershed • ARTICLE............................................................ 445-455<br />
J.W. Grimm and J.A. Lynch<br />
Chemometrics methods for the investigation of methylmercury and total mercury<br />
contamination in mollusks samples collected from coastal sites along the Chinese<br />
Bohai Sea • ARTICLE......................................................................................... 457-467<br />
Wang Yawei, Liang Lina, Shi Jianbo and Jiang Guibin<br />
Effects of increased <strong>de</strong>position of atmospheric nitrogen on an upland Calluna<br />
moor: N and P transformations • ARTICLE......................................................... 469-480<br />
M.G. Pilkington, S.J.M. Caporn, J.A. Carroll, N. Cresswell, J.A. Lee, B.A. Emmett<br />
and D. Johnson<br />
Risk to breeding success of waterbirds by contaminants in Hong Kong: evi<strong>de</strong>nce<br />
from trace elements in eggs • ARTICLE............................................................. 481-490<br />
James C.W. Lam, Shinsuke Tanabe, Michael H.W. Lam and Paul K.S. Lam<br />
Equilibrium partitioning of 14C-benzo(a)pyrene and 14C-benazolin between<br />
fractionated phases from an arable topsoil • ARTICLE....................................... 491-500<br />
J.-M. Séquaris, A. Lavorenti and P. Burauel<br />
The use of autecological and environmental parameters for establishing the status<br />
of lichen vegetation in a baseline study for a long-term monitoring survey •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 501-514<br />
S. Gombert, J. Asta and M.R.D. Seaward<br />
26
Soil remediation: humic acids as natural surfactants in the washings of highly<br />
contaminated soils • ARTICLE............................................................................ 515-522<br />
Pellegrino Conte, Anna Agretto, Riccardo Spaccini and Alessandro Piccolo<br />
ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY<br />
Vol. 24, No. 4, April 2005.<br />
Editorial<br />
VETERINARY MEDICINES AND THE ENVIRONMENT<br />
Alistair Boxall and Carol Long .....................................................................................759<br />
Veterinary Medicines<br />
FACTORS INFLUENCING THE SORPTION OF OXYTETRACYCLINE TO SOILS<br />
Aaryn D. Jones, Gregory L. Bruland, Sheela G. Agrawal and Dharni Vasu<strong>de</strong>van<br />
761<br />
INVESTIGATIONS ON THE FATE OF SULFADIAZINE IN MANURED SOIL:<br />
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS AND TEST PLOT STUDIES<br />
Robert Kreuzig and Sibylla Höltge ..............................................................................771<br />
TEST-PLOT STUDIES ON RUNOFF OF SULFONAMIDES FROM MANURED<br />
SOILS AFTER SPRINKLER IRRIGATION<br />
Robert Kreuzig, Sibylla Höltge, Joachim Brunotte, Norbert Berenzen, Jörn Wogram<br />
and Ralf Schulz ...........................................................................................................777<br />
INHIBITION OF MICROBIAL METABOLISM IN ANAEROBIC LAGOONS BY<br />
SELECTED SULFONAMIDES, TETRACYCLINES, LINCOMYCIN, AND TYLOSIN<br />
TARTRATE<br />
Keith A. Loftin, Cynthia Henny, Craig D. Adams, Rao Surampali and Melanie R.<br />
Mormile....................................................................................................................... 782<br />
INSECTICIDAL ACTIVITY OF SYNTHETIC PYRETHROIDS,<br />
ORGANOPHOSPHATES, INSECT GROWTH REGULATORS, AND OTHER<br />
LIVESTOCK PARASITICIDES: AN AUSTRALIAN PERSPECTIVE<br />
Keith G. Wardhaugh................................................................................................... 789<br />
POUR-ON FORMULATION OF EPRINOMECTIN FOR CATTLE: FECAL<br />
ELIMINATION PROFILE AND EFFECTS ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE<br />
DUNG-INHABITING DIPTERA NEOMYIA CORNICINA (L.) (MUSCIDAE)<br />
Jean-Pierre Lumaret, Faiek Errouissi, Pierre Galtier and Michel Alvinerie .................797<br />
DISSIPATION AND EFFECTS OF CHLORTETRACYCLINE AND TYLOSIN IN<br />
TWO AGRICULTURAL SOILS: A FIELD-SCALE STUDY IN SOUTHERN<br />
DENMARK<br />
Bent Halling-Sørensen, Anne-<strong>Mar</strong>ie Jacobsen, John Jensen, Gitte Sengeløv, Elvira<br />
Vaclavik and Flemming Ingerslev............................................................................... 802<br />
EFFECTS OF SULFACHLORPYRIDAZINE IN MS·3-ARABLE LAND: A<br />
MULTISPECIES SOIL SYSTEM FOR ASSESSING THE ENVIRONMENTAL FATE<br />
AND EFFECTS OF VETERINARY MEDICINES<br />
Sara Boleas, Carmen Alonso, Javier Pro, M. <strong>Mar</strong> Babín, Carlos Fernán<strong>de</strong>z,<br />
Gregoria Carbonell and José V. Tarazona ................................................................. 811<br />
THE USE OF TERRESTRIAL AND AQUATIC MICROCOSMS AND<br />
MESOCOSMS FOR THE ECOLOGICAL RISK ASSESSMENT OF VETERINARY<br />
MEDICINAL PRODUCTS<br />
27
Paul J. Van <strong>de</strong>n Brink, José V. Tarazona, Keith R. Solomon, Thomas Knacker,<br />
Nico W. Van <strong>de</strong>n Brink, Theo C.M. Brock and J.P. (Hans) Hoogland .........................820<br />
Environmental Chemistry<br />
MAXIMUM CAPACITIES FOR ADSORPTION OF PHENANTHRENE IN THE<br />
SLOWLY AND VERY SLOWLY DESORBING DOMAINS IN NINETEEN SOILS<br />
AND SEDIMENTS<br />
Henny van <strong>de</strong>n Heuvel, Thomas Le Couriaut, Brian M. McMullen, Frédéric Lozac'h<br />
and Paul van Noort .....................................................................................................830<br />
ASSESSING TRACE-METAL EXPOSURE TO AMERICAN DIPPERS IN<br />
MOUNTAIN STREAMS OF SOUTHWESTERN BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA<br />
Christy A. Morrissey, Leah I. Ben<strong>de</strong>ll-Young and John E. Elliott ................................ 836<br />
VARIATIONS OF NITRATE AND SULFATE IN THE ATMOSPHERE ON DAYS OF<br />
HIGH AND LOW PARTICULATE MATTERS<br />
Chung-Yih Kuo, Hsin-Hong Chen, Jeng-Fu Shih and Ruey-Hong Wong ...................846<br />
DEPOSITION AND DISSIPATION OF CHLORPYRIFOS IN SURFACE WATER<br />
FOLLOWING VINEYARD APPLICATIONS IN NORTHERN ITALY<br />
Ettore Capri, Matteo Bal<strong>de</strong>racchi, Denis Yon and Graham Reeves ............................852<br />
DIFFERENT BEHAVIOR OF TETRACYCLINES AND SULFONAMIDES IN<br />
SANDY SOILS AFTER REPEATED FERTILIZATION WITH LIQUID MANURE<br />
Gerd Hamscher, Heike Theresia Pawelzick, Heinrich Höper and Heinz Nau .............861<br />
MICROBIAL INHIBITION BY PHARMACEUTICAL ANTIBIOTICS IN DIFFERENT<br />
SOILS—DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONS DETERMINED WITH THE IRON(III)<br />
REDUCTION TEST<br />
Sören Thiele-Bruhn..................................................................................................... 869<br />
THE CONTRASTING ROLES OF SEDIMENTARY PLANT-DERIVED CARBON<br />
AND BLACK CARBON ON SEDIMENT-SPIKED HYDROPHOBIC ORGANIC<br />
CONTAMINANT BIOAVAILABILITY TO DIPOREIA SPECIES AND<br />
LUMBRICULUS VARIEGATUS<br />
Jussi V.K. Kukkonen, Siddhartha Mitra, Peter F. Landrum, Duane C. Gossiaux,<br />
Jonas Gunnarsson and Donald Weston..................................................................... 877<br />
STAGE CHANGE IN BINDING OF PYRENE TO SELECTED HUMIC<br />
SUBSTANCES UNDER DIFFERENT IONIC STRENGTHS<br />
Li-Jung Kuo and Chon-Lin Lee ...................................................................................886<br />
Environmental Toxicology<br />
IMPORTANCE OF ACCLIMATION TO ENVIRONMENTALLY RELEVANT ZINC<br />
CONCENTRATIONS ON THE SENSITIVITY OF DAPHNIA MAGNA TOWARD<br />
ZINC<br />
Brita T.A. Muyssen and Colin R. Janssen .................................................................. 895<br />
A COMPARISON OF CHRONIC CADMIUM EFFECTS ON HYALELLA AZTECA<br />
IN EFFLUENT-DOMINATED STREAM MESOCOSMS TO SIMILAR<br />
LABORATORY EXPOSURES IN EFFLUENT AND RECONSTITUTED HARD<br />
WATER<br />
Jacob K. Stanley, Bryan W. Brooks and Thomas W. La Point.................................... 902<br />
THE ROLE OF CANNIBALISM AND CONTAMINANT SOURCE ON<br />
BIOACCUMULATION IN AQUATIC FOOD WEBS<br />
Alison J. Fraser, Thomas M. Cahill, David C. Lasenby, Donald Mackay and Lynne<br />
Milford .........................................................................................................................909<br />
28
BIOAVAILABILITY OF POLYBROMINATED DIPHENYL ETHER FLAME<br />
RETARDANTS IN BIOSOLIDS AND SPIKED SEDIMENT TO THE AQUATIC<br />
OLIGOCHAETE, LUMBRICULUS VARIEGATUS<br />
Serena Ciparis and Robert C. Hale ............................................................................916<br />
METAMORPHIC INHIBITION OF XENOPUS LAEVIS BY SODIUM<br />
PERCHLORATE: EFFECTS ON DEVELOPMENT AND THYROID HISTOLOGY<br />
Joseph E. Tietge, Gary W. Holcombe, Kevin M. Flynn, Patricia A. Kosian, Joseph<br />
J. Korte, Leroy E. An<strong>de</strong>rson, Douglas C. Wolf and Sigmund J. Degitz....................... 926<br />
ASSESSMENT OF ZINC PHYTOAVAILABILITY BY DIFFUSIVE GRADIENTS IN<br />
THIN FILMS<br />
Osman Sonmez and Gary M. Pierzynski.................................................................... 934<br />
FIELD EXPOSURE OF FROG EMBRYOS AND TADPOLES ALONG A<br />
POLLUTION GRADIENT IN THE FOX RIVER AND GREEN BAY ECOSYSTEM IN<br />
WISCONSIN, USA<br />
William H. Karasov, Robin E. Jung, Susan Van<strong>de</strong>n Langenberg and Tara L.E.<br />
Bergeson.................................................................................................................... 942<br />
ANALYZING EFFECTS OF PESTICIDES ON INVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES IN<br />
STREAMS<br />
Matthias Liess and Peter Carsten Von Der Ohe......................................................... 954<br />
USE AND TOXICITY OF PYRETHROID PESTICIDES IN THE CENTRAL<br />
VALLEY, CALIFORNIA, USA<br />
Erin L. Amweg, Donald P. Weston and Nicole M. Ureda ............................................966<br />
COPPER UPTAKE BY MYTILUS EDULIS IN THE PRESENCE OF HUMIC ACIDS<br />
J. Ignacio Lorenzo, Ricardo Beiras, Valentine K. Mubiana and Ronny Blust.............. 973<br />
PERFLOUROALKYL CONTAMINANTS IN LIVER TISSUE FROM EAST<br />
GREENLAND POLAR BEARS (URSUS MARITIMUS)<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>la Smithwick, Derek C.G. Muir, Scott A. Mabury, Keith R. Solomon, Jonathan<br />
W. <strong>Mar</strong>tin, Christian Sonne, Erik W. Born, Robert J. Letcher and Rune Dietz............ 981<br />
INFLUENCE OF NUTRIENT AMENDMENTS ON THE PHYTOEXTRACTION OF<br />
WEATHERED 2,2-BIS(p-CHLOROPHENYL)-1,1-DICHLOROETHYLENE BY<br />
CUCURBITS<br />
Jason C. White, Zakia D. Parrish, Mehmet Isleyen, <strong>Mar</strong>tin P.N. Gent, William<br />
Iannucci-Berger, Brian D. Eitzer and <strong>Mar</strong>yjane Incorvia Mattina .................................987<br />
Hazard/Risk Assessment<br />
RISK OF FIVE POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS IN A<br />
TERRESTRIAL ENVIRONMENT: INFLUENCE OF DATA VARIABILITY<br />
Patrik Fauser, <strong>Mar</strong>ianne Thomsen, Janeck Scott-Fordsmand and Peter B.<br />
Sørensen ....................................................................................................................995<br />
COMPARISON OF STEP-STRESS DATA AMONG MULTIPLE GROUPS<br />
Jeremy L. Craft and A. John Bailer ...........................................................................1004<br />
APPLICATION OF THE RICEWQ–VADOFT MODEL FOR SIMULATING THE<br />
ENVIRONMENTAL FATE OF PRETILACHLOR IN RICE PADDIES<br />
Dimitrios Georgios Karpouzas, Aldo Ferrero, Francesco Vidotto and Ettore Capri....1007<br />
29
FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY<br />
Vol. 14, No. 2, march 2005<br />
Mechanism of body cavity temperature regulation of chum salmon (Oncorhynchus<br />
keta) during homing migration in the North Pacific Ocean.............................................81<br />
TOMONORI AZUMAYA, YUKIMASA ISHIDA<br />
The importance of episodic weather events to the ecosystem of the Bering Sea<br />
shelf...............................................................................................................................97<br />
NICHOLAS A. BOND, JAMES E. OVERLAND<br />
Larval lobster (Homarus americanus) distribution and drift in the vicinity of the Gulf<br />
of Maine offshore banks and their probable origins.....................................................112<br />
G. C. HARDING, K. F. DRINKWATER, C. G. HANNAH, J. D. PRINGLE, J.<br />
PRENA, J. W. LODER, S. PEARRE JR, W. P. VASS<br />
Incorporating an environmental stockrecruitment relationship in the assessment of<br />
Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus)............................................................................138<br />
A. F. SINCLAIR, W. R. CRAWFORD<br />
The effects of climate variability on zooplankton and basking shark (Cetorhinus<br />
maximus) relative abundance off southwest Britain.....................................................151<br />
PETER A. COTTON, DAVID W. SIMS, SAM FANSHAWE, MARK CHADWICK<br />
SHORT COMMUNICATION<br />
Quantifying the effects of individual and environmental variability in fish recruitment..156<br />
JONATHAN W. PITCHFORD, ALEX JAMES, JOHN BRINDLEY<br />
FISHERY BULLETIN<br />
Vol. 103, No. 1, Janauary 2005.<br />
Bochenek, Eleanor A., Eric N. Powell, Allison J. Bonner, and Sarah E. Banta<br />
An assessment of scup (Stenotomus chrysops) and black sea bass (Centropristas<br />
striata) discards in the directed otter trawl fisheries in the Mid-Atlantic Bight ..................1<br />
Cooper, Daniel W., Katherine E. Pearson, and Donald R. Gun<strong>de</strong>rson<br />
Fecundity of shortspine thornyhead (Sebastolobus alascanus) and longspine<br />
thornyhead (S. altivelis) (Scorpaenidae) from the northeastern Pacific Ocean,<br />
<strong>de</strong>termined by stereological and gravimetric techniques...............................................15<br />
De<strong>Mar</strong>tini, Edward E., <strong>Mar</strong>ti L. McCracken, Robert B. Moffitt, and Jerry A.<br />
Wetherall<br />
Relative pleopod length as an indicator of size at sexual maturity in slipper<br />
(Scyllari<strong>de</strong>s squammosus) and spiny Hawaiian (Panulirus marginatus) lobsters..........23<br />
Fisher, Joseph P., and William G. Pearcy<br />
Seasonal changes in growth of coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) off Oregon<br />
and Washington and concurrent changes in the spacing of scale circuli.......................34<br />
Groeneveld, Johan C., Jimmy P. Khanyile, and David S. Schoeman<br />
Escapement of the Cape rock lobster (Jasus lalandii) through the mesh and<br />
entrance of commercial traps.........................................................................................52<br />
Grusha, Donna S., and <strong>Mar</strong>k R. Patterson<br />
Quantification of drag and lift imposed by pop-up satellite archival tags and<br />
estimation of the metabolic cost to cownose rays (Rhinoptera bonasus)......................63<br />
Harvey, Chris J.<br />
30
Effects of El Niño events on energy <strong>de</strong>mand and egg production of rockfish<br />
(Scorpaenidae: Sebastes): a bioenergetics approach...................................................71<br />
Horodysky, Andrij Z., and John Graves<br />
Application of pop-up satellite archival tag technology to estimate postrelease<br />
survival of white marlin (Tetrapturus albidus) caught on circle and straight-shank<br />
(“J”) hooks in the western North Atlantic recreational fishery.........................................84<br />
Kerr, Lisa A., Allen H. Andrews, Kristen Munk, Kenneth H. Coale, Brian R. Frantz,<br />
Gregor M. Cailliet, and Thomas A. Brown<br />
Age validation of quillback (Sebastes maliger) using bomb radiocarbon.......................97<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>ancik, Katrin E., Lisa M. Clough, and Jonathan A. Hare<br />
Cross-shelf and seasonal variation in larval fish assemblages on the southeast<br />
United States continental shelf off the coast of Georgia..............................................108<br />
O’Farrell, Michael R., and Ralph J. Larson<br />
Year-class formation in Pacific herring (Clupea pallasi) estimated from spawningdate<br />
distributions of juveniles in San Francisco Bay, California...................................130<br />
Parker, Denise M., William J. Cooke, and George H. Balazs<br />
Diet of oceanic loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) in the central North Pacific...142<br />
Roberson, Nancy E., Daniel K. Kimura, Donald R. Gun<strong>de</strong>rson, and Allen M.<br />
Shimada<br />
Indirect validation of the age-reading method for Pacific cod (Gadus<br />
macrocephalus) using otoliths from marked and recaptured fish.................................153<br />
Sulikowski, James A., Jeff Kneebone, Scott Elzey, Joe Jurek, Patrick D. Danley,<br />
W. Huntting Howell, and Paul C. W. Tsang<br />
Age and growth estimates of the thorny skate (Amblyraja radiata) in the western<br />
Gulf of Maine...............................................................................................................161<br />
Tracey, Sean R., and Jeremy M. Lyle<br />
Age validation, growth mo<strong>de</strong>ling, and mortality estimates for striped trumpeter<br />
(Latris lineata) from southeastern Australia: making the most of patchy data..............169<br />
Trnski, Thomas, Amanda C. Hay, and D. Stewart Fiel<strong>de</strong>r<br />
Larval <strong>de</strong>velopment of estuary perch (Macquaria colonorum) and Australian bass<br />
(M. novemaculeata) (Perciformes: Percichthyidae), and comments on their life<br />
history..........................................................................................................................183<br />
195-206<br />
Venerus, Leonardo A., Laura Machinandiarena, <strong>Mar</strong>tin D. Ehrlich, and Ana M.<br />
Parma<br />
Early life history of the Argentine sandperch Pseudopercis semifasciata<br />
(Pinguipedidae) off northern Patagonia.......................................................................195<br />
Wilson, Matthew T., Annette L. Brown, and Kathryn L. Mier<br />
Geographic variation among age-0 walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma):<br />
evi<strong>de</strong>nce of mesoscale variation in nursery quality?....................................................207<br />
Note<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>kaida, Unai, Joshua J. C. Rosenthal, and William F. Gilly<br />
Tagging studies on the jumbo squid (Dosidicus gigas) in the Gulf of California,<br />
Mexico.........................................................................................................................219<br />
31
GEOS<br />
Vol. 24, No.1, octubre <strong>de</strong> 2004<br />
ARTÍCULOS DE INVESTIGACIÓN<br />
Sismotectónica <strong>de</strong>l norte y oeste <strong>de</strong>l Bloque <strong>de</strong> Jalisco usando datos sísmicos<br />
regionales<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>ta Rutz-López y Francisco Javier Núñez-Cornú<br />
Rasgos estructurales y petrográficos <strong>de</strong> plutones localizados entre San Quintín y<br />
la sierra San Pedro Mártir, Baja California, México<br />
Luis A. Delgado-Argote, Tomás A. Peña-Alonso, Elisa Ramírez, Harald Böhnel,<br />
Roberto Molina-Garza y Amabel Ortega-Rivera<br />
ARTÍCULOS DE DIVULGACIÓN<br />
El conocimiento <strong>de</strong> la tierra a través <strong>de</strong>l impacto tecnológico en la sismología<br />
Juan <strong>Mar</strong>tín Gómez-González, Harald Böhnel, Luis A.Delgado-Argote, Arturo<br />
Gómez-Tuena, <strong>Mar</strong>co Guzmán-Speziale, Román Pérez-Enriquez y Birgit Steinich<br />
Selección <strong>de</strong> eventos <strong>de</strong>ntro <strong>de</strong> un polígono y en la superficie <strong>de</strong> la tierra con<br />
MATLAB<br />
José Frez C.<br />
REPORTES<br />
Ecuaciones que estiman las curvas intensidad-duración-período <strong>de</strong> retorno <strong>de</strong> la<br />
lluvia<br />
Domitilo-Pereyra Díaz, José Antonio A. Pérez-Sesma y Leonorilda Gómez-Romero<br />
Huracanes en Baja California, México, y sus implicaciones en la sedimentación en<br />
el Golfo <strong>de</strong> California<br />
Genaro <strong>Mar</strong>tínez-Gutiérrez y Larry Mayer<br />
Boletín <strong>de</strong> la red sísmica <strong>de</strong>l noroeste <strong>de</strong> México, (Periodo enero a junio <strong>de</strong> 2004)<br />
GRUPO RESNOM<br />
NOTAS<br />
La influencia <strong>de</strong> los ciclones tropicales en la lluvia <strong>de</strong>l noroeste <strong>de</strong> Baja California y<br />
suroeste <strong>de</strong> California<br />
Edgar G. Pavía<br />
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGRAPHY<br />
Vol. 14, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005<br />
Topographic mediation of growth in high elevation foxtail pine (Pinus balfouriana<br />
Grev. et Balf.) forests in the Sierra Nevada, USA........................................................103<br />
Andrew G. Bunn, Lindsey A. Waggoner, Lisa J. Graumlich<br />
Allelic diversity at the Mhc-DQA locus of woodmouse populations (Apo<strong>de</strong>mus<br />
sylvaticus) present in the islands and mainland of the northern Mediterranean ..........115<br />
Joëlle Goüy <strong>de</strong> Bellocq, Christiane Delarbre, Gabriel Gachelin, Serge Morand<br />
Impact of short-term rainfall fluctuation on interannual land cover change in sub-<br />
Saharan Africa.............................................................................................................123<br />
Veerle Vanacker, <strong>Mar</strong>c Lin<strong>de</strong>rman, Fre<strong>de</strong>rick Lupo, Stephanne Flasse, Eric<br />
Lambin<br />
The distribution and diversity of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera) in western Finnish<br />
Lapland, with special emphasis on shallow lakes........................................................137<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>jut Nyman, A. Korhola, S. J. Brooks<br />
32
Pteridophyte richness, climate and topography in the Iberian Peninsula: comparing<br />
spatial and nonspatial mo<strong>de</strong>ls of richness patterns.....................................................155<br />
Dolores Ferrer-Castán, Ole R. Vetaas<br />
Diversification of ectoparasite assemblages and climate: an example with fleas<br />
parasitic on small mammals ........................................................................................167<br />
Boris R. Krasnov, Georgy I. Shenbrot, Irina S. Khokhlova, Robert Poulin<br />
Mo<strong>de</strong>lling geographical patterns in species richness using eigenvector-based<br />
spatial filters.................................................................................................................177<br />
José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho, Luis Mauricio Bini<br />
People, energy and avian species richness.................................................................187<br />
Karl L. Evans, Kevin J. Gaston<br />
HIDROBIOLOGICA<br />
Vol. 14, No. 2, 2004<br />
Giri F. Y P. Collins<br />
Eficiencia <strong>de</strong> captura <strong>de</strong>l camarón dulceacuícola Palaemonetes argentinus (Nobili<br />
1901) sobre larvas <strong>de</strong> mosquito Culex pipiens s.l. (Linnaeus 175885-90.................85-90<br />
Mora-Navarro M. R., J.A. Vázquez-García y Y. L Vargas-Rodríguez<br />
Or<strong>de</strong>nación <strong>de</strong> comunida<strong>de</strong>s <strong>de</strong> fitoplancton en el lago <strong>de</strong> Chapala, Jalisco-<br />
Michoacán, México.................................................................................................91-103<br />
Valenzuela-Quiñonez W., J.A. López Limón y E. A. Aragón Noriega<br />
Impacto <strong>de</strong>l cultivo <strong>de</strong> camarón por succión <strong>de</strong> larvas <strong>de</strong> peces y camarón<br />
mediante el bombeo <strong>de</strong> granjas<br />
acuícolas en Navachiste, Sinaloa.........................................................................105-112<br />
Vega M. E., F. Oíaz y S. Espina<br />
Balance energético <strong>de</strong> juveniles <strong>de</strong> Chirostoma estor estor (Jordan, 18791 (Pisces,<br />
Atherinopsidae) en relación con el tamaño corpora..............................................113-120<br />
Aguilar-Rosas LE., R. Aguilar-Rosas, l. Sánchez-Rodríguez, J,E, Broom y W.A.<br />
Nelson<br />
El género Porphyra (Bangiaceae, Rhodophyta) en la costa <strong>de</strong>l Pacífico <strong>de</strong> México.<br />
IV. Porphyra pendula E.V. Dawson......................................................................121-126<br />
García l., S., R. Flores F., P. Flores R., y A. Vál<strong>de</strong>z G.<br />
Densidad y tallas <strong>de</strong> Plicopurpura patula pansa relacionadas con el sustrato y<br />
oleaje en la costa rocosa <strong>de</strong> Guerrero, México ....................................................127-136<br />
García-Ulloa Gómez M., and F. Hernán<strong>de</strong>z-Garciabada<br />
Effect of the feeding ration on growth performance of Oreochromis mossambicus<br />
(Peters) larvae using <strong>de</strong>capsulated Anemia cysts as dietary supplement............137-144<br />
Rull-Lluch J.<br />
Estudio morfológico y anatómico <strong>de</strong> las especies reflexas <strong>de</strong>l género<br />
Gastroclonium Kützing (Rhodophyceae)..............................................................145-155<br />
Notas<br />
Navarrete-Salgado N. A., E. Fernán<strong>de</strong>z-Guillermo y G. Contreras-Rivero<br />
Abundancia <strong>de</strong> Quironómidos (Diptera: Chironomidael en el bordo "JC" <strong>de</strong>l norte<br />
<strong>de</strong>l Estado <strong>de</strong> México en el periodo <strong>de</strong> secas ......................................................157-160<br />
Villalejo-Fuerte. M., M. Arellano-<strong>Mar</strong>tínez. M. Robles-Mungaray y B. P. Ceballos-<br />
Vázquez<br />
33
Notas sobre el crecimiento, sobrevivencia y reproducción <strong>de</strong> la almeja mano <strong>de</strong><br />
león Nodipecten subnodosus en cultivo en suspensión.......................................161-165<br />
Artículo <strong>de</strong> revisión<br />
Espinoza-García A.C., C. F. Arias-Ortíz y M. Mazari-Hiriart<br />
Virus en sistemas acuáticos e implicaciones en salud pública<br />
JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY<br />
Vol. 32, No. 22, February 2005<br />
185 Is biogeography emerging from its i<strong>de</strong>ntity crisis?................................................185<br />
Brett R. Riddle<br />
Coastal and island biogeography<br />
187 Biogeography of the nearshore rocky-reef fishes at the southern and Baja<br />
California islands.........................................................................................................187<br />
Daniel J. Pon<strong>de</strong>lla II, Brooke E. Gintert, Jana R. Cobb, Larry G. Allen<br />
203 Shifts in southern endpoints of distribution in rocky intertidal species along the<br />
south-eastern Pacific coast..........................................................................................203<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>celo M. Riva<strong>de</strong>neira, Miriam Fernán<strong>de</strong>z<br />
211 Insular black files (Diptera: Simuliidae) of North America: tests of colonization<br />
hypotheses..................................................................................................................211<br />
Peter H. Adler, Donna J. Giberson, Lisa A. Purcell<br />
221 Species richness and structure of ant communities in a dynamic archipelago:<br />
effects of island area and age......................................................................................221<br />
Ernesto I. Badano, Héctor A. Regidor, Hector A. Núñez, Rebeca Acosta, Ernesto<br />
Gianoli<br />
229 The roles of geological history and colonization abilities in genetic<br />
differentiation between mammalian populations in the Philippine archipelago............229<br />
Lawrence R. Heaney, Joseph S. Walsh Jr, A. Townsend Peterson<br />
Developments in historical biogeography<br />
249 A historical biogeographical protocol for studying biotic diversification by taxon<br />
pulses..........................................................................................................................249<br />
Dominik Halas, David Zamparo, Daniel R. Brooks<br />
261 Cladistic analysis of distributions and en<strong>de</strong>mism (CADE): using raw<br />
distributions of birds to unravel the biogeography of the South American aridlands....261<br />
Ana Luz Porzecanski, Joel Cracraft<br />
277 Factors shaping the range-size frequency distribution of the en<strong>de</strong>mic fish<br />
fauna of the Tropical Eastern Pacific...........................................................................277<br />
Camilo Mora, D. Ross Robertson<br />
The biogeography of otophysan fishes (Ostariophysi: Otophysi): a new appraisal<br />
John C. Briggs.............................................................................................................287<br />
After the <strong>de</strong>luge: mitochondrial DNA indicates Miocene radiation and Pliocene<br />
adaptation of tree and giant weta (Orthoptera: Anostostomatidae) .............................295<br />
Steven A. Trewick, <strong>Mar</strong>y Morgan-Richards<br />
From phytoliths to phorid flies<br />
Grass water stress estimated from phytoliths in West Africa.......................................311<br />
Laurent Bremond, Anne Alexandre, Odile Peyron, Joël Guiot<br />
Effects of life-history traits and species distribution on genetic structure at<br />
maternally inherited markers in European trees and shrubs........................................329<br />
34
Itziar Aguinagal<strong>de</strong>, Arndt Hampe, Aparajita Mohanty, Juan Pedro <strong>Mar</strong>tín, Jérôme<br />
Duminil, Rémy J. Petit<br />
Geographic range size, seedling ecophysiology and phenotypic plasticity in<br />
Australian Acacia species............................................................................................341<br />
Catherine L. Pohlman, Adrienne B. Nicotra, Brad R. Murray<br />
Biogeography and macroecology of phorid flies that attack fire ants in southeastern<br />
Brazil and Argentina........................................................................................353<br />
P. J. Folgarait, O. Bruzzone, S. D. Porter, M. A. Pesquero, L. E. Gilbert<br />
JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY<br />
VOLUME 25, NUMBER 1 FEBRUARY 2005<br />
Articles<br />
DISTRIBUTION, ADULT MORPHOLOGY, AND LARVAL DEVELOPMENT OF<br />
SACCULINA SINENSIS (CIRRIPEDIA: RHIZOCEPHALA: KENTROGONIDA) IN<br />
HONG KONG COASTAL WATERS. Benny Kwok Kan Chan, David Yiu Nam Poon,<br />
and Graham Walker, ............................................................................................... 1–10.<br />
VARGULA MORINI, A NEW SPECIES OF BIOLUMINESCENT OSTRACODE<br />
(MYODOCOPIDA: CYPRIDINIDAE) FROM BELIZE AND AN ASSOCIATED<br />
COPEPOD (COPEPODA: SIPHONOSTOMATOIDA: NICOTHOIDAE). Elizabeth<br />
Torres and Anne C. Cohen, .................................................................................. 11–24.<br />
A NEW BATHYNELLID FROM INDIA WITH UNUSUAL MOUTHPARTS<br />
(BATHYNELLACEA: BATHYNELLIDAE). Y. Ranga Reddy and Horst Kurt<br />
Schminke, ............................................................................................................. 25–30.<br />
A REVISION OF THE GENUS PARASTILOMYSIS (MYSIDA: MYSIDAE), WITH<br />
DESCRIPTIONS OF THREE NEW SPECIES AND ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW<br />
GENUS FOR P. SECUNDA. Kouki Fukuoka, Manuel Rafael Bravo, and Masaaki<br />
Murano, ................................................................................................................ 31–48.<br />
NEW SPECIES OF AMPHIPOD CRUSTACEANS IN THE GENERA TEGANO<br />
AND MELITA (HADZIOIDEA: MELITIDAE) FROM SUBTERRANEAN<br />
GROUNDWATERS IN GUAM, PALAU, AND THE PHILIPPINES. Thomas R.<br />
Sawicki, John R. Holsinger, and Thomas M. Iliffe, ................................................ 49–74.<br />
SINGULARIA CUNCTA N. GEN., N. SP. (TANAIDACEA: TANAIDOMORPHA)<br />
FROM ANTARCTIC ABYSSAL WATERS. Magdalena Baewicz-Paszkowycz, .... 75–80.<br />
NEW SPECIES OF THE GENUS TYPHLATYA (DECAPODA: ATYIDAE) FROM<br />
ANCHIALINE CAVES IN MEXICO, THE BAHAMAS, AND HONDURAS. Fernando<br />
Alvarez, Thomas M. Iliffe, and José Luis Villalobos, ............................................. 81–94.<br />
AGE DETERMINATION OF EUROPEAN LOBSTERS (HOMARUS GAMMARUS<br />
L.) BY HISTOLOGICAL QUANTIFICATION OF LIPOFUSCIN. Ingebrigt Uglem,<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>k Belchier, and Terje Svåsand, ....................................................................... 95–99.<br />
EXCRETORY AND STORAGE PURINES IN THE ANOMURAN LAND CRAB<br />
BIRGUS LATRO; GUANINE AND URIC ACID. Stuart Linton, Joanne E. Wil<strong>de</strong>, and<br />
Peter Greenaway, ............................................................................................. 100–104.<br />
NEGATIVE EFFECTS OF DELAYED MATING ON THE REPRODUCTIVE<br />
SUCCESS OF FEMALE SPINY KING CRAB, PARALITHODES BREVIPES. Taku<br />
Sato, Masakazu Ashidate, and Seiji Goshima, ................................................. 105–109.<br />
35
SIZE AT SEXUAL MATURITY OF THE SPIDER CRAB ANAMATHIA RISSOANA<br />
(DECAPODA: MAJOIDEA) FROM THE SARDINIAN SEA. <strong>Mar</strong>co Mura, Flavio<br />
Orrù, and Angelo Cau, ...................................................................................... 110–115.<br />
REVIEW OF DURCKHEIMIA AND XANTHASIA, WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF TWO<br />
NEW GENERA (DECAPODA: BRACHYURA: PINNOTHERIDAE). Shane T.<br />
Ahyong and Peter K. L. Ng, .............................................................................. 116–129.<br />
LABORATORY INVESTIGATIONS OF FOOD SELECTION BY THE ASIAN<br />
SHORE CRAB, HEMIGRAPSUS SANGUINEUS: ALGAL VERSUS ANIMAL<br />
PREFERENCE. Diane J. Brousseau and Jenny A. Baglivo, ............................ 130–134.<br />
REPRODUCTION OF EPIGRAPSUS NOTATUS (BRACHYURA:<br />
GECARCINIDAE) IN TAIWAN. Hung-Chang Liu and Ming-Shiou Jeng, .......... 135–140.<br />
HERDING LIMITS WATER LOSS IN THE SAND FIDDLER CRAB, UCA<br />
PUGILATOR. Jay A. Yo<strong>de</strong>r, Kathleen A. Reinsel, James M. Welch, Danielle M.<br />
Clifford, and Eric J. Rellinger, ........................................................................... 141–145.<br />
FACTORS INFLUENCING COEXISTENCE OF TWO BRACHYURAN CRABS,<br />
HELICE TRIDENS AND PARASESARMA PLICATUM, IN AN ESTUARINE SALT<br />
MARSH, JAPAN. Miki Kuroda, Keiji Wada, and Mahito Kamada, .................... 146–153.<br />
A CATALOGUE OF THE TYPE MATERIAL IN THE IVIC REFERENCE<br />
COLLECTION OF DECAPODA, VENEZUELA. Héctor Suárez, ....................... 154–158.<br />
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY<br />
Vol. 34, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch-April 2005.<br />
EXECUTIVE SUMMARIES:<br />
This Issue in Journal of Environmental Quality....................................................403-407.<br />
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR:<br />
Glendon W. Gee<br />
Comments on "Improvements to Measuring Water Flux in the Vadose Zone" (K.C.<br />
Masarik, J.M. Norman, K.R. Brye, and J.M. Baker; J. Environ. Qual. 33:1152–<br />
1158). ..................................................................................................................408-409.<br />
J.M. Norman, K.C. Masarik, K.R. Brye, and J.M. Baker<br />
Reply ...................................................................................................................409-410.<br />
TECHNICAL REPORTS:<br />
Atmospheric Pollutants and Trace Gases:<br />
Tom H. Misselbrook, Siobhan K. E. Brookman, Ken A. Smith, Trevor Cumby,<br />
Adrian G. Williams, and Dan F. McCrory<br />
Crusting of Stored Dairy Slurry to Abate Ammonia Emissions: Pilot-Scale Studies411-419.<br />
LinYing Li, Bruce Johnson, and Randy Segawa<br />
Empirical Relationship between Use, Area, and Ambient Air Concentration of<br />
Methyl Bromi<strong>de</strong>....................................................................................................420-428.<br />
J. W. Casey and N. M. Hol<strong>de</strong>n<br />
The Relationship between Greenhouse Gas Emissions and the Intensity of Milk<br />
Production in Ireland............................................................................................429-436.<br />
Mahdi M. Al-Kaisi and Xinhua Yin<br />
Tillage and Crop Residue Effects on Soil Carbon and Carbon Dioxi<strong>de</strong> Emission in<br />
Corn–Soybean Rotations.....................................................................................437-445.<br />
Abdirashid A. Elmi, Tess Astatkie, Chandra Madramootoo, Robert Gordon, and<br />
David Burton<br />
36
Assessment of Denitrification Gaseous End-Products in the Soil Profile un<strong>de</strong>r Two<br />
Water Table Management Practices Using Repeated Measures Analysis..........446-454.<br />
Søren O. Petersen, Barbara Amon, and Andreas Gattinger<br />
Methane Oxidation in Slurry Storage Surface Crusts..........................................455-461.<br />
Bioremediation and Bio<strong>de</strong>gradation:<br />
Jonathan Holt, Seth Hothem, Heidi Howerton, Richard Larson, and Robert Sanford<br />
9,10-Phenanthrenequinone Photoautocatalyzes its Formation from Phenanthrene,<br />
and Inhibits Bio<strong>de</strong>gradation of Naphthalene........................................................462-468.<br />
Ground Water Quality:<br />
S. A. Bradford and M. Bettahar<br />
Straining, Attachment, and Detachment of Cryptosporidium Oocysts in Saturated<br />
Porous Media.......................................................................................................469-478.<br />
Heavy Metals in the Environment:<br />
M. Quaghebeur, A. Rate, Z. Rengel, and C. Hinz<br />
Desorption Kinetics of Arsenate from Kaolinite as Influenced by pH...................479-486.<br />
Yiqiang Zhang, Juanfang Wang, Chris Amrhein, and William T. Frankenberger, Jr.<br />
Removal of Selenate from Water by Zerovalent Iron...........................................487-495.<br />
Annette L. Nolan, Hao Zhang, and Mike J. McLaughlin<br />
Prediction of Zinc, Cadmium, Lead, and Copper Availability to Wheat in<br />
Contaminated Soils Using Chemical Speciation, Diffusive Gradients in Thin Films,<br />
Extraction, and Isotopic Dilution Techniques.......................................................496-507.<br />
I. W. Oliver, A. Hass, G. Merrington, P. Fine, and M. J. McLaughlin<br />
Copper Availability in Seven Israeli Soils Incubated with and without Biosolids..508-513.<br />
Landscape and Watershed Processes:<br />
Xinbao Zhang and Desmond E. Walling<br />
Characterizing Land Surface Erosion from Cesium-137 Profiles in Lake and<br />
Reservoir Sediments...........................................................................................514-523.<br />
D. Q. Kellogg, A. J. Gold, P. M. Groffman, K. Addy, M. H. Stolt, and G. Blazejewski<br />
In Situ Ground Water Denitrification in Stratified, Permeable Soils Un<strong>de</strong>rlying<br />
Riparian Wetlands...............................................................................................524-533.<br />
Organic Compounds in the Environment:<br />
H. Bernard, P. F. Chabalier, J. L. Chopart, B. Legube, and M. Vauclin<br />
Assessment of Herbici<strong>de</strong> Leaching Risk in Two Tropical Soils of Reunion Island<br />
(France)...............................................................................................................534-543.<br />
Y. Ouyang, L.-T. Ou, and G. C. Sigua<br />
Characterization of the Pestici<strong>de</strong> Chlordane in Estuarine River Sediments.........544-551.<br />
Talli Ilani, Elke Schulz, and Benny Chefetz<br />
Interactions of Organic Compounds with Wastewater Dissolved Organic Matter:<br />
Role of Hydrophobic Fractions.............................................................................552-562.<br />
Surface Water Quality:<br />
C. Roselina Angel, Wendy J. Powers, Todd J. Applegate, Nada M. Tamim, and<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>y C. Christman<br />
Influence of Phytase on Water-Soluble Phosphorus in Poultry and Swine Manure563-571.<br />
P. A. Vadas, P. J. A. Kleinman, A. N. Sharpley, and B. L. Turner<br />
Relating Soil Phosphorus to Dissolved Phosphorus in Runoff: A Single Extraction<br />
Coefficient for Water Quality Mo<strong>de</strong>ling................................................................572-580.<br />
Rob C. Jamieson, Douglas M. Joy, H. Lee, R. Kostaschuk, and Robert J. Gordon<br />
37
Resuspension of Sediment-Associated Escherichia coli in a Natural Stream......581-589.<br />
G. W. Randall and J. A. Vetsch<br />
Nitrate Losses in Subsurface Drainage from a Corn–Soybean Rotation as Affected<br />
by Fall and Spring Application of Nitrogen and Nitrapyrin....................................590-597.<br />
R. W. McDowell and I. Stewart<br />
Phosphorus in Fresh and Dry Dung of Grazing Dairy Cattle, Deer, and Sheep:<br />
Sequential Fraction and Phosphorus-31 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Analyses598-607.<br />
Vadose Zone Processes and Chemical Transport:<br />
Jeanne Kjær, Preben Olsen, <strong>Mar</strong>lene Ullum, and Ruth Grant<br />
Leaching of Glyphosate and Amino-Methylphosphonic Acid from Danish<br />
Agricultural Field Sites.........................................................................................608-620.<br />
Mats Larsbo and Nicholas Jarvis<br />
Simulating Solute Transport in a Structured Field Soil: Uncertainty in Parameter<br />
I<strong>de</strong>ntification and Predictions...............................................................................621-634.<br />
Waste Management:<br />
L. Barton, L. A. Schipper, G. F. Barkle, M. McLeod, T. W. Speir, M. D. Taylor, A. C.<br />
McGill, A. P. van Schaik, N. B. Fitzgerald, and S. P. Pan<strong>de</strong>y<br />
Land Application of Domestic Effluent onto Four Soil Types: Plant Uptake and<br />
Nutrient Leaching.................................................................................................635-643.<br />
Daniel N. Miller and Elaine D. Berry<br />
Cattle Feedlot Soil Moisture and Manure Content: I. Impacts on Greenhouse<br />
Gases, Odor Compounds, Nitrogen Losses, and Dust........................................644-655.<br />
Elaine D. Berry and Daniel N. Miller<br />
Cattle Feedlot Soil Moisture and Manure Content: II. Impact on Escherichia coli<br />
O157....................................................................................................................656-663.<br />
J. Beraud, P. Fine, U. Yermiyahu, M. Keinan, R. Rosenberg, A. Hadas, and A. Bar-<br />
Tal<br />
Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Carbon and Nitrogen Transformations for Adjustment of Compost<br />
Application with Nitrogen Uptake by Wheat.........................................................664-675.<br />
David A. Kost, Jerry M. Bigham, Richard C. Stehouwer, Joel H. Beeghly, Randy<br />
Fowler, Samuel J. Traina, William E. Wolfe, and Warren A. Dick<br />
Chemical and Physical Properties of Dry Flue Gas Desulfurization Products .....676-686.<br />
Gurpal S. Toor, J. Derek Peak, and J. Thomas Sims<br />
Phosphorus Speciation in Broiler Litter and Turkey Manure Produced from<br />
Modified Diets......................................................................................................687-697.<br />
Gerard L. Velthof, Jaap A. Nelemans, Oene Oenema, and Peter J. Kuikman<br />
Gaseous Nitrogen and Carbon Losses from Pig Manure Derived from Different<br />
Diets ....................................................................................................................698-706.<br />
Wetlands and Aquatic Processes:<br />
Véronique Maître, Anne-Clau<strong>de</strong> Cosan<strong>de</strong>y, Aurèle Parriaux, and Claire Guenat<br />
A Methodology to Estimate the Denitrifying Capacity of a Riparian Wetland.......707-716.<br />
Evelyn E. Gaiser, Joel C. Trexler, Jennifer H. Richards, Daniel L. Chil<strong>de</strong>rs, David<br />
Lee, Adrienne L. Edwards, Leonard J. Scinto, Krish Jayachandran, Gregory B.<br />
Noe, and Ronald D. Jones<br />
Cascading Ecological Effects of Low-Level Phosphorus Enrichment in the Florida<br />
Evergla<strong>de</strong>s...........................................................................................................717-723.<br />
SHORT COMMUNICATIONS:<br />
38
B. E. Haggard, P. A. Moore, Jr., and P. B. DeLaune<br />
Phosphorus Flux from Bottom Sediments in Lake Eucha, Oklahoma..................724-728.<br />
BOOK REVIEWS:<br />
Yan Chen<br />
Biodiversity and Pest Management in Agroecosystems......................................729-730.<br />
M.S. Liphadzi<br />
The Environmental Planning Handbook: For Sustainable Communities and<br />
Regions ......................................................................................................................730.<br />
J.P. Michaud<br />
Exotic Pests and Diseases—Biology and Economics for Biosecurity.........................730.<br />
Nicholas W. Lepp<br />
Waste Management....................................................................................................731.<br />
Alison M. Cupples<br />
Principles and Applications of Soil Microbiology, Second Edition........................731-732.<br />
Steven Siciliano<br />
Field Sampling: Principles and Practices in Environmental Analysis..........................732.<br />
L. Wu<br />
Polyacrylami<strong>de</strong> (PAM) and Micronized PAM Soil Conditioners—50 Years of<br />
Progress.....................................................................................................................732.<br />
John Pichtel<br />
Handbook of Industrial and Hazardous Wastes Treatment, Second Edition..............733.<br />
Jack Watson<br />
Risk Communication, Third Edition......................................................................733-734.<br />
JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH<br />
Vol. 27, no. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005<br />
ORIGINAL ARTICLES:<br />
François Darchambeau and Isabelle Thys<br />
In situ filtration responses of Daphnia galeata to changes in food quality<br />
JPR Advance Access published on February 14, 2005........................................227-236<br />
S. Uye and H. Shimauchi<br />
Population biomass, feeding, respiration and growth rates, and carbon budget of<br />
the scyphomedusa Aurelia aurita in the Inland Sea of Japan<br />
JPR Advance Access published on January 18, 2005..........................................237-248<br />
Simone <strong>Mar</strong>iani, <strong>Mar</strong>ía Jesus Uriz, and Xavier Turon<br />
The dynamics of sponge larvae assemblages from northwestern Mediterranean<br />
nearshore bottoms<br />
JPR Advance Access published on January 27, 2005..........................................249-262<br />
S. L’Helguen, G. Slawyk, and P. Le Corre<br />
Seasonal patterns of urea regeneration by size-fractionated microheterotrophs in<br />
well-mixed temperate coastal waters<br />
JPR Advance Access published on January 18, 2005..........................................263-270<br />
A. F. González, J. Otero, A. Guerra, R. Prego, F. J. Rocha, and A. W. Dale<br />
Distribution of common octopus and common squid paralarvae in a wind-driven<br />
upwelling area (Ria of Vigo, northwestern Spain)<br />
JPR Advance Access published on February 7, 2005..........................................271-277<br />
Jaime Gómez-Gutiérrez and Carlos J. Robinson<br />
39
Embryonic, early larval <strong>de</strong>velopment time, hatching mechanism and interbrood<br />
period of the sac-spawning euphausiid Nyctiphanes simplex Hansen<br />
JPR Advance Access published on February 16, 2005........................................279-295<br />
BOOK REVIEWS:<br />
John T. Lehman<br />
The Lakes Handbook, Volume 1. Limnology and Limnetic Ecology. Edited by<br />
O’Sullivan P. E. and Reynolds C. S. (2004) Blackwell Science, Ltd. Oxford, UK.<br />
$204.95. ISBN 0-632-04797-6.<br />
JPR Advance Access published on February 21, 2005...............................................297<br />
Stig Skreslet<br />
Oceanography and <strong>Mar</strong>ine Environment of the Basque Country. Elsevier<br />
Oceanography Series 70. Edited by Á. Borja and M. Collins (2004) Elsevier B.V.,<br />
Amsterdam. ISBN 0-444-51581-X. ISSN 0422–9894 (Series).<br />
JPR Advance Access published on February 21, 2005...............................................299<br />
CORRIGENDUM:<br />
Irene Karlsson-Elfgren, Per Hyenstrand, and Emil Rydin<br />
Pelagic growth and colony division of Gloeotrichia echinulata in Lake Erken<br />
JPR Advance Access published on February 21, 2005...............................................301<br />
JOURNAL OF SHELLFISH RESEARCH<br />
Vol. 27, No. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005<br />
Proceedings 5th International Symposium on Abalone Biology, Fisheries, and<br />
Culture.........................................................................................................................931<br />
Preface .......................................................................................................................933<br />
H. Roy Gordon and Peter A. Cook<br />
World abalone fisheries and aquaculture update: supply and market dynamics ........ 935<br />
Zongqing Nie and Suping Wang<br />
The status of abalone culture in China........................................................................941<br />
Guofan Zhang, Huayong Que, Xiao Liu and Huasen Xu<br />
Abalone mariculture in China ......................................................................................947<br />
S. M. H. Huchette and J. Clavier<br />
Status of the ormer (Haliotis tuberculata L.) industry in Europe ................................. 951<br />
Adrian E. Stott, Toshio Takeuchi and Yasuyuki Koike<br />
Growth and survival of post-larval abalone Haliotis diversicolor supertexta<br />
(Lischke) using an alternative culture method in the light and dark ............................957<br />
Junyi Lu, Qiang Lin, Yanyan Sun, Junqing Sheng and Qingxiang Chen<br />
Effect of temperature on the early <strong>de</strong>velopment of Haliotis diversicolor Reeve...........963<br />
Sabine Daume and Stephen Ryan<br />
Fatty acid composition of eggs <strong>de</strong>rived from conditioned and wild caught greenlip<br />
abalone broodstock (Haliotis laevigata).......................................................................967<br />
Rodney D. Roberts, Heinrich F. Kaspar and Richard J. Barker<br />
Settlement of abalone (Haliotis iris) larvae in response to five species of coralline<br />
algae ...........................................................................................................................975<br />
Tomohiko Kawamura, Hi<strong>de</strong>ki Takami and Yoh Yamashita<br />
Effect of grazing by a herbivorous gastropod Homalopoma amussitatum, a<br />
competitor for food with post-larval<br />
abalone, on a community of benthic diatoms.............................................................. 989<br />
40
Jorge Arturo Simental, <strong>Mar</strong>ı´a <strong>de</strong>l Pilar Sa´nchez-Saavedra and Norberto Flores-<br />
Acevedo<br />
Growth and survival of juvenile red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) fed with<br />
macroalgae enriched with a benthic diatom film..........................................................995<br />
Ere`ndira Gorrostieta-Hurtado and Ricardo Searcy-Bernal<br />
Combined effects of light condition (constant illumination or darkness) and diatom<br />
<strong>de</strong>nsity on postlarval survival and growth of the abalone Haliotis rufescens ........... 1001<br />
Rob Day, Patrick Gilmour and Sylvain Huchette<br />
Effects of <strong>de</strong>nsity and food supply on postlarval abalone: behaviour, growth and<br />
mortality.....................................................................................................................1009<br />
Sabine Daume and Stephen Ryan<br />
Nursery culture of the abalone Haliotis laevigata: larval settlement and juvenile<br />
production using cultured algae or formulated feed. .................................................1019<br />
Sang-Min Lee<br />
Utilization of dietary protein, lipid, and carbohydrate by abalone Haliotis discus<br />
hannai: a review ........................................................................................................1027<br />
Porncharn Saitong<strong>de</strong>e, Pornrut Rabintossaporn, Prapee Sretarugsa, Tanes<br />
Poomtong and Prasert Sobhon<br />
Aminopeptidase reactivity in the digestive tract of adult abalone Haliotis asinina<br />
Linnaeus....................................................................................................................1031<br />
Shaobo Du and Kangsen Mai<br />
Effects of starvation on energy reserves in young juveniles of abalone Haliotis<br />
discus hannai Ino.......................................................................................................1037<br />
Wei Xu, Kangsen Mai, Wenbing Zhang, Zhiguo Liufu, Beiping Tan, Hongming Ma<br />
and Qinghui Ai<br />
Influence of dietary lipid sources on growth and fatty acid composition of juvenile<br />
abalone, Haliotis discus hannai Ino...........................................................................1041<br />
Wei Zhu, Kangsen Mai, Beiping Tan and Getian Wu<br />
Dietary pantothenic acid requirement of juvenile abalone, Haliotis discus hannai<br />
Ino. ............................................................................................................................1045<br />
G. Ponce-Dı´az, E. Serviere-Zaragoza, I. S. Racotta, T. Reynoso-Granados, A.<br />
Mazariegos-Villarreal, P. Monsalvo-Spencer and D. Lluch-Belda<br />
Growth and tissue biochemical composition of Haliotis fulgens at elevated<br />
temperatures in Baja California un<strong>de</strong>r two dried brown algal diets ...........................1051<br />
Sang-Min Lee, Kyoung-duck Kim and Tae Jin Kim<br />
Utilization of fermented skipjack tuna viscera as a dietary protein source replacing<br />
fish meal or soybean meal for juvenile abalone Haliotis discus hannai.....................1059<br />
Wenbing Zhang, Kangsen Mai, Wei Xu, Qinghui Ai, Beiping Tan, Zhiguo Liufu and<br />
Hongming Ma<br />
Effects of vitamins A and D on shell biomineralization of abalone Haliotis discus<br />
hannai, Ino.................................................................................................................1065<br />
Jianmin Zhao, Wenbing Zhang, Kangsen Mai, Wei Xu, Zhiguo Liufu, Hongming<br />
Ma, Qinghui Ai and Beiping Tan<br />
Shell microstructure, mineralogy and in vitro crystallization studies on the shell<br />
soluble matrix of abalone, Haliotis discus hannai Ino............................................... 1073<br />
Toshihiro Onitsuka, Tomohiko Kawamura, Satoshi Ohashi, Toyomitsu Horii and<br />
Yoshiro Watanabe<br />
41
Morphological changes in the radula of abalone Haliotis diversicolor aquatilis from<br />
post-larva to adult......................................................................................................1079<br />
Sasiporn Panasophonkul, Prapee Sretarugsa, Narumol Anunruang, Somjai<br />
Apisawetakan, Porncharn Saitong<strong>de</strong>e,<br />
Suchart E. Upathum, Tanes Poomtong, Peter J. Hanna and Prasert Sobhon<br />
Serotonergic and FMRF-ami<strong>de</strong>rgic neurons in the nerve ganglia of Haliotis asinina<br />
Linnaeus....................................................................................................................1087<br />
Chaitip Wanichanon, Praphaporn Laimek, Natpila Chitchulanon, Worawit<br />
Suphamungmee, Somjai Apisawetakan, Vichai Linthong, Prapee Sretarugsa,<br />
Maleeya Kruatrachue, Edward Suchart Upatham, Tanes Poomtong and Prasert<br />
Sobhon<br />
Sensory receptors on cephalic and epipodial tentacles of Haliotis asinina Linnaeus 1097<br />
Chaitip Wanichanon, Praphaporn Laimek, Vichai Linthong, Prapee Sretarugsa,<br />
Maleeya Kruatrachue, Edward Suchart Upatham, Tanes Poomtong and Prasert<br />
Sobhon<br />
Histology of hypobranchial gland and gill of Haliotis asinina Linnaeus .................... 1107<br />
Hongen Zhao, Jinshi Zhang, Lihong Huang and Limin Sun<br />
Biological zero point in hybrid Pacific abalone ..........................................................1113<br />
Mingyi Cai, Caihuan Ke, Zhiyong Wang, Shiqiang Zhou, Zhaoxia Zhang, Yilei<br />
Wang and Ziping Zhang<br />
Induction of gynogenetic diploids in the small abalone, Haliotis diversicolor<br />
supertexta..................................................................................................................1115<br />
Xiaolong Wang, Jingjie Hu, Jie Pan, Zhuojun Ma, Ke Bi, Quanqi Zhang and<br />
Zhenmin Bao<br />
Polyethylenimine promotes sperm-mediated transgene and oligonucleoti<strong>de</strong><br />
<strong>de</strong>livery in abalone Haliotis discus hannai. ...............................................................1123<br />
Scott F. Cummins and Peter J. Hanna<br />
I<strong>de</strong>ntification of an •-pepti<strong>de</strong> in Haliotis rubra with homology to the Lymnaea •-<br />
CDCP spawning pepti<strong>de</strong>........................................................................................... 1129<br />
Zhongbao Li and Changsheng Chen<br />
Genetic structure of cultured Haliotis diversicolor supertexta (Reeve) populations ..1135<br />
Taiwu Li, Wenxin Yang, Xiurong Su, Zhibiao Yang and Hao Guo<br />
RAPD analysis of genetic diversities of three species of abalone ............................ 1139<br />
Zhi Yong Wang, Ka Chai Ho, Da Hui Yu, Cai Huan Ke, Wai Yan Mak and Ka Hou<br />
Chu<br />
Lack of genetic divergence in nuclear and mitochondrial DNA between subspecies<br />
of two Haliotis species.............................................................................................. 1143<br />
Zhi Yong Wang, Cai-Huan Ke, Yi-Lei Wang, Zhi-Qun Xiao, Ka Chai Ho and Ka<br />
Hou Chu<br />
Genetic variations and divergence of two Haliotis species as revealed by AFLP<br />
analysis......................................................................................................................1147<br />
Toshimasa Kobayashi, Ikue Kawahara, Osamu Hasekura and Akihiro Kijima<br />
Genetic control of bluish shell color variation in the Pacific abalone, Haliotis discus<br />
hannai........................................................................................................................1153<br />
Motoyuki Hara, Masashi Sekino, Akira Kumagai and Tomoyoshi Yoshinaga<br />
The i<strong>de</strong>ntification of genetic resistance to amyotrophia in Japanese abalone,<br />
Haliotis discus discus.................................................................................................1157<br />
42
Jiangyong Wang, Zhixun Guo, Juan Feng, Guangfeng Liu, Liwen Xu, Bisheng<br />
Chen and Jinpei Pan<br />
Virus infection in cultured abalone, Haliotis diversicolor Reeve in Guangdong<br />
Province, China ........................................................................................................1163<br />
Bisheng Chen, Liwen Xu, Zhixun Guo and Hongzhi Yang<br />
A new species of Cryptobia sp. n. (Kineloplastida, Bodinina, Bodonidae) found in<br />
the blood of the farmed abalone, Haliotis diversicolor Reeve ...................................1169<br />
Wang Shuhong, Wang Yilei, Zhang Zhaoxia, Ralph Jack, Weng Zhaohong, Zou<br />
Zhihua and Zhang Ziping<br />
Response of innate immune factors in abalone Haliotis diversicolor supertexta to<br />
pathogenic or nonpathogenic infection .................................................................... 1173<br />
H. McDiarmid, R. Day and R. Wilson<br />
The ecology of polychaetes that infest abalone shells in Victoria, Australia ............ 1179<br />
F. Caballero-Alegrı´a, J. A. Rodrı´guez-Valencia and J. Castro-Gonza´lez<br />
Data on pink abalone, Haliotis corrugata (Gray 1828) with infested shells from the<br />
San Benito Archipelago, Baja California, Mexico ..................................................... 1189<br />
Ben T. Maynard, Peter J. Hanna and John A. H. Benzie<br />
Microsatellite DNA analysis of southeast Australian Haliotis laevigata (Donovan)<br />
populations — implications for ranching in Port Phillip Bay. .....................................1195<br />
Laura Rogers-Bennett, Brian L. Allen and Gary E. Davis<br />
Measuring abalone (Haliotis spage.) recruitment in California to examine<br />
recruitment<br />
overfishing and recovery criteria . ............................................................................ 1201<br />
Tosiatu Simizu and Kanako Uchino<br />
Effects of extensive seeding on abalone, Haliotis discus discus, abundance on the<br />
Pacific coast of Boso Peninsula, Japan ....................................................................1209<br />
Luke A. McAvaney, Robert W. Day, Cameron D. Dixon and Sylvain M. Huchette<br />
Gonad <strong>de</strong>velopment in see<strong>de</strong>d Haliotis laevigata: growth environment <strong>de</strong>termines<br />
initial reproductive investment .................................................................................. 1213<br />
Kanako Uchino, Tosiatu Simizu, Taneo Tanaka and Terukazu Shibata<br />
Abalone resource <strong>de</strong>cline and a recovery attempt in CHIBA Prefecture, Japan .......1219<br />
Cameron D. Dixon and Robert W. Day<br />
Growth responses in emergent greenlip abalone to <strong>de</strong>nsity reductions and<br />
translocations.............................................................................................................1223<br />
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY<br />
Vol. 50, No. 2, march 2005<br />
Articles<br />
Lindén, Eveliina, and Maiju Lehtiniemi<br />
The lethal and sublethal effects of the aquatic macrophyte Myriophyllum spicatum<br />
on Baltic littoral planktivores ................................................................................405-411<br />
Duffy, Meghan A., Spencer R. Hall, Alan J. Tessier, and <strong>Mar</strong>ianne Huebner<br />
Selective predators and their parasitized prey: Are epi<strong>de</strong>mics in zooplankton un<strong>de</strong>r<br />
top-down control? ................................................................................................412-420<br />
Hampton, Stephanie E.<br />
Increased niche differentiation between two Conochilus species over 33 years of<br />
climate change and food web alteration ..............................................................421-426<br />
43
Moeller, Robert E., Shawna Gilroy, Craig E. Williamson, Gabriella Grad, and<br />
Ruben Sommaruga<br />
Dietary acquisition of photoprotective compounds (mycosporine-like amino acids,<br />
carotenoids) and acclimation to ulraviolet radiation in a freshwater copepod ......427-439<br />
Rohrlack, Thomas, Kirsten Christoffersen, Elke Dittmann, Isabel Nogueira, Vitor<br />
Vasconcelos, and Thomas Börner<br />
Ingestion of microcystins by Daphnia: Intestinal uptake and toxic effects ............440-448<br />
Carotenuto, Ylenia, Thomas Wichard, Georg Pohnert, and Winfried Lampert<br />
Life history responses of Daphnia pulicaria to diets containing freshwater diatoms:<br />
Effects of nutritional quality versus polyunsaturated al<strong>de</strong>hy<strong>de</strong>s........................... 449-454<br />
Vijverberg, Jacobus, Hans Peter Koelewijn, and Wim L. T. van Densen<br />
Effects of predation and food on the population dynamics of the raptorial<br />
cladoceran Leptodora kindtii ................................................................................455-464<br />
Brind'Amour, Anik, Daniel Boisclair, Pierre Legendre, and Daniel Borcard<br />
Multiscale spatial distribution of a littoral fish community in relation to<br />
environmental variables .......................................................................................465-479<br />
Roman, M., X. Zhang, C. McGilliard, and W. Boicourt<br />
Seasonal and annual variability in the spatial patterns of plankton biomass in<br />
Chesapeake Bay .................................................................................................480-492<br />
Engel, A., I. Zon<strong>de</strong>rvan, K. Aerts, L. Beaufort, A. Benthien, L. Chou, B. Delille, J.-P.<br />
Gattuso, J. Harlay, C. Heemann, L. Hoffmann, S. Jacquet, J. Nejstgaard, M.-D.<br />
Pizay, E. Rochelle-Newall, U.Schnei<strong>de</strong>r, A. Terbrueggen, and U. Riebesell<br />
Testing the direct effect of CO2 concentration on a bloom of the coccolithophorid<br />
Emiliania huxleyi in mesocosm experiments .......................................................493-507<br />
Dupont, Christopher L., and Beth A. Ahner<br />
Effects of copper, cadmium, and zinc on the production and exudation of thiols by<br />
Emiliania huxleyi ..................................................................................................508-515<br />
Tang, Degui, <strong>Mar</strong>tin M. Shafer, Dawn A. Karner, and David E. Armstrong<br />
Response of nonprotein thiols to copper stress and extracellular release of<br />
glutathione in the diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii ..............................................516-525<br />
Berman, Tom, and David Wynne<br />
Assessing phytoplankton lysis in Lake Kinneret ..................................................526-537<br />
Karlsson, Jan, and Pär Byström<br />
Littoral energy mobilization dominates energy supply for top consumers in<br />
subarctic lakes..................................................................................................... 538-543<br />
Sarma, V. V. S. S., O. Abe, S. Hashimoto, A. Hinuma, and T. Saino<br />
Seasonal variations in triple oxygen isotopes and gross oxygen production in the<br />
Sagami Bay, central Japan ..................................................................................544-552<br />
Salmaso, Nico<br />
Effects of climatic fluctuations and vertical mixing on the interannual trophic<br />
variability of Lake Garda, Italy ..............................................................................553-565<br />
Gillett, David J., A. Fre<strong>de</strong>rick Holland, and Denise M. Sanger<br />
Secondary production of a dominant oligochaete (Monopylephorus rubroniveus) in<br />
the tidal creeks of South Carolina and its relation to ecosystem characteristics ..566-577<br />
Park, Geun-Ha, Kitack Lee, Chul-Min Koo, Hyun-Woo Lee, Chang-Kyu Lee, Jun-<br />
Seok Koo, Tongsup Lee, Shin-Hong Ahn, Hak-Gyoon Kim, and Byong-Kwon Park<br />
44
A sulfur hexafluori<strong>de</strong>-based Lagrangian study on initiation and accumulation of the<br />
red ti<strong>de</strong> Cochlodinium polykrikoi<strong>de</strong>s in southern coastal waters of Korea ...........578-586<br />
Arnold, William S., Gary L. Hitchcock, <strong>Mar</strong>c E. Frischer, Rik Wanninkhof, and Y.<br />
Peter Sheng<br />
Dispersal of an introduced larval cohort in a coastal lagoon ................................587-597<br />
Sahling, Heiko, Klaus Wallmann, Anke Dählmann, Rolf Schmaljohann, and Sven<br />
Petersen<br />
The physicochemical habitat of Sclerolinum sp. at Hook Ridge hydrothermal vent,<br />
Bransfield Strait, Antarctica .................................................................................598-606<br />
von Dassow, Peter, Rachel N. Bearon, and Michael I. Latz<br />
Bioluminescent response of the dinoflagellate Lingulodinium polyedrum to<br />
<strong>de</strong>veloping flow: Tuning of sensitivity and the role of <strong>de</strong>sensitization in controlling a<br />
<strong>de</strong>fensive behavior of a planktonic cell ................................................................607-619<br />
Schwalbach, Michael S., and Jed A. Fuhrman<br />
Wi<strong>de</strong>-ranging abundances of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria in the world<br />
ocean revealed by epifluorescence microscopy and quantitative PCR ................620-628<br />
Bachmann, Roger W., <strong>Mar</strong>k V. Hoyer, Susana B. Vinzon, and Daniel E. Canfield,<br />
Jr.<br />
The origin of the fluid mud layer in Lake Apopka, Florida ....................................629-635<br />
Harita, Yunosuke, Toshitaka Hori, and Masahito Sugiyama<br />
Release of trace oxyanions from littoral sediments and suspen<strong>de</strong>d particles<br />
induced by pH increase in the epilimnion of lakes ...............................................636-645<br />
Christian, James Robert<br />
Biogeochemical cycling in the oligotrophic ocean: Redfield and non-Redfield<br />
mo<strong>de</strong>ls .................................................................................................................646-657<br />
Waite, Anya M., Örjan Gustafsson, Odd Lindahl, and Peter Tiselius<br />
Linking ecosystem dynamics and biogeochemistry: Sinking fractionation of organic<br />
carbon in a Swedish fjord ....................................................................................658-671<br />
Townsend-Small, Amy, Michael E. McClain, and Jay A. Bran<strong>de</strong>s<br />
Contributions of carbon and nitrogen from the An<strong>de</strong>s Mountains to the Amazon<br />
River: Evi<strong>de</strong>nce from an elevational gradient of soils, plants, and river material .672-685<br />
Stedmon, Colin A., and Stiig <strong>Mar</strong>kager<br />
Resolving the variability of dissolved organic matter fluorescence in a temperate<br />
estuary and its catchment using PARAFAC analysis ...........................................686-697<br />
Voss, Kenneth J., and André Morel<br />
Bidirectional reflectance function for oceanic waters with varying chlorophyll<br />
concentrations: Measurements versus predictions ..............................................698-705<br />
Gabriel A. Singer, Michaela Panzenböck, Gabriele Weigelhofer, Christina<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>chesani, Johann Waringer, Wolfgang Wanek, and Tom J. Battin<br />
Flow history explains temporal and spatial variation of carbon fractionation in<br />
stream periphyton ................................................................................................706-712<br />
Statzner, Bernhard, Sylvie Mérigoux, and <strong>Mar</strong>ia Leichtfried<br />
Mineral grains in caddisfly pupal cases and streambed sediments: Resource use<br />
and its limitation through conflicting resource requirements ................................713-721<br />
Notes<br />
Obayashi, Yumiko, and Satoru Suzuki<br />
45
Proteolytic enzymes in coastal surface seawater: Significant activity of<br />
endopeptidases and exopeptidases ....................................................................722-726<br />
Vollmer, <strong>Mar</strong>tin K., Harvey A. Bootsma, Robert E. Hecky, Graeme Patterson, John<br />
D. Halfman, John M. Edmond, David H. Eccles, and Ray F. Weiss<br />
Deep-water warming trend in Lake Malawi, East Africa .......................................727-732<br />
Pond, David W., Angus Atkinson, Rachael S. Shreeve, Geraint Tarling, and Peter<br />
Ward<br />
Diatom fatty acid biomarkers indicate recent growth rates in Antarctic krill .........732-736<br />
Green, Andy J., <strong>Mar</strong>ta I. Sánchez, Francisco Amat, Jordi Figuerola, Francisco<br />
Hontoria, Olga Ruiz, and Francisco Hortas<br />
Dispersal of invasive and native brine shrimps Artemia (Anostraca) via waterbirds 737-742<br />
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES<br />
Vol. 50, No. 2 <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2005<br />
FEATURE ARTICLE:<br />
THEME SECTION on Sensory Biology<br />
Weissburg MJ, Browman HI<br />
Sensory biology: linking the internal and external ecologies of marine organisms<br />
More Information... |<br />
RESEARCH ARTICLES<br />
Suikkanen S, Fistarol GO, Granéli E<br />
Effects of cyanobacterial allelochemicals on a natural plankton community................:1-9<br />
Sunda WG, Litaker RW, Hardison DR, Tester PA<br />
Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) and its relation to algal pigments in diverse<br />
waters of the Belize coastal lagoon and barrier reef system....................................:11-22<br />
Ryan JP, Chavez FP, Bellingham JG<br />
Physical-biological coupling in Monterey Bay, California: topographic influences on<br />
phytoplankton ecology.............................................................................................:23-32<br />
Pahlow M<br />
Linking chlorophyll-nutrient dynamics to the Red[fi]eld N:C ratio with a mo<strong>de</strong>l of<br />
optimal phytoplankton growth..................................................................................:33-43<br />
Mouriño B, Fernán<strong>de</strong>z E, Pingree R, Sinha B, Escánez J, <strong>de</strong> Armas D<br />
Constraining effect of mesoscale features on carbon budget of photic layer in the<br />
NE subtropical Atlantic.............................................................................................:45-52<br />
Bulleri F<br />
Role of recruitment in causing differences between intertidal assemblages on<br />
seawalls and rocky shores.......................................................................................:53-65<br />
Binzer T, Mid<strong>de</strong>lboe AL<br />
From thallus to communities: scale effects and photosynthetic performance in<br />
macroalgae communities.........................................................................................:65-75<br />
Jenkins SR, Coleman RA, Santina PD, Hawkins SJ, Burrows MT, Hartnoll RG<br />
Regional scale differences in the <strong>de</strong>terminism of grazing effects in the rocky<br />
intertidal...................................................................................................................:77-86<br />
Wild C, Woyt H, Huettel M<br />
Influence of coral mucus on nutrient fluxes in carbonate sands ..............................:87-98<br />
Purkis SJ, Riegl B<br />
46
Spatial and temporal dynamics of Arabian Gulf coral assemblages quantified from<br />
remote-sensing and in situ monitoring data...........................................................:99-113<br />
Tomas F, Turon X, Romero J<br />
Effects of herbivores on a Posidonia oceanica seagrass meadow: importance of<br />
epiphytes.............................................................................................................:115-125<br />
Sherrard KM, LaBarbera M<br />
Form and function in juvenile ascidians. I. Implications of early juvenile<br />
morphologies for performance.............................................................................:127-138<br />
Sherrard KM, LaBarbera M<br />
Form and function in juvenile ascidians. II. Ontogenetic scaling of volumetric flow<br />
rates.....................................................................................................................:139-148<br />
Beukema JJ, Dekker R<br />
Decline of recruitment success in cockles and other bivalves in the Wad<strong>de</strong>n Sea:<br />
possible role of climate change, predation on postlarvae and fisheries...............:149-167<br />
Ruiz JM, Barreiro R, González JJ<br />
Biomonitoring organotin pollution with gastropods and mussels .........................:169-176<br />
King CK, Simpson SL, Smith SV, Stauber JL, Batley GE<br />
Short-term accumulation of Cd and Cu from water, sediment and algae by the<br />
amphipod Melita plumulosa and the bivalve Tellina <strong>de</strong>ltoidalis............................:177-188<br />
Lejeusne C, Chevaldonné P<br />
Population structure and life history of Hemimysis margalefi (Crustacea:<br />
Mysidacea), a ‘thermophilic’ cave-dwelling species benefiting from the warming of<br />
the NW Mediterranean.........................................................................................:189-199<br />
Simpson SD, Yan HY, Wittenrich ML, Meekan MG<br />
Response of embryonic coral reef fishes (Pomacentridae: Amphiprion s...........) to noise :201<br />
Östlund-Nilsson S, Curtis L, Nilsson GE, Grutter AS<br />
Parasitic isopod Anilocra apogonae, a drag for the cardinal fish Cheilodipterus<br />
quinquelineatus....................................................................................................:209-216<br />
Berumen ML, Pratchett MS, McCormick MI<br />
Within-reef differences in diet and body condition of coral-feeding butterflyfishes<br />
(Chaetodontidae).................................................................................................:217-227<br />
Abookire AA, Piatt JF<br />
Oceanographic conditions structure forage fishes into lipid-rich and lipid-poor<br />
communities in lower Cook Inlet, Alaska, USA....................................................:229-240<br />
Pomeroy PP, Hammond JA, Hall AJ, Lonergan M, Duck CD, Smith VJ, Thompson<br />
H<br />
Morbillivirus neutralising antibodies in Scottish grey seals Halichoerus grypus:<br />
assessing the effects of the 1988 and 2002 PDV epizootics...............................:241-250<br />
NOTE<br />
Jacob U, Mintenbeck K, Brey T, Knust R, Beyer K<br />
Stable isotope food web studies: a case for standardized sample treatment......:251-253<br />
Tuya F, Sanchez-Jerez P, Haroun RJ<br />
Influence of fishing and functional group of algae on sea urchin control of algal<br />
communities in the eastern Atlantic.....................................................................:255-260<br />
COMMENT<br />
Bradshaw CJA<br />
Survival of the fittest technology-problems estimating marine turtle mortality......:261-262<br />
47
THEME SECTION<br />
Sensory biology: linking the internal and external ecologies of marine organisms<br />
I<strong>de</strong>a and coordination: <strong>Mar</strong>c J. Weissburg, Howard I. Browman<br />
Contributors: Francesco Bonadonna, Todd E. Dennis, David M. Fields, Jan M.<br />
Hemmi, Dennis M. Higgs, Sönke Johnsen, Kristina S. Mead, Joachim Mogdans,<br />
Gabrielle A. Nevitt, Michael M. Walker, <strong>Mar</strong>c J. Weissburg, Jochen Zeil.............:263-307<br />
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES<br />
Vol. 288, 2005<br />
Seymour JR, Patten N, Bourne DG, Mitchell JG<br />
Spatial dynamics of virus-like particles and heterotrophic bacteria within a shallow<br />
coral reef system.........................................................................................................:1-8<br />
van Leeuwe MA, van Sikkelerus B, Gieskes WWC, Stefels J<br />
Taxon-specific differences in photoacclimation to fluctuating irradiance in an<br />
Antarctic diatom and a green flagellate......................................................................:9-19<br />
Lundholm N, Hansen PJ, Kotaki Y<br />
Lack of allelopathic effects of the domoic acid-producing marine diatom Pseudonitzschia<br />
multiseries.................................................................................................:21-33<br />
Molina V, Farías L, Eissler Y, Cuevas LA, Morales CE, Escribano R<br />
Ammonium cycling un<strong>de</strong>r a strong oxygen gradient associated with the Oxygen<br />
Minimum Zone off northern Chile (~23°S)...............................................................:35-43<br />
Waniek JJ, Holliday NP, Davidson R, Brown L, Henson SA<br />
Freshwater control of onset and species composition of Greenland shelf spring<br />
bloom.......................................................................................................................:45-57<br />
Granberg ME, Hansen R, Selck H<br />
Relative importance of macrofaunal burrows for the microbial mineralization of<br />
pyrene in marine sediments: impact of macrofaunal species and organic matter<br />
quality......................................................................................................................:59-74<br />
Ellison CK, Burton RS<br />
Application of bead array technology to community dynamics of marine<br />
phytoplankton..........................................................................................................:75-85<br />
Taylor DI, Schiel DR<br />
Self-replacement and community modification by the southern bull kelp Durvillaea<br />
antarctica...............................................................................................................:87-102<br />
Young EB, Lavery PS, van Elven B, Dring MJ, Berges JA<br />
Nitrate reductase activity in macroalgae and its vertical distribution in macroalgal<br />
epiphytes of seagrasses......................................................................................:103-114<br />
Baums IB, Hughes CR, Hellberg ME<br />
Men<strong>de</strong>lian microsatellite loci for the Caribbean coral Acropora palmata.............:115-127<br />
Faugeron S, <strong>Mar</strong>tínez EA, Correa JA, Billot C<br />
Long-term copper mine waste disposal in northern Chile associated with gene flow<br />
disruption of the intertidal kelp Lessonia nigrescens............................................:129-140<br />
McKee MP, Ward JE, MacDonald BA, Holohan BA<br />
Production of transparent exopolymer particles (TEP) by the eastern oyster<br />
Crassostrea virginica...........................................................................................:141-149<br />
Gibbs M, Funnell G, Pickmere S, Norkko A, Hewitt J<br />
48
Benthic nutrient fluxes along an estuarine gradient: influence of the pinnid bivalve<br />
Atrina zelandica in summer .................................................................................:151-164<br />
Wang G, Jiang X, Wu L, Li S<br />
Differences in the <strong>de</strong>nsity, sinking rate and biochemical composition of Centro tenuiremis (Copepo<br />
Castellani C, Irigoien X, Harris RP, Lampitt RS<br />
Feeding and egg production of Oithona similis in the North Atlantic....................:173-182<br />
Dorman JG, Bollens SM, Slaughter AM<br />
Population biology of euphausiids off northern California and effects of short timescale<br />
wind events on Euphausia pacifica............................................................:183-198<br />
Cotté C, Simard Y<br />
Formation of <strong>de</strong>nse krill patches un<strong>de</strong>r tidal forcing at whale feeding hot spots in<br />
the St. Lawrence Estuary.....................................................................................:199-210<br />
Behum ME, Brodie RJ, Staton JL<br />
Distribution of juvenile Uca pugnax and U. pugilator across habitats in a South<br />
Carolina estuary, assessed by molecular techniques..........................................:211-220<br />
Lye CM, Bentley MG, Clare AS, Sefton EM<br />
Endocrine disruption in the shore crab Carcinus maenas—a biomarker for benthic<br />
marine invertebrates?..........................................................................................:221-232<br />
Watanabe H, Tsuchida S, Fujikura K, Yamamoto H, Inagaki F, Kyo M, Kojima S<br />
Population history associated with hydrothermal vent activity inferred from genetic<br />
structure of neoverrucid barnacles around Japan................................................:233-240<br />
Machias A, Karakassis I, Giannoulaki M, Papadopoulou KN, Smith CJ, Somarakis<br />
S<br />
Response of <strong>de</strong>mersal fish communities to the presence of fish farms...............:241-250<br />
Weimerskirch H, Le Corre M, Jaquemet S, <strong>Mar</strong>sac F<br />
Foraging strategy of a tropical seabird, the red-footed booby, in a dynamic marine<br />
environment.........................................................................................................:251-261<br />
Jenkins GP<br />
Influence of climate on the fishery recruitment of a temperate, seagrass-associated<br />
fish, the King George whiting Sillagino<strong>de</strong>s punctata............................................:263-271<br />
McMahon CR, Hin<strong>de</strong>ll MA, Burton HR, Bester MN<br />
Comparison of southern elephant seal populations, and observations of a<br />
population on a <strong>de</strong>mographic knife-edge.............................................................:273-283<br />
Heithaus MR, Frid A, Wirsing AJ, Bej<strong>de</strong>r L, Dill LM<br />
Biology of sea turtles un<strong>de</strong>r risk from tiger sharks at a foraging ground..............:285-294<br />
REVIEW<br />
Wahlberg M, Westerberg H<br />
Hearing in fish and their reactions to sounds from offshore wind farms...............:295-309<br />
NEW SCIENTIST<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2486, February 12-18, 2005.<br />
NEWS<br />
Disaster mitigation plans take shape<br />
Monkey moniker goes up for auction<br />
Gene therapy trial suffers new setback<br />
Bunker-busting bombs back on US agenda<br />
Rare rhino evacuation plan scuppered<br />
49
End of Hubble's days in sight<br />
Experimental mini nuclear plant in the pipeline<br />
60 Seconds<br />
Climate change: Act now, before it is too late<br />
Climate change: Awaking the sleeping giants<br />
Mini star could offer haven for life<br />
Second '<strong>de</strong>signer' steroid i<strong>de</strong>ntified<br />
Soundbites<br />
Beagle 2 was doomed from the start<br />
Ancient tsunami scrambled the fossil record<br />
Alphabet similarities come in threes<br />
The bacterial future of fuel cells<br />
High hopes for DNA-based TB vaccine<br />
Free-falling ants steer themselves to safety<br />
Foxes make better dogs than wolves do<br />
First partial pancreas transplant a success<br />
The universe is no place for megastars<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>ijuana really does cause a headrush<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Night-vision camera turns night into day<br />
Light-emitting line reels in the big fish<br />
Million dollar reward to remove arsenic from water<br />
Spammers attack while looking legit<br />
Software converts camcor<strong>de</strong>r into back-up drive<br />
$100 laptop sought for world's poor<br />
Forget takeout, eat a print-out<br />
Invention<br />
'Podcasters' <strong>de</strong>liver radio-on-<strong>de</strong>mand<br />
FEATURES<br />
Alive! The race to create life from scratch<br />
What are the ingredients nee<strong>de</strong>d to create life? Meet the people who claim they<br />
are about to find out<br />
The Los Alamos bug<br />
The four ingredients to make artificial life<br />
Robots inspired by Segway balancing act<br />
A faltering advance in transport is bringing stability to the wobbly world of robots.<br />
Douglas Fox climbs aboard<br />
Climate change: Menace or myth?<br />
Global warming is a fantasy dreamed up by climate scientists, say the sceptics.<br />
Could they possibly be right, asks Fred Pearce<br />
Meet the global warming sceptics<br />
Hotly contested<br />
REGULARS<br />
Comment<br />
Editorial: Beagle 2, cock-ups and conspiracy; Editorial: Climate change threat may<br />
be un<strong>de</strong>restimated; The great university sell out;<br />
Books<br />
50
Blink by Malcolm Gladwell; Exploring Animal Behavior in Laboratory and Field<br />
edited by Bonnie J Ploger and Ken Yasukawa; Human Bones: A scientific and<br />
pictorial investigation by R McNeill Alexan<strong>de</strong>r; Gaming Hacks by Simon Carless;<br />
Pioneering Research: A risk worth taking by Donald Braben; A Sense of the<br />
Mysterious by Alan Lightman; Out now in paperback; Out now in paperback;<br />
Letters<br />
Dirty by <strong>de</strong>sign; Radio menace; Sensation seeking; Downsi<strong>de</strong> of fertility; Could I be<br />
there?; Rocks on ice; Fatties are green; Boy with a handbag; Railway bikes; For<br />
the record;<br />
Interview<br />
Interview: The heart healer;<br />
Back Page: Feedback<br />
Feedback;<br />
Back Page: Last Word<br />
Cool mist; Fresher for longer; Which way to turn?; Family line; Electrostatic fun;<br />
Other<br />
Politics Westminster diary<br />
NEW SCIENTIST<br />
Vol. 185, N0. 2487, February 19-25, 2005<br />
NEWS<br />
US scientists feel political heat<br />
Ariane 5 Heavy rocket noses ahead<br />
Francis Crick archive ma<strong>de</strong> available online<br />
The world is cooling, says NASA<br />
Children should be targeted with flu vaccinations<br />
Drug resistant 'super HIV' creates a scare<br />
North Korea boasts of nuclear arms<br />
60 Seconds<br />
A whiff of life on the Red Planet<br />
IVF embryos may be starved of a vital ingredient<br />
Stockpile bird flu vaccine now<br />
Soundbites<br />
Interstellar gas cloud linked to 'Snowball Earth'<br />
Galactic lightning may have formed Earth<br />
Privatising nuclear clean-up risks public safety<br />
Sperm damage claims over phone radiation<br />
Can 'feather foot' knock ol<strong>de</strong>st bird off its perch?<br />
Hearing restored in <strong>de</strong>af guinea pigs<br />
Middle ear so useful it evolved twice<br />
Young blood restores body's healing powers<br />
Mosquito eaters help beat <strong>de</strong>ngue fever<br />
Math skills evolved in<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt of language<br />
Mo<strong>de</strong>rn humans are ol<strong>de</strong>r than realised<br />
St John's wort as good as anti<strong>de</strong>pressant<br />
Forests return but gene pool shrinks<br />
Why vaccination by potato got chopped<br />
51
Titan's wind-blown message reaches Earth<br />
Slumbering Vesuvius is in a slump<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
New chip puts Pentium's reign in jeopardy<br />
Nanotubes get to grips with the 'burger bug'<br />
Swiping cellphones really does pay<br />
Silicon-based lasers to boost photonic circuits<br />
Satellite train trial gives the all-clear<br />
Invention<br />
Wi-Fi is the key to internet telephony<br />
FEATURES<br />
India special: Space programme presses ahead<br />
While <strong>de</strong>tractors say India cannot afford a space programme, Indira Gandhi<br />
believed it was vital for India's <strong>de</strong>velopment - the Moon is on the agenda<br />
India special: The silicon subcontinent<br />
Some of the biggest names in IT are heading towards Bangalore once more, but<br />
now it's the brightest minds they seek - not cheap labour<br />
India special: Young IT crowd lives it up<br />
Bangalore's young, upcoming IT people are changing the face of the city, and<br />
helping to revitalise the previously settled social scene<br />
India special: Millions get mobiles<br />
The country is becoming connected as never before, and the consequences could<br />
be dramatic<br />
India special: Making science pay<br />
R A Mashelkar is running a one-man campaign to create an enterprise culture in<br />
India: to bring science and industry together to benefit the country<br />
India special: Vaccines for pennies<br />
An Indian husband and wife team risked everything to build a facility producing the<br />
hepatitis B vaccine for just 28 cents per shot<br />
India special: Radio telescope offers dishes to savour<br />
Why astronomers are flocking to India's wine country<br />
India special: Closing the door on generic drugs<br />
Recent changes in India's unusual patent laws mean the country's recently<br />
booming drugs industry is risking everything to stay afloat<br />
India special: The returning scientist<br />
Physicist Shobo Bhattacharya spent <strong>de</strong>ca<strong>de</strong>s in leading US labs before returning<br />
to India to direct the Tata Institute for Fundamental Research in Mumbai<br />
India special: The IT pioneer<br />
In 1981, Nandan Nilekani was one of seven engineers who scraped together $250<br />
to start a software company in India - annual sales now exceed $1 billion<br />
India special: Welcome to the global village<br />
The internet has arrived in Pinjavakkam - a village with only 500 resi<strong>de</strong>nts,<br />
intermittent electricity and five telephone lines<br />
The mystery of disappearing gravity<br />
Gravity is a force unlike the other fundamental forces of the universe - and it might<br />
be leaking into other dimensions. Bruce Schechter follows its trail<br />
India<br />
52
India special: The next knowledge superpower<br />
In just a few years, more than 100 IT and science-based firms have located R&D<br />
labs in India. Big changes are making the country a centre of innovation<br />
India special: Embracing GM crops<br />
Some believe that genetically modified crops can go a long way towards tackling<br />
hunger in the <strong>de</strong>veloping world - some say they have no choice<br />
India special: Bold plans for the nuclear future<br />
India's energy needs are set to soar over the coming <strong>de</strong>ca<strong>de</strong>s and the nuclear<br />
option is embraced as the key to meeting the <strong>de</strong>mand<br />
India special: Sight for sore eyes<br />
An Indian charity hospital is pioneering an innovative stem-cell-based cure for<br />
blindness - its success rate is impressive<br />
REGULARS<br />
Comment<br />
Editorial: The temptation of edible vaccines; Editorial: Polio is down but not out;<br />
Cyber-antiquities;<br />
Books<br />
Letters<br />
Heating Earth's crust; Dyslexic drivers; Global genebanks; Selfish harmony;<br />
Religious road sense; Meaningless image; Adult AI; Scottish bikes; For the record;<br />
Interview<br />
Back Page: Feedback<br />
Feedback;<br />
Back Page: Last Word<br />
Cloud cover; Acid indigestion; Nostalgic nasturtiums?; Beating the bell;<br />
Other<br />
Careers Going the distance; Politics Westminster diary<br />
NEW SCIENTIST<br />
Vol. 185, N0. 2488, February 26-<strong>Mar</strong>ch 4, 2005.<br />
NEWS<br />
Iran's dam threatens Iraqi marshes<br />
Gold-standard online security co<strong>de</strong> cracked<br />
Space shuttle still 'go' for May launch<br />
FDA recommends Cox-2 drugs remain available<br />
UN fudges <strong>de</strong>cision on human embryo cloning ban<br />
Depleted uranium ammo may be replaced<br />
Tsunami waves exposed remnants of lost city<br />
60 Seconds<br />
Astronomers claim first 'dark galaxy' find<br />
Hydroelectric power's dirty secret revealed<br />
Bird flu in humans may be going undiagnosed<br />
<strong>Mar</strong>s: Not <strong>de</strong>ad but very much alive<br />
Genetic 'map' shows patterns in human variation<br />
Grazing drop of oil loops the loop<br />
Oil plans threaten whales' existence<br />
Soundbites<br />
53
'Superflare' offers insight into gamma-ray bursts<br />
Cultured bone offers novel wedding rings<br />
Soccer link to motor neuron disease<br />
Minke population study un<strong>de</strong>rmines whalers' claims<br />
Captive chimpanzees' release <strong>de</strong>clared a success<br />
A rousing chorus gets finches in the mood<br />
Earth's gamma rays more powerful than realised<br />
Synthetic enamel seals cavities painlessly<br />
Grow-your-own breast implants<br />
Coffee may reduce liver cancer risk<br />
Sterile GM fish reduce risk to wild stocks<br />
Neutrinos to spy on planet's core<br />
Good vibrations tell termites to tuck in<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Making the best of garbage gas<br />
Plastic pimples make better hard discs<br />
Anti-theft <strong>de</strong>vice shuts down PC monitors<br />
Room for seven on trip to the heavens<br />
New robots waddle with human efficiency<br />
Mirror trick leads electronic-paper chase<br />
Invention<br />
The touchy-feely si<strong>de</strong> of telecoms<br />
FEATURES<br />
Revealing or<strong>de</strong>r in the chaos<br />
See the world in a blur and the future comes into focus. Prepare to adjust your<br />
outlook, says <strong>Mar</strong>k Buchanan<br />
Psyche<strong>de</strong>lic medicine: Mind bending, health giving<br />
LSD and other hallucinogens were once consi<strong>de</strong>red promising psychiatric<br />
treatments. Vive la renaissance, says John Horgan<br />
Beware - shark repellent testing in progress<br />
What does it take to get a man-eating monster off your case? Michael Le Page<br />
braved the shark-infested waters of the Caribbean to find out<br />
The new age of sail<br />
Fuel bills are a growing proportion of cargo ship costs, so high-tech sails are<br />
becoming more of a pull<br />
REGULARS<br />
Comment<br />
Editorial: Which scientists can we trust?; 'Terminator' technology keeps GM crops<br />
in check;<br />
Books<br />
The Natural History of Southern New Zealand edited by John Darby and others; A<br />
Different Universe by Robert Laughlin; Obsessive Genius by Barbara Goldsmith;<br />
The History of the Laser by <strong>Mar</strong>io Bertolotti; Bestsellers - Online;<br />
Letters<br />
Flu unknowns; Warming to task; Big bang messages; Chances of survival; Almost<br />
seen by Galileo; Superbug busting; The Adams asteroids; Choose your groove;<br />
Trouble with oats; Taking a stand; Prime error; For the record;<br />
54
Interview<br />
Interview: Breaking the barriers;<br />
Back Page: Feedback<br />
Feedback;<br />
Back Page: Last Word<br />
Gnab gib; Snow squares; Beer or<strong>de</strong>rs; Jet streams; Who's in control?;<br />
Other<br />
Politics Washington diary; Histories Histories: Death and the outcast<br />
NEW SCIENTIST<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2489, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 5-11, 2005<br />
NEWS<br />
An end to black box black-out<br />
Global tobacco treaty comes into force<br />
Supply rocket carries cameras for shuttle inspection<br />
Columbia crew member's diary survived disaster<br />
DNA tests end for 9/11 victims<br />
Intimate piercings cause unreported health problems<br />
Rare monkey suffers as protection is withdrawn<br />
60 Seconds<br />
The hid<strong>de</strong>n cost of fighting bioterror<br />
Maximum pain is aim of new US weapon<br />
Musical notes leave a taste on the tongue<br />
Soundbites<br />
'Missing' dark matter was there all along<br />
Ancient bacteria woken from <strong>de</strong>ep Alaskan sleep<br />
'Sperm clock' could pinpoint time of a rape<br />
Double-slit effect seen over time too<br />
Ripples of light might make you invisible<br />
Autism rises <strong>de</strong>spite MMR ban in Japan<br />
How we make food cost the earth<br />
Blazing core closes gap on bubble fusion<br />
Twin <strong>Mar</strong>s rovers in instrument mix-up<br />
Climate change blamed for shift in lake life<br />
Hubble gyro trick could win telescope time<br />
Hormone-based cancer treatment affects male thinking<br />
HIV virus in sexual selection puzzle<br />
Tracking linked to voles' sex upset<br />
Turning salaman<strong>de</strong>r larvae into killing machines<br />
Powerful radio pulses puzzle astronomers<br />
The life and <strong>de</strong>ath of ancient texts<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Phone viruses: how bad is it?<br />
Gold cure for heavy industry's hangover<br />
Standard scale for computer security flaws<br />
UK government acts over computer viruses<br />
Charge a battery in just six minutes<br />
55
Invention<br />
A cellphone is the only gadget you need<br />
FEATURES<br />
Higher laws and the mind-boggling complexity of life<br />
Add the limits of computation to the age of the universe and what do you get? A<br />
radical take on the emergence of life, says Paul Davies<br />
Teenagers special: The original rebels<br />
Are humans the first and only species to have teenagers? Lynn Dicks digs among<br />
our ancestors' remains for the origin and meaning of adolescence<br />
Teenagers special: Brain storm<br />
Some parts of the brain are still <strong>de</strong>veloping through adolescence. Could this<br />
explain some of teenagers' unique behavioural traits?<br />
Teenagers special: Going all the way<br />
Do teenagers need more sex education, or less? It is a field fraught with subjective<br />
views - New Scientist examines the facts<br />
Teenagers special: Bully boys<br />
Bullies, it is commonly believed, often come from unaffectionate or violent families -<br />
but could this typical view of the bully be wrong?<br />
Teenagers special: Live now, pay later<br />
In the west, some of the biggest threats to teenagers long-term health stem from<br />
their own bad habits<br />
REGULARS<br />
Comment<br />
Editorial: The real cost of US bio<strong>de</strong>fence; Editorial: Pain-maximising weapon could<br />
be abused; Medicine safety - a risk we have to swallow;<br />
Books<br />
Aliens: Why they are here by Bryan Appleyard; Insights from Insects: What bad<br />
bugs can teach us; Trading the Genome: Investigating the commodification of bioinformation;<br />
The Knife Man by Wendy Moore; Catastrophe: Risk and response by<br />
Richard Posner; Oxford Dictionary of Scientific Quotations edited by William<br />
Bynum and Roy Porter; Bathsheba's Breast by James Olsen; The Kingdon Pocket<br />
Gui<strong>de</strong> to African Mammals; Life's Solutions by Simon Conway Morris;<br />
Letters<br />
Methane catastrophe; Climate feedbacks; Debugging hospitals; Dyslexia and<br />
<strong>de</strong>nial; Languages with soul; Light housekeeping; Did the earth move?; Heating<br />
Earth's crust; Lost in virtual space;<br />
Interview<br />
Back Page: Feedback<br />
Feedback;<br />
Back Page: Last Word<br />
Finding nemo's flies; Gin on the rocks; Bla<strong>de</strong> runner; Earth to asparagus...;<br />
Other<br />
Essay Essay: Making a myth of climate change; Politics Westminster diary;<br />
Histories Histories: Hats off to Mr Henley; Careers Coming up on the insi<strong>de</strong>...<br />
56
NEW SCIENTIST<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2490, march 12-18, 2005<br />
NEWS<br />
Illegal GM soybeans go legit in Brazil<br />
US War on Drugs a 'tragic failure'<br />
Kidney 'swap shop' offers patients hope<br />
Monarch butterfly in sud<strong>de</strong>n trouble<br />
Paperwork stops space privateers building lunar lan<strong>de</strong>r<br />
Ecstasy may trigger gene-linked <strong>de</strong>pression<br />
NASA sends Columbia wreckage for external study<br />
60 Seconds<br />
Why it is hard to share the wealth<br />
Forest policy in the dock as court battle ignites<br />
3D animation gives evi<strong>de</strong>nce more bite<br />
Soundbites<br />
Peckish pilferers caught out by snack attack<br />
Simple twist untangles quantum computing<br />
Row erupts over WHO's malaria 'miscalculation'<br />
Prehistoric farmers felled forests after all<br />
Flores fossil passes unique species test<br />
Laughing all the way to a healthier heart<br />
Evi<strong>de</strong>nce of dark energy missed 30 years ago<br />
Embryo cells not like peas in a pod<br />
Sooty skies blight Asia's climate<br />
Perform last if you want to come first<br />
Breakthrough in premature ageing<br />
Online database reveals normal gene expression<br />
Sea life's long-term highs and lows<br />
Migraine herb may help fight cancer<br />
Worst effects of toxic mould are 'in the mind'<br />
Young star's X-rays are a mystery<br />
Arctic ozone wiped out by solar storms<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Light microscope sees the nanoworld<br />
Fingerprinting technique enjoys notable success<br />
Robotic aircraft could map forest fires<br />
Owner's face provi<strong>de</strong>s cellphone protection<br />
Channel-switcher torments couch potatoes<br />
Colour profile exposes faked or stolen gems<br />
Roll-up digital displays move closer to market<br />
Invention<br />
Vi<strong>de</strong>otape reaches the end of the reel<br />
FEATURES<br />
The bubble that ate the universe<br />
Space-time fizzes with bubbles popping in and out of existence all across the<br />
cosmos - they could <strong>de</strong>stroy the universe and everything in it<br />
57
Charity begins at Homo sapiens<br />
Why do people choose to help complete genetic strangers? Because evolution has<br />
given human nature an unexpected twist, says <strong>Mar</strong>k Buchanan<br />
It's written all over your face<br />
Even the coolest criminal cannot hi<strong>de</strong> a guilty countenance. Susan Gaidos tests<br />
her mettle against a new breed of lie <strong>de</strong>tector<br />
Looking for trouble with the 'one-minute scan'<br />
High-tech body scans are the latest health craze for the "worried well". Are they<br />
really such a good i<strong>de</strong>a, asks James Kingsland<br />
REGULARS<br />
Comment<br />
Editorial: Egg and sperm donating dilemma; Is nanotechnology "the next GM"?;<br />
Books<br />
Victor Regnault and the Advance of Photography: The art of avoiding errors by<br />
Laurie Dahlberg; How the Earthquake Bird Got its Name and Other Tales of an<br />
Unbalanced Nature by H H Shugart; Rats by Robert Sullivan; Electronic Brains by<br />
Mike Hally; If Dogs Could Talk: Exploring the canine mind by Vilmos Csanyi;<br />
Bestsellers - London;<br />
Letters<br />
Don't mix viruses; Better bombs; Unite and fight...; Unlimited space; Bye bye black<br />
holes?; For the birds; Not only for the birds; The business end; Bods of the gaps;<br />
Not the case; For the record; Heavy smoking; Patent absurdity; Fat figures;<br />
Interview<br />
Interview: Hooked on catfish;<br />
Back Page: Feedback<br />
Feedback;<br />
Back Page: Last Word<br />
Turn left at <strong>Mar</strong>s; No-ball snow; Ash for dash; Pregnant pepper; Hot in the sack;<br />
Other<br />
Politics Westminster diary; Careers Baywatch...<br />
NEW SCIENTIST<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2491, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 19-25, 2005.<br />
NEWS<br />
Global warming may dry up economies too<br />
French nuclear material may be easy target<br />
US mercury pollution more pervasive than realised<br />
Imported plants threaten Australian flora<br />
Virus writers focus on Instant Messenger<br />
US cancels Agent Orange study in Vietnam<br />
Mapping the proteins that make up a human<br />
60 Seconds<br />
Asia primed for next big quake<br />
Will low-fat foods sway biotech sceptics?<br />
Superflares could kill unprotected astronauts<br />
Soundbites<br />
Pay up, you are being watched<br />
58
The real reason for Atkins diet weight loss<br />
Complete reconstructed Nean<strong>de</strong>rthal skeleton revealed<br />
Human embryonic stem cells grown animal-free<br />
Better plane ventilation could cut spread of disease<br />
Black hole-like phenomenon created by colli<strong>de</strong>r<br />
Vampire bats are champion sprinters<br />
Flapping flags show how birds fly<br />
Protein recovered from dinosaur eggs<br />
Blindness risk is in your genes<br />
Seven times lucky for the pig tamers<br />
Alzheimer's plaques revealed in living brains<br />
Individual electrons line up to be counted<br />
Rooting out arsenic in Bangla<strong>de</strong>shi wells<br />
X chromosome activity different in every woman<br />
Sequencing reveals origins of X chromosome<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Phase-change memory chips could win global jackpot<br />
New photofit 'evolves' a suspect's face<br />
Chameleon-like smart phones do impressions<br />
Laptop <strong>de</strong>signed to break in half<br />
Mouse smoothes out troublesome hand tremors<br />
Classic Japanese clock to spring back to life<br />
Invention<br />
The new pioneers of map making<br />
FEATURES<br />
13 things that do not make sense<br />
There are many scientific observations that simply <strong>de</strong>fy explanation. New Scientist<br />
takes a tour of exceptions that could rewrite all the rules<br />
Crazy about transistor crystals<br />
Scandal nearly sank a revolutionary new chip without trace. Good thing some<br />
people know a great i<strong>de</strong>a when they see one<br />
The cure that came in from the cold<br />
As our antibiotic <strong>de</strong>fences crumble and new diseases emerge, there is an old i<strong>de</strong>a<br />
that could save us the nick of time - Robin Orwant follows the trail<br />
REGULARS<br />
Comment<br />
Editorial: On the uptake of healthier GM foods; Editorial: Turning scandal into<br />
success; Science to offer hope to Africa;<br />
Books<br />
Assembling the Tree of Life edited by Joel Cracraft and Michael J Donoghue;<br />
Keepers of the Spring: Reclaiming our water in an age of globalization by Fred<br />
Pearce; The 1702 Chair of Chemistry at Cambridge edited by <strong>Mar</strong>y Archer and<br />
Christopher Haley; The Disconnected Rivers by Ellen Woh; Bicycle: The history by<br />
David V Herlihy; Stalking the Riemann Hypothesis: The quest to find the hid<strong>de</strong>n<br />
law of numbers by Dan Rockmore; Being read by Virginia Zakian, professor of life<br />
sciences; Being read by Harriet Ritvo, professor of history;<br />
Letters<br />
59
The next pan<strong>de</strong>mic; Stick to science; Soccer scare; No pain, no gain; Harvesting<br />
vaccines; Frail Russian woman; Bad climate; Gum-free streets; Empty and clean;<br />
Make use of methane; Harrison's bells; Bar to progress; Going with the wind;<br />
warming - or freezing; RAS syndrome;<br />
Interview<br />
Interview: The running man;<br />
Back Page: Feedback<br />
Feedback;<br />
Back Page: Last Word<br />
Congener congeniality; Siren scream; Fly, fly away;<br />
Other<br />
Politics Westminster diary; Histories Histories: Ungentlemanly conduct; Careers<br />
Trailblazing in Europe.<br />
NEW SCIENTIST<br />
Vol. 185, No. 2492, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 26-April 1, 2005.<br />
NEWS<br />
Face blindness runs in families<br />
UK's final farm-scale GM evaluation conclu<strong>de</strong>s<br />
Indian-ma<strong>de</strong> cheap drugs threatened by patent law<br />
Coal-fired power plants to tra<strong>de</strong> mercury pollution<br />
Huge US market fuels illegal logging crisis<br />
School computers may be overrated<br />
French nuclear tests may have caused cancers<br />
Fuel tax likely for European airlines<br />
60 Seconds<br />
Rogue weeds <strong>de</strong>fy rules of genetics<br />
Cracks may force shutdown of UK reactors<br />
US flu vaccine trials may be effort wasted<br />
Soundbites<br />
Glow of alien planets glimpsed at last<br />
Kids - do not let gen<strong>de</strong>r bend your fen<strong>de</strong>r<br />
Greenpeace slams seal hunt quotas<br />
Wrinkles could be less than skin <strong>de</strong>ep<br />
Crater count led <strong>Mar</strong>s historians astray<br />
Robot finds life in a <strong>Mar</strong>s-like <strong>de</strong>sert<br />
No way to heaven for born heathens<br />
Forests belch out greenhouse gas<br />
Green tea may increase birth <strong>de</strong>fect risk<br />
An apple a day may keep the doctor away<br />
Bar-tailed godwit is king of the skies<br />
Prion antibodies open way for vCJD vaccine<br />
Neptune's rings are fading away<br />
Oysters may <strong>de</strong>serve their sexy reputation<br />
TECHNOLOGY<br />
Following the trail of the zombie PCs<br />
Oil and water mix for better drugs<br />
60
New Powerbook controlled with a shake<br />
Snooze button addicts <strong>de</strong>feated by runaway clock<br />
Personalised robot aircraft for US soldiers<br />
Invention<br />
The personalised traffic jam buster<br />
FEATURES<br />
Introducing the glooper computer<br />
How do you turn a blob of jelly into a thinking, feeling liquid brain? New Scientist<br />
investigates the <strong>de</strong>velopment of chemical-based processors<br />
When lava flows uphill<br />
In July 2003, the volcano on the Caribbean island of Montserrat blew its top - but<br />
this was no ordinary eruption<br />
Micro scalpel offers unprece<strong>de</strong>nted precision<br />
What if you could cut a window into a living cell and watch it working? Now you<br />
can, says Karen Schmidt<br />
Cannabis: Too much, too young?<br />
It is known that taking a lot of cannabis over a short period can cause psychotic<br />
symptoms, but the long term effects are still hotly <strong>de</strong>bated<br />
REGULARS<br />
Comment<br />
Editorial: Edge of the global warming abyss; Editorial: Back-pedalling on cannabis<br />
policy?; When drugs are too blunt an instrument;<br />
Books<br />
All in My Head: An epic quest to cure an unrelenting, totally unreasonable, and<br />
only slightly enlightening headache by Paula Kamen; Perfectly Reasonable<br />
Deviations from the Beaten Track: The letters of Richard P. Feynman; On the Wing<br />
by Alan Tennant; Philip's Dark Skies Map; A Geological Time Scale 2004 edited by<br />
Felix Gradstein, Jim Ogg and Alan Smith; The Hopes of Snakes by Lisa Couturier;<br />
Earthly <strong>de</strong>lights; Meanwhile in heaven; Do answer back;<br />
Letters<br />
Terminator vista; Language counts; Trials and tribulation; Self-education; Nature<br />
isn't God; No need for a Creator; Acci<strong>de</strong>nt prone; Peak problem; For the record;<br />
Drug <strong>de</strong>lving; Close to the wing-sail; Ghost arithmetic;<br />
Interview<br />
Interview: Electronic maestros;<br />
Back Page: Feedback<br />
Feedback;<br />
Back Page: Last Word<br />
A sting in the mouth; Planet pinball;<br />
Other<br />
Politics Washington diary; Histories Histories: Nearer my god to thee;<br />
OCEANS & COASTAL MANAGEMENT<br />
Vol. 47, No. 11-12, 2004.<br />
The Gulf of Mexico: towards an integration of coastal management with large<br />
marine ecosystem management • ARTICLE...................................................... 537-563<br />
Alejandro Yáñez-Arancibia and John W. Day<br />
61
3.<br />
The economic significance of the Gulf of Mexico related to population, income,<br />
employment, minerals, fisheries and shipping • ARTICLE.................................. 565-580<br />
Charles M. Adams, Emilio Hernan<strong>de</strong>z and James C. Cato<br />
Some socio-economic indicators in the Mexican states of the Gulf of Mexico •<br />
ARTICLE ............................................................................................................. 581-596<br />
Patricia Sánchez-Gil, Alejandro Yáñez-Arancibia, José Ramírez-Gordillo, Jonh W.<br />
Day and Paul H. Templet<br />
A review of ecological impacts of oil and gas <strong>de</strong>velopment on coastal ecosystems<br />
in the Mississippi Delta • ARTICLE..................................................................... 597-623<br />
Jae-Young Ko and John W. Day<br />
Coastal water quality assessment in the Yucatan Peninsula: management<br />
implications • ARTICLE....................................................................................... 625-639<br />
Jorge A. Herrera-Silveira, Francisco A. Comin, Nancy Aranda-Cirerol, Luis Troccoli<br />
and Luis Capurro<br />
Cleaner production and environmentally sound biotechnology for the prevention of<br />
upstream nutrient pollution in the Mexican coast of the Gulf of México • ARTICLE 641-670<br />
Eugenia J. Olguín, Gloria Sánchez and Gabriel Mercado<br />
The use of wetlands in the Mississippi Delta for wastewater assimilation: a review<br />
• ARTICLE........................................................................................................... 671-691<br />
J.W. Day, Jr., Jae-Young Ko, J. Rybczyk, D. Sabins, R. Bean, G. Berthelot, C.<br />
Brantley, L. Cardoch, W. Conner et al.<br />
Assessing coastal management plans using watershed spatial mo<strong>de</strong>ls for the<br />
Mississippi <strong>de</strong>lta, USA, and the Ususmacinta–Grijalva <strong>de</strong>lta, Mexico • ARTICLE 693-708<br />
Enrique Reyes, John W. Day, Ana Laura Lara-Domínguez, Patricia Sánchez-Gil,<br />
David Zarate Lomelí and Alejandro Yáñez-Arancibia<br />
Integration of subsystems mo<strong>de</strong>ls as a tool toward <strong>de</strong>scribing feeding interactions<br />
and fisheries impacts in a large marine ecosystem, the Gulf of Mexico • ARTICLE 709-725<br />
Laura Vidal and Daniel Pauly<br />
Environmental sub-regions in the Gulf of Mexico coastal zone: the ecosystem<br />
approach as an integrated management tool, • ARTICLE................................. 727-757<br />
Alejandro Yáñez-Arancibia and John W. Day<br />
SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLOGICA<br />
Vol. 84, No. 1-2, December 2004.<br />
Títol: Syllidae from the continental shelf off Aveiro (NW Portugal) with the<br />
<strong>de</strong>scription of a new species, Syllis licheri (Annelida, Polychaeta, Syllidae)<br />
Autor: Ravara, A.; San <strong>Mar</strong>tin, G.; Moreira, M. H. pg - 1<br />
Títol: Deep sea Syllidae from the Pacific Ocean, collected during cruises with the<br />
RV Sonne (Annelida, Polychaeta, Syllidae)<br />
Autor: San <strong>Mar</strong>tin, G. .................................................................................................. 13<br />
Títol: Die Typen und Typoi<strong>de</strong> <strong>de</strong>s Natur-Museums Senckenberg, Nr. 85. Type<br />
catalogue of the Annelida: Polychaeta in the collections of the Senckenberg-<br />
Museum in Frankfurt am Main, Germany<br />
Autor: Fiege, D.; Wehe, T. .......................................................................................... 27<br />
Títol: Four new species and new records of Meconematinae in Thailand (Insecta,<br />
Ensifera, Tettigoniidae)<br />
62
Autor: Sanger, K.; Helfert, B. ...................................................................................... 45<br />
Títol: Agapanthia erzurumensis Onalp 1974, a new synonym of Theophilea<br />
cylindricollis Pic 1895 (Insecta, Coleoptera, Cerambycidae)<br />
Autor: Sama, G. .......................................................................................................... 59<br />
Títol: Bionomics of the horse-chestnut leaf miner Cameraria ohri<strong>de</strong>lla Deschka &<br />
Dimic 1986, a pest on Aesculus hippocastanum in Europe (Insecta, Lepidoptera,<br />
Gracillariidae)<br />
Autor: Freise, J. F.; Heitland, W. ................................................................................. 61<br />
Títol: [The composition and function of insect communities living in catkins of<br />
willows (Salix spp.)] (Insecta: Coleoptera; Diptera; Lepidoptera; Thysanoptera;<br />
Hemiptera; Hymenoptera)<br />
Autor: Urban, C.; Kopelke, J.-P. .................................................................................. 81<br />
Títol: [The evolutionary history of tunicates and the origin of their polymorphic<br />
generations] (Tunicata)<br />
Autor: Gudo, M. .......................................................................................................... 97<br />
Títol: Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for a sister group relationship between the Madagascan mesites<br />
(Mesitornithidae) and the cuckoos (Cuculidae) (Aves)<br />
Autor: Mayr, G.; Ericson, P. G. M. ............................................................................ 119<br />
Títol: Comments on the genus Galea Meyen 1833 with <strong>de</strong>scription of Galea<br />
monasteriensis n. sp. from Bolivia (Mammalia, Ro<strong>de</strong>ntia, Caviidae)<br />
Autor: Solmsdorff, K.; Kock, D.; Hohoff, C. ............................................................... 137<br />
ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA<br />
Vol. 34, No. 2, march 2005<br />
Origins of Hippopotamidae (Mammalia, Cetartiodactyla): towards resolution<br />
Jean-Renaud Boisserie, Fabrice Lihoreau, Michel Brunet...........................................119<br />
Phylogenetics of the common raven complex (Corvus: Corvidae) and the utility of<br />
ND4, COI and intron 7 of the -fibrinogen gene in avian molecular systematics...........145<br />
Chris R. Feldman, Kevin E. Omland<br />
A phylogeny of the fossil and extant zeiform-like fishes, Upper Cretaceous to<br />
Recent, with comments on the putative zeomorph cla<strong>de</strong> (Acanthomorpha)................157<br />
James C. Tyler, Francesco Santini<br />
Molecular evi<strong>de</strong>nce for a fourth species within the Isotoma viridis group (Insecta,<br />
Collembola) .................................................................................................................177<br />
Ulrich Burkhardt, Juliane Filser<br />
Phylogenetic relationships of the globally distributed freshwater prawn genus<br />
Macrobrachium (Crustacea: Decapoda: Palaemonidae): biogeography, taxonomy<br />
and the convergent evolution of abbreviated larval <strong>de</strong>velopment................................187<br />
Nicholas P. Murphy, Christopher M. Austin<br />
Species names and metaphyly: a case study in Discodorididae (Mollusca,<br />
Gastropoda, Euthyneura, Nudibranchia, Doridina)......................................................199<br />
Benoît Dayrat, Terrence M. Gosliner<br />
63