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BOLETÍN NO. 200 - Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología

BOLETÍN NO. 200 - Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología

BOLETÍN NO. 200 - Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología

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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 />

BRIGGS, JOHN C., 1974. <strong>Mar</strong>ine Zoogeography.—New York: McGraw-Hill Book<br />

Company, 475 p.<br />

TUREKIAN, KARL K., 1968. Oceans.—Englewood Cliffs, New Cork: Prentice-Hall, Inc.,<br />

120 p.<br />

TESIS<br />

MIRANDA BAEZA, ANSELMO, <strong>200</strong>5. Remoción <strong>de</strong> materia particulada en efluentes <strong>de</strong><br />

estanquería <strong>de</strong> camarón con Anadara tuberculosa (Pelecypoda: Arcidae)<br />

(Sowerby, 1833). Tesis <strong>de</strong> Doctorado. CICESE, 124 p.<br />

CATÁLOGOS, MEMORIAS<br />

SIGMA <strong>200</strong>6-<strong>200</strong>7. Bioquímicos, Reactivos y Kits para Investigación en <strong>Ciencias</strong><br />

<strong>de</strong> la Vida.—México: SIGMA, 2488 p.<br />

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

AMPHIPACIFICA:<br />

Vol. II, No. 4, October 10, <strong>200</strong>0.<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 74, No. 6, June <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Vol. 75, No. 1, July <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

CLIMATE DIAG<strong>NO</strong>STICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 11/05, November <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 19, No. 5, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vol. 78, Part. 8, September <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 11, No. 6, November <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

3


ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 139, No. 1, January <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 12, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

ESTUARIES:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 4, August <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

FARO, EL:<br />

No. 57, 1o. <strong>de</strong> diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

No. 58, enero 5 <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

FORMACIÓN AMBIENTAL:<br />

No. 37, julio-diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

GACETA UNAM:<br />

No. 3,861, 15 <strong>de</strong> diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

No. 3,862, 5 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

No. 3,863, 9 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

No. 3,864, 12 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

No. 3,865, 16 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

No. 3,866, 19 <strong>de</strong> enero <strong>de</strong> <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 14, No. 6, November <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 62, No. 7, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Vol. 62, No. 8, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. XVII, No. 3, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 32, No. 12, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 93, No. 6, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 6, November-December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 27, No. 10, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

4


Vol. 54, No. 4, November <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 301, October 11, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Vol. 302, November 4, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Vol. 303, November 21, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 48, Nos. 9-10, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 4, August <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Vol. 13, No. 5, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

REIMPRESOS<br />

BENÍTEZ PARDO, DANIEL, FRANCISCO FLORES VERDUGO y JUAN IGNACIO<br />

VALDEZ HERNANDEZ, <strong>200</strong>2. Reproducción vegetativa <strong>de</strong> dos especia arbóreas<br />

en un manglar <strong>de</strong> la costa norte <strong>de</strong>l Pacífico mexicano. Ma<strong>de</strong>ra y Bosques 8(2):<br />

57-71<br />

5


AMPHIPACIFICA<br />

Volume II, Number 4<br />

The species of Lismata (Cari<strong>de</strong>a:Hippolytidae) from the Eastern Pacific Ocean<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>y E. Wicksten...........................................................................................................................................3<br />

The amphipod family Melitidae on the Pacific coast of North America. Part II. The Maera-<br />

Ceradocus complex<br />

Traudl Krapp-Shickel & Norma E. Jarret.....................................................................................................23<br />

The Whale-Lice (Amphipoda: Cyamidae) of the Northeastern Pacific Region<br />

Leo <strong>Mar</strong>golis, T. E. Mcdonald, & E. L. Bousfield.........................................................................................63<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY<br />

Vol. 74, No. 6, June <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Comparison of Active versus Passive Atmospheric Samplers for Some Current-Use Pestici<strong>de</strong>s<br />

................................................................................................................................................................ 1018<br />

D. T. Waite, N. R. Droneck, L. Tuduri, J. F. Sproull, D. F. Chau, D. V. Quiring<br />

Organochlorine Extraction Based on the Combination of Polyaluminum Chlori<strong>de</strong> and<br />

Octa<strong>de</strong>cyl Silica Pow<strong>de</strong>r: Application to Lake Water .............................................................................1026<br />

T. Takazawa, K. Kitamura, N. Suzuki, Y. Shibata, M. Morita<br />

Reduction of Indoor Formal<strong>de</strong>hy<strong>de</strong> Concentrations and Subjective Symptoms in a Gross<br />

Anatomy Laboratory ...............................................................................................................................1027<br />

T. Takigawa, M. Usami, Y. Yamasaki, B. Wang, N. Sakano, T. Horike, H. Kataoka, A.<br />

Ohtsuka, S. Kira<br />

Personal Exposure During Abatement of Various Asbestos-Containing Materials in the Same<br />

Work Area ...............................................................................................................................................1034<br />

J.H. Lange, K. W. Thomulka, S. S. L. Sites, G. Priolo, A. Buja, G. Mastrangelo<br />

Revised Cancer Risk Assessment of Inorganic Arsenic upon Consumption of Tilapia<br />

(Oreochomis mossambicus) from Blackfoot Disease Hyperen<strong>de</strong>mic Areas ..........................................1037<br />

C.-W. Liu, F.-M. Huang, Y.-M. Hsueh<br />

Environmental Remnants of the First World War: Soil Contamination of a Burning Ground for<br />

Arsenical Ammunition .............................................................................................................................1045<br />

T. Bausinger and J. Preuβ<br />

Thallium in Whole Blood Samples from College Stu<strong>de</strong>nts in Taiwan ....................................................1053<br />

T.-S. Lin and C.-L. Chang<br />

Thallium Accumulation in Floral Structures of Hirschfeldia incana (L.) Lagrèze-Fossat<br />

(Brassicaceae) ........................................................................................................................................1058<br />

P. Ma<strong>de</strong>jón, J. M. Murillo, T. <strong>Mar</strong>añón, B. Valdés, S. Rossini Oilva<br />

Concentrations of Heavy Metals in the Benthic Microgastropods Sermyla riqueti and<br />

Stenothyra <strong>de</strong>valis at the Mai Po Inner Deep Bay Ramsar Site of Hong Kong .....................................1065<br />

M. Y. Lai, P. P. Shen, Z. Zhao, H. Zhou, J.-D. Gu<br />

Heavy Metal Content of Potato and Corn Chips from Turkey ................................................................1072<br />

I. Narin, M. Tuzen, H. Sari, M. Soylak<br />

Trace Metals in Wyoming Fish (1078 - 1083)<br />

R. Dailey, M. F. Raisbeck, R. Siemion, S. Wolff<br />

Bioaccumulation and Bioavailability of Mirex from Lake Ontario Sediments .........................................1084<br />

S. W. Pickard, J. U. Clarke, G. R. Lotufo<br />

Cadmium Level in Blood and Milk from Animals Reared Around Different Polluting Sources in<br />

India ........................................................................................................................................................1092<br />

R. C. Patra, D. Swarup, R. Naresh, P. Kumar, P. Shekhar, R. Ranjan<br />

Heavy Metals in the Edible Muscle of Shrimp from Coastal Lagoons Located in Northwest<br />

Mexico ....................................................................................................................................................1098<br />

M. G. Frídas-Espericueta, J. I. Osuna-López, F. J. Estrada-Toledo, G. López-López, G.<br />

Izaguirre-Fierro<br />

Mercury Toxicology as Assessed Through Fish Scales ........................................................................1105<br />

A. Dua and N. Gupta<br />

Impact of Copper and Its EDTA Complex on the Glutathione-Depen<strong>de</strong>nt Antioxidant System in<br />

Freshwater Fish (Carassius auratus) .....................................................................................................1111<br />

6


H. Liu, J. F. Zhang, H. Shen, X. R. Wang, W. M. Wang<br />

Histopathological Changes in the Hepatopancreas of Palaemonetes turcorum (Holthuis, 1961)<br />

(Crustacae, Decapoda), Exposed to Lead Acetate ................................................................................1118<br />

M. Kutlu, C. Bayçu, G. Aydoğan, M. Tanatmiş, N. Aldırmaz<br />

Effect of Copper and Lead on Photosynthesis and Plant Pigments in Black Gram [Vigna<br />

mungo (L.) Hepper] ................................................................................................................................1126<br />

M. Bibi and M. Hussain<br />

Relationship Between Embryo Selenium Concentration and Early Life Stage Development in<br />

White Sucker (Catostomus commersoni) from a Northern Canadian Lake (1134<br />

S. C. <strong>de</strong> Rosemond, K. Liber, A. Rosaasen<br />

Comparison Between Field Experiment and PERSIST Mo<strong>de</strong>l Simulation: Dissipation of<br />

Fenvalerate in a Malaysian Agricultural Soil ..........................................................................................1143<br />

B. S. Ismail and Z. Maznah<br />

Physiological Changes in Prickly Sculpin (Cottus asper) Inhabiting a Lake Used by Jet-<br />

Propelled Watercraft ...............................................................................................................................1151<br />

A. Moles and G.D. <strong>Mar</strong>ty<br />

Two-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis Analysis of Proteins Following Tebufenozi<strong>de</strong> Treatment<br />

of Chironomus riparius ...........................................................................................................................1159<br />

I.-S. Kwak and W. Lee<br />

Toxic Effects of Pentachlorophenol on Lemna minor .............................................................................1166<br />

Z. H. Song and G. L. Huang<br />

Effect of Sublethal Concentrations of Endosulfan on Growth and Fecundity of Two Species of<br />

Snails ......................................................................................................................................................1173<br />

M. Ellis-Tabanor and E. Hyslop<br />

Endpoint for DEHP Exposure Assessment in Chironomus riparius .......................................................1179<br />

I.-S. Kwak and W. Lee<br />

Effect of Combinations of the Toxic Cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa PCC7820 and the<br />

Green Alga Scene<strong>de</strong>smus on the Experimental Population of Daphnia pulex ......................................1186<br />

Y. Liu, P. Xie, F. Chen, X. Wu<br />

Toxicity of Three Insectici<strong>de</strong>s in a Standard Algal Growth Inhibition Test with Scene<strong>de</strong>smus<br />

subspicatus .............................................................................................................................................1192<br />

K. Burkiewicz, R. Synak, Z. Tukaj<br />

Effects of Alachlor on Survival and Development of Bombina orientalis (Boulenger) Embryos ............1199<br />

H. S. Kang, M. C. Gye, M. K. Kim<br />

Effects of an Environmental Estrogen on Male Gulf Pipefish, Syngnathus scovelli (Evermann<br />

and Kendall), a Male Brooding Teleost ..................................................................................................1207<br />

N. Ueda, C. Partridge, J. Bolland, J. Hemming, T. Sherman, A. Boettcher<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY<br />

Vol. 75, No. 1, July <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Geostatistical Analysis for Hydrogeochemical Characterization of the Han River, Korea:<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntification of Major Factors Governing Water Chemistry ........................................................................1<br />

J.-S. Ryu, K.-S. Lee, J.-H. Kim, K.-H. Ahn, H.-W. Chang<br />

Tolerable Level of Lifetime Cadmium Intake Estimated as a Benchmark Dose Low, Based on<br />

Excretion of ;2-Microglobulin in the Cadmium-Polluted Regions of the Kakehashi River Basin,<br />

Japan ............................................................................................................................................................8<br />

E. Kobayashi, Y. Suwazono, M. Uetani, T. Kido, M. Nishijo, H. Nakagawa, K. Nogawa<br />

Relationship Between Dietary Cadmium Absorption by Grass Shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio)<br />

and Trophically Available Cadmium in Amphipod (Gammarus lawrencianus) Prey ..................................16<br />

D. R. Seebaugh, A. Estephan, W. G. Wallace<br />

Determination of in Vitro Biotoxicity in Exhaust Particulate Matter from Heavy-Duty Diesel<br />

Engine ........................................................................................................................................................24<br />

C. L. Song, R. J. Huang, Y. Q. Wang, K. M. Liu, S. R. Dong, S. G. Dai<br />

Aftermath of the Long-Term Application of Sludge and Water from a Sewage Treatment Plant<br />

to a Lemon Tree (Citrus limon) Plantation ................................................................................................33<br />

J. Menti, M. Roulia, E. Tsadilas, N. S. Christodoulakis<br />

7


Impact of 1,4-Dioxane from Domestic Effluent on the Agano and Shinano Rivers, Japan ........................44<br />

A. Tanabe, Y. Tsuchida, T. Ibaraki, K. Kawata<br />

Toxicity to Daphnia magna, Hyalella azteca, Oncorhynchus kisutch, Oncorhynchus mykiss,<br />

Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, and Rana catesbeiana of Atrazine, Metolachlor, Simazine, and<br />

Their Formulated Products .........................................................................................................................52<br />

M. T. Wan, C. Buday, G. Schroe<strong>de</strong>r, J. Kuo, J. Pasternak<br />

Acute Toxicity of the Synthetic Pyrethroid Deltamethrin to Fingerling European Catfish, Silurus<br />

glanis L. ......................................................................................................................................................59<br />

S. Ş. Köprücü, K. Köprücü, M. S. Ural<br />

Toxicity of Sediment from a Mining Spill to Cylindrotheca closterium (Ehremberg) Lewin and<br />

Reimann (Bacillariophyceae) .....................................................................................................................66<br />

I. Moreno-Garrido, N. Robveille, I. Riba, T. A. DelValls<br />

Comparative Sensitivity of Freshwater Algae to Atrazine ..........................................................................73<br />

C. K. Lockert, K. D. Hoagland, B. D. Siegfried<br />

Pilot Study of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Surface Soils of Guiyang City, People's<br />

Republic of China .............................................................................................................................. 80 - 89)<br />

J. Hu, G. Zhang, C.-Q. Lui<br />

Treatment of Polluted River Water Using Pilot-Scale Constructed Wetlands ............................................90<br />

X. Ruan, Y. Xue, J. Wu, L. Ni, M. Sun, X. Zhang<br />

Preparation and Performance of Inorganic Coagulant for Landfill Leachate Pretreatment .......................98<br />

Q.-B. Gu, S.-S. Liu, X.-N. Zhuang, X.-J. Li, F.-S. Li<br />

Photochemical Transformation of Bisphenol A Promoted by Nitrate Ions ...............................................105<br />

M. J. Zhan, X. Yang, Q. M. Xian, L. R. Kong<br />

Bisphenol A in the Surface Water and Freshwater Snail Collected from Rivers Around a<br />

Secure Landfill ..........................................................................................................................................113<br />

J. H. Kang and F. Kondo<br />

Use Patterns and Residue Levels of Pestici<strong>de</strong>s on Mukunuwenna, a Leafy Vegetable Grown in<br />

Sri Lanka ..................................................................................................................................................119<br />

G. K. Hemakanthi <strong>de</strong> Alwis, R. D. Wijesekera, T. A. D. N. A. K. Jayasekera<br />

Abamectin in Tea and Tea Liquor Un<strong>de</strong>r Northeastern Indian Climatic Conditions ................................126<br />

R. Pal, N. Sanyal, P. Das, S. K. Pramanik, C. Das, A. Bhattacharyya, A. Chowdhury<br />

Bioaccumulation of Heavy Metals, Organochlorine Pestici<strong>de</strong>s, and Detoxication Biochemical<br />

In<strong>de</strong>xes in Tissues of Ictalurus melas of Lake Trasimeno .......................................................................132<br />

A. C. Elia, R. Galarini, A. J. M. Dörr, M. I. Taticchi<br />

Ecochemical Approach Using Mercury Accumulation of Antarctic Minke Whale, Balaenoptera<br />

bonaerensis, as Tracer of Historical Change of Antarctic <strong>Mar</strong>ine Ecosystem During 1980—<br />

1999 ..........................................................................................................................................................140<br />

K. Honda, M. Aoki, Y. Fujise<br />

Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers and Polychlorinated Biphenyls in Different Tissue Types from<br />

Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) .......................................................................................148<br />

D. Stone<br />

Organotin Compounds in the Three Gorges Reservoir Region of the Yangtze River .............................155<br />

J.-M. Gao, J.-Y. Hu, H. Zhen, M. Yang, B.-Z. Li<br />

Heavy Metal Accumulation of Edible Vegetables Cultivated in Agricultural Soil in the Suburb of<br />

Zhengzhou City, People's Republic of China ...........................................................................................163<br />

W.-X. Lui, H.-H. Li, S.R. Li, Y.-W. Wang<br />

On the Adsorption Mechanisms of Copper Ions over Modified Biomass .................................................171<br />

S. Montes, G. Montes-Atenas, F. Salomo, E. Valero, O. Diaz<br />

Adsorption of Cu2+ on Montmorillonite as Affected by 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid (2,4-D) ............179<br />

F. Qin and Q. Shan<br />

CLIMATE DIAG<strong>NO</strong>STICS BULLETIN<br />

November <strong>200</strong>5<br />

TROPICS<br />

Editor's Notes<br />

Highlights<br />

Table of Atmospheric Indices Table T1<br />

Table of SST Indices Table T2<br />

Time Series<br />

8


Southern Oscillation In<strong>de</strong>x (SOI)<br />

Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies<br />

OLR Anomalies T1<br />

Equatorial SOI T2<br />

<strong>200</strong>-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 Pressure<br />

T6<br />

Mean and Anomalous 850-mb Zonal Wind<br />

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 AnomaliesT 13<br />

Anomalous Equatorial Zonal Wind T14<br />

Anomalous and Mean Depth of the 20C<br />

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 />

<strong>200</strong>-mb Vector Wind T21<br />

<strong>200</strong>-mb Streamfunction T22<br />

<strong>200</strong>-mb Divergence T23<br />

<strong>200</strong>-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) T29<br />

Mean and Anomalous RH and<br />

Divergent Circulation (Atlantic sector) T30<br />

Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />

and Divergent Circulation (Western Pacific<br />

sector) T31<br />

Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />

and Divergent Circulation (Eastern Pacific<br />

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 A1.6<br />

Satellite-Derived Surface Currents - Pacific<br />

A1.7<br />

Satellite-Derived Surface Currents -<br />

Atlantic/Indian A1.8<br />

FORECAST FORUM<br />

Discussion<br />

Canonical Correlation Analysis Forecasts<br />

Canonical Correlation Analysis SST<br />

anomaly prediction F1<br />

Canonical Correlation ENSO Forecast F2<br />

NCEP Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts<br />

Forecast SST A<strong>NO</strong>MALY F3<br />

Forecast SST NI<strong>NO</strong> 3 F4a<br />

Forecast SST NI<strong>NO</strong> 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 NI<strong>NO</strong> 3 Anomalies F10<br />

Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l (HMC-<br />

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 - Table E1<br />

Surface Temperature - Anomalies and<br />

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) 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 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 />

9


Troposphere<br />

Mean and Anomalous SLP E14<br />

Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights 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 S1<br />

Height-longitu<strong>de</strong> section S2<br />

50-hPa Temperature Anomalies S3<br />

2 & 10-hPa Temperature Anomalies S4<br />

Total Ozone Anomalies (Time Series) S5<br />

Hemispheric Ozone Anomalies (Map) S6<br />

Daily vertical component of EP flux S7<br />

Ozone Hole S8<br />

Appendix 2: Additional Figures<br />

Arctic Oscillation and 500-hPa Anomalies<br />

A2.1<br />

Snow Cover A2.2<br />

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 19, No. 5, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Editorial<br />

Science: Who Needs It? .........................................................................................................................1341<br />

Walter V. Reid<br />

Conservation Education<br />

Legal Ecology: Ecosystem Function and the Law...................................................................................1344<br />

Daniel J. Rohlf, David S. Dobkin<br />

Issues in International Conservation<br />

Virtual Conservation: How the European Union is Turning a Blind Eye to Its Vanishing<br />

Primeval Forests .....................................................................................................................................1349<br />

Tomasz Wesołowski<br />

Conservation and Policy<br />

Conservation Science, Biodiversity, and the <strong>200</strong>5 U.S. Forest Service Regulations .............................1359<br />

Barry R. Noon, Patrick Parenteau, Stephen C. Trombulak<br />

Review<br />

Feral Goat Eradications on Islands .........................................................................................................1362<br />

KARL CAMPBELL, C. JOSH DONLAN<br />

Essays<br />

Indigenous Population Growth in the Lowland Neotropics: Social Science Insights for<br />

Biodiversity Conservation........................................................................................................................1375<br />

KENDRA McSWEENEY<br />

Bush Tucker, Bush Pets, and Bush Threats: Cooperative Management of Feral Animals in<br />

Australia's Kakadu National Park ............................................................................................................1385<br />

CATHERINE J. ROBINSON, DERMOT SMYTH, PETER J. WHITEHEAD<br />

1392<br />

Protected Areas.......................................................................................................................................1392<br />

TRACEY MORIN DALTON<br />

Integrating the Metapopulation and Habitat Paradigms for Un<strong>de</strong>rstanding Broad-Scale<br />

Declines of Species.................................................................................................................................1402<br />

DOUG P. ARMSTRONG<br />

Conservation in Practice<br />

Economics and Land-Use Change in Prioritizing Private Land Conservation<br />

DAVID NEWBURN, SARAH REED, PETER BERCK, ADINA MERENLENDER<br />

Conservation Focus: Amphibian Declines and Chytridiomycosis ...........................................................1411<br />

Inconclusiveness of Chytridiomycosis as the Agent in Wi<strong>de</strong>spread Frog Declines................................1421<br />

HAMISH McCALLUM<br />

Historical Evi<strong>de</strong>nce of Wi<strong>de</strong>spread Chytrid Infection in North American Amphibian Populations ..........1431<br />

MARTIN OUELLET, IGOR MIKAELIAN, BRUCE D. PAULI, JEAN RODRIGUE, DAVID M.<br />

GREEN<br />

The Novel and En<strong>de</strong>mic Pathogen Hypotheses: Competing Explanations for the Origin of<br />

Emerging Infectious Diseases of Wildlife ................................................................................................1441<br />

LARA J. RACHOWICZ, JEAN-MARC HERO, ROSS A. ALFORD, JOHN W. TAYLOR, JESS<br />

A.T. MORGAN, VANCE T. VREDENBURG, JAMES P. COLLINS, CHERYL J. BRIGGS<br />

10


Ecology of Chytridiomycosis in Rainforest Stream Frog Assemblages of Tropical Queensland............1449<br />

DOUGLAS C. WOODHAMS, ROSS A. ALFORD<br />

Interspecific Variation in Susceptibility of Frog Tadpoles to the Pathogenic Fungus<br />

Batrachochytrium <strong>de</strong>ndrobatidis..............................................................................................................1460<br />

ANDREW R. BLAUSTEIN, JOHN M. ROMANSIC, ERIN A. SCHEESSELE, BARBARA A.<br />

HAN, ALLAN P. PESSIER, JOYCE E. LONGCORE<br />

Contributed Papers<br />

Tra<strong>de</strong>, Tenure, and Tradition: Influence of Sociocultural Factors on Resource Use in<br />

Melanesia ................................................................................................................................................1469<br />

JOSHUA E. CINNER, MICHAEL J. MARNANE, TIMOTHY R. McCLANAHAN, TRACY H.<br />

CLARK, JOHN BEN<br />

Conservation Deficits for the Continental United States: an Ecosystem Gap Analysis..........................1478<br />

ROBERT W. DIETZ, BRIAN CZECH<br />

Habitat Suitability Mo<strong>de</strong>ls and the Shortfall in Conservation Planning for African Vertebrates ..............1488<br />

CARLO RONDININI, SIMON STUART, LUIGI BOITANI<br />

Evaluating Wolf Translocation as a Nonlethal Method to Reduce Livestock Conflicts in the<br />

Northwestern United States ....................................................................................................................1498<br />

ELIZABETH H. BRADLEY, DANIEL H. PLETSCHER, EDWARD E. BANGS, KYRAN E.<br />

KUNKEL, DOUGLAS W. SMITH, CURT M. MACK, THOMAS J. MEIER, JOSEPH A.<br />

FONTAINE, CARTER C. NIEMEYER, MICHAEL D. JIMENEZ<br />

Importance of Assessing Population Genetic Structure before Eradication of Invasive Species:<br />

Examples from Insular Norway Rat Populations.....................................................................................1509<br />

JAWAD ABDELKRIM, MICHEL PASCAL, CLAIRE CALMET, SARAH SAMADI<br />

Establishment Success across Convergent Mediterranean Ecosystems: an Analysis of Bird<br />

Introductions............................................................................................................................................1519<br />

SALIT KARK, DANIEL SOL<br />

The Role of Immigration in the Decline of an Isolated Migratory Bird Population...................................1528<br />

MICHAEL P. WARD<br />

Demographic Responses by Birds to Forest Fragmentation ..................................................................1537<br />

PETRI LAMPILA, MIKKO MÖNKKÖNEN, ANDRÉ DESROCHERS<br />

Spatial and Seasonal Patterns of Bird Communities in Italian Agroecosystems ....................................1547<br />

PAOLA LAIOLO<br />

Regional IUCN Red Listing: the Process as Applied to Birds in the United Kingdom ............................1557<br />

M. A. EATON, R. D. GREGORY, D. G. <strong>NO</strong>BLE, J. A. ROBINSON, J. HUGHES, D. PROCTER,<br />

A. F. BROWN, D. W. GIBBONS<br />

Physiological and Behavioral Differences in Magellanic Penguin Chicks in Undisturbed and<br />

Tourist-Visited Locations of a Colony......................................................................................................1571<br />

BRIAN G. WALKER, P. DEE BOERSMA, JOHN C. WINGFIELD<br />

Reproductive Investment of a Lacertid Lizard in Fragmented Habitat....................................................1578<br />

JOSÉ A. DÍAZ, JAVIER PÉREZ-TRIS, JOSÉ L. TELLERÍA, ROBERTO CARBONELL,<br />

TOMÁS SANTOS<br />

Effectiveness of Existing Reserves in the Long-Term Protection of a Regionally Rare Butterfly ...........1586<br />

DAVID GUTIÉRREZ<br />

Recovery of Soil Macrofauna Communities after Forest Clearance in Eastern Amazonia, Brazil .........1598<br />

J. MATHIEU, J.-P. ROSSI, P. MORA, P. LAVELLE, P. F. da S. MARTINS, C. ROULAND, M.<br />

GRIMALDI<br />

Alterations of Steppe-Like Grasslands in Eastern Europe: a Threat to Regional Biodiversity<br />

Hotspots ..................................................................................................................................................1606<br />

CRISTINA CREMENE, GHEORGHE GROZA, LASZLO RAKOSY, ANATOLI A. SCHILEYKO,<br />

ANETTE BAUR, ANDREAS ERHARDT, BRU<strong>NO</strong> BAUR<br />

Cattle Grazing Mediates Climate Change Impacts on Ephemeral Wetlands .........................................1619<br />

CHRISTOPHER R. PYKE, JAYMEE MARTY<br />

Effects of Cattle Grazing on Diversity in Ephemeral Wetlands ...............................................................1626<br />

JAYMEE T. MARTY<br />

Effect of Habitat Deterioration on Population Dynamics and Extinction Risks in a Previously<br />

Common Perennial..................................................................................................................................1633<br />

11


REIN BRYS, HANS JACQUEMYN, PATRICK ENDELS, GEERT DE BLUST, MARTIN<br />

HERMY<br />

Using Vascular Plants as a Surrogate Taxon to Maximize Fungal Species Richness in<br />

Reserve Design.......................................................................................................................................1644<br />

ALESSANDRO CHIARUCCI, FRANCESCA D'AURIA, VINCENZO DE DOMINICIS, ANGELA<br />

LAGANÀ, CLAUDIA PERINI, ELENA SALERNI<br />

Research Notes<br />

Recreational Portage Trails as Corridors Facilitating Non-Native Plant Invasions of the<br />

Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wil<strong>de</strong>rness (U.S.A.)................................................................................1653<br />

SARA JO M. DICKENS, FRITZ GERHARDT, SHARON K. COLLINGE<br />

Forest Stand Dynamics and Livestock Grazing in Historical Context.....................................................1658<br />

MICHAEL M. BORMAN<br />

Variance and Uncertainty in the Expected Number of Occurrences in Reserve Selection ....................1663<br />

ATTE MOILANEN, MAR CABEZA<br />

Extirpation of a Large Black Bear Population by Introduced White-Tailed Deer ....................................1668<br />

STEEVE D. CÔTÉ<br />

Rapid Evolutionary Change in Homogocene ..........................................................................................1672<br />

Anthony Ricciardi<br />

Using, Respecting, and Appreciating Nature? ........................................................................................1673<br />

David Schmidtz<br />

Environmental Virtue Ethics Then and Now............................................................................................1674<br />

Clare Palmer<br />

Reality Check ..........................................................................................................................................1675<br />

Paul H. Zedler, Joy B. Zedler<br />

Mixed Messages about Opportunistic Carnivores...................................................................................1676<br />

Douglas W. Smith<br />

CRUSTACEANA<br />

Vol. 78, Part. 8, September <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Variabilité morphologique et reproductive <strong>de</strong> Porcellioni<strong>de</strong>s pruinosus (Brandt, 1833) en<br />

Tunisie (Isopoda, Onisci<strong>de</strong>a) [Morphological and reproductive variability in Porcellioni<strong>de</strong>s<br />

pruinosus (Brandt, 1833) from Tunisia (Isopoda, Onisci<strong>de</strong>a)]<br />

M. Achouri & F. Charfi-Cheikhrouha ........................................................................................................897<br />

Two new species of Hemicyclops (Copepoda, Clausidiidae) and a new species of<br />

Paramacrochiron (Copepoda, Macrochironidae) from Indonesian waters<br />

sMulyadi ...................................................................................................................................................917<br />

First record of Lynceus brachyurus Müller, 1776 (Branchiopoda, Laevicaudata, Lynceidae) in<br />

France<br />

N. Rabet, J. Cart, D. Montero & H. Boulekbache .....................................................................................931<br />

A preliminary study on population structure and abundance of Aristaeomorpha foliacea (Risso,<br />

1827) (Decapoda, Natantia) in the <strong>de</strong>ep water of the northeastern Mediterranean<br />

M. Can & M. Aktaş ...................................................................................................................................941<br />

Growth and reproduction of the kishi velvet shrimp, Metapenaeopsis dalei (Rathbun, 1902)<br />

(Decapoda, Penaeidae) in the western sea of Korea<br />

J. Choi, J. Nyun Kim, C. Ma & H. Cha .....................................................................................................947<br />

Respiratory physiology of three Indo-Pacific fiddler crabs: metabolic responses to intertidal<br />

zonation patterns<br />

A. Jimenez & W. Bennett .........................................................................................................................965<br />

On the evolution of the genus Microdarwinula Danielopol, 1968 (Ostracoda, Darwinulidae) with<br />

the <strong>de</strong>scription of a new species from semi-terrestrial habitats in São Paulo state (Brazil)<br />

R. Pinto, C. Rocha & K. <strong>Mar</strong>tens ..............................................................................................................975<br />

First records of the two cari<strong>de</strong>an families, Gnathophyllidae Dana, 1852 and Hymenoceridae<br />

Ortmann, 1890 (Decapoda, Palaemonoi<strong>de</strong>a) from Taiwan<br />

M. Mitsuhashi, T. Chan & M. Jeng ........................................................................................................... 987<br />

First record of the <strong>de</strong>ep-water shrimp, Plesionika williamsi Forest, 1964 (Decapoda, Cari<strong>de</strong>a,<br />

Pandalidae) from Japan and Taiwan<br />

12


T. Komai, T. Chan, Y. Hanamura & Y. Abe ............................................................................................1001<br />

Osmoregulation and oxygen consumption of the hololimnetic prawn, Macrobrachium<br />

tuxtlaense at varying salinities (Decapoda, Palaemonidae)<br />

A. Ordiano, F. Alvarez & G. Alcaraz .......................................................................................................1013<br />

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS:<br />

Vol. 11, No. 6, November <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Biodiversity Research<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the distribution of Bonelli's eagle in Spain: implications for conservation planning..................477<br />

A. Román Muñoz, Raimundo Real, A. Márcia Barbosa, J. <strong>Mar</strong>io Vargas<br />

The effects of fire, local environment and time on ant assemblages in fens and forests .........................487<br />

Jaime S. Ratchford, Sarah E. Wittman, Erik S. Jules, Aaron M. Ellison, Nicholas J. Gotelli,<br />

Nathan J. San<strong>de</strong>rs<br />

Ecological boundary <strong>de</strong>tection using Carlin–Chib Bayesian mo<strong>de</strong>l selection...........................................499<br />

Ralph Mac Nally<br />

Herbarium collections and field data-based plant diversity maps for Burkina Faso .................................509<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>co Schmidt, Holger Kreft, Adjima Thiombiano, Georg Zizka<br />

Arthropod diversity and allochthonous-based food webs on tiny oceanic islands ....................................517<br />

Lloyd W. Morrison<br />

Factors affecting plant diversity during post-fire recovery and succession of mediterraneanclimate<br />

shrublands in California, USA.......................................................................................................525<br />

Jon E. Keeley, C. J. Fotheringham, Melanie Baer-Keeley<br />

Habitat and integration within indigenous communities of Xeropicta <strong>de</strong>rbentina (Gastropoda:<br />

Hygromiidae) a recently introduced land snail in south-eastern France...................................................539<br />

Sébastien Aubry, Corinne Labaune, Frédéric Magnin, Laurence Kiss<br />

Seed dispersal of fleshy-fruited invasive plants by birds: contributing factors and management<br />

options .......................................................................................................................................................549<br />

Carl R. Gosper, Chris D. Stansbury, Gabrielle Vivian-Smith<br />

En<strong>de</strong>mism and sexual systems in the evergreen tree flora of the Western Ghats, India .........................559<br />

Rani M. Krishnan, B. R. Ramesh<br />

Plant species richness and diversity along an altitudinal gradient in the Sierra Nevada, Mexico ............567<br />

Arturo Sánchez-González, Lauro López-Mata<br />

Biogeography and comparative ecology of testate amoebae inhabiting Sphagnum-dominated<br />

peatlands in the Great Lakes and Rocky Mountain regions of North America .........................................577<br />

Robert K. Booth, Jennifer R. Zygmunt<br />

Bibliodiversions<br />

Introduced reptiles and amphibians of the world: unwanted exotic species .............................................591<br />

Jeff Lovich<br />

Wild western mammals .............................................................................................................................591<br />

Rachel Freer<br />

High diversity in Europe 's mountains .......................................................................................................592<br />

Eva M. Spehn<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION<br />

Vol. 139, No. 1, January <strong>200</strong>6.<br />

Interactions of mycorrhizal fungi with Pteris vittata (As hyperaccumulator) in As-contaminated<br />

soils • ........................................................................................................................................................... 1<br />

H.M. Leung, Z.H. Ye and M.H. Wong<br />

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in suspen<strong>de</strong>d particulate matter and sediments from the<br />

Pearl River Estuary and adjacent coastal areas, China • ........................................................................... 9<br />

Xiao-Jun Luo, She-Jun Chen, Bi-Xian Mai, Qing-Shu Yang, Guo-Ying Sheng and Jia-Mo Fu<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the extra and intracellular uptake and discharge of heavy metals in Fontinalis<br />

antipyretica transplanted along a heavy metal and pH contamination gradient • ..................................... 21<br />

J.A. Fernán<strong>de</strong>z, M.D. Vázquez, J. López and A. Carballeira<br />

Bioconcentration of atrazine and chlorophenols into roots and shoots of rice seedlings • ....................... 32<br />

Yu-Hong Su and Yong-Guan Zhu<br />

13


Soil amendments reduce trace element solubility in a contaminated soil and allow regrowth of<br />

natural vegetation • .................................................................................................................................... 40<br />

Engracia Ma<strong>de</strong>jón, Alfredo Pérez <strong>de</strong> Mora, Efraín Felipe, Pilar Burgos and Francisco Cabrera<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for potential impacts of ozone on Pinus cembra L. at mountain sites in Europe: An<br />

overview • .................................................................................................................................................. 53<br />

G. Wieser, W.J. Manning, M. Tausz and A. Bytnerowicz<br />

Perchlorate in fish from a contaminated site in east-central Texas • ........................................................ 59<br />

Christopher Theodorakis, Jacques Rinchard, Todd An<strong>de</strong>rson, Fujun Liu, June-Woo Park,<br />

Filipe Costa, Leslie McDaniel, Ronald Kendall and Aaron Waters<br />

A comparative assessment of heavy metal accumulation in soft parts and byssus of mussels<br />

from subarctic, temperate, subtropical and tropical marine environments • ............................................. 70<br />

P. Szefer, S.W. Fowler, K. Ikuta, F. Paez Osuna, A.A. Ali, B.-S. Kim, H.M. Fernan<strong>de</strong>s, M.-J.<br />

Belzunce, B. Guterstam, H. Kunzendorf et al.<br />

Tetrodotoxin prevents copper-induced bradycardia in gastropod limpets • .............................................. 79<br />

Giada Bini, Anna <strong>Mar</strong>ia Pugliese, Giancarlo Pepeu and Guido Chelazzi<br />

Release of trace metals, sulfate and complexed cyani<strong>de</strong> from soils contaminated with gaspurifier<br />

wastes: A microcosm study • ........................................................................................................ 86<br />

T. Rennert and T. Mansfeldt<br />

Contamination by arsenic and other trace elements in tube-well water and its risk assessment<br />

to humans in Hanoi, Vietnam • .................................................................................................................. 95<br />

Tetsuro Agusa, Takashi Kunito, Junko Fujihara, Reiji Kubota, Tu Binh Minh, Pham Thi Kim<br />

Trang, Hisato Iwata, Annamalai Subramanian, Pham Hung Viet and Shinsuke Tanabe<br />

Specific accumulation of organochlorines in human breast milk from Indonesia: Levels,<br />

distribution, accumulation kinetics and infant health risk • ...................................................................... 107<br />

Agus Sudaryanto, Tatsuya Kunisue, Natsuko Kajiwara, Hisato Iwata, Tussy A. Adibroto,<br />

Phillipus Hartono and Shinsuke Tanabe<br />

Effects of teflubenzuron on sediment processing by members of the Capitella species-complex<br />

• ............................................................................................................................................................... 118<br />

Nuria Mén<strong>de</strong>z<br />

Scale and causes of lead contamination in Chinese tea • ...................................................................... 125<br />

Wen-Yan Han, Fang-Jie Zhao, Yuan-Zhi Shi, Li-Feng Ma and Jian-Yun Ruan<br />

Development of an SPME–GC–MS/MS method for the <strong>de</strong>termination of pestici<strong>de</strong>s in<br />

rainwater: Laboratory and field experiments • ......................................................................................... 133<br />

Nathalie Sauret-Szczepanski, Philippe Mirabel and Henri Wortham<br />

Water quality dynamics and hydrology in nitrate loa<strong>de</strong>d riparian zones in the Netherlands • ................ 143<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>iet Hefting, Bou<strong>de</strong>wijn Beltman, Derek Karssenberg, Karin Rebel, Mirjam van Riessen and<br />

Maarten Spijker<br />

Treatment of log yard run-off by irrigation of grass and willows • ........................................................... 157<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ia Jonsson, Ioannis Dimitriou, Pär Aronsson and Torbjörn Elowson<br />

Effect of soil characteristics on Cd uptake by the hyperaccumulator Thlaspi caerulescens • ................ 167<br />

Junta Yanai, Fang-Jie Zhao, Steve P. McGrath and Takashi Kosaki<br />

Use of dolomite phosphate rock (DPR) fertilizers to reduce phosphorus leaching from sandy<br />

soil • ......................................................................................................................................................... 176<br />

G.C. Chen, Z.L. He, P.J. Stoffella, X.E. Yang, S. Yu and D. Calvert<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling the dynamic changes in concentrations of γ-hexachlorocyclohexane (γ-HCH) in<br />

Tianjin region from 1953 to 2020 • .......................................................................................................... 183<br />

S. Tao, Y. Yang, H.Y. Cao, W.X. Liu, R.M. Coveney, Jr., F.L. Xu, J. Cao, B.G. Li, X.J. Wang et<br />

al.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY<br />

Vol. 24, No. 12, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Environmental Chemistry<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL FATE OF THE ANTIFOULING COMPOUND ZINC PYRITHIONE IN<br />

SEAWATER<br />

Katja S. Grunnet and Ingela Dahllöf .......................................................................................................3001<br />

14


EXPERIMENTAL AND MODELING INVESTIGATION OF METAL RELEASE FROM METAL-<br />

SPIKED SEDIMENTS<br />

Richard F. Carbonaro, John D. Mahony, Alison D. Walter, Eve B. Halper and Dominic M. Di<br />

Toro ........................................................................................................................................................3007<br />

SLOW DESORPTION BEHAVIOR OF ONE HIGHLY RESISTANT AROMATIC AMINE IN<br />

LAKE MACATAWA, MICHIGAN, USA, SEDIMENT<br />

Shihua Chen and <strong>Mar</strong>ianne C. Nyman ..................................................................................................3020<br />

BIOCHEMICAL RESPONSES OF THE AQUATIC HIGHER PLANT LEMNA GIBBA TO A<br />

MIXTURE OF COPPER AND 1,2-DIHYDROXYANTHRAQUI<strong>NO</strong>NE: SYNERGISTIC<br />

TOXICITY VIA REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES<br />

T. Sudhakar Babu, Sri<strong>de</strong>vi Tripuranthakam and Bruce M. Greenberg .................................................. 3030<br />

DEGRADATION OF CHLOROPICRIN IN THE PRESENCE OF ZERO-VALENT IRON<br />

Carrie R. Pearson, Raymond M. Hozalski and William A. Arnold ..........................................................3037<br />

MEASURING SULFIDE ACCUMULATION IN DIFFUSIVE GRADIENTS IN THIN FILMS BY<br />

MEANS OF PURGE AND TRAP FOLLOWED BY ION-SELECTIVE ELECTRODE<br />

Michael S. Rearick, Cynthia C. Gilmour, Andrew Heyes and Robert P. Mason .................................... 3043<br />

A UNIVERSAL ASSAY FOR VITELLOGENIN IN FISH MUCUS AND PLASMA<br />

Peter A. Van Veld, Barbara J. Rutan, Constance A. Sullivan, L. Danielle Johnston, Charles D.<br />

Rice, Daniel F. Fisher and Lance T. Yonkos ..........................................................................................3048<br />

Environmental Toxicology<br />

POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYL 126 AFFECTS EXPRESSION OF GENES INVOLVED IN<br />

STRESS–IMMUNE INTERACTION IN PRIMARY CULTURES OF RAINBOW TROUT<br />

ANTERIOR KIDNEY CELLS<br />

Elgar Susanne Quabius, Guido Krupp and Christopher J. Secombes .................................................. 3053<br />

BEHAVIORAL RESPONSE OF COROPHIUM VOLUTATOR RELATIVE TO EXPERIMENTAL<br />

CONDITIONS, PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL DISTURBANCES<br />

Jocelyne Hellou, Kerri Cheeseman, <strong>Mar</strong>ie-Laure Jouvenelle and Sarah Robertson .............................3061<br />

EXTRACELLULAR SIGNAL-REGULATED KINASE-SIGNALING-DEPENDENT G2/M<br />

ARREST AND CELL DEATH IN MURINE MACROPHAGES BY CADMIUM<br />

Jiyoung Kim, Sang Hyun Kim, Victor J. Johnson and Raghubir P. Sharma ..........................................3069<br />

SUBCHRONIC EFFECTS OF METHYLMERCURY ON PLASMA AND ORGAN<br />

BIOCHEMISTRIES IN GREAT EGRET NESTLINGS<br />

David J. Hoffman, <strong>Mar</strong>ilyn G. Spalding and Peter C. Fre<strong>de</strong>rick .............................................................3078<br />

4-<strong>NO</strong>NYLPHE<strong>NO</strong>L-INDUCED TOXICITY AND APOPTOSIS IN HYDRA ATTENUATA<br />

Sophie Pachura, Jean-Pierre Cambon, Christian Blaise and Paule Vasseur........................................ 3085<br />

GENE EXPRESSION IN CAGED FISH AS A FIRST-TIER INDICATOR OF CONTAMINANT<br />

EXPOSURE IN STREAMS<br />

Aaron P. Roberts, James T. Oris, G. Allen Burton Jr and William H. Clements ....................................3092<br />

TRACE METALS, STABLE ISOTOPE RATIOS, AND TROPHIC RELATIONS IN SEABIRDS<br />

FROM THE <strong>NO</strong>RTH PACIFIC OCEAN<br />

John E. Elliott.......................................................................................................................................... 3099<br />

REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS AND CONTAMINANTS IN TREE SWALLOWS (TACHYCINETA<br />

BICOLOR) BREEDING AT A WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANT<br />

Patti L. Dods, Erinn M. Birmingham, Tony D. Williams, Michael G. Ikonomou, Donald T.<br />

Bennie and John E. Elliott ......................................................................................................................3106<br />

EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE ON TOXICITY OF A NATURAL PYRETHRIN PESTICIDE TO<br />

GREEN A<strong>NO</strong>LE LIZARDS (A<strong>NO</strong>LIS CAROLINENSIS)<br />

Larry G. Talent ........................................................................................................................................3113<br />

A COMPARISON OF THE LETHAL AND SUBLETHAL TOXICITY OF ORGANIC CHEMICAL<br />

MIXTURES TO THE FATHEAD MIN<strong>NO</strong>W (PIMEPHALES PROMELAS)<br />

Steven J. Bro<strong>de</strong>rius, Michael D. Kahl, Gregory E. Elonen, Dean E. Hammermeister and<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ilynn D. Hoglund ...............................................................................................................................3117<br />

POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS AND TOXAPHENE IN PREFERRED PREY FISH OF<br />

COASTAL SOUTHEASTERN U.S. BOTTLE<strong>NO</strong>SE DOLPHINS (TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS)<br />

Erin L. Pulster, Kelly L. Smalling and Keith A. <strong>Mar</strong>uya ..........................................................................3128<br />

15


EFFECTS OF SELECTED BIOCIDES USED IN THE DISINFECTION OF COOLING<br />

TOWERS ON TOXICITY AND BIOACCUMULATION IN ARTEMIA LARVAE<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ía Carmen Bartolomé and Sebastián Sánchez-Fortún ....................................................................3137<br />

LIGHT AS A CONFOUNDING FACTOR FOR TOXICITY ASSESSMENT OF COMPLEX<br />

CONTAMINATED SEDIMENTS<br />

Matthias Grote, Werner Brack, Helge A. Walter and Rolf Altenburger ..................................................3143<br />

AIR–VEGETATION PARTITIONING OF POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS NEAR A POINT<br />

SOURCE<br />

Clement Poon, Irene Gregory-Eaves, Lee Anne Connell, Gaelle Guillore, Paul M. Mayer, Jeff<br />

Ridal and Jules M. Blais .........................................................................................................................3153<br />

SPATIAL, TEMPORAL, AND DIETARY DETERMINANTS OF ORGANIC CONTAMINANTS IN<br />

NESTLING TREE SWALLOWS IN POINT PELEE NATIONAL PARK, ONTARIO, CANADA<br />

Judit E.G. Smits, Gary R. Bortolotti, <strong>Mar</strong>y Sebastian and Jan J.H. Ciborowski .....................................3159<br />

Hazard/Risk Assessment<br />

IMPROVED EMPIRICAL MODELS DESCRIBING HORMESIS<br />

Nina Ce<strong>de</strong>rgreen, Christian Ritz and Jens Carl Streibig ........................................................................3166<br />

COMPARATIVE SEDIMENT QUALITY GUIDELINE PERFORMANCE FOR PREDICTING<br />

SEDIMENT TOXICITY IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, USA<br />

Doris E. Vidal and Steven M. Bay ..........................................................................................................3173<br />

ESTUARIES<br />

Vol. 28, No. 4, August <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

HEATHER U. ABELLO, SHAWN M. SHELLITO, LESLIE H. TAYLOR, AND PETER A.<br />

JUMARS. Light-cued Emergence and Reentry Events in a Strongly Tidal Estuary ................................487<br />

LESLIE H. TAYLOR, SHAWN M. SHELLITO, HEATHER U. ABELLO, AND FETER A.<br />

JUMARS. Tidally Phased Emergence Events in a Strongly Tidal Estuary ............................................. 500<br />

MELANIE J. BISHOP. Compensatory Effects of Boat Wake and Dredge Spoil Disposal on<br />

Assemblages of Macroinvertebrates.........................................................................................................510<br />

MATTHEW G. SLOCUM, IRVING A. MENDFLSSOHN, AND NATHAN L. Kuhn. Effects of<br />

Sediment Slurry Enrichment on Salt <strong>Mar</strong>sh Rehabilitation: Plant and Soil Responses Over<br />

Seven Years .............................................................................................................................................519<br />

RAYMOND M. VALENTE AND CARMELA CUOMO. Did Multiple Sediment-associated<br />

Stressors Contribute to the 1999 Lobster Mass Mortality Event in Western Long Island Sound,<br />

USA? ....................................................................................................................................................... 529<br />

WIM J. KIMMFRFR, NISSA FERM, MARY HELEN NICOLINI, AND CAROLINA PEÑALVA.<br />

Chronic Food Limitation of Egg Production in Populations of Copepods of the Genus Acartia in<br />

the San Francisco Estuary ...................................................................................................................... 541<br />

K. ROGERS, N. SAINTILAN, AND H. REUNIS. Mangrove Encroachment of Salt <strong>Mar</strong>sh in<br />

Western Port Bay, Victoria: The Role of Sedimentation, Subsi<strong>de</strong>nce, and Sea Level Rise ................... 551<br />

CHRISTOPHER R. KELBLE, PETER B. ORTNFR, GARY L. HITCI-ICOCK, AND JOSEPH N.<br />

BOYER. Attenuation of Photosynthetically Available Radiation (PAR) in Florida Bay: Potential<br />

for Light Limitation of Primary Producers ................................................................................................ 560<br />

JIANGTAO XU RALEIGH R. HOOD, AND SHENN-YU CHAO. A Simple Empirical Optical<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>l for Simulating Light Attenuation Variability in a Partially Mixed Estuary .......................................572<br />

GILES DURRIEU MARY-BRACHET, MICHEL GIRARDIN, ERIC ROCHRD, AND AL-AIN<br />

BOUDOU. Contamination by Heavy Metals (Cd, Zn, Cu, Hg) of Eight Fish Species in the<br />

Giron<strong>de</strong> Estuary (France) ........................................................................................................................ 581<br />

CATARINA M. MAGALHAES, WILLIAM J. WREBE, SAMANTHA B. JOYE, AND ADRIA<strong>NO</strong> A.<br />

BORDALO. Inorganic Nitrogen Dynamics in Intertidal Rocky Biofilms and Sediments of the<br />

Douro River Estuary (Portugal) ............................................................................................................... 592<br />

JOHN M. FEAR, SUZANNE P. THOMPSON, TOMAS E. GALLO, AND HANS W PAERL.<br />

Denitrification Rates Measured Along a Salinity Gradient in die Eutrophic Neuse River Estuary,<br />

North Carolina, USA ................................................................................................................................ 608<br />

THOMAS A. RADZIO AND WILLEM M. ROOSENBURG. Diamondback Terrapin Mortality in<br />

the American Eel Pot Fishery and Evaluation of a Bycatch Reduction Device .......................................620<br />

16


T. GARCIA-ARMISEN, A. TOURON, E PFTIT, AND P. SERVAIS. Sources of faecal<br />

Contamination in the Seine Estuary (France) ......................................................................................... 627<br />

LAUREN D. MCDANIEL, VICKI MCGEE, AND JOHN H. PAUL. Use of the <strong>Mar</strong>ine prophage<br />

Induction Assay (WIA) to Detect Environmental Mutagens .....................................................................634<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY<br />

Vol. 14, No. 6, November <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

505<br />

Thinking at the global scale.......................................................................................................................505<br />

David P. Turner<br />

Research Papers<br />

Rainfall reliability, a neglected factor in explaining convergence and divergence of plant traits<br />

in fire-prone mediterranean-climate ecosystems ......................................................................................509<br />

Richard M. Cowling, Fernando Ojeda, Byron B. Lamont, Phillip W. Run<strong>de</strong>l, Richard Lechmere-<br />

Oertel<br />

Human impacts, energy availability and invasion across Southern Ocean Islands..................................521<br />

Steven L. Chown, Bruce Hull, Kevin J. Gaston<br />

Reducing uncertainty in projections of extinction risk from climate change..............................................529<br />

Miguel B. Araújo, Robert J. Whittaker, Richard J. Ladle, <strong>Mar</strong>kus Erhard<br />

Species turnover on elevational gradients in small ro<strong>de</strong>nts......................................................................539<br />

José Luis Mena, Ella Vázquez-Domínguez<br />

A climatic stratification of the environment of Europe ...............................................................................549<br />

M. J. Metzger, R. G. H. Bunce, R. H. G. Jongman, C. A. Mücher, J. W. Watkins<br />

A retrospective study of climatic suitability for the tick Rhipicephalus (Boophilus)microplus in<br />

the Americas..............................................................................................................................................565<br />

A. Estrada-Peña, C. Sánchez Acedo, J. Quílez, E. Del Cacho<br />

Uncertainty of bioclimate envelope mo<strong>de</strong>ls based on the geographical distribution of species ...............575<br />

M. Luoto, J. Pöyry, R. K. Heikkinen, K. Saarinen<br />

Plant allometry, stoichiometry and the temperature-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nce of primary productivity ........................585<br />

Andrew J. Kerkhoff, Brian J. Enquist, James J. Elser, William F. Fagan<br />

Library Letters<br />

San Francisco Bay Area plants for beginners...........................................................................................599<br />

G. Fre<strong>de</strong>ric Hrusa<br />

Characterizing ecosystem response to climate variability ........................................................................600<br />

Matt Fitzpatrick, Jake F. Weltzin<br />

Advocating the Devil's advocate ...............................................................................................................601<br />

Ian C. W. Hardy<br />

Forests at the land–atmosphere interface: a tribute to Dr Paul Jarvis......................................................601<br />

Brian D. Amiro<br />

A new taste for old fine wines....................................................................................................................602<br />

José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 62, No. 7, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Kenneth F. Drinkwater, Harald Loeng, Bernard A. Megrey, Nick Bailey and Robin M. Cook<br />

Synchronous ecological regime shifts in the central Baltic and the North Sea in the late 1980s •<br />

................................................................................................................................................................ 1205<br />

J. Alheit, C. Möllmann, J. Dutz, G. Kornilovs, P. Loewe, V. Mohrholz and N. Wasmund<br />

On the phenology of North Sea ichthyoplankton • ................................................................................ 1216<br />

Wulf Greve, Sabine Prinage, Heike Zidowitz, Jutta Nast and Frank Reiners<br />

Climatic effects on plankton and productivity on the Faroe Shelf • ....................................................... 1224<br />

Bogi Hansen, Sólvá K. Eliasen, Eilif Gaard and Karin M.H. Larsen<br />

Regional variability in the trophic requirements of shelf sea fisheries in the Northeast Atlantic,<br />

1973–<strong>200</strong>0 • .......................................................................................................................................... 1233<br />

Michael R. Heath<br />

Comparison of the biophysical and trophic characteristics of the Bering and Barents Seas • ............. 1245<br />

17


George L. Hunt, Jr. and Bernard A. Megrey<br />

Comparative analysis of statistical tools to i<strong>de</strong>ntify recruitment–environment relationships and<br />

forecast recruitment strength • .............................................................................................................. 1256<br />

Bernard A. Megrey, Yong-Woo Lee and S. Allen Macklin<br />

Climate, zooplankton, and pelagic fish growth in the central Baltic Sea • ............................................ 1270<br />

Christian Möllmann, Georgs Kornilovs, <strong>Mar</strong>ina Fetter and Friedrich W. Köster<br />

The relationship between plankton, capelin, and cod un<strong>de</strong>r different temperature conditions • ........... 1281<br />

E.L. Orlova, V.D. Boitsov, A.V. Dolgov, G.B. Rudneva and V.N. Nesterova<br />

Some effects of ultraviolet radiation and climate on the reproduction of Calanus finmarchicus<br />

(Copepoda) and year class formation in Arcto-Norwegian cod (Gadus morhua) • ............................... 1293<br />

Stig Skreslet, Angel Borja, Luca Bugliaro, Georg Hansen, Ralf Meerkötter, Ketil Olsen and<br />

Jean Ver<strong>de</strong>bout<br />

Variability in retention of Calanus finmarchicus in the Nordic Seas • .................................................... 1301<br />

Thomas Torgersen and Geir Huse<br />

Long-term variability of growth and recruitment of cod (Gadus morhua) off Greenland • .................... 1310<br />

Hans-Joachim Rätz and Josep Lloret<br />

The implications of warming climate for the management of North Sea <strong>de</strong>mersal fisheries • .............. 1322<br />

R.M. Cook and M.R. Heath<br />

The response of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) to future climate change • ........................................... 1327<br />

Kenneth F. Drinkwater<br />

The emerging role of climate in post-smolt growth of Atlantic salmon • ............................................... 1338<br />

Kevin D. Friedland, Gerald Chaput and Julian C. MacLean<br />

The flow of Atlantic water to the North Icelandic Shelf and its relation to the drift of cod larvae • ........ 1350<br />

Steingrímur Jónsson and Héðinn Valdimarsson<br />

On distributional responses of North Atlantic fish to climate change • .................................................. 1360<br />

G.A. Rose<br />

The combined effect of transport and temperature on distribution and growth of larvae and<br />

pelagic juveniles of Arcto-Norwegian cod • ........................................................................................... 1375<br />

Fro<strong>de</strong> Vikebø, Svein Sundby, Bjørn Ådlandsvik and Øyvind Fiksen<br />

Effect of temperature and food availability on reproductive investment of first-time spawning<br />

male Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua • ....................................................................................................... 1387<br />

Michio Yoneda and Peter J. Wright<br />

Do environmental factors affect recruits per spawner anomalies of New England groundfish? • ........ 1394<br />

Jon Brodziak and Loretta O'Brien<br />

Baltic cod recruitment – the impact of climate variability on key processes • ....................................... 1408<br />

Friedrich W. Köster, Christian Möllmann, Hans-Harald Hinrichsen, Kai Wieland, Jonna<br />

Tomkiewicz, Gerd Kraus, Rüdiger Voss, Andrei Makarchouk, Brian R. MacKenzie, Michael A.<br />

St. John et al.<br />

The use of historical catch data to trace the influence of climate on fish populations: examples<br />

from the White and Barents Sea fisheries in the 17th and 18th centuries • .......................................... 1426<br />

Dmitry L. Lajus, Julia A. Lajus, Zoya V. Dmitrieva, Alexei V. Kraikovski and Daniel A.<br />

Alexandrov<br />

The impact of climate change on the fish community structure of the eastern continental shelf<br />

of the Bay of Biscay • ............................................................................................................................ 1436<br />

Jean-Charles Poulard and Fabian Blanchard<br />

Bathymetric shift in the distribution of Atlantic surfclams: response to warmer ocean<br />

temperature • ......................................................................................................................................... 1444<br />

James R. Weinberg<br />

Changes in recruitment, growth, and stock size of northern shrimp (Pandalus borealis) at West<br />

Greenland: temperature and <strong>de</strong>nsity-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt effects at released predation pressure • .................. 1454<br />

Kai Wieland<br />

The effect of abiotic and biotic factors on the importance of macroplankton in the diet of<br />

Northeast Arctic cod in recent years • ................................................................................................... 1463<br />

E.L. Orlova, A.V. Dolgov, G.B. Rudneva and V.N. Nesterova<br />

Analysis of juvenile North Atlantic albacore (Thunnus alalunga) catch per unit effort by surface<br />

gears in relation to environmental variables • ....................................................................................... 1475<br />

18


Nicolas Goñi and Haritz Arrizabalaga<br />

Implications of climate change for the management of North Sea cod (Gadus morhua) • ................... 1483<br />

Laurence T. Kell, Graham M. Pilling and Carl M. O'Brien<br />

The impact of climate change on the adaptation of marine fish in the Baltic Sea • .............................. 1492<br />

Evald Ojaveer and <strong>Mar</strong>gers Kalejs<br />

The role of interannual environmental variations in the geographic range of spawning and<br />

feeding concentrations of redfish Sebastes mentella in the Irminger Sea • .......................................... 1501<br />

Andrey P. Pedchenko<br />

Inter<strong>de</strong>cadal variability in the Gulf of Maine zooplankton community, with potential impacts on<br />

fish recruitment • .................................................................................................................................... 1511<br />

Andrew J. Pershing, Charles H. Greene, Jack W. Jossi, Loretta O'Brien, Jon K.T. Brodziak and<br />

Barbara A. Bailey<br />

Capelin (Mallotus villosus) distribution and climate: a sea “canary” for marine ecosystem<br />

change • ................................................................................................................................................. 1524<br />

G.A. Rose<br />

Managing fish stocks un<strong>de</strong>r climate uncertainty • ................................................................................. 1531<br />

Brian J. Rothschild, Changsheng Chen and R. Greg Lough<br />

Referees • PUBLISHER'S <strong>NO</strong>TE<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 62, No. 8, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Disentangling the effects of capture efficiency and population abundance on catch data using<br />

random effects mo<strong>de</strong>ls • ........................................................................................................................ 1543<br />

Verena M. Trenkel and Hans J. Skaug<br />

The fuzzy relationship between trawl and acoustic surveys in the North Sea • .................................... 1556<br />

Steven Mackinson, Jeroen van <strong>de</strong>r Kooij and Suzanna Neville<br />

The application of qualitative risk assessment methodology to prioritize issues for fisheries<br />

management • ....................................................................................................................................... 1576<br />

W.J. Fletcher<br />

Deviation from Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium, and temporal instability in allele frequencies at<br />

microsatellite loci in a local population of Atlantic cod • ........................................................................ 1588<br />

Sten Karlsson and Jarle Mork<br />

Analyses of Bering Sea bottom-trawl surveys in Norton Sound: absence of regime shift effect<br />

on epifauna and <strong>de</strong>mersal fish • ............................................................................................................ 1597<br />

Toshihi<strong>de</strong> Hamazaki, Lowell Fair, Leslie Watson and Elisabeth Brennan<br />

Evolution of the state of fish stocks in the Northeast Atlantic within a precautionary framework,<br />

1970–<strong>200</strong>3: a synoptic evaluation • ...................................................................................................... 1603<br />

S.M. Garcia and J.I. De Leiva Moreno<br />

Novel DNA markers for rapid, accurate, and cost-effective discrimination of the continental<br />

origin of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) • ........................................................................................... 1609<br />

John Gilbey, David Knox, <strong>Mar</strong>tha O'Sullivan and Eric Verspoor<br />

Is juvenile salmon abundance related to subsequent and preceding catches? Perspectives<br />

from a long-term monitoring programme • ............................................................................................ 1617<br />

E. Niemelä, J. Erkinaro, M. Julkunen and E. Hassinen<br />

The estimation of hid<strong>de</strong>n seal-inflicted losses in the Baltic Sea set-trap salmon fisheries • ................. 1630<br />

Arne Fjälling<br />

An improved multiple-frequency method for measuring in situ target strengths • ................................. 1636<br />

Stéphane G. Conti, David A. Demer, Michael A. Soule and Jean H.E. Conti<br />

Combining indicator trends to assess ongoing changes in exploited fish communities:<br />

diagnostic of communities off the coasts of France • ............................................................................ 1647<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ie-Joëlle Rochet, Verena Trenkel, Robert Bellail, Franck Coppin, Olivier Le Pape, Jean-<br />

Clau<strong>de</strong> Mahé, Jocelyne Morin, Jean-Charles Poulard, Ivan Schlaich, Arnauld Souplet et al.<br />

Genetic evi<strong>de</strong>nce that the northern calamary, Sepioteuthis lessoniana, is a species complex in<br />

Australian waters • ................................................................................................................................. 1665<br />

Lianos Triantafillos and <strong>Mar</strong>k Adams<br />

19


Trends in age-at-recruitment and juvenile growth of cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, from the<br />

English Channel • .................................................................................................................................. 1671<br />

Laurence Challier, Matthew R. Dunn and Jean-Paul Robin<br />

A double DNA approach for i<strong>de</strong>ntifying Macrorhamphosus scolopax (Pisces, Centriscidae) • ............ 1683<br />

Nikoletta Karaiskou, Alexan<strong>de</strong>r Triantafyllidis, <strong>Mar</strong>itsa <strong>Mar</strong>garoni, Dimitris Karatzas and Costas<br />

Triantaphyllidis<br />

Geographic variation of gol<strong>de</strong>n redfish (Sebastes marinus) and <strong>de</strong>ep-sea redfish (S. mentella)<br />

in the North Atlantic based on otolith shape analysis • ......................................................................... 1691<br />

Christoph Stransky<br />

Population structure of Merluccius merluccius along the Iberian Peninsula coast • ............................. 1699<br />

Ana G.F. Castillo, Paula Alvarez and Eva Garcia-Vazquez<br />

Estimation of mackerel (Scomber scombrus L., 1758) and horse mackerel (Trachurus<br />

trachurus L., 1758) daily egg production outsi<strong>de</strong> the standard ICES survey area • SHORT<br />

COMMUNICATION<br />

Pages 1705-1710<br />

Leonie Dransfeld, Oonagh Dwane, John Molloy, Sarah Gallagher and Dave G. Reid<br />

Ex situ conservation status of an endangered Yangtze finless porpoise population<br />

(Neophocaena phocaenoi<strong>de</strong>s asiaeorientalis) as measured from microsatellites and mtDNA<br />

diversity • ............................................................................................................................................... 1711<br />

Junhong Xia, Jinsong Zheng and Ding Wang<br />

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. XVII, No. 3, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

CONTENTS<br />

REVIEW<br />

REHYDRATION OF DRIED FRUIT PIECES IN AQUEOUS SUGAR SOLUTIONS: A REVIEW<br />

ON MASS TRANSFER AND FINAL PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS<br />

D. Mastrocola, G. Sacchetti, P. Pittia, C. Di Mattia and M. Dalla Rosa ...................................................131<br />

PAPERS<br />

TRAINING OF A SENSORY PANEL FOR QUANTITATIVE DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS OF<br />

LAMB MEAT<br />

F. Gasperi, F. Biasioli, G. Gallerani, S. Fasoli and E. Piasentier .............................................................255<br />

MICROBIOLOGICAL QUALITY OF VEGETABLE PROTEINS DURING THE PREPARATION<br />

OF A MEAT ANALOG<br />

G.C.S. Filho, T.C. Vessoni Penna and D.W. Schaffner ...........................................................................269<br />

DIETARY FIBRE COMPONENTS OF HIGH-FIBRE COMMERCIAL PRODUCTS. EFFECT OF<br />

COOKING PROCESS<br />

D. Sgrulletta, G. Scalfati, E. De Stefanis and A. Conciatori ......................................................................285<br />

EFFECT OF DIRECT ACIDIFICATION AND PASTEURIZATION OF BUFFALO MILK ON THE<br />

QUALITY OF MARAJOARA CHEESE<br />

R.M. Hotta, C.A.F. Oliveira, O.C. Cunha Neto, A.M. Fernan<strong>de</strong>s, P.J.A. Sobral and R. Franzolin<br />

Neto ...........................................................................................................................................................295<br />

EVALUATION OF TOTAL CAROTE<strong>NO</strong>IDS AND ASCORBIC ACID IN OSMOTIC<br />

PRETREATED GUAVAS DURING CONVECTIVE DRYING<br />

E.J. Sanjinez-Argandoña, R.L. Cunha, F.C. Menegalli and M.D. Hubinger ............................................305<br />

ANTIOXIDANT PROPERTIES OF THYME (THYMUS VULGARIS L.) AND WILD THYME<br />

(THYMUS SERPYLLUM L.) ESSENTIAL OILS<br />

T. Kulisic, A. Radonic and M. Milos ..........................................................................................................315<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATIONS<br />

SQUID (SEPIA OFFICINALIS) STORED IN ACTIVE PACKAGING: SOME CHEMICAL AND<br />

MICROBIOLOGICAL CHANGES<br />

D. Albanese, L. Cinquanta, M.T. Lanorte and M. Di Matteo .....................................................................325<br />

PRELIMINARY NUTRITIONAL AND ORGA<strong>NO</strong>LEPTIC ASSESSMENT OF XOCO<strong>NO</strong>STLE<br />

FRUIT (OPUNTIA SPP.) AS A CONDIMENT OR APPETIZER<br />

L.G. García-Pedraza, J.A. Reyes-Agüero, J.R. Aguirre-Rivera and J. M. Pinos-Rodríguez ...................333<br />

20


VOLATILE PROFILES OF SICILIAN PRICKLY PEAR (OPUNTIA FICUS INDICA) BY SPME-<br />

GC/MS ANALYSIS<br />

P. Agozzino, G. Avellone, L. Ceraulo, M. Ferrugia and F. Filizzol ............................................................341<br />

MICROBIAL POPULATIONS IN MEDICINAL AND AROMATIC PLANTS AND HERBAL TEAS<br />

FROM CROATIA<br />

M. Halt and T. Klapec ...............................................................................................................................349<br />

NEWS........................................................................................................................................................355<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 32, No. 12, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Plant responses to environmental change<br />

Simulating forest ecosystem response to climate warming incorporating spatial effects in<br />

north-eastern China.................................................................................................................................2043<br />

Hong S. He, Zhanqing Hao, David J. Mla<strong>de</strong>noff, Guofan Shao, Yuanman Hu, Yu Chang<br />

Reciprocal distribution of two congeneric trees, Betula platyphylla var. japonica and Betula<br />

maximowicziana, in a landscape dominated by anthropogenic disturbances in northeastern<br />

Japan.......................................................................................................................................................2057<br />

Katsuhiro Osumi<br />

The relative importance of local, regional and historical factors <strong>de</strong>termining the distribution of<br />

plants in fragmented riverine forests: an emergent group approach ......................................................2069<br />

Bruno Hérault, Olivier Honnay<br />

Un<strong>de</strong>rstorey plant community structure in lower montane and subalpine forests, Grand<br />

Canyon National Park, USA....................................................................................................................2083<br />

Daniel C. Laughlin, Jonathan D. Bakker, Peter Z. Fulé<br />

A global selection<br />

A brief history of Great Basin pikas.........................................................................................................2103<br />

Donald K. Grayson<br />

Lizard habitat partitioning on islands: the interaction of local and landscape scales..............................2113<br />

Lauren B. Buckley, Joan Roughgar<strong>de</strong>n<br />

Influence of physical environmental characteristics and anthropogenic factors on the position<br />

and structure of a contact zone between two chromosomal races of the house mouse on the<br />

island of Ma<strong>de</strong>ira (North Atlantic, Portugal) ............................................................................................2123<br />

A. C. Nunes, J. Britton-Davidian, J. Catalan, M. G. Ramalhinho, R. Capela, M. L. Mathias, G.<br />

Ganem<br />

Phylogenetics of the allodapine bee genus Braunsapis: historical biogeography and longrange<br />

dispersal over water ......................................................................................................................2135<br />

Susan Fuller, Michael Schwarz, Simon Tierney<br />

The importance of species i<strong>de</strong>ntity in the biocontrol process: i<strong>de</strong>ntifying the subspecies of<br />

Acacia nilotica (Leguminosae: Mimosoi<strong>de</strong>ae) by genetic distance and the implications for<br />

biological control......................................................................................................................................2145<br />

Trevor J. Wardill, Glenn C. Graham, Myron Zalucki, William A. Palmer, Julia Playford, Kirsten<br />

D. Scott<br />

Biogeographical and geological evi<strong>de</strong>nce for a smaller, completely-enclosed Pacific Basin in<br />

the Late Cretaceous ................................................................................................................................2161<br />

Dennis McCarthy<br />

Correspon<strong>de</strong>nce<br />

Forum on historical biogeography: what is cladistic biogeography?.......................................................2179<br />

Malte C. Ebach, Juan J. Morrone<br />

Falklands: facts and fiction ......................................................................................................................2183<br />

Juan J. Morrone, Paula Posadas<br />

Falklands: fact, fiction or fiddlesticks?.....................................................................................................2187<br />

R.M. McDowall<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 93, No. 6, December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Community structure, dynamics and assembly rules<br />

21


Reconciling plant strategy theories of Grime and Tilman .......................................................................1041<br />

JOSEPH M. CRAINE<br />

Invasion impacts diversity through altered community dynamics ...........................................................1053<br />

KATHRYN A. YURKONIS, SCOTT J. MEINERS, BRENT E. WACHHOLDER<br />

Experimental invasion by legumes reveals non-random assembly rules in grassland<br />

communities ............................................................................................................................................1062<br />

LINDSAY A. TURNBULL, SABINE RAHM, OKSANA BAUDOIS, SUSANN EICHENBERGER-<br />

GLINZ, LUCA WACKER, BERNHARD SCHMID<br />

Successional dynamics of woody seedling communities in wet tropical secondary forests...................1071<br />

ROBERT S. CAPERS, ROBIN L. CHAZDON, ALVARO REDONDO BRENES, BRAULIO<br />

VILCHEZ ALVARADO<br />

Differential tree mortality in response to severe drought: evi<strong>de</strong>nce for long-term vegetation<br />

shifts ........................................................................................................................................................1085<br />

REBECCA C. MUELLER, CRESCENT M. SCUDDER, MARIANNE E. PORTER, R. TALBOT<br />

TROTTER III, CATHERINE A. GEHRING, THOMAS G. WHITHAM<br />

1094<br />

Hydrochory increases riparian plant species richness: a comparison between a free-flowing<br />

and a regulated river ...............................................................................................................................1094<br />

ROLAND JANSSON, URSULA ZINKO, DAVID M. MERRITT, CHRISTER NILSSON<br />

Competition and facilitation<br />

Abundance and flowering success patterns in a short-term grazed grassland: early evi<strong>de</strong>nce of<br />

facilitation.................................................................................................................................................1104<br />

B. BOSSUYT, B. DE FRÉ, M. HOFFMANN<br />

Disentangling above- and below-ground competition between lianas and trees in a tropical<br />

forest........................................................................................................................................................1115<br />

STEFAN A. SCHNITZER, MIRJAM E. KUZEE, FRANS BONGERS<br />

Dual role for an allelochemical: (±)-catechin from Centaurea maculosa root exudates regulates<br />

conspecific seedling establishment.........................................................................................................1126<br />

LAURA G. PERRY, GILES C. THELEN, WENDY M. RIDE<strong>NO</strong>UR, TIFFANY L. WEIR, RAGAN<br />

M. CALLAWAY, MARK W. PASCHKE, JORGE M. VIVANCO<br />

Winners and losers in herbaceous plant communities: insights from foliar carbon isotope<br />

composition in monocultures and mixtures .............................................................................................1136<br />

A. JUMPPONEN, C. P. H. MULDER, K. HUSS-DANELL, P. HÖGBERG<br />

Reproduction, recruitment and establishment<br />

Evolutionary advantages of mast seeding in Fagus crenata ..................................................................1148<br />

HIROKAZU KON, TAKASHI <strong>NO</strong>DA, KAZUHIKO TERAZAWA, HIROMASA KOYAMA,<br />

MICHIYASU YASAKA<br />

Seed mass, seedling size and neotropical tree seedling establishment.................................................1156<br />

CHRISTOPHER BARALOTO, PIERRE-MICHEL FORGET, DEBORAH E. GOLDBERG<br />

Longevity of experimentally buried seed in Vaccinium: relationship to climate, reproductive<br />

factors and natural seed banks ...............................................................................................................1167<br />

NICHOLAS M. HILL, SAM P. VANDER KLOET<br />

Survival of tree seedlings across space and time: estimates from long-term count data.......................1177<br />

BRIAN BECKAGE, MICHAEL LAVINE, JAMES S. CLARK<br />

Temperature effects on seed maturity and dormancy cycles in an aquatic annual, Najas<br />

marina, at the edge of its range...............................................................................................................1185<br />

RICHARD J. HANDLEY, ANTHONY J. DAVY<br />

Fragmentation and its impact at different scales<br />

Microhabitats shift rank in suitability for seedling establishment <strong>de</strong>pending on habitat type and<br />

climate .....................................................................................................................................................1194<br />

LORENA GÓMEZ-APARICIO, JOSE M. GÓMEZ, REGI<strong>NO</strong> ZAMORA<br />

Plant traits and local extinctions in natural grasslands along an urban–rural gradient...........................1203<br />

NICHOLAS S. G. WILLIAMS, JOHN W. MORGAN, MARK J. MCDONNELL, MICHAEL A.<br />

MCCARTHY<br />

Habitat fragmentation reduces grassland connectivity for both short-distance and longdistance<br />

wind-dispersed forbs.................................................................................................................1214<br />

22


M. B. SOONS, J. H. MESSELINK, E. JONGEJANS, G. W. HEIL<br />

Reduced reproductive success and offspring survival in fragmented populations of the forest<br />

herb Phyteuma spicatum.........................................................................................................................1226<br />

ANNETTE KOLB<br />

Self-organization in raised bog patterning: the origin of microtope zonation and mesotope<br />

diversity ...................................................................................................................................................1238<br />

JOHN COUWENBERG, HANS JOOSTEN<br />

Biological Flora of the British Isles<br />

Biological Flora of the British Isles: Rubus vestitus Weihe .....................................................................1249<br />

K. TAYLOR<br />

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY:<br />

Vol. 34, No. 6, November-December <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

TECHNICAL REPORTS:<br />

Bioremediation and Bio<strong>de</strong>gradation:<br />

Sabine Beulke, Wendy van Beinum, Colin D. Brown, Matthew Mitchell, and Allan Walker<br />

Evaluation of Simplifying Assumptions on Pestici<strong>de</strong> Degradation in Soil ...............................................1933<br />

Fiona H. Crocker, Karen T. Thompson, James E. Szecsody, and Herbert L. Fredrickson<br />

Biotic and Abiotic Degradation of CL-20 and RDX in Soils.....................................................................2208<br />

Ecological Risk Assessment:<br />

D. V. Ige, O. O. Akinremi, and D. N. Flaten<br />

Environmental In<strong>de</strong>x for Estimating the Risk of Phosphorus Loss in Calcareous Soils of<br />

Manitoba..................................................................................................................................................1944<br />

Yogesh Chan<strong>de</strong>r, Kuldip Kumar, Sagar M. Goyal, and Satish C. Gupta<br />

Antibacterial Activity of Soil-Bound Antibiotics .......................................................................................1952-<br />

Brandon H. An<strong>de</strong>rson and Fre<strong>de</strong>rick R. Magdoff<br />

Autoclaving Soil Samples Affects Algal-Available Phosphorus ..............................................................1958<br />

Girisha K. Ganjegunte, George F. Vance, and Lyle A. King<br />

Soil Chemical Changes Resulting from Irrigation with Water Co-Produced with Coalbed<br />

Natural Gas .............................................................................................................................................2217<br />

Brandon H. An<strong>de</strong>rson and Fre<strong>de</strong>rick R. Magdoff<br />

Relative Movement and Soil Fixation of Soluble Organic and Inorganic Phosphorus............................2228<br />

Organic Compounds in the Environment:<br />

Allison A. MacKay and Brian Canterbury<br />

Oxytetracycline Sorption to Organic Matter by Metal-Bridging ...............................................................1964<br />

Plant and Environment Interactions:<br />

T. Centofanti, R. Penfield, A. Albrecht, S. Pellerin, H. Flühler, and E. Frossard<br />

Is the Transfer Factor a Relevant Tool to Assess the Soil-to-Plant Transfer of Radionucli<strong>de</strong>s<br />

un<strong>de</strong>r Field Conditions? .........................................................................................................................1972-<br />

Surface Water Quality:<br />

Xiaoqing Zeng and Todd C. Rasmussen<br />

Multivariate Statistical Characterization of Water Quality in Lake Lanier, Georgia, USA .......................1980<br />

Alex T. Chow, Fengmao Guo, Suduan Gao, and Richard S. Breuer<br />

Trihalomethane Formation Potential of Filter Isolates of Electrolyte-Extractable Soil Organic<br />

Carbon.....................................................................................................................................................1992<br />

L. B. Mason, C. Amrhein, C. C. Goodson, M. R. Matsumoto, and M. A. An<strong>de</strong>rson<br />

Reducing Sediment and Phosphorus in Tributary Waters with Alum and Polyacrylami<strong>de</strong>....................1998-<br />

H. L. Byers, M. L. Cabrera, M. K. Matthews, D. H. Franklin, J. G. Andrae, D. E. Radcliffe, M. A.<br />

McCann, H. A. Kuykendall, C. S. Hoveland, and V. H. Calvert, II<br />

Phosphorus, Sediment, and Escherichia coli Loads in Unfenced Streams of the Georgia<br />

Piedmont, USA........................................................................................................................................2293<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ianne E. Bechmann, Peter J. A. Kleinman, Andrew N. Sharpley, and Lou S. Saporito<br />

Freeze–Thaw Effects on Phosphorus Loss in Runoff from Manured and Catch-Cropped Soils............2301<br />

Vadose Zone Processes and Chemical Transport:<br />

Terry Prichard, John Troiano, Joe <strong>Mar</strong>a<strong>de</strong>, Fengmao Guo, and Mick Canevari<br />

Movement of Diuron and Hexazinone in Clay Soil and Infiltrated Pond Water.......................................<strong>200</strong>5<br />

23


Waste Management:<br />

O. Grant Clark, Brent Morin, Yongcheng Zhang, Willem C. Sauer, and John J. R. Fed<strong>de</strong>s<br />

Preliminary Investigation of Air Bubbling and Dietary Sulfur Reduction to Mitigate Hydrogen<br />

Sulfi<strong>de</strong> and Odor from Swine Waste .......................................................................................................2018<br />

Nathan O. Nelson, John E. Parsons, and Robert L. Mikkelsen<br />

Field-Scale Evaluation of Phosphorus Leaching in Acid Sandy Soils Receiving Swine Waste .............2024<br />

J. <strong>Mar</strong>k Powell, Daniel F. McCrory, D. B. Jackson-Smith, and H. Saam<br />

Manure Collection and Distribution on Wisconsin Dairy Farms ..............................................................2036<br />

M. T. Rashid and R. P. Voroney<br />

Nitrogen Fertilizer Recommendations for Corn Grown on Soils Amen<strong>de</strong>d with Oily Food Waste .........2045<br />

Valtcho D. Zheljazkov<br />

Assessment of Wool Waste and Hair Waste as Soil Amendment and Nutrient Source<br />

Published online 7 November <strong>200</strong>5; doi:10.2134/jeq<strong>200</strong>4.0332 ............................................................2310<br />

Francis Zvomuya, Francis J. Larney, Connie K. Nichol, Andrew F. Olson, Jim J. Miller, and<br />

Paul R. DeMaere<br />

Chemical and Physical Changes Following Co-Composting of Beef Cattle Feedlot Manure with<br />

Phosphogypsum......................................................................................................................................2318<br />

Fabio Gosetti, Valentina Gianotti, Mauro Ravera, and <strong>Mar</strong>ia Carla Gennaro<br />

HPLC-MSn to Investigate the Oxidative Destruction Pathway of Aromatic Sulfonate Wastes...............2328<br />

Wetlands and Aquatic Processes:<br />

Melissa J. Hay<strong>de</strong>n and Donald S. Ross<br />

Denitrification as a Nitrogen Removal Mechanism in a Vermont Peatland ............................................2052<br />

Stefanie L. Whitmire and Stephen K. Hamilton<br />

Rapid Removal of Nitrate and Sulfate in Freshwater Wetland Sediments .............................................2062<br />

Christopher J. An<strong>de</strong>rson, William J. Mitsch, and Robert W. Nairn<br />

Temporal and Spatial Development of Surface Soil Conditions at Two Created Riverine<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>shes...................................................................................................................................................2072<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATIONS:<br />

K. Kumar, S. C. Gupta, S. K. Baidoo, Y. Chan<strong>de</strong>r, and C. J. Rosen<br />

Antibiotic Uptake by Plants from Soil Fertilized with Animal Manure......................................................2082<br />

A. K. Guber, D. R. Shelton, and Ya. A. Pachepsky<br />

Effect of Manure on Escherichia coli Attachment to Soil ........................................................................2086<br />

SPECIAL SUBMISSIONS:<br />

Phosphorus Workshop:<br />

Papers presented at the Fourth International Phosphorus Workshop "Critical Evaluation of<br />

Options for Reducing Phosphorus Loss from Agriculture," Wageningen, the Netherlands,<br />

August <strong>200</strong>4.<br />

W.J. Chardon and G.F. Koopmans<br />

Phosphorus Workshop ............................................................................................................................2091<br />

R. O. Maguire, Z. Dou, J. T. Sims, J. Brake, and B. C. Joern<br />

Dietary Strategies for Reduced Phosphorus Excretion and Improved Water Quality.............................2093<br />

P. A. Moore, Jr. and D. R. Edwards<br />

Long-Term Effects of Poultry Litter, Alum-Treated Litter, and Ammonium Nitrate on Aluminum<br />

Availability in Soils...................................................................................................................................2104<br />

E. A. Dayton and N. T. Basta<br />

Use of Drinking Water Treatment Residuals as a Potential Best Management Practice to<br />

Reduce Phosphorus Risk In<strong>de</strong>x Scores..................................................................................................2112<br />

J. W. Cox, J. Varcoe, D. J. Chittleborough, and J. van Leeuwen<br />

Using Gypsum to Reduce Phosphorus in Runoff from Subcatchments in South Australia....................2118<br />

B. Kronvang, M. Bechmann, H. Lun<strong>de</strong>kvam, H. Behrendt, G. H. Rubæk, O. F. Schoumans, N.<br />

Syversen, H. E. An<strong>de</strong>rsen, and C. C. Hoffmann<br />

Phosphorus Losses from Agricultural Areas in River Basins: Effects and Uncertainties of<br />

Targeted Mitigation Measures.................................................................................................................2129<br />

B. C. Braskerud, K. S. Ton<strong>de</strong>rski, B. Wedding, R. Bakke, A.-G. B. Blankenberg, B. Ulén, and<br />

J. Koskiaho<br />

24


Can Constructed Wetlands Reduce the Diffuse Phosphorus Loads to Eutrophic Water in Cold<br />

Temperate Regions?...............................................................................................................................2145<br />

Rhizosphere Conference:<br />

Papers presented at the international conference "Rhizosphere <strong>200</strong>4: Perspectives and<br />

Challenges-A Tribute to Lorenz Hiltner," Munich, Germany, September <strong>200</strong>4.<br />

W.W. Wenzel<br />

Rhizosphere Conference........................................................................................................................2156.<br />

Jun Wasaki, Annett Rothe, Angelika Kania, Günter Neumann, Volker Römheld, Takuro<br />

Shinano, Mitsuru Osaki, and Ellen Kan<strong>de</strong>ler<br />

Root Exudation, Phosphorus Acquisition, and Microbial Diversity in the Rhizosphere of White<br />

Lupine as Affected by Phosphorus Supply and Atmospheric Carbon Dioxi<strong>de</strong> Concentration..... 2157-2166.<br />

A. Gommers, Y. Thiry, and B. Delvaux<br />

Rhizospheric Mobilization and Plant Uptake of Radiocesium from Weathered Micas: I.<br />

Influence of Potassium Depletion............................................................................................................2167<br />

Yves Thiry, Annick Gommers, Anne Iserentant, and Bruno Delvaux<br />

Rhizospheric Mobilization and Plant Uptake of Radiocesium from Weathered Micas: II.<br />

Influence of Mineral Alterability ...............................................................................................................2174<br />

Abid Al Agely, David M. Sylvia, and Lena Q. Ma<br />

Mycorrhizae Increase Arsenic Uptake by the Hyperaccumulator Chinese Brake Fern (Pteris<br />

vittata L.)..................................................................................................................................................2181<br />

K. Wenger, L. Bigler, M. J.-F. Suter, R. Schönenberger, S. K. Gupta, and R. Schulin<br />

Effect of Corn Root Exudates on the Degradation of Atrazine and Its Chlorinated Metabolites<br />

in Soils .....................................................................................................................................................2187<br />

Atmospheric Pollutants and Trace Gases:<br />

Steven A. Cryer<br />

Predicting Soil Fumigant Air Concentrations un<strong>de</strong>r Regional and Diverse Agronomic<br />

Conditions................................................................................................................................................2197<br />

Ecosystem Restoration:<br />

Richard K. Bor<strong>de</strong>n and Rick Black<br />

Volunteer Revegetation of Waste Rock Surfaces at the Bingham Canyon Mine, Utah..........................2234<br />

Ground Water Quality:<br />

R. J. Gehl, J. P. Schmidt, L. R. Stone, A. J. Schlegel, and G. A. Clark<br />

In Situ Measurements of Nitrate Leaching Implicate Poor Nitrogen and Irrigation Management<br />

on Sandy Soils.........................................................................................................................................2243<br />

Heavy Metals in the Environment:<br />

Beshr F. Sukkariyah, Gregory Evanylo, Lucian Zelazny, and Rufus L. Chaney<br />

Cadmium, Copper, Nickel, and Zinc Availability in a Biosolids-Amen<strong>de</strong>d Piedmont Soil Years<br />

after Application.......................................................................................................................................2255<br />

Landscape and Watershed Processes:<br />

Trevor Page, Philip M. Haygarth, Keith J. Beven, Adrian Joynes, Trisha Butler, Chris Keeler,<br />

Jim Freer, Philip N. Owens, and Gavin A. Wood<br />

Spatial Variability of Soil Phosphorus in Relation to the Topographic In<strong>de</strong>x and Critical Source<br />

Areas: Sampling for Assessing Risk to Water Quality ............................................................................2263<br />

Larry J. Puckett and W. Brian Hughes<br />

Transport and Fate of Nitrate and Pestici<strong>de</strong>s: Hydrogeology and Riparian Zone Processes ................2278<br />

BOOK REVIEWS:<br />

Jeffrey P. Obbard<br />

Boiling Point: How Politicians, Big Oil and Coal, Journalists, and Activists Have Fueled the<br />

Climate Crisis—and What We Can Do to Avert Disaster........................................................................2334<br />

Kristin Van Tassel<br />

Agrarian Dreams: The Paradox of Organic Farming in California .........................................................2335.<br />

D.Z. Skinner<br />

Genetically Modified Planet.....................................................................................................................2335<br />

B.A. Kimball<br />

Crops and Environmental Change: An Introduction to Effects of Global Warming, Increasing<br />

Atmospheric CO2 and O3 Concentrations, and Soil Salinization on Crop Physiology and Yield..........2336.<br />

25


Elizabeth Stockdale<br />

Sustaining Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in Soils and Sediments: SCOPE Series no.<br />

64............................................................................................................................................................2336-<br />

M.J. Schlossberg<br />

Soils and Soil Fertility, Sixth Edition........................................................................................................2337<br />

R. Webster<br />

Using Statistical Methods for Water Quality Management: Issues, Problems, and Solutions...............2338.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 27, No. 10, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

FOREWORD:<br />

Roger Harris<br />

The role of zooplankton predator–prey interactions in structuring plankton communities........................957<br />

ORIGINAL ARTICLES:<br />

Astrid Schnetzer and David A. Caron<br />

Copepod grazing impact on the trophic structure of the microbial assemblage of the San Pedro<br />

Channel, California....................................................................................................................................959<br />

S. Fonda Umani, V. Tirelli, A. Beran, and B. Guardiani<br />

Relationships between microzooplankton and mesozooplankton: competition versus predation<br />

on natural assemblages of the Gulf of Trieste (northern Adriatic Sea).....................................................973<br />

Andrew W. Leising, James J. Pierson, Scott Cary, and Bruce W. Frost<br />

Copepod foraging and predation risk within the surface layer during night-time feeding forays ..............987<br />

Houshuo Jiang and J. Rudi Strickler<br />

Mass <strong>de</strong>nsity contrast in relation to the feeding currents in calanoid copepods.....................................1003<br />

J. D. Wiggert, A. G. E. Haskell, G.-A. Paffenhöfer, E. E. Hofmann, and J. M. Klinck<br />

The role of feeding behavior in sustaining copepod populations in the tropical ocean...........................1013<br />

R. M. L. Mckay, David Porta, George S. Bullerjahn, Mamoon M. D. Al-Rshaidat, Jeffrey A.<br />

Klimowicz, Robert W. Sterner, Tanya M. Smutka, Erik T. Brown, and Robert M. Sherrell<br />

Bioavailable iron in oligotrophic Lake Superior assessed using biological reporters..............................1033<br />

Alexan<strong>de</strong>r Y. Karatayev, Lyubov E. Burlakova, and Stanley I. Dodson<br />

Community analysis of Belarusian lakes: relationship of species diversity to morphology,<br />

hydrology and land use ...........................................................................................................................1045<br />

Evaristo Vázquez-Domínguez, Josep M. Gasol, Susana Agustí, Carlos M. Duarte, and Dolors<br />

Vaqué<br />

Growth and grazing losses of prokaryotes in the central Atlantic Ocean ...............................................1055<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATION:<br />

Owen M. Gilbert and Edward J. Buskey<br />

Turbulence <strong>de</strong>creases the hydrodynamic predator sensing ability of the calanoid copepod<br />

Acartia tonsa............................................................................................................................................1067<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 54, No. 4, November <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Primary production rates calculated by different concepts—an opportunity to study the<br />

complex production system in the Baltic Proper • ................................................................................... 244<br />

N. Wasmund, G. Nausch and B. Schnei<strong>de</strong>r<br />

Foraminiferal selectivity towards bacteria: an experimental approach using a cell-permeant<br />

stain • ....................................................................................................................................................... 256<br />

A.M. Langezaal, N.T. Jannink, E.S. Pierson and G.J. van <strong>de</strong>r Zwaan<br />

A growth mo<strong>de</strong>l of the cockle (Cerasto<strong>de</strong>rma edule L.) tested in the Oosterschel<strong>de</strong> estuary<br />

(The Netherlands) • ................................................................................................................................. 276<br />

Jose L. Rueda, Aad C. Smaal and Huub Scholten<br />

Aspects of the distribution, population structure and reproduction of the gastropod Tibia<br />

<strong>de</strong>licatula (Nevill, 1881) inhabiting the oxygen minimum zone of the Oman and Pakistan<br />

continental margins • ............................................................................................................................... 299<br />

Eva Ramirez-Llodra and Celia Olabarria<br />

26


Automated egg counting and sizing from scanned images: Rapid sample processing and large<br />

data volumes for fecundity estimates • .................................................................................................... 307<br />

K.D. Friedland, D. Ama-Abasi, M. Manning, L. Clarke, G. Kligys and R.C. Chambers<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 301, October 11, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

FEATURE ARTICLE<br />

Coyne MS, Godley BJ<br />

Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT): an integrated system for archiving, analyzing and<br />

mapping animal tracking data .......................................................................................................................1<br />

RESEARCH ARTICLES<br />

Naviaux RK, Good B, McPherson JD, Steffen DL, <strong>Mar</strong>kusic D, Ransom B, Corbeil J<br />

Sand DNA—a genetic library of life at the water's edge ...............................................................................9<br />

Gazeau F, Borges AV, Barrón C, Duarte CM, Iversen N, Mid<strong>de</strong>lburg JJ, Delille B, Pizay MD,<br />

Frankignoulle M, Gattuso JP<br />

Net ecosystem metabolism in a micro-tidal estuary (Ran<strong>de</strong>rs Fjord, Denmark): evaluation of<br />

methods.......................................................................................................................................................23<br />

Wieters EA<br />

Upwelling control of positive interactions over mesoscales: a new link between bottom-up and<br />

top-down processes on rocky shores..........................................................................................................43<br />

Arndt CE, Pavlova O<br />

Origin and fate of ice fauna in the Fram Strait and Svalbard area..............................................................55<br />

Garcés E, Vila M, Masó M, Sampedro N, Giacobbe MG, Penna A<br />

Taxon-specific analysis of growth and mortality rates of harmful dinoflagellates during bloom<br />

conditions ....................................................................................................................................................67<br />

Mengelt C, Prézelin BB<br />

UVA enhancement of carbon fixation and resilience to UV inhibition in the genus Pseudonitzschia<br />

may provi<strong>de</strong> a competitive advantage in high UV surface waters ...............................................81<br />

Tomas F, Turon X, Romero J<br />

Seasonal and small-scale spatial variability of herbivory pressure on the temperate seagrass<br />

Posidonia oceanica .....................................................................................................................................95<br />

Nakamura T, van Woesik R, Yamasaki H<br />

Photoinhibition of photosynthesis is reduced by water flow in the reef-building coral Acropora<br />

digitifera .....................................................................................................................................................109<br />

Williams DE, Miller MW<br />

Coral disease outbreak: pattern, prevalence and transmission in Acropora cervicornis ..........................119<br />

Sherwood OA, Scott DB, Risk MJ, Guil<strong>de</strong>rson TP<br />

Radiocarbon evi<strong>de</strong>nce for annual growth rings in the <strong>de</strong>ep-sea octocoral Primnoa<br />

resedaeformis............................................................................................................................................129<br />

Sherwood OA, Heikoop JM, Scott DB, Risk MJ, Guil<strong>de</strong>rson TP, McKinney RA<br />

Stable isotopic composition of <strong>de</strong>ep-sea gorgonian corals Primnoa spp.: a new archive of<br />

surface processes .....................................................................................................................................135<br />

Lombard F, Sciandra A, Gorsky G<br />

Influence of body mass, food concentration, temperature and filtering activity on the oxygen<br />

uptake of the appendicularian Oikopleura dioica ......................................................................................149<br />

Dubois S, Barillé L, Cognie B, Beninger PG<br />

Particle capture and processing mechanisms in Sabellaria alveolata (Polychaeta:<br />

Sabellariidae).............................................................................................................................................159<br />

McQuaid CD, Lindsay JR<br />

Interacting effects of wave exposure, tidal height and substratum on spatial variation in<br />

<strong>de</strong>nsities of mussel Perna perna plantigra<strong>de</strong>s ..........................................................................................173<br />

Grove M, Breitburg DL<br />

Growth and reproduction of gelatinous zooplankton exposed to low dissolved oxygen...........................185<br />

McManus MA, Cheriton OM, Drake PJ, Holliday DV, Storlazzi CD, Donaghay PL, Greenlaw<br />

CF<br />

27


Effects of physical processes on structure and transport of thin zooplankton layers in the<br />

coastal ocean ............................................................................................................................................199<br />

Miller CB, Crain JA, <strong>Mar</strong>cus NH<br />

Seasonal variation of male-type antennular setation in female Calanus finmarchicus.............................217<br />

Patil JS, Anil AC<br />

Influence of diatom exopolymers and biofilms on metamorphosis in the barnacle Balanus<br />

amphitrite...................................................................................................................................................231<br />

Lecchini D<br />

Spatial and behavioural patterns of reef habitat settlement by fish larvae ...............................................247<br />

Carls MG, Heintz RA, <strong>Mar</strong>ty GD, Rice SD<br />

Cytochrome P4501A induction in oil-exposed pink salmon Oncorhynchus gorbuscha embryos<br />

predicts reduced survival potential............................................................................................................253<br />

Case RAJ, Hutchinson WF, Hauser L, Van Oosterhout C, Carvalho GR<br />

Macro- and micro-geographic variation in pantophysin (PanI) allele frequencies in NE Atlantic<br />

cod Gadus morhua....................................................................................................................................267<br />

Milton DA, Chenery SR<br />

Movement patterns of barramundi Lates calcarifer, inferred from 87Sr/86Sr and Sr/Ca ratios in<br />

otoliths, indicate non-participation in spawning.........................................................................................279<br />

Congdon BC, Krockenberger AK, Smithers BV<br />

Dual-foraging and co-ordinated provisioning in a tropical Procellariiform, the wedge-tailed<br />

shearwater.................................................................................................................................................293<br />

<strong>NO</strong>TES<br />

Ramos AG, <strong>Mar</strong>tel A, Codd GA, Soler E, Coca J, Redondo A, Morrison LF, Metcalf JS, Ojeda<br />

A, Suárez S, Petit M<br />

Bloom of the marine diazotrophic cyanobacterium Tricho<strong>de</strong>smium erythraeum in the<br />

Northwest African Upwelling .....................................................................................................................303<br />

Stentiford GD, Feist SW<br />

First reported cases of intersex (ovotestis) in the flatfish species dab Limanda limanda: Dogger<br />

Bank, North Sea ........................................................................................................................................307<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 302, November 4, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

FEATURE ARTICLE<br />

Shanks AL, Brink L<br />

Upwelling, downwelling, and cross-shelf transport of bivalve larvae: test of a hypothesis...........................1<br />

RESEARCH ARTICLES<br />

Thrush SF, Hewitt JE, Herman PMJ, Ysebaert T<br />

Multi-scale analysis of species-environment relationships .........................................................................13<br />

Nylund GM, Cervin G, Hermansson M, Pavia H<br />

Chemical inhibition of bacterial colonization by the red alga Bonnemaisonia hamifera .............................27<br />

Hepburn CD, Hurd CL<br />

Conditional mutualism between the giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera and colonial epifauna .......................37<br />

Carney LT, Waaland JR, Klinger T, Ewing K<br />

Restoration of the bull kelp Nereocystis luetkeana in nearshore rocky habitats.........................................49<br />

Dorenbosch M, Grol MGG, Christianen MJA, Nagelkerken I, van <strong>de</strong>r Vel<strong>de</strong> G<br />

Indo-Pacific seagrass beds and mangroves contribute to fish <strong>de</strong>nsity and diversity on adjacent<br />

coral reefs....................................................................................................................................................63<br />

Smith JE, Runcie JW, Smith CM<br />

Characterization of a large-scale ephemeral bloom of the green alga Cladophora sericea on<br />

the coral reefs of West Maui, Hawai’i..........................................................................................................77<br />

Seuront L<br />

Hydrodynamic and tidal controls of small-scale phytoplankton patchiness ................................................93<br />

Descroix A, Harvey M, Roy S, Galbraith PS<br />

Macrozooplankton community patterns driven by water circulation in the St. Lawrence marine<br />

system, Canada.........................................................................................................................................103<br />

Dreyer JC, Knick KE, Flickinger WB, Van Dover CL<br />

28


Development of macrofaunal community structure in mussel beds on the northern East Pacific<br />

Rise ...........................................................................................................................................................121<br />

Labarta U, Fernán<strong>de</strong>z-Reiriz MJ, Garrido JL, Babarro JMF, Bayona JM, Albaigés J<br />

Response of mussel recruits to pollution from the ‘Prestige’ oil spill along the Galicia coast. A<br />

biochemical approach ...............................................................................................................................135<br />

Pradillon F, Zbin<strong>de</strong>n M, Mullineaux LS, Gaill F<br />

Colonisation of newly-opened habitat by a pioneer species, Alvinella pompejana (Polychaeta:<br />

Alvinellidae), at East Pacific Rise vent sites..............................................................................................147<br />

Böttger-Schnack R, Schnack D<br />

Population structure and fecundity of the microcopepod Oncaea bispinosa in the Red Sea—a<br />

challenge to general concepts for the scaling of fecundity .......................................................................159<br />

Ladah LB, Tapia FJ, Pineda J, López M<br />

Spatially heterogeneous, synchronous settlement of Chthamalus spp. larvae in northern Baja<br />

California ...................................................................................................................................................177<br />

Pikitch EK, Chapman DD, Babcock EA, Shivji MS<br />

Habitat use and <strong>de</strong>mographic population structure of elasmobranchs at a Caribbean atoll<br />

(Glover’s Reef, Belize) ..............................................................................................................................187<br />

MacNeil MA, Skomal GB, Fisk AT<br />

Stable isotopes from multiple tissues reveal diet switching in sharks.......................................................199<br />

Porter SM, Ciannelli L, Hillgruber N, Bailey KM, Chan KS, Canino MF, Haldorson LJ<br />

Environmental factors influencing larval walleye pollock Theragra chalcogramma feeding in<br />

Alaskan waters ..........................................................................................................................................207<br />

Chen Q, Chan KS, Lekve K, Torstensen E, Gjøsæter J, Ottersen G, Stenseth NC<br />

Population dynamics of cod Gadus morhua in the North Sea region: biological <strong>de</strong>nsity<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt<br />

and climatic <strong>de</strong>nsity-in<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt effects ................................................................................219<br />

Powers SP, Peterson CH, Christian RR, Sullivan E, Powers MJ, Bishop MJ, Buzzelli CP<br />

Effects of eutrophication on bottom habitat and prey resources of <strong>de</strong>mersal fishes ................................233<br />

Lescroël A, Bost CA<br />

Foraging un<strong>de</strong>r contrasting oceanographic conditions: the gentoo penguin at Kerguelen<br />

Archipelago................................................................................................................................................245<br />

Velando A, Munilla I, Leyenda PM<br />

Short-term indirect effects of the ‘Prestige’ oil spill on European shags: changes in availability<br />

of prey........................................................................................................................................................263<br />

Herman DP, Burrows DG, Wa<strong>de</strong> PR, Durban JW, Matkin CO, LeDuc RG, Barrett-Lennard LG,<br />

Krahn MM<br />

Feeding ecology of eastern North Pacific killer whales Orcinus orca from fatty acid, stable<br />

isotope, and organochlorine analyses of blubber biopsies .......................................................................275<br />

REVIEWS<br />

Sheaves M<br />

Nature and consequences of biological connectivity in mangrove systems .............................................293<br />

Tuya F, Haroun RJ, Boyra A, Sanchez-Jerez P<br />

Sea urchin Dia<strong>de</strong>ma antillarum: different functions in the structure and dynamics of reefs on<br />

both si<strong>de</strong>s of the Atlantic ...........................................................................................................................307<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 303, November 21, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

FEATURE ARTICLE: REVIEW<br />

Kemp WM, Boynton WR, Adolf JE, Boesch DF, Boicourt WC, Brush G, Cornwell JC, Fisher<br />

TR, Glibert PM, Hagy JD, Harding LW, Hou<strong>de</strong> ED,<br />

Kimmel DG, Miller WD, Newell RIE, Roman MR, Smith EM, Stevenson JC<br />

Eutrophication of Chesapeake Bay: historical trends and ecological interactions........................................1<br />

RESEARCH ARTICLE<br />

Wlodarska-Kowalczuk M, Pearson TH, Kendall MA<br />

Benthic response to chronic natural physical disturbance by glacial sedimentation in an Arctic<br />

fjord..............................................................................................................................................................31<br />

Sun L, Zhu R, Liu X, Xie Z, Yin X, Zhao S, Wang Y<br />

29


HCl-soluble 87Sr/86Sr ratio in sediments impacted by penguin or seal excreta as a proxy for<br />

historical population size in the maritime Antarctic .....................................................................................43<br />

Struyf E, Van Damme S, Gribsholt B, Mid<strong>de</strong>lburg JJ, Meire P<br />

Biogenic silica in tidal freshwater marsh sediments and vegetation (Schel<strong>de</strong> estuary, Belgium) ..............51<br />

Paramor OAL, Hughes RG<br />

Effects of the invertebrate infauna on early saltmarsh plant colonisation of managed<br />

realignment areas in south-east England....................................................................................................61<br />

Eldridge PM, Cifuentes LA, Kaldy JE<br />

Development of a stable-isotope constraint system for estuarine food-web mo<strong>de</strong>ls..................................73<br />

Son SH, Campbell J, Dowell M, Yoo S, Noh J<br />

Primary production in the Yellow Sea <strong>de</strong>termined by ocean color remote sensing....................................91<br />

Boehnlein JM, Santiago-Vázquez LZ, Kerr RG<br />

Diterpene biosynthesis by the dinoflagellate symbiont of the Caribbean gorgonian<br />

Pseudopterogorgia bipinnata ....................................................................................................................105<br />

Maciá S, Robinson MP<br />

Effects of habitat heterogeneity in seagrass beds on grazing patterns of parrotfishes ............................113<br />

Steele LT, Caldwell M, Boettcher A, Arnold T<br />

Seagrass-pathogen interactions: ‘pseudo-induction’ of turtlegrass phenolics near wasting<br />

disease lesions..........................................................................................................................................123<br />

Engel S, Pawlik JR<br />

Interactions among Florida sponges. I. Reef habitats...............................................................................133<br />

Engel S, Pawlik JR<br />

Interactions among Florida sponges. II. Mangrove habitats .....................................................................145<br />

Pratt MC<br />

Consequences of coloniality: influence of colony form and size on feeding success in the<br />

bryozoan Membranipora membranacea ...................................................................................................153<br />

Berge J, Johnsen G, Nilsen F, Gulliksen B, Slagstad D<br />

Ocean temperature oscillations enable reappearance of blue mussels Mytilus edulis in<br />

Svalbard after a 1000 year absence .........................................................................................................167<br />

Riisgård HU, Larsen PS<br />

Water flow analysis and particle capture in ciliary suspension-feeding scallops (Pectinidae)..................177<br />

Meysman FJR, Galaktionov OS, Mid<strong>de</strong>lburg JJ<br />

Irrigation patterns in permeable sediments induced by burrow ventilation: a case study of<br />

Arenicola marina .......................................................................................................................................195<br />

Takahashi K, Tiselius P<br />

Ontogenetic change of foraging behaviour during copepodite <strong>de</strong>velopment of Acartia clausi .................213<br />

Tod CD, Stevenson RJ, Reinardy H, Ritchie MG<br />

Polyandry in the ectoparasitic copepod Lepeophtheirus salmonis <strong>de</strong>spite complex<br />

precopulatory and postcopulatory mate-guarding.....................................................................................225<br />

Parsons DM, Eggleston DB<br />

Indirect effects of recreational fishing on behavior of the spiny lobster Panulirus argus ..........................235<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>iani S, Hutchinson WF, Hatfield EMC, Ruzzante DE, Simmonds EJ, Dahlgren TG, Andre<br />

C, Brigham J, Torstensen E, Carvalho GR<br />

North Sea herring population structure revealed by microsatellite analysis .............................................245<br />

Trippel EA, Kraus G, Köster FW<br />

Maternal and paternal influences on early life history traits and processes of Baltic cod Gadus<br />

morhua ......................................................................................................................................................259<br />

Holland GJ, Greenstreet SPR, Gibb IM, Fraser HM, Robertson MR<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntifying san<strong>de</strong>el Ammodytes marinus sediment habitat preferences in the marine<br />

environment...............................................................................................................................................269<br />

Depczynski M, Bellwood DR<br />

Wave energy and spatial variability in community structure of small cryptic coral reef fishes..................283<br />

Hare JA, Thorrold S, Walsh H, Reiss C, Valle-Levinson A, Jones C<br />

Biophysical mechanisms of larval fish ingress into Chesapeake Bay.......................................................295<br />

OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT:<br />

30


Vol. 48, Nos. 9-10, <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Stakehol<strong>de</strong>r participation in Norwegian coastal zone planning • ............................................................ 658<br />

Arild Buanes, Svein Jentoft, Anita Maurstad, Siri U. Søreng and Geir Runar Karlsen<br />

Changes in Scottish coastal fishing communities—Un<strong>de</strong>rstanding socio-economic dynamics to<br />

aid management, planning and policy • .................................................................................................. 670<br />

Selina M. Stead<br />

Assessing foreign aid efforts for coastal management in Latin America and the Caribbean<br />

regions • ................................................................................................................................................... 693<br />

Evelia Rivera-Arriaga<br />

Fisher participation in research: Dilemmas with the use of fisher knowledge • ...................................... 721<br />

Jennifer J. Silver and Lisa M. Campbell<br />

Influence of socio-economic characteristics of beach users on litter generation • .................................. 742<br />

Isaac Rodrigues Santos, Ana Cláudia Friedrich, Mônica Wallner-Kersanach and Gilberto<br />

Fillmann<br />

Social capital and fisheries governance • ................................................................................................ 753<br />

R. Quentin Grafton<br />

A risk assessment approach to management of estuarine dunefields • ................................................. 767<br />

Lyle M. Varnell and C. Scott Hardaway, Jr.<br />

The applicability of international conservation instruments to the establishment of marine<br />

protected areas in Antarctica • ................................................................................................................ 782<br />

Susanna M. Grant<br />

Integrated coastal zone management in Vietnam: Present potentials and future challenges • .............. 813<br />

Nagothu Udaya Sekhar<br />

Changes in macrophytes distribution in a hypersaline coastal lagoon associated with the<br />

<strong>de</strong>velopment of intensively irrigated agriculture • .................................................................................... 828<br />

Javier Lloret, Arnaldo <strong>Mar</strong>in, Lazaro <strong>Mar</strong>in-Guirao and Josefa Velasco<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 4, August <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

Comparison Between Tidally Driven Groundwater Flow and Flushing of Animal Burrows in<br />

Tropical Mangrove Swamps .....................................................................................................................377<br />

Adi Susilo, Peter V. Ridd, Séverine Thomas<br />

A Practical Tool to I<strong>de</strong>ntify Water Bodies with Potential for Mosquito Habitatun<strong>de</strong>r Mangrove<br />

Canopy: Large-scale Airborne Scanning in the Thermal Band 8–13 µm .................................................389<br />

Patricia E. R. Dale, Jon Knight, Scott A. Ritchie, Brian H. Kay<br />

Sediments in <strong>Mar</strong>sh Ponds of the Gulf Coast Chenier Plain: Effects of Structural <strong>Mar</strong>sh<br />

Management and Salinity .........................................................................................................................395<br />

François Bolduc and Alan D. Afton<br />

The Nutrient Status of Mgazana, a Warm Temperate Mangrove Estuary in the Transkei,<br />

Eastern Cape, South Africa ......................................................................................................................405<br />

W. Emmerson<br />

Seasonal Variations of Chemical Composition of Water and Bottom Sediments in the Wetland<br />

of Wadi Gaza, Gaza Strip .........................................................................................................................419<br />

B. H. Shomar, G. Müller, A. Yahya<br />

A Mo<strong>de</strong>l of Holocene Mangrove Development and Relative Sea-level Changes on the<br />

Bragança Peninsula (Northern Brazil) ......................................................................................................433<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>celo C. L. Cohen, Pedro W. M. Souza Filho, Rubén J. Lara, Hermann Behling, Rodolfo J.<br />

Angulo<br />

Designing Wetlands for Amphibians: The Importance of Predatory Fish and Shallow Littoral<br />

Zones in Structuring of Amphibian Communities .....................................................................................445<br />

Deni Porej and Thomas E. Hetherington<br />

Temporal Variations in Fish Catch Using Pop Nets in Mangrove and Saltmarsh Flats at Towra<br />

Point, NSW, Australia ...............................................................................................................................457<br />

Debashish Mazum<strong>de</strong>r, Neil Saintilan, Robert J. Williams<br />

Vegetation Communities of 20-year-old Created Depressional Wetlands ...............................................469<br />

Robert B. Atkinson, James E. Perry, John Cairns<br />

31


Dormant Season Prescribed Fire as a Management Tool for the Control of Salix caroliniana<br />

Michx. in a Floodplain <strong>Mar</strong>sh ....................................................................................................................479<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>y Ann B. Lee, Kenneth L. Sny<strong>de</strong>r, Patricia Valentine-Darby, Steven J. Miller, Kimberli J.<br />

Ponzio<br />

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 5, October <strong>200</strong>5.<br />

A Field Experiment to Assess the Transplant Success of Salt <strong>Mar</strong>sh Plants into Tidal Wetlands<br />

...................................................................................................................................................................489<br />

Dana Thomsen, Islay D. <strong>Mar</strong>s<strong>de</strong>n, Ashley D. Sparrow<br />

Salvaged-Wetland Soil as a Technique to Improve Aquatic Vegetation at Created Wetlands in<br />

Wyoming, USA .........................................................................................................................................499<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k C. McKinstry and Stanley H. An<strong>de</strong>rson<br />

Coal Dust Pollution Effects on Wetland Tree Species in Richards Bay,South Africa ..............................509<br />

G. Naidoo and Y. Naidoo<br />

Vegetation, Invertebrate, and Wildlife Community Rankings and Habitat Analysis of Mitigation<br />

Wetlands in West Virginia ........................................................................................................................517<br />

Collin K. Balcombe, James T. An<strong>de</strong>rson, Ronald H. Fortney, Walter S. Kor<strong>de</strong>k<br />

Long-Term Growth and Succession in Restored and Natural Mangrove Forests in<br />

Southwestern Florida ...............................................................................................................................531<br />

C. Edward Proffitt and Donna J. Devlin<br />

Impacts of Seawalls on Saltmarsh Plant Communities in the Great Bay Estuary, New<br />

Hampshire USA ........................................................................................................................................553<br />

Catherine M. Bozek and David M. Burdick<br />

Young Mangrove Stands Produce a Large and High Quality Litter Input to Aquatic Systems ................569<br />

B.T. Nga, H.Q. Tinh, D.T. Tam, M. Scheffer, R. Roijackers<br />

Effect of Different Chlori<strong>de</strong> Concentrations on Nutrient Release in Wetland Soils: A<br />

Phytometer Assessment in the Botshol Wetlands, The Netherlands .......................................................577<br />

B. Beltman, W.J. Rip, A. Bak, T. Broek<br />

Surface Elevation Dynamics in a Regenerating Mangrove Forest at Homebush Bay, Australia ............587<br />

K. Rogers, N. Saintilan, D. Cahoon<br />

32

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