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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> <strong>reciente</strong> <strong>ingreso</strong>, 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 />

BOLTOVSKOY, DEMETRIO, 1981. Atlas <strong>de</strong>l Zooplancton <strong>de</strong>l Atlántico<br />

Sudocci<strong>de</strong>ntal y métodos <strong>de</strong> trabajo con el zooplancton marino.—<strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Plata,<br />

Argentina: INIDEP, 936 p.<br />

BRUNETTI, NORMA E., MARCELA L. IVANOVIC AND MITSUO SAKAI, 1999.<br />

Calamares <strong>de</strong> Importancia Comercial en la Argentina. Biología, distribución,<br />

pesquerías, muestreo biológico.—<strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Plata, Argentina: INIDEP, 45 p.<br />

CARROLL, J. AND I. LERCEH, 2003. Sedimentary Processes Quantification Using<br />

Radionucli<strong>de</strong>s.—Amsterdam: Elsevier, 272 p.<br />

CUSHING, COLBERT E. AND J. DAVID ALLAN, 2001. Streams. Their Ecology and<br />

Life. —San Diego: Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Press, 366 p.<br />

DALE, BARRIE AND AMY L. DALE, 1992. Dinoflagellate Contributions to the Deep<br />

Sea. —Woods Hole, Mass. U.S.A.: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 76 p.<br />

(Biocoenosis Series No. 5).<br />

FALOWSKI, PAUL G. AND ARIL D. WOODHEAD, EDS., 1992. Primary Productivity<br />

and Biogeochemical cycles in the Sea.—New York: Plenum Press, 550 p.<br />

GOLDSTEIN, DAVID B. AND CHRISTINA SCHLOTTERER, EDS., 1999.<br />

Microsatellites. Evolution and Applications. -Oxford: Oxford University Press,<br />

352 p.<br />

HAUER, F. RICHARD AND GARY A. LAMBERTI, EDS., 1996. Methods<br />

Ecology. —San Diego: Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Press, 674 p.<br />

in Stream<br />

HILBORN, RAY AND MARC MANGEL, 1997. The Ecological Detective Confronting<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ls with Data. —Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 315 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 1: Meteorites, Comets, and Planets. —Amsterdam: Elsevier, 737 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 2: The Mantle and Core. —Amsterdam, Elsevier, 586 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 3: The Crust. -- Amsterdam, Elsevier, 683 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 4: The Atmosphere. -- Amsterdam, Elsevier, 358 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 5: Surface and Ground Water, Weathering, and Soils. -- Amsterdam,<br />

Elsevier, 626 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 6: The Oceans and <strong>Mar</strong>ine Geochemistry. -- Amsterdam, Elsevier, 646<br />

p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

1


Volume 7: Sediments, Diagenesis, and Sedimentary Rocks. -- Amsterdam,<br />

Elsevier, 425 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 8: Biogeochemistry.-- Amsterdam, Elsevier, 702 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 9: Environmental Geochemistry. -- Amsterdam, Elsevier, 630 p.<br />

HOLLAND, H.D. AND K.K. TUREKIAN, EDS., 2004. Treatise on Geochemistry.<br />

Volume 10: In<strong>de</strong>xes.-- Amsterdam, Elsevier, 203 p.<br />

INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE INVESTIGACIÓN Y DESARROLLO PESQUERO<br />

(INIDEP), 2000. Síntesis <strong>de</strong>l estado <strong>de</strong> las pesquerías marítimas argentinas y<br />

<strong>de</strong>la Cuenca <strong>de</strong>l Plata. Años 1997-1998, con la actualización <strong>de</strong> 1999.—<strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l<br />

Plata, Argentina: INIDEP, 388 p.<br />

INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE INVESTIGACIÓN Y DESARROLLO PESQUERO<br />

(INIDEP), 1997. El <strong>Mar</strong> Argentino y sus Recursos Pesqueros. TOMO 1:<br />

Antece<strong>de</strong>ntes Históricos <strong>de</strong> las Exploraciones en el <strong>Mar</strong> y las Características<br />

Ambientales.—<strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Plata, Argentina: INIDEP, 222 p.<br />

INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE INVESTIGACIÓN Y DESARROLLO PESQUERO<br />

(INIDEP), 1998. El <strong>Mar</strong> Argentino y sus Recursos Pesqueros. TOMO 2: Los<br />

Moluscos <strong>de</strong> Interés Pesquero. Cultivos y Estrategias Reproductivos <strong>de</strong><br />

Bivalvos y Equinoi<strong>de</strong>os.—<strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Plata, Argentina: INIDEP, 231 p.<br />

INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE INVESTIGACIÓN Y DESARROLLO PESQUERO<br />

(INIDEP), 2001. El <strong>Mar</strong> Argentino y sus Recursos Pesqueros. TOMO 3:<br />

Evolución <strong>de</strong> la Flota Pesquera Argentina, Artes <strong>de</strong> Pesca y Dispositivos<br />

Selectivos.—<strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Plata, Argentina. INIDEP, 165 p.<br />

L´ANNUNZIATA, MICHAEL F., ED., 2003. Handbook of Radioactivity Analysis.<br />

Second edition. — Amsterdam: Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Press, 1273 p.<br />

LING, HSIN-YI, 1992. Tintinnids: A Taxon-Vertical Distributional Study of Settling<br />

Assemblages from the Panama Basin. –Woods Hole, Mass., U.S.A.: Woods<br />

Hole Oceanographic Institution, 21 p. (Ocean Biocoenosis Series No. 4).<br />

MARGULIS, LYNN AND RENE FESTER, 1991. Symbiosis as a Source of<br />

Evolutionary Innovation. Speciation and Morphogenesis.—Cambridge,<br />

Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 454 p.<br />

MELLOR, GEORGE L., 1996. Introduction to Physical Oceanography. —New York:<br />

Springer-Verlag, 260 p.<br />

RAMIREZ, FERNANDO C., 2002. Plancton sin Formol.—<strong>Mar</strong> <strong>de</strong>l Plata, Argentina:<br />

INIDEP, 95 p.<br />

RAPPORT, DAVID J., ET. AL., EDS., 2002. Managing for Healthy Ecosystems. —<br />

Boca Raton: Lewis Publishers, 1510 p.<br />

SCHREIBER, E.A. AND JOANNA BURGER, EDS., 2001. Biology of <strong>Mar</strong>ine Birds. —<br />

Boca Raton: CRC Press, 722 p.<br />

2


SECKBACH, JOSEPH, ED., 2002. Symbiosis : Mechanisms and Mo<strong>de</strong>l Systems. —<br />

Dordrecht: Kluwer Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Publishers, 796 p.<br />

STEINMETZ, JOHN C., 1991. Calcareous Nannoplankton Biocoenosis: Sediment<br />

Trap Studies in the Equatorial Atlantic, Central Pacific, and Panama Basin. —<br />

Woods Hole Mass., U.S.A.: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 85 p.<br />

(Ocean Biocoenosis Series No. 1).<br />

TAKAHASHI, KOZO, 1991. Silicoflagellates and Actiniscus: Vertical Fluxes at Pacific<br />

and Atlantic Sediment Trap Stations.—Woods Hole, Mass., U.S.A.: Woods Hole<br />

Oceanographic Institution, 35 p. (Ocean Biocoenosis Series No. 2).<br />

TAKAHASHI, KOZO, 1991. Radiolaria: Flux, Ecology and Taxonomy in the Pacific<br />

and Atlantic. -- Woods Hole, Mass., U.S.A.: Woods Hole Oceanographic<br />

Institution, 303 p. (Ocean Biocoenosis Series No. 3).<br />

TYKVA, RICHARD AND JOSEF SABOL, 1995. Low-Level Environmental<br />

Radioactivity. Sources and Evaluation. —Lancaster, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.:<br />

Technomic Publishing Company, Inc., 331 p.<br />

TYLER, P.A. ED., 2003. Ecosystems of the Deep Oceans. —Amsterdam: Elsevier,<br />

569 (Ecosystems of the World 28).<br />

U.N.A.M., COMISIÓN ESPECIAL PARA EL CONGRESO UNIVERSITARIO, 2003.<br />

Seminarios <strong>de</strong> Diagnóstico. Memoria Seminarios Locales. Tomo III.—México,<br />

D.F.: U.NA.M., 667 p.<br />

WOLANKSI, ERIC, 2001. Oceanographic Processes of Coral Reefs. Physical and<br />

Biological Links in the Great Barrier Reef.—Boca Raton: CRC Press, 356 p.<br />

MANUAL<br />

JIMÉNEZ G., FERNANDO Y CUAUHTÉMOC IBARRA G., 2003. Manual <strong>de</strong><br />

Recomendaciones para el Manejo <strong>de</strong> Granjas <strong>de</strong> Camarón en México.—<br />

México. SAGARPA: CONAPESCA, 22 p.<br />

INFORMES<br />

INFORME DE ACTIVIDADES DEL CENTRO DE CIENCIAS DE SINALOA, 2003. —<br />

Culiacán, Sinaloa: Centro <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong>, 16 p.<br />

INFORME DE ACTIVIDADES DEL CONSEJO ESTATAL DE CIENCIA Y<br />

TECNOLOGÍA, 2003. – Culiacán, Sinaloa, Consejo Estatal <strong>de</strong> Ciencia y<br />

Tecnología, 14 p.<br />

3


TESIS<br />

HERNANDEZ INDA, ZAIRA LIZETH, 2003. Variabilidad Inter e Intra-Específica <strong>de</strong> la<br />

Bioactividad <strong>de</strong> Algunas Ascidias <strong>de</strong>l Golfo <strong>de</strong> California. Tesis <strong>de</strong> Maestría.<br />

U.N.A.M., Posgrado en <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong> y Limnología, 63 p.<br />

RODRÍGUEZ SANTIAGO, MARÍA AMPARO, 2002. I<strong>de</strong>ntificación <strong>de</strong> Especies<br />

Ectoparásitas <strong>de</strong>l Género Trichodina (Ciliophora: Peritrichida) en Tilapia nilotica<br />

Mediante correlación Invariante con Filtros Compuestos. Tesis <strong>de</strong> Maestría.<br />

Centro <strong>de</strong> Investigación en Alimentación y Desarrollo-Unidad Mazatlán, 96 p.<br />

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

ANUARIO ESTADÍSTICO DE PESCA:<br />

1999.<br />

BIBLIOTECA UNIVERSITARIA:<br />

Vol. 6, No. 2, julio-diciembre <strong>de</strong> 2003.<br />

BOLETÍN ARAGÓN:<br />

No. 174, enero <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 72, No. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2004.<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 73, No. 2, September 2003.<br />

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 02/04, February 2004.<br />

COMUNIDAD UNAM:<br />

No. 20, 10 <strong>de</strong> noviembre <strong>de</strong> 2002.<br />

No. 3, 10 <strong>de</strong> febrero <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

COPEIA:<br />

No. 1, February 9, 2004.<br />

CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vol. 76, Part. 5, May 2003.<br />

Vol. 76, Part. 9, October 2003.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 45, No. 2, December 2003.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL INTERNATIONAL:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 2, April 2004.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 128, Nos. 1-2, 2004.<br />

Vol. 128, No. 3, 2004.<br />

4


Vol. 129, No. 1, May, 2004.<br />

Vol. 129, No. 2, May, 2004.<br />

EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 57, No. 12, December 2003.<br />

EX LIBRIS:<br />

No. 0, enero-febrero <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 441: A Gui<strong>de</strong> to the Seaweed Industry. (2003).<br />

No. 443: The ecosystem Approach to Fisheries. Issues, Terminology, Principles,<br />

Institutional Foundations, Implementation and Outlook. (2003).<br />

FARO, EL:<br />

No. 35, febrero 5, <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 36, marzo 4, <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

FISHERIES:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 9, September 2003.<br />

Vol. 29, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

GACETA UNAM:<br />

No. 3,700, 1o. <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 3,701, 4 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 3,702, 8 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 3,703, 11 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 3,704, 15 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 3,706, 22 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 3,707, 25 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY. A JOURNAL OF MACROECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

GLOBAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM:<br />

GOOS Report No. 129, 2003. : IOC-WMO-UNEP-ICSU Steering Committee of the<br />

Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS).<br />

HIDROBIOLOGICA:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 2, 2003.<br />

Vol. 13, No. 3, 2003.<br />

HUMANIDADES:<br />

No. 265, 18 <strong>de</strong> febrero <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

No. 266, 3 <strong>de</strong> marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

IAMSLIC NEWSLETTER:<br />

No. 90, February 2004.<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

5


INGENIERÍA HIDRÁULICA EN MÉXICO:<br />

Vol. XIX, No. 1, enero-marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

INTERCIENCIA: Revista <strong>de</strong> Ciencia y Tecnología <strong>de</strong> América:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 6, June 2003.<br />

Vol. 28, No. 7, July 2003.<br />

Vol. 28, No. 8, August 2003.<br />

Vol. 28, No. 10, October 2003.<br />

IOC REPORT OFGOVERNING AND MAJOR SUBSIDIARY BODIES:<br />

2003: Thirty-Sixth Session of the Executive Council. Paris, 23 June 2003.<br />

IOC TECHNICAL SERIES:<br />

No. 57, 2000: Ad Hoc Benthic Indicator Group Results of Initial Planning Meeting.<br />

Paris, France, 6-9 December 1999.<br />

IOC WORKSHOP REPORT:<br />

No. 166, 2000: IOC-SOA International Workshop on Coastal Megacities: Challenges<br />

of Growing Urbanisation of the World´s Coastal Areas.<br />

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. XV, No. 4, 2003.<br />

JOIDES JOURNAL:<br />

Volume 28, No. 1. Special Issue. Spring 2002.: Achievements and Opportunities of<br />

Scientific Ocean Drilling. The Legacy of the Ocean Drilling Program.<br />

JOURNAL OF AQUATIC ANIMAL HEALTH:<br />

Vol. 15, No. 2, June 2003.<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 11, November 2003.<br />

Vol. 31, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH:<br />

Special Issue, No. 8, Fall, 2003: Shoreline Mapping and Change Analysis: Technical<br />

Consi<strong>de</strong>rations and Management Implications.<br />

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 92, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 108, No. C11, 15 November, 2003.<br />

Vol. 108, No. C12, 15 December 2003.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 2, February 2004.<br />

JOURNAL OF SHELLFISH RESEARCH:<br />

6


Vol. 22, No. 3, December 2003.<br />

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 20, No. 12, December 2003.<br />

NEW SCIENTIST:<br />

Vol. 180, No. 2426/7/8/, December 20, 2003-January 9, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2429, January 10-16, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2430, January 17-23, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2431, January 24-30, 2004.<br />

Vol. 181, No. 2432, January 31-February 6, 2004.<br />

NOVEDADES MARINAS:<br />

No. 79, enero-febrero <strong>de</strong> 2003.<br />

PACIFIC SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 58, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

UNIVERSITARIOS, LOS:<br />

No. 34, julio <strong>de</strong> 2003.<br />

No. 36, septiembre <strong>de</strong> 2003.<br />

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

Vol. 33, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2004.<br />

REIMPRESOS<br />

HO, JU-SHEY, SAMUEL GOMEZ, KAZUO OGAWA AND MASATO ARITAKI, 2004.<br />

Two Species of Parasitic Copepods (Caligidae) New to Japan. Systematic<br />

Parasitology 57: 19-34.<br />

RUIZ-FERNÁNDEZ, A.C. AND F. PAEZ-OSUNA, 2004. Comparative Survey of the<br />

Influent and Effluent Water Quality of Shrimp Ponds on Mexican Farms. Water<br />

Environment Research, Vol. 76(1): 5-14.<br />

7


ANUARIO ESTADÍSTICO DE PESCA: 1999.<br />

INTRODUCCiÓN.........................................................................................................................................7<br />

CAPITULO I<br />

PRODUCCiÓN PESQUERA.......................................................................................................................13<br />

CAPITULO II<br />

INDUSTRIALIZACiÓN..............................................................................................................................109<br />

CAPITULO III<br />

COMERCIALlZACIÓN y CONSUMO........................................................................................................123<br />

CAPITULO IV<br />

FACTORES DE PRODUCCiÓN...............................................................................................................147<br />

CAPITULO V<br />

NORMATIVIDAD......................................................................................................................................177<br />

CAPITULO VI<br />

ESTADíSTICAS INTERNACIONALES.....................................................................................................201<br />

GLOSARIO..............................................................................................................................................237<br />

INDICE DE CUADROS............................................................................................................................243<br />

ANEXO....................................................................................................................................................257<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 72, No. 3, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2004.<br />

Intraspecific Variation of Mercury Contamination in Chicks of Black- Winged Stilt (Himantopus<br />

himantopus) in Coastal Wetlands from Southwestern Europe by P. C. Tavares, L. R. Monteiro, R. J.<br />

-Copes, M. M. Correia Santos, R. W. Furness ...............................................................................437<br />

Mercury Distribution in Farmlands Downstream from an Acetal<strong>de</strong>hy<strong>de</strong> Producing Chemical Company in<br />

Qingzhen City, Guizhou, People's Republic of China by Y. Yasuda,<br />

A. Matsuyama, A. Yasutake, M. Yamaguchi, R. Aramaki, L. Xiaojie, J. Pin, A. Yumin, L. Li,<br />

L. Mei, C. Wei, Q. Liya .............................................................................................................................445<br />

Distribution and Concentration of Trace Metals in Tissues of Three Penaeid Shrimp Species from Altata-<br />

Ensenada <strong>de</strong>l Pabellón Lagoon (S.E. Gulf of California) by J. Ruelas-Inzunza,<br />

F. Páez-Osuna.........................................................................................................................................452<br />

Heavy Metals in Tissues of Gray Whales Eschrichtius robustus, and in Sediments of Ojo <strong>de</strong> Liebre<br />

Lagoon in Mexico by C. J. De Luna, L. Rosales-Hoz ......................................................................460<br />

Bioaccumulation of Copper from Contaminated Wastewater by Using Lemna minor by Y. Kara ...............467<br />

Chemical and Ecotoxicological Characterization of AvernO Lake by C. Improta, S. Andini,<br />

L. Ferrara.................................................................................................................................................472<br />

8


Impact of Acid Mine Drainage from the Abandoned Hahkoy Mercury Mine (Western Turkey) on Surface<br />

and Groundwaters by Ü. Gemici ....................................................................................................482<br />

Chlorinated Hydrocarbons in Skin and Blubber of Two Blue Whales (Balaenoptera musculus) Stran<strong>de</strong>d<br />

Along the Baja California Coast by M. Val<strong>de</strong>z-Márquez, M. L. Lares, V. Camacho Ibar, D. Gendron 490<br />

Organochlorine Pestici<strong>de</strong> Residues in Water, Sediment, and Muscle ofRiver Shad, Hilsa ilisha (Hamilton<br />

1822) from the South Patches of the Bay of Bengal by B. Das, P. Das ...........................................496<br />

Studies on Bio<strong>de</strong>gradation of 2,4-D and Metribuzin in Soil Un<strong>de</strong>r Controlled Conditions by Z. M. Getenga,<br />

V. Madadi, S. O. Wandiga .............................................................................................................504<br />

PAH G.ontamination Sources in the Sediments of the Strait of Istanbul (Bosphorus), Turkey by S. Unlü, D.<br />

Ongan, B. Alpar .............................................................................................................................514<br />

Levels and Trends of Chlorinated Pestici<strong>de</strong>s in Human Breast Milk from Ankara Resi<strong>de</strong>nts: Comparison of<br />

Concentrations in 1984 and 2002 by I. C;ok, M. K. Donmez, A. E. Karakaya ..................................522<br />

Trace Element Contents in Human Head Hair of Resi<strong>de</strong>nts from Agra City, India by R. Sharma, L.<br />

Chandreshwor Singh, S. Tanveer, S. Verghese P., A. Kumar .........................................................530<br />

Elevated Exposure to Nitrogen Dioxi<strong>de</strong> During Food Preparation: Results from a Cooking Laboratory by<br />

T.-S. Lin, Y.-L. Huang ....................................................................................................................535<br />

Asbestos Abatement of Pipe and Floor TilelMastic and Comparison of Critical Plastic Barrier Controls by<br />

J. H. Lange ....................................................................................................................................542<br />

Temporal Evolution of Natural and Man-Ma<strong>de</strong> RadioactivityLevels in Milk Samples: Dosimetry Implications<br />

by A. Baeza, J. A. Corbacho, C. Miró .............................................................................................547<br />

Effects of Funnel and Gate Geometry on Capture of Contaminated Groundwater by P. F. Hudak............557.<br />

Assessing Stream Grazer Response to Stress: A Post-Exposure Feeding Bioassay Using fue Freshwater<br />

Snail Lymnaea peregra (Müller) by C. A. Crichton, A. U. Conrad, D. 1. Baird .................................564<br />

Use of the ICso for Predicting Joint Toxic Effects of Mixtures by Z. Lin, P. Zhong, K. Yin, D. Zhao, L.<br />

Wang, H. Yu ..................................................................................................................................571<br />

Effects of Body Size and Sodium Chlori<strong>de</strong> on the Tolerance of Net-Spinning Caddisfly Larvae to Fluori<strong>de</strong><br />

Toxicity by J. A. Camargo ..............................................................................................................579<br />

Levels of Serum Cholinesterase Activity in the Rococo Toad (Bufo paracnemis) in Agrosystems of<br />

Argentina by R. C. Lajmanovich, 1. C. Sánchez-Hemán<strong>de</strong>z, G. Stringhini, P. M. Peltzer ................586<br />

Toxicity of Malathion and Carbaryl Pestici<strong>de</strong>s: Effects on Some Biochemical Profiles of the Freshwater<br />

Fish Colisafasciatus by S. K. Singh, P. K. Tripathi, R. P. Yadav, D. Singh, A. Singh .......................592<br />

Effects of Pestici<strong>de</strong>s and Their Hydrolysates on Catalase Activity in Soil by L. Shiyin, N. Lixiao, P.<br />

Panying, S. Cheng, W. Liansheng .................................................................................................600<br />

Comet Assay Assessment of Wastewater Genotoxicity Using Yeast Cells by B. Lah, G. Gorjanc, F. V.<br />

Nekrep, R. <strong>Mar</strong>insek-Logar ............................................................................................................607<br />

Bioremediation of Arsenic Contaminated Groundwater by Modified Mycelial Pellets of Aspergillus<br />

fumigatus by M. Sathishkumar, G. S. Murugesan, P. M. Ayyasamy, K. Swarninathan, P.<br />

Lakshmanaperumalsamy ...............................................................................................................617<br />

9


Effects of Genistein on Growth and Development of Aquatic Vertebrates by R. R. Ingham, D. A. Gesualdi,<br />

C. R. Toth, E. D. Clotfelter .............................................................................................................625<br />

Acute Toxicity of Bunker C Refined Oil to the Japanese Littleneck Clam Ruditapes philippinarum (Bivalvia:<br />

Veneridae) by K. Ara, D. Aoike, J. Hirorni, N. Uchida .....................................................................632<br />

Effects of Aluminum in Acidic Water on Hematological and Physiological Parameters of the Neotropical<br />

Fish Leporinus macrocephalus (Anostomidae) by I. F. Barcarolli, C. B. R. <strong>Mar</strong>tinez........................639<br />

Toxicity of Four Surfactants to Juvenile Rainbow Trout: Implications for Use over Water by B. C. Smith, C.<br />

A. Curran, K. W. Brown, J. L. Cabarrus, 1. B, Gown, J. K. McIntyre, E. E. Moreland, V. L. Wong, J.<br />

M. Grassley, C. E. Grue .................................................................................................................647<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 73, No. 2, September 2003.<br />

Kingston Harbour, Jamaica - An overview Goodbody, I. pp. 249-256<br />

Characterization of sources of organic pollution to Kingston Harbour, the extent of their influence and<br />

some rehabilitation recommendations Webber, D. F.; Kelly, P. W. pp. 257-272<br />

The relative importance of meteorological events, tidal activity and bathymetry to circulation and mixing in<br />

Kingston Harbour, Jamaica Webber, D. F.; Webber, M. K.; Williams, D. D.............................. 273-290<br />

The impact of coastline change and urban <strong>de</strong>velopment on the flushing time of a coastal embayment,<br />

Kingston Harbour, Jamaica, Bigg, G. R.; Webber, D. F........................................................... 291-306<br />

Phytoplankton distribution in a highly eutrophic estuarine bay, Hunts Bay, Kingston Harbour, Jamaica.<br />

Ranston, E. R.; Webber, D. F................................................................................................. 307-324<br />

The phytoplankton distribution in Kingston Harbour, Jamaica. Ranston, E. R.; Simmonds, R.-M. A.;<br />

Webber, D. F.......................................................................................................................... 325-342<br />

Zooplankton distribution in the eutrophic Kingston Harbour, Jamaica. Dunbar, F. N.; Webber, M. K.. 343-360<br />

Changes in water quality and plankton of Kingston Harbour, Jamaica after 20 years of continued<br />

eutrophication. Webber, M. K.; Webber, D. F.; Ranston, E. R.; Dunbar, F. N.; Simmonds, R.-M. A. 361-378<br />

Abundance, biomass and production of ctenophores and medusae off Kingston, Jamaica. Persad, G.;<br />

Hopcroft, R. R.; Webber, M. K.; Roff, J. C............................................................................... 379-396<br />

Response of tropical marine phytoplankton communities to manipulations of nutrient concentration and<br />

metazoan grazing pressure, Hopcroft, R. R.; Roff, J. C........................................................... 397-420<br />

The artisanal thread herring fishery of Kingston Harbour: A review, Harvey, G. C. M. N.; Goodbody, I.;<br />

Aiken, K. A............................................................................................................................. 421-432<br />

Distribution of the invasive Indo-Pacific green mussel, Perna viridis, in Kingston Harbour, Jamaica, Buddo,<br />

D. S. A.; Steele, R. D.; D Oyen, E. R....................................................................................... 433-442<br />

The effects of varying levels of eutrophication on phytoplankton and seagrass (Thalassia testudinum)<br />

populations of the southeast coast of Jamaica, Green, S. O.; Webber, D. F............................ 443-456<br />

The ascidian fauna of Port Royal, Jamaica I. Harbor and mangrove dwelling species, Goodbody, I.. 457-476<br />

10


Spatial distribution of epibenthic bryozoans found on the roots of Rhizophora mangle, Kingston Harbour,<br />

Jamaica, W.I. Creary, M. M.................................................................................................... 477-490<br />

Mangrove forest structure un<strong>de</strong>r varying environmental conditions, McDonald, K. O.; Webber, D. F.;<br />

Webber, M. K......................................................................................................................... 491-506<br />

The sand dune ecology of the Palisadoes, Kingston Harbour, Jamaica, Thompson, H. P.; Webber, D. F. 507-520<br />

A simplified field gui<strong>de</strong> to the bryozoan species found on the roots of the red mangrove (Rhizophora<br />

mangle) in and around Kingston Harbour, Jamaica, W.I Creary, M. M..................................... 521-526<br />

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 02/04, February 2004.<br />

February 2004<br />

TROPICS<br />

Highlights<br />

Table of Atmospheric Indices Table T1<br />

Table of SST Indices Table T2<br />

Time Series<br />

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

Tahiti and Darwin SLP Anomalies<br />

OLR Anomalies T1<br />

Equatorial SOI T2<br />

200-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies<br />

500-mb Temperature Anomalies<br />

30-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T3<br />

850-mb Zonal Wind Anomalies T4<br />

Equatorial Pacific SST Anomalies T5<br />

Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections<br />

Mean and Anomalous Sea Level Pressure T6<br />

Mean and Anomalous 850-mb Zonal Wind T7<br />

Mean and Anomalous OLR T8<br />

Mean and Anomalous SST T9<br />

Pentad SLP Anomalies T10<br />

Pentad OLR Anomalies T11<br />

Pentad 250-mb Velocity Potential Anomalies T12<br />

Pentad 850-mb Zonal Wind AnomaliesT 13<br />

Anomalous Equatorial Zonal Wind T14<br />

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

T15<br />

Mean & Anomaly Fields<br />

Depth of the 20C Isotherm T16<br />

Subsurface Equatorial Pacific<br />

Temperatures T17<br />

Tropical Strip SST T18<br />

SLP T19<br />

850-mb Vector Wind T20<br />

200-mb Vector Wind T21<br />

200-mb Streamfunction T22<br />

200-mb Divergence T23<br />

200-mb Velocity Potential and<br />

Divergent Wind T24<br />

OLR T25<br />

SSM/I Satellite Tropical<br />

Precipitation Estimates T26<br />

Cloud Liquid Water T27<br />

Vertically Integrated Water Vapor 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 />

11


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> Section<br />

Mean A1.3<br />

TAO/TRITON Array Time-Longitu<strong>de</strong> Section<br />

Anomalies A1.4<br />

East Pacific SST and Sea Level A1.5<br />

Sea Level Anomalies A1.6 - Not Available<br />

Pacific Wind Stress and Anomalies A1.7<br />

Satellite-Derived Surface Currents A1.8<br />

FORECAST FORUM<br />

Discussion<br />

Canonical Correlation Analysis Forecasts<br />

Canonical Correlation Analysis SST anomaly<br />

prediction F1<br />

Canonical Correlation ENSO Forecast F2<br />

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

Forecast SST ANOMALY F3<br />

Forecast SST NINO 3 F4a<br />

Forecast SST NINO 3.4 F4b<br />

NCEP <strong>Mar</strong>kov Mo<strong>de</strong>l Forecasts<br />

Forecast SST Anomalies F5<br />

Forecast SST Nino 3.4 F6<br />

LDEO Forecast<br />

Forecast of SST and Wind Stress F7<br />

Forecast of Nino 3 SSTA F8<br />

Linear Inverse Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Forecasts<br />

Predicted SST Anomalies F9<br />

Forecasts of NINO 3 Anomalies F10<br />

Scripps/MPI Hybrid Coupled Mo<strong>de</strong>l (HMC-3)<br />

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)- Anomaly and<br />

Percentiles E3<br />

Time Series of Selected Global Precipitation<br />

Estimates (CAMSOPI) E4<br />

Time Series of U. S. Precipitation Estimates<br />

(CAMSOPI) E5<br />

U. S. Precipitation E6<br />

THESE TWO MAPS ARE NOT IN THE<br />

BULLETIN<br />

United States Surface Temperature - Anomalies<br />

and Percentiles<br />

United States Surface Precipitation - Total and<br />

Percentiles<br />

Northern Hemisphere<br />

Standardized Monthly Amplitu<strong>de</strong>s of Selected<br />

Teleconnection Indices E7<br />

Standardized Daily Amplitu<strong>de</strong>s of Selected<br />

Teleconnection Indices E8<br />

Mean and Anomalous SLP E9<br />

Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E10<br />

Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E11<br />

500-mb Persistence E12<br />

Time -Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections of 500-mb Height<br />

Anomalies E13<br />

700-mb Storm Track E14<br />

Southern Hemisphere<br />

Troposphere<br />

Mean and Anomalous SLP E15<br />

Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E16<br />

Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E17<br />

500-mb Persistence E18<br />

Time -Longitu<strong>de</strong> Sections of 500-mb Height<br />

Anomalies E19<br />

Stratosphere<br />

Height Anomalies at selected levels S1<br />

12


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 />

Appendix 2: Additional Figures<br />

Arctic Oscillation and 500-hPa Anomalies A2.1<br />

Snow Cover A2.2<br />

COPEIA:<br />

No. 1, February 9, 2004.<br />

Spawning Behavior and Genetic Parentage in the Pirate Perch (Aphredo<strong>de</strong>rus sayanus), a Fish with an<br />

Enigmatic Reproductive Morphology. Dean E. Fletcher, Elizabeth E. Dakin, Brady A. Porter, and<br />

John C. Avise............................................................................................................................. 1–10.<br />

Asymmetrical Effects of Introduced Bullfrogs (Rana catesbeiana) on Native Ranid Frogs in Oregon.<br />

Christopher A. Pearl, Michael J. Adams, R. Bruce Bury, and Brome McCreary.......................... 11–20.<br />

Hatching Events in the California Grunion, Leuresthes tenuis. Tara M. Speer-Blank and Karen L. M.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tin........................................................................................................................................ 21–27.<br />

Resource Availability and Costs of Reproduction in the Salaman<strong>de</strong>r Plethodon cinereus. Kerry L. Yurewicz<br />

and Henry M. Wilbur.................................................................................................................. 28–36.<br />

Growth-In<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt Effects of Temperature on Age and Size at Maturity in Japanese Medaka (Oryzias<br />

latipes). Rashpal S. Dhillon and Michael G. Fox......................................................................... 37–45.<br />

New Species of Drymoluber (Reptilia: Squamata: Colubridae) from Southeastern Peru. Edgar Lehr, Nelly<br />

Carrillo, and Peter Hocking........................................................................................................ 46–52.<br />

Morphology and Phylogeny of the Studfish Cla<strong>de</strong>, Subgenus Xenisma (Teleostei: Cyprinodontiformes).<br />

Michael J. Ghedotti, Andrew M. Simons, and Matthew P. Davis................................................. 53–61.<br />

Encheliophis char<strong>de</strong>walli: A New Species of Carapidae (Ophidiiformes) from French Polynesia, with a<br />

Re<strong>de</strong>scription of Encheliophis vermicularis. Eric Parmentier...................................................... 62–67.<br />

Moenkhausia bonita: A New Small Characin Fish from the Rio Paraguay Basin, Southwestern Brazil<br />

(Characiformes: Characidae). Ricardo C. Benine, Ricardo M. C. Castro, and José Sabino......... 68–73.<br />

New Species of Deep-Sea Ceratioid Anglerfish, Oneiro<strong>de</strong>s pietschi (Lophiiformes: Oneirodidae), from the<br />

North Pacific Ocean. Hsuan-Ching Ho and Kwang-Tsao Shao................................................... 74–77.<br />

Steatogenys ocellatus: A New Species of Neotropical Electric Fish (Gymnotiformes: Hypopomidae) from<br />

the Lowland Amazon Basin. William G. R. Crampton, Dean H. Thorsen, and James S. Albert... 78–91.<br />

Wallago micropogon: A New Species of Silurid Catfish (Teleostei: Siluridae) from Mainland Southeast<br />

Asia. Heok Hee Ng.................................................................................................................... 92–97.<br />

Revision of the Deep-Sea Anglerfish Genus Bufoceratias Whitley (Lophiiformes: Ceratioi<strong>de</strong>i: Diceratiidae),<br />

with Description of a New Species from the Indo-West Pacific Ocean. Theodore W. Pietsch, Ho<br />

Hsuan-ching, and Chen Hong-ming......................................................................................... 98–107.<br />

13


Re<strong>de</strong>scription of Dolichallabes microphthalmus (Poll, 1942) (Siluriformes, Clariidae). Stijn Devaere, Guy<br />

G. Teugels, Dominique Adriaens, Frank Huysentruyt, and Walter Verraes............................. 108–115.<br />

New Species of Eustomias (Teleostei: Stomiidae) from the Western North Atlantic, with a Review of the<br />

Subgenus Neostomias. Tracey T. Sutton and Karsten E. Hartel............................................. 116–121.<br />

SHORTER CONTRIBUTIONS<br />

Pietschichthys horridus Kharin, 1989 : A Junior Synonym of Dermatias platynogaster Smith and Radcliffe,<br />

in Radcliffe, 1912 (Lophiiformes: Oneirodidae), with a Revised Key to Oneirodid Genera. Theodore<br />

W. Pietsch and Vladimir E. Kharin......................................................................................... 122–127.<br />

Maternal Care and Obligatory Oophagy in Leptodactylus fallax: A New Reproductive Mo<strong>de</strong> in Frogs.<br />

Richard C. Gibson and Kevin R. Buley................................................................................... 128–135.<br />

Allozyme Variation in the Salaman<strong>de</strong>r Genus Pseudobranchus: Phylogeographic and Taxonomic<br />

Significance. Fu-Guo Robert Liu, Paul E. Moler, Howard P. Whid<strong>de</strong>n, and Michael M. Miyamoto 136–144.<br />

Effects of Body Mass and Temperature on Standard Metabolic Rate in the Eastern Diamondback<br />

Rattlesnake (Crotalus adamanteus). Michael E. Dorcas, William A. Hopkins, and John H. Roe 145–151.<br />

Effects of Conspecifics on the Burrow Occupancy Behavior of Spotted Salaman<strong>de</strong>rs (Ambystoma<br />

maculatum). Jonathan V. Regosin, Bryan S. Windmiller, and J. Michael Reed....................... 152–158.<br />

Seasonal Differences in Aggression and Site Tenacity in Male Green Frogs, Rana clamitans. Donald B.<br />

Shepard................................................................................................................................ 159–164.<br />

Tail Autotomy in Territorial Salaman<strong>de</strong>rs Influences Scent <strong>Mar</strong>king by Resi<strong>de</strong>nts and Behavioral<br />

Responses of Intru<strong>de</strong>rs to Resi<strong>de</strong>nt Chemical Cues. Sharon E. Wise, Frank D. Verret, and Robert<br />

G. Jaeger.............................................................................................................................. 165–172.<br />

Influence of Habitat Complexity on Predator–Prey Interactions between the Fish (Gambusia holbrooki)<br />

and Tadpoles of Hyla squirella and Gastrophryne carolinensis. Matthew J. Baber and Kimberly J.<br />

Babbitt................................................................................................................................... 173–177.<br />

Seasonal Changes in Lymphoid Distribution of the Turtle Mauremys caspica. Francisco J. Muñoz and<br />

Mónica De la Fuente............................................................................................................. 178–183.<br />

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES<br />

PAULO EMÍLIO VANZOLINI. W. Ronald Heyer............................................................................... 184–189.<br />

Book Review<br />

INTRODUCTION TO HORNED LIZARDS OF NORTH AMERICA. Kurt Schwenk............................ 190–192.<br />

ESTADIOS TEMPRANOS DE PECES DEL PACIFICO COLOMBIANO. <strong>Mar</strong>ia M. Criales and William J.<br />

Richards................................................................................................................................ 192–193.<br />

SHOREFISHES OF THE TROPICAL EASTERN PACIFIC/PECES COSTEROS DEL PACÍFICO<br />

ORIENTAL TROPICAL. John E. McCosker and David B. Catania.......................................... 193–195.<br />

MANUAL OF FISH SCLEROCHRONOLOGY. William A. Roumillat................................................. 195–195.<br />

Editorial Notes and News. .............................................................................................................. 197–198.<br />

14


CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vol. 76, Part. 5, May 2003.<br />

The diel vertical migration pattern of the cladoceran Pleopis polyphemoi<strong>de</strong>s (Leuckart, 1859) in a stratified<br />

tropical bay. J. L. Valentin, A. <strong>Mar</strong>azzo & C. L. Gomes ...................................................................513<br />

Procambarus (Villalobosus) achilli (Decapoda, Cambaridae): a new species of crayfish from Mexico.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ilú López, Luis M. Mejıa & Fernando Alvarez ...........................................................................523<br />

Physiological responses to hypoxia and anoxia in the giant barnacle,Austromegabalanus psittacus<br />

(Molina, 1782). D. A. López, J. M. Castro, M. L. González & R. W. Simpfendörfer ..........................533<br />

Annual migrations and spawning of Coenobita clypeatus (Herbst) on Mona Island (Puerto Rico) and notes<br />

on inland crustaceans. Ángel M. Nieves-Rivera & Ernest H. Williams, Jr. .......................................547<br />

Biased sex ratios in fiddler crabs (Brachyura, Ocypodidae): a review and evaluation of the influence of<br />

sampling method, size class, and sex-specific mortality. Pieter T. J. Johnson ................................559<br />

A new species of Caprella (Amphipoda, Caprellidae) from <strong>de</strong>ep sea waters. J. M. Guerra-Garcıa & J. C.<br />

Garcıa-Gómez ...............................................................................................................................581<br />

Re<strong>de</strong>scription of Teratocyclops cubensis Pleşa, 1981 (Copepoda, Cyclopoida, Cyclopidae) from Cuba.<br />

Sanda Iepure & Danielle Defaye ....................................................................................................591<br />

The effect of cooking and freezing on the carapace measurement of western rock lobster, Panulirus<br />

cygnus George, 1962. Roy Melville-Smith & Adrian W. Thomson ...................................................605<br />

The suprabenthic peracarid fauna collected at bathyal <strong>de</strong>pths in the Ionian Sea (eastern Mediterranean).<br />

Teresa Madurell & Joan E. Cartes .................................................................................................611<br />

First record of the non-indigenous crab, Charybdis hellerii (A. Milne-Edwards, 1867) from French Guyana<br />

(Decapoda, Brachyura, Portunidae). <strong>Mar</strong>cos Tavares & Jean-Michel Amouroux ............................625<br />

Notes and news.......................................................................................................................................631<br />

New records of and observations on Branchiopoda of St. John, United States Virgin Islands. Douglas G.<br />

Smith & Colin D. Little ....................................................................................................................631<br />

A new record of Albunea carabus (L., 1758) (Decapoda, Anomura, Hippi<strong>de</strong>a) from the eastern<br />

Mediterranean coast of Turkey. Tuncer Katağan & Cem Çevik .......................................................637<br />

CRUSTACEANA:<br />

Vol. 76, Part. 9, October 2003.<br />

Distribution and estimation of body size and weight of four species of <strong>de</strong>ep water shrimps in the<br />

southeastern Gulf of California, Mexico. Michel E. Hendrickx ....................................................... 1025<br />

Comparative distribution of protozoan epibionts on Mysis relicta Lovén, 1869 (Mysidacea) from three lakes<br />

in northern Europe. Gregorio Fernan<strong>de</strong>z-Leborans ...................................................................... 1037<br />

Burrow-morphological characters of the fiddler crab, Uca annulipes (H. Milne Edwards, 1837) and<br />

ecological correlates in a lagoonal beach on Pulau Hantu, Singapore. Shirley S. L. Lim & C. H.<br />

Diong .......................................................................................................................................... 1055<br />

15


Cirolana mercuryi sp. nov., a distinctive cirolanid isopod (Flabellifera) from the corals reefs of Zanzibar,<br />

East Africa. Niel L. Bruce ............................................................................................................. 1071<br />

Ordre <strong>de</strong>s Euphausiacea Dana, 1852 [The or<strong>de</strong>r Euphausiacea Dana, 1852]. Berna<strong>de</strong>tte Casanova ..... 1083<br />

Population dynamics and production of the amphipod Orchestia gammarellus (Talitridae) in a Ria<br />

Formosa saltmarsh (southern Portugal). Natália Dias & <strong>Mar</strong>tin Sprung ....................................... 1123<br />

Notes and news..................................................................................................................................... 1143<br />

Additional specimens and range extension of Brachycarpus crosnieri Bruce, 1998 (Decapoda, Cari<strong>de</strong>a,<br />

Palaemonidae). Junji Okuno, Masatsune Takeda & Tomoki Kase ................................................ 1143<br />

Shore stranding of the neritic euphausiid Pseu<strong>de</strong>uphausia latifrons (G. O. Sars, 1883) in western Japan.<br />

Yukio Hanamura, Nobuhiro Saito & Ken-Ichi Hayashi .................................................................. 1147<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 45, No. 2, December 2003.<br />

Trace metals in sediments near offshore oil exploration and production sites in the Alaskan Arctic . 149 - 160<br />

John H. Trefry, Robert D. Rember, Robert P. Trocine, et al.<br />

A preliminary assessment of nitrate <strong>de</strong>gradation in simulated soil environments ............................ 161 - 170<br />

U. Atxotegi, M. Z. Iqbal, A. C. Czarnetzki<br />

Distribution of heavy metals in Gaborone urban soils (Botswana) and its relationship to soil pollution and<br />

bedrock composition ............................................................................................................ 171 - 180<br />

M. Zhai, H. A. B. Kampunzu, M. P. Modisi, et al.<br />

Pilot-scale field mo<strong>de</strong>l tests for <strong>de</strong>tecting landfill leachate intrusion into the subsurface using a grid-net<br />

electrical conductivity measurement system ......................................................................... 181 - 189<br />

Myoung Hak Oh, Ju Hyung Lee, Gil Lim Yoon, et al.<br />

Conceptual mo<strong>de</strong>l for transferring information between small watersheds ...................................... 190 - 197<br />

Emery T. Cleaves<br />

Heavy metal pollution and acid drainage from the abandoned Balya Pb-Zn sulfi<strong>de</strong> Mine, NW<br />

Anatolia,Turkey ................................................................................................................... 198 - 208<br />

Atilla Aykol, Murat Budakoglu, Mustafa Kumral, et al.<br />

Microbial ecology and geochemistry of soils containing iron pans .................................................. 209 - 220<br />

C. R. An<strong>de</strong>rson, I. M. Turnbull, M. R. Rosen<br />

Groundwater discharge to the Gulf of Finland (Baltic Sea): ecological aspects ............................... 221 - 225<br />

E. A. Viventsova and A. N. Voronov<br />

Surface water quality and sediment geochemistry in the Gualaxo do Norte basin, eastern Quadrilátero<br />

Ferrífero, Minas Gerais, Brazil ............................................................................................. 226 - 235<br />

Adivane Teresinha Costa, Hermínio Arias Nalini, Jorge Carvalho <strong>de</strong> Lena, et al.<br />

Sorption capacity on lead, copper and zinc by clay soils from South Wales, United Kingdom ......... 236 - 242<br />

W. Y. Wan Zuhairi<br />

16


Fluori<strong>de</strong> inci<strong>de</strong>nce in groundwater in an area of Peninsular India ................................................... 243 - 251<br />

N. Subba Rao and D. John Devadas<br />

Mineral precipitation and dissolution at two slag-disposal sites in northwestern Indiana, USA ........ 252 - 261<br />

E. R. Bayless and M. S. Schulz<br />

Heavy metal distribution in karst soils from Croatia and Slovakia ................................................... 262 - 272<br />

Slobodan Miko, Goran Durn, Renata Adamcová, et al.<br />

GIS-based <strong>de</strong>termination of the mean long-term groundwater recharge in Lower Saxony .............. 273 - 278<br />

F. Wendland, R. Kunkel, B. Tetzlaff, et al.<br />

Constituents and features of displacement vector angle of colluvial landsli<strong>de</strong> ................................. 279 - 285<br />

He Keqiang and Wang Sijing<br />

GIS-based hazard mapping and zonation of <strong>de</strong>bris flows in Xiaojiang Basin, southwestern China .. 286 - 293<br />

Y. P. He, H. Xie, P. Cui, et al.<br />

Book reviews<br />

December 2004 (second edition) p. 294<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL INTERNATIONAL:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 2, April 2004.<br />

Determination of aniline and related mono-aromatic amines in indoor air in selected Canadian resi<strong>de</strong>nces<br />

by a modified thermal <strong>de</strong>sorption GC/MS method................................................................... 135-143<br />

Jiping Zhu and Bio Aikawa<br />

Inhibition of seawater on bisphenol A (BPA) <strong>de</strong>gradation by Fenton reagents................................... 145-150<br />

Junko Sajiki and Jun Yonekubo<br />

Preliminary evaluation of PAH sorptive changes in soil by Soxhlet extraction.................................... 151-158<br />

Sangchul Hwang and Teresa J. Cutright<br />

Metal contamination of farming soils affected by industry.................................................................. 159-165<br />

Krzysztof Loska, Danuta Wiechua and Irena Korus<br />

Effects of Se and Zn supplementation on the antagonism against Pb and Cd in vegetables.............. 167-172<br />

P. P. He, X. Z. Lv and G. Y. Wang<br />

Heavy metals monitoring at a Mediterranean natural ecosystem of Central Italy. Trends in different<br />

environmental matrixes........................................................................................................... 173-181<br />

Luciano Morselli, Barbara Brusori, Fabrizio Passarini, Elena Bernardi, Rosa Francaviglia, Licia Gataleta,<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ia <strong>Mar</strong>chionni, Rita Aromolo, Anna Bene<strong>de</strong>tti and Piera Olivieri<br />

Heavy metals in mullet, Liza abu, and catfish, Silurus triostegus, from the Atatürk Dam Lake (Euphrates),<br />

Turkey.................................................................................................................................... 183-188<br />

Hülya Kara<strong>de</strong><strong>de</strong>, Seyit Ahmet Oymak and Erhan Ünlü<br />

Wintertime indoor air levels of PM10, PM2.5 and PM1 at public places and their contributions to TSP 189-197<br />

Yangsheng Liu, Rui Chen, Xingxing Shen and Xiaoling Mao<br />

17


Geomorphological evolution and environmental reclamation of Fusaro Lagoon (Campania Province,<br />

southern Italy)........................................................................................................................ 199-208<br />

Tommaso De Pippo, Carlo Donadio, Doriana Grottola and Micla Pennetta<br />

Lead contamination and isotope signatures in the urban environment of Hong Kong......................... 209-217<br />

N. S. Duzgoren-Aydin, X. D. Li and S. C. Wong<br />

Legislation with respect to dioxins in the workplace........................................................................... 219-233<br />

C. W. Davy<br />

Worldwi<strong>de</strong> occurrence and effects of antifouling paint booster bioci<strong>de</strong>s in the aquatic environment: a<br />

review.................................................................................................................................... 235-248<br />

I. K. Konstantinou and T. A. Albanis<br />

Parameters affecting biological phosphate removal from wastewaters.............................................. 249-259<br />

D. Mulkerrins, A. D. W. Dobson and E. Colleran<br />

Metal bioremediation through growing cells...................................................................................... 261-278<br />

Anushree Malik<br />

Carbon trading: time for industry involvement*1................................................................................ 279-288<br />

Eric Johnson and Russell Heinen<br />

Global Environment Change. Issues in Environmental Science and Technology: R.E. Hester and R.M.<br />

Harrison (Eds.), Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry ISBN: 0854042806 Format: softback. 197pp.<br />

Price: £32.50.......................................................................................................................... 289-290<br />

William F. Hunt, Jr.<br />

Assessment of a book entitled "Sustainable Management of Wetlands: Biodiversity and Beyond": Edited<br />

by Jyoti Parikh and Hemant Datye. Sage Publications India Pvt., Ltd., New Delhi, India. ISBN: 0-<br />

7619-9602, Price: Rs. 650.00, Page: 444 Pages, Year: 2003.................................................. 290-291<br />

Santosh Kumar Sarkar<br />

Editorial Board, Page CO2<br />

Publisher's note, Page iii<br />

Editorial 1-2<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 128, Nos. 1-2, 2004.<br />

K. C. Jones, A. Sweetman and D. Mackay<br />

Primary sources of selected POPs: regional and global scale emission inventories................................. 3-16<br />

Knut Breivik, Ruth Alcock, Yi-Fan Li, Robert E. Bailey, Hei<strong>de</strong>lore Fiedler and Jozef M. Pacyna<br />

Seasonal and long-term trends in atmospheric PAH concentrations: evi<strong>de</strong>nce and implications............ 17-27<br />

Konstantinos Prevedouros, Eva Brorström-Lundén, Crispin J. Halsall, Kevin C. Jones, Robert G. M. Lee<br />

and Andrew J. Sweetman<br />

Distribution of some organochlorine compounds in pine needles from Central and Northern Europe..... 29-48<br />

Anna Hellström, Henrik Kylin, William M. J. Strachan and Sören Jensen<br />

18


Soil–air exchange of organochlorine pestici<strong>de</strong>s in the Southern United States...................................... 49-57<br />

Terry F. Bidleman and Andi D. Leone<br />

PCB in soils and estimated soil–air exchange fluxes of selected PCB congeners in the south of Swe<strong>de</strong>n 59-72<br />

Cecilia Backe, Ian T. Cousins and Per Larsson<br />

Air–sea gas exchange of HCHs and PCBs and enantiomers of -HCH in the Kattegat Sea region.......... 73-83<br />

Kristina L. Sundqvist, Håkan Wingfors, Eva Brorstöm-Lundén and Karin Wiberg<br />

Evaluation of sequentially-coupled POP fluxes estimated from simultaneous measurements in multiple<br />

compartments of an air–water–sediment system......................................................................... 85-97<br />

Anna Palm, Ian Cousins, Örjan Gustafsson, Johan Axelman, Kerstin Grun<strong>de</strong>r, Dag Broman and Eva<br />

Brorström-Lundén<br />

Current issues and uncertainties in the measurement and mo<strong>de</strong>lling of air–vegetation exchange and<br />

within-plant processing of POPs............................................................................................... 99-138<br />

Jonathan L. Barber, Gareth O. Thomas, Gerhard Kerstiens and Kevin C. Jones<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for the "grasshopper" effect and fractionation during long-range atmospheric transport of organic<br />

contaminants.......................................................................................................................... 139-148<br />

T. Gouin, D. Mackay, K. C. Jones, T. Harner and S. N. Meijer<br />

Latitudinal and seasonal capacity of the surface oceans as a reservoir of polychlorinated biphenyls. 149-162<br />

Elena Jurado, Rainer Lohmann, Sandra Meijer, Kevin C. Jones and Jordi Dachs<br />

Investigating the occurrence of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in the arctic: their atmospheric<br />

behaviour and interaction with the seasonal snow pack.......................................................... 163-175<br />

Crispin J. Halsall<br />

Long-range transport and global fractionation of POPs: insights from multimedia mo<strong>de</strong>ling studies... 177-188<br />

M. Scheringer, M. Salzmann, M. Stroebe, F. Wegmann, K. Fenner and K. Hungerbühler<br />

Prediction of overall persistence and long-range transport potential with multimedia fate mo<strong>de</strong>ls:<br />

robustness and sensitivity of results........................................................................................ 189-204<br />

Kathrin Fenner, <strong>Mar</strong>tin Scheringer and Konrad Hungerbühler<br />

Indicators for persistence and long-range transport potential as <strong>de</strong>rived from multicompartment chemistry–<br />

transport mo<strong>de</strong>lling................................................................................................................. 205-221<br />

Adrian Leip and Gerhard Lammel<br />

BETR-World: a geographically explicit mo<strong>de</strong>l of chemical fate: application to transport of -HCH to the<br />

Arctic...................................................................................................................................... 223-240<br />

L. Toose, D. G. Woodfine, M. MacLeod, D. Mackay and J. Gouin<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling transport and <strong>de</strong>position of contaminants to ecosystems of concern: a case study for the<br />

Laurentian Great Lakes.......................................................................................................... 241-250<br />

Matthew MacLeod and Don Mackay<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the fate of persistent organic pollutants in Europe: parameterisation of a grid<strong>de</strong>d distribution<br />

mo<strong>de</strong>l..................................................................................................................................... 251-261<br />

Konstantinos Prevedouros, Matthew MacLeod, Kevin C. Jones and Andrew J. Sweetman<br />

19


Evaluating multimedia/multipathway mo<strong>de</strong>l intake fraction estimates using POP emission and monitoring<br />

data........................................................................................................................................ 263-277<br />

M. <strong>Mar</strong>gni, D. W. Pennington, C. Amman and O. Jolliet<br />

evaluation of the PCBs transport over the Northern Hemisphere....................................................... 279-289<br />

Alexan<strong>de</strong>r Malanichev, Elena Mantseva, Victor Shatalov, Boris Strukov and Na<strong>de</strong>zhda Vulykh<br />

Effects of time-averaging climate parameters on predicted multicompartmental fate of pestici<strong>de</strong>s and<br />

POPs..................................................................................................................................... 291-302<br />

Gerhard Lammel<br />

Editorial Board, Page CO2<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 128, No. 3, 2004.<br />

Letter to the Editor, Page 303<br />

Massimiliano Panella, Roberta Aina, Manuel Renna, Angela Santagostino, and Lucio Palin<br />

Letter to the Editor, Page 305<br />

Daniel Luttinger and Lloyd Wilson<br />

Copper uptake by Elsholtzia splen<strong>de</strong>ns and Silene vulgaris and assessment of copper phytoavailability in<br />

contaminated soils.................................................................................................................. 307-315<br />

Jing Song, Fang-Jie Zhao, Yong-Ming Luo, Steve P. McGrath and Hao Zhang<br />

Antioxidative responses to arsenic in the arsenic-hyperaccumulator Chinese brake fern (Pteris vittata L.) 317-325<br />

Xin<strong>de</strong> Cao, Lena Q. Ma and Cong Tu<br />

Organochlorine contaminants in seven species of Arctic seabirds from northern Baffin Bay.............. 327-338<br />

Andrea H. Buckman, Ross J. Norstrom, Keith A. Hobson, Nina J. Karnovsky, Jason Duffe and Aaron T.<br />

Fisk<br />

Suitability of altai wildrye (Elymus angustus) and slen<strong>de</strong>r wheatgrass (Agropyron trachycaulum) for initial<br />

reclamation of saline composite tailings of oil sands................................................................ 339-349<br />

Sylvie Renault, Clara Qualizza and Mike MacKinnon<br />

Long-term changes of acidifying <strong>de</strong>position in Finland (1973–2000).................................................. 351-362<br />

Jussi Vuorenmaa<br />

Vitellogenin content in European eel (Anguilla anguilla) in Flan<strong>de</strong>rs, Belgium.................................... 363-371<br />

Bram J. Versonnen, Geert Goemans, Clau<strong>de</strong> Belpaire and Colin R. Janssen<br />

Phytoextraction crop disposal––an unsolved problem....................................................................... 373-379<br />

A. Sas-Nowosielska, R. Kucharski, E. Makowski, M. Pogrzeba, J. M. Kuperberg and K. Kryski<br />

Organochlorine residues in harbour porpoises from Southwest Greenland........................................ 381-391<br />

Asunción Borrell, Alex Aguilar, Gemma Cantos, Christina Lockyer, Mads Peter Hei<strong>de</strong>-Jørgensen and Jette<br />

Jensen<br />

20


Antioxidant responses to benzo[a]pyrene and Aroclor 1254 exposure in the green-lipped mussel, Perna<br />

viridis...................................................................................................................................... 393-403<br />

C. C. C. Cheung, W. H. L. Siu, B. J. Richardson, S. B. De Luca-Abbott and P. K. S. Lam<br />

A cumulative ozone uptake–response relationship for the growth of Norway spruce saplings............ 405-417<br />

P. E. Karlsson, E. L. Medin, S. Ottosson, G. Selldén, G. Wallin, H. Pleijel and L. Skärby<br />

The quantification and distribution of pollution Pb at a woodland in rural south central Ontario, Canada 419-428<br />

Shaun A. Watmough and Thomas C. Hutchinson<br />

Priming effects on PAH <strong>de</strong>gradation and ecotoxicity during a phytoremediation experiment.............. 429-435<br />

Erik J. Joner, Doris Hirmann, Oliver H. J. Szolar, Dragana Todorovic, Corinne Leyval and Andreas P.<br />

Loibner<br />

Effects of incremental increases in silt load on the cardiovascular performance of riverine and lacustrine<br />

rock bass, Ambloplites rupestris............................................................................................. 437-444<br />

Christopher M. Bunt, Steven J. Cooke, Jason F. Schreer and David P. Philipp<br />

Invariant chlorine isotopic signatures during microbial PCB reductive <strong>de</strong>chlorination......................... 445-448<br />

Nicholas J. Drenzek, Timothy I. Eglinton, Carl O. Wirsen, Neil C. Sturchio, Linnea J. Heraty, Kevin R.<br />

Sowers, Qingzhong Wu, Harold D. May and Christopher M. Reddy<br />

Editorial Board, Page CO2<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 129, No. 1, May, 2004.<br />

Preliminary evi<strong>de</strong>nce of the role of hydrogen peroxi<strong>de</strong> in the <strong>de</strong>gradation of benzo[a]pyrene by a non-white<br />

rot fungus Fusarium solani.............................................................................................................. 1-4<br />

Etienne Veignie, Catherine Rafin, Patrice Woisel and Fabrice Cazier<br />

Evaluation of factors influencing root-induced changes of copper fractionation in rhizosphere of a<br />

calcareous soil*1.......................................................................................................................... 5-12<br />

S. Tao, W. X. Liu, Y. J. Chen, F. L. Xu, R. W. Dawson, B. G. Li, J. Cao, X. J. Wang, J. Y. Hu and J. Y.<br />

Fang<br />

A case study of contaminants on military ranges: Camp Edwards, Massachusetts, USA....................... 13-21<br />

Jay Clausen, Joe Robb, Diane Curry and Nic Korte<br />

Tissue metal levels in Muskrat (Ondatra zibethica) collected near the Sudbury (Ontario) ore-smelters;<br />

G. H. Parker<br />

prospects for biomonitoring marsh pollution................................................................................ 23-30<br />

Constraints on the use of 137Cs as a time-marker to support CRS and SIT chronologies..................... 31-37<br />

J. M. Abril<br />

Assessing the cause of impacts on benthic organisms near Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec.......................... 39-48<br />

U. Borgmann, M. Nowierski, L. C. Grapentine and D. G. Dixon<br />

21


Ostracoda and foraminifera as short-term tracers of environmental changes in very polluted areas: the<br />

Odiel Estuary (SW Spain)........................................................................................................... 49-61<br />

F. Ruiz, M. L. González-Regalado, J. Borrego, M. Abad and J. G. Pendón<br />

Rainwater chemistry at the summit and southern flank of the Itatiaia massif, Southeastern Brazil ......... 63-68<br />

William Z. <strong>de</strong> Mello and <strong>Mar</strong>celo D. <strong>de</strong> Almeida<br />

Low molecular weight thiols in arsenic hyperaccumulator Pteris vittata upon exposure to arsenic and other<br />

trace elements............................................................................................................................ 69-78<br />

Yong Cai, Jinhui Su and Lena Q. Ma<br />

Sulphur dioxi<strong>de</strong> adsorption in Scots pine canopies exposed to high ammonia emissions near a Cu–Ni<br />

smelter in SW Finland................................................................................................................. 79-88<br />

John Derome, Tiina Nieminen and Anna Saarsalmi<br />

Chemical coupling between ammonia, acid gases, and fine particles.................................................... 89-98<br />

Bok Haeng Baek, Viney P. Aneja and Quansong Tong<br />

Cellular energy allocation in zebra mussels exposed along a pollution gradient: linking cellular effects to<br />

higher levels of biological organization...................................................................................... 99-112<br />

R. Smol<strong>de</strong>rs, L. Bervoets, W. De Coen and R. Blust<br />

The study of metal contamination in urban soils of Hong Kong using a GIS-based approach ............ 113-124<br />

Xiangdong Li, Siu-lan Lee, Sze-chung Wong, Wenzhong Shi and Iain Thornton<br />

The effect of heavy metal exposure on egg size, eggshell thickness and the number of spermatozoa in<br />

blue tit Parus caeruleus eggs.................................................................................................. 125-129<br />

T. Dauwe, E. Janssens, B. Kempenaers and M. Eens<br />

Spatial and temporal trends in surface water and sediment contamination in the Laurentian Great Lakes 131-144<br />

Chris <strong>Mar</strong>vin, Scott Painter, Donald Williams, Violeta Richardson, Ronald Rossmann and Patricia Van<br />

Hoof<br />

Sulphur, nitrogen and carbon content of Sphagnum capillifolium and Pseu<strong>de</strong>vernia furfuracea exposed in<br />

bags in the Naples urban area................................................................................................ 145-158<br />

S. Vingiani, P. Adamo and S. Giordano<br />

The need for ammonia abatement with respect to secondary PM reductions in Europe..................... 159-163<br />

J. W. Erisman and M. Schaap<br />

Editorial Board, Page CO2<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 129, No. 2, May, 2004.<br />

Testing the ecotoxicology of vegetable versus mineral based lubricating oils: 1. Degradation rates using<br />

tropical marine microbes......................................................................................................... 165-173<br />

Philip Mercurio , Kathryn A. Burns and Andrew Negri<br />

22


Testing the ecotoxicology of vegetable versus mineral based lubricating oils: 2. Induction of mixed function<br />

oxidase enzymes in barramundi, Lates calcarifer, a tropical fish species................................. 175-182<br />

Philip Mercurio , Kathryn A. Burns and Joanne Cavanagh<br />

The ecotoxicology of vegetable versus mineral based lubricating oils: Coral fertilization and adult corals 183-194<br />

Philip Mercurio , Andrew P. Negri , Kathryn A. Burns and Andrew J. Heyward<br />

Spatio-temporal behaviour and mass balance of fluorine in forest soils near an aluminium smelting plant:<br />

short- and long-term aspects.................................................................................................. 195-207<br />

M. Egli , S. Dürrenberger and P. Fitze<br />

Distribution and coassociations of trace elements in soft tissue and byssus of Mytilus galloprovincialis<br />

relative to the surrounding seawater and suspen<strong>de</strong>d matter of the southern part of the Korean<br />

Peninsula............................................................................................................................... 209-228<br />

P. Szefer , B. -S. Kim , C. -K. Kim , E. -H. Kim and C. -B. Lee<br />

Role of manganese oxi<strong>de</strong>s in the exposure of mute swans (Cygnus olor) to Pb and other elements in the<br />

Chesapeake Bay, USA........................................................................................................... 229-235<br />

W. Nelson Beyer and Daniel Day<br />

Overexpression of LCT1 in tobacco enhances the protective action of calcium against cadmium toxicity 237-245<br />

Danuta <strong>Mar</strong>ia Antosiewicz and Jacek Hennig<br />

The effects of land use change on mercury distribution in soils of Alta Floresta, Southern Amazon... 247-255<br />

Luiz D. Lacerda , <strong>Mar</strong>gareth <strong>de</strong> Souza and <strong>Mar</strong>io G. Ribeiro<br />

Antimony distribution and environmental mobility at an historic antimony smelter site, New Zealand. 257-266<br />

N. J. Wilson , D. Craw and K. Hunter<br />

Degradation of terbutylazine (2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-terbutylamino-1,3,5-triazine), <strong>de</strong>isopropyl atrazine<br />

(2-amino-4-chloro-6-ethylamino-1,3,5-triazine), and chlorinated dimethoxy triazine (2-chloro-4,6-<br />

dimethoxy-1,3,5-triazine) by zero valent iron and electrochemical reduction............................ 267-275<br />

T. Dombek , D. Davis , J. Stine and D. Klarup<br />

Attenuation reactions in a multiple contaminated aquifer in Bitterfeld (Germany)............................... 277-288<br />

Susanne Heidrich , Holger Weiß and Arno Kaschl<br />

Patterns of metal soil contamination and changes in terrestrial cryptogamic communities................. 289-297<br />

Damien Cuny , Franck-Olivier Denayer , Bruno <strong>de</strong> Foucault , René Schumacker , Philippe Colein and<br />

Chantal Van Haluwyn<br />

Autometallographic tracing of mercury in frog liver............................................................................ 299-304<br />

N. S. Loumbourdis and G. Danscher<br />

Methane oxidation and formation of EPS in compost: effect of oxygen concentration........................ 305-314<br />

J. H. Wilshusen , J. P. A. Hettiaratchi , A. De Visscher and R. Saint-Fort<br />

Tributyltin in environmental samples from the Former Derecktor Shipyard, Coddington Cove, Newport RI 315-320<br />

Terry L. Wa<strong>de</strong> , Stephen T. Sweet , James G. Quinn , Robert W. Cairns and John W. King<br />

Single-well reactive tracer test and stable isotope analysis for <strong>de</strong>termination of microbial activity in a fast<br />

hydrocarbon-contaminated aquifer.......................................................................................... 321-330<br />

23


L. Burbery , G. Cassiani , G. Andreotti , T. Ricchiuto and K. T. Semple<br />

The effects of heavy metal contamination on the soil arthropod community of a shooting range........ 331-340<br />

Massimo Migliorini , Gaia Pigino , Nicola Bianchi , Fabio Bernini and Claudio Leonzio<br />

Editorial Board, Page CO2<br />

EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 57, No. 12, December 2003.<br />

THE EVOLUTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC SEX DETERMINATION IN FLUCTUATING<br />

ENVIRONMENTS. • Tom J. M. Van Dooren and Olof Leimar............................................. 2667–2677.<br />

HOW ARE DELETERIOUS MUTATIONS PURGED? DRIFT VERSUS NONRANDOM MATING. • Sylvain<br />

Glémin.............................................................................................................................. 2678–2687.<br />

CONTRASTING PATTERNS OF RADIATION IN AFRICAN AND AUSTRALIAN RESTIONACEAE. • H.<br />

Peter Lin<strong>de</strong>r, Pia El<strong>de</strong>näs, and Barbara G. Briggs.............................................................. 2688–2702.<br />

A MULTILOCUS GENEALOGICAL APPROACH TO PHYLOGENETIC SPECIES RECOGNITION IN THE<br />

MODEL EUKARYOTE NEUROSPORA. • Jeremy R. Dettman, David J. Jacobson, and John W.<br />

Taylor................................................................................................................................ 2703–2720.<br />

REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION AND PHYLOGENETIC DIVERGENCE IN NEUROSPORA: COMPARING<br />

METHODS OF SPECIES RECOGNITION IN A MODEL EUKARYOTE. • Jeremy R. Dettman, David<br />

J. Jacobson, Elizabeth Turner, Anne Pringle, and John W. Taylor...................................... 2721–2741.<br />

POLLEN TRANSFER BY HUMMINGBIRDS AND BUMBLEBEES, AND THE DIVERGENCE OF<br />

POLLINATION MODES IN PENSTEMON. • <strong>Mar</strong>ia Clara Castellanos, Paul Wilson, and James D.<br />

Thomson........................................................................................................................... 2742–2752.<br />

TRACKING A GENETIC SIGNAL OF EXTINCTION-RECOLONIZATION EVENTS IN A NEOTROPICAL<br />

TREE SPECIES: VOUACAPOUA AMERICANA AUBLET IN FRENCH GUIANA. • Cyril Dutech,<br />

Laurent Maggia, Christophe Tardy, Hélène I. Joly, and Philippe Jarne............................... 2753–2764.<br />

COSTS AND BENEFITS OF EVOLVING UNDER EXPERIMENTALLY ENFORCED POLYANDRY OR<br />

MONOGAMY. • Oliver Y. <strong>Mar</strong>tin and David J. Hosken. ...................................................... 2765–2772.<br />

ALLOMETRIC AND NONALLOMETRIC COMPONENTS OF DROSOPHILA WING SHAPE RESPOND<br />

DIFFERENTLY TO DEVELOPMENTAL TEMPERATURE. • Vincent Debat, Mattieu Bégin, Hélène<br />

Legout, and Jean R. David................................................................................................ 2773–2784.<br />

POPULATION GENETICS OF ACCESSORY GLAND PROTEINS AND SEXUAL BEHAVIOR IN<br />

DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER POPULATIONS FROM EVOLUTION CANYON. • Tami M.<br />

Panhuis, Willie J. Swanson, and Leonard Nunney. ............................................................ 2785–2791.<br />

MOSQUITO MORTALITY AND THE EVOLUTION OF MALARIA VIRULENCE. • H. M. Ferguson, M. J.<br />

Mackinnon, B. H. Chan, and A. F. Read............................................................................. 2792–2804.<br />

24


HIERARCHICAL ANALYSIS OF COLONY AND POPULATION GENETIC STRUCTURE OF THE<br />

EASTERN SUBTERRANEAN TERMITE, RETICULITERMES FLAVIPES, USING TWO CLASSES<br />

OF MOLECULAR MARKERS. • Edward L. Vargo.............................................................. 2805–2818.<br />

EVOLUTION OF SUBTERRANEAN DIVING BEETLES (COLEOPTERA: DYTISCIDAE: HYDROPORINI,<br />

BIDESSINI) IN THE ARID ZONE OF AUSTRALIA. • Remko Leys, Chris H. S. Watts, Steve J. B.<br />

Cooper, and William F. Humphreys. .................................................................................. 2819–2834.<br />

INITIAL STAGES OF REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION IN TWO SPECIES OF THE ENDANGERED<br />

SONORAN TOPMINNOW. • Carla R. Hurt and Philip W. Hedrick...................................... 2835–2841.<br />

A TEST OF ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESES FOR THE EVOLUTION OF REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION<br />

BETWEEN SPADEFOOT TOADS: SUPPORT FOR THE REINFORCEMENT HYPOTHESIS. •<br />

Karin S. Pfennig................................................................................................................ 2842–2851.<br />

RECONCILING ACTUAL AND INFERRED POPULATION HISTORIES IN THE HOUSE FINCH<br />

(CARPODACUS MEXICANUS) BY AFLP ANALYSIS. • Zhenshan Wang, Allan J. Baker, Geoffrey<br />

E. Hill, and Scott V. Edwards............................................................................................. 2852–2864.<br />

GENETIC DIFFERENTIATION AT NUCLEAR AND MITOCHONDRIAL LOCI AMONG LARGE WHITE-<br />

HEADED GULLS: SEX-BIASED INTERSPECIFIC GENE FLOW?. Pierre-Andre Crochet, Junjian Z.<br />

Chen, Jean-<strong>Mar</strong>c Pons, Jean-Dominique Lebreton, Paul D. N. Hebert, and François Bonhomme. 2865–2878.<br />

ESTIMATING SELECTION ON NEONATAL TRAITS IN RED DEER USING ELASTICITY PATH<br />

ANALYSIS. T. Coulson, L. E. B. Kruuk, G. Tavecchia, J. M. Pemberton, and T. H. Clutton-Brock. 2879–2892.<br />

BRIEF COMMUNICATION<br />

ENERGY AND THE RATE OF EVOLUTION: INFERENCES FROM PLANT rDNA SUBSTITUTION<br />

RATES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC. Shane D. Wright, Russell D. Gray, and Richard C. Gardner. 2893–2898.<br />

INFORMATION ABOUT TRANSMISSION OPPORTUNITIES TRIGGERS A LIFE-HISTORY SWITCH IN<br />

A PARASITE. • Robert Poulin............................................................................................ 2899–2903.<br />

CORRELATED EVOLUTION OF CONSPICUOUS COLORATION AND BODY SIZE IN POISON FROGS<br />

(DENDROBATIDAE). • Mattias Hagman and An<strong>de</strong>rs Forsman........................................... 2904–2910.<br />

INBREEDING AND INTERBREEDING IN DARWIN'S FINCHES. • Peter R. Grant, B. Rosemary Grant,<br />

Lukas F. Keller, Jeffrey A. <strong>Mar</strong>kert, and Kenneth Petren.................................................... 2911–2916.<br />

ANNOUNCEMENTS<br />

THE SOCIETY FOR THE STUDY OF EVOLUTION. • ................................................................ 2917–2918.<br />

ERRATA<br />

ERRATUM. • .............................................................................................................................. 2918–2918.<br />

ERRATA. • .................................................................................................................................. 2919–2919<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 441: A Gui<strong>de</strong> to the Seaweed Industry. (2003).<br />

Table of Contents<br />

PREPARATION OF THIS DOCUMENT<br />

25


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS<br />

ABSTRACT<br />

1. INTRODUCTION TO COMMERCIAL<br />

SEAWEEDS<br />

1.1 Scope of the seaweed industry<br />

1.2 Classification of seaweeds<br />

1.3 Uses of seaweeds - an overview<br />

1.4 Sources of seaweed<br />

1.4.1 Brown seaweeds<br />

1.4.2 Red seaweeds<br />

1.5 Cultivation methods - general outline<br />

2. SEAWEEDS USED AS A SOURCE OF AGAR<br />

2.1 Genera and species used<br />

2.2 Natural habitats<br />

2.3 Sources of agarophytes<br />

2.4 Harvesting methods for wild agarophytes<br />

2.5 Cultivation of agarophytes<br />

2.6 Quantities harvested<br />

2.7 <strong>Mar</strong>kets<br />

2.8 Future prospects<br />

3. AGAR<br />

3.1 Agar production methods<br />

3.1.1 Food gra<strong>de</strong> agar<br />

3.1.2 Agar strips<br />

3.1.3 Bacteriological agar<br />

3.1.4 Agarose<br />

3.2 Agar producers<br />

3.3 Agar uses<br />

3.3.1 Food<br />

3.3.2 Other uses<br />

3.3.3 Microbiological agar<br />

3.4 <strong>Mar</strong>kets and marketing of agar<br />

3.5 Future prospects<br />

4. SEAWEEDS USED AS A SOURCE OF<br />

ALGINATE<br />

4.1 Genera and species used<br />

4.2 Natural habitats<br />

4.3 Sources of alginophytes<br />

4.4 Harvesting methods for wild seaweeds<br />

4.5 Cultivation of seaweeds<br />

4.6 Quantities harvested<br />

4.7 <strong>Mar</strong>kets<br />

4.8 Future prospects<br />

5. ALGINATE<br />

5.1 Alginate production methods<br />

5.1.1 Sodium alginate<br />

5.1.2 Other alginate products<br />

5.2 Alginate producers<br />

5.3 Alginate uses<br />

5.3.1 Textile printing<br />

5.3.2 Food<br />

5.3.3 Immobilized biocatalysts<br />

5.3.4 Pharmaceutical and medical uses<br />

5.3.5 Other applications<br />

5.4 <strong>Mar</strong>kets and marketing of alginates<br />

5.5 Future prospects<br />

6. SEAWEEDS USED AS A SOURCE OF<br />

CARRAGEENAN<br />

6.1 Genera and species used<br />

6.2 Natural habitats<br />

6.3 Sources of carrageenophytes<br />

6.4 Harvesting methods for wild<br />

carrageenophytes<br />

6.5 Cultivation of carrageenophytes<br />

6.6 Quantities harvested<br />

6.7 <strong>Mar</strong>kets<br />

6.8 Future prospects<br />

7. CARRAGEENAN<br />

7.1 Carrageenan production methods<br />

7.1.1 Refined carrageenan and filtered<br />

carrageenan<br />

7.1.2 Semi-refined carrageenan and seaweed<br />

flour<br />

7.1.3 Philippine natural gra<strong>de</strong> (PNG) and<br />

processed Eucheuma seaweed (PES)<br />

7.2 Carrageenan producers and distributors<br />

26


7.2.1 Refined carrageenan producers and<br />

distributors<br />

7.2.2 PNG and PES and seaweed flour<br />

producers and distributors<br />

7.3 Carrageenan uses<br />

7.3.1 Dairy products<br />

7.3.2 Water-based foods<br />

7.3.3 Meat products<br />

7.3.4 Pet food<br />

7.3.5 Air freshener gels<br />

7.3.6 Toothpaste<br />

7.3.7 Immobilized biocatalysts<br />

7.3.8 For further <strong>de</strong>tails<br />

7.3.9 Refined gra<strong>de</strong> vs natural gra<strong>de</strong><br />

7.4 <strong>Mar</strong>kets and marketing of carrageenan<br />

7.5 Future prospects<br />

8. SEAWEEDS USED AS HUMAN FOOD<br />

8.1 Introduction<br />

8.2 Nori or purple laver (Porphyra spp.)<br />

8.3 Aonori or green laver (Monostroma spp. and<br />

Enteromorpha spp.)<br />

8.4 Kombu or haidai (Laminaria japonica)<br />

8.5 Wakame, quandai-cai (Undaria pinnatifida)<br />

8.6 Hiziki (Hizikia fusiforme)<br />

8.7 Mozuku (Cladosiphon okamuranus)<br />

8.8 Sea grapes or green caviar (Caulerpa<br />

lentillifera)<br />

8.9 Dulse (Palmaria palmata)<br />

8.10 Irish moss or carrageenan moss (Chondrus<br />

crispus)<br />

8.11 Winged kelp (Alaria esculenta)<br />

8.12 Ogo, ogonori or sea moss (Gracilaria spp.)<br />

8.13 Callophyllis variegata<br />

8.14 Future prospects<br />

9. OTHER USES OF SEAWEEDS<br />

9.1 Fertilizers and soil conditioners<br />

9.2 Animal feed<br />

9.3 Fish feed<br />

9.4 Biomass for fuel<br />

9.5 Cosmetics<br />

9.6 Integrated aquaculture<br />

9.7 Wastewater treatment<br />

9.7.1 Treatment of wastewater to reduce<br />

nitrogen- and phosphorus-containing<br />

compounds<br />

9.7.2 Removal of toxic metals from industrial<br />

wastewater<br />

REFERENCES 1 - LITERATURE SOURCES<br />

REFERENCES 2 - INTERNET SOURCES<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 443: The ecosystem Approach to Fisheries. Issues, Terminology, Principles,<br />

Institutional Foundations, Implementation and Outlook. (2003).<br />

PREPARATION OF THIS DOCUMENT<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

1. TERMINOLOGY AND PARADIGMS<br />

1.1 Fisheries Management<br />

1.2 Ecosystem Management<br />

1.3 Ecosystem Approach<br />

1.4 Ecosystem-based Fisheries Management<br />

(EBFM)<br />

1.5 Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries (EAF)<br />

1.6 Integrated Management (IM)<br />

2. ECOSYSTEM CHARACTERISTICS<br />

2.1 Definition<br />

2.2 Scale and Boundaries<br />

2.3 Dynamics and Natural Variability<br />

2.4 Biological Organization<br />

2.5 Structure<br />

3. FISHERIES IMPACT ON THE ECOSYSTEM<br />

3.1 Overall Impacts<br />

27


3.2 Impact on Associated and Depen<strong>de</strong>nt<br />

Species<br />

3.3 Impact on the Environment<br />

3.4 Poor Selectivity, Bycatch and Discards<br />

3.5 Gear Loss and Ghost Fishing<br />

4. FISHERIES VERSUS OTHER IMPACTS<br />

4.1 Overall Impacts<br />

4.2 Relative Importance of Fisheries and Other<br />

Impacts<br />

4.3 The Black Sea Example<br />

4.4 Impact on Diadromous Fish<br />

4.5 Competition Between Humans and <strong>Mar</strong>ine<br />

Mammals<br />

4.6 Allocation Implications<br />

5. INSTITUTIONAL FOUNDATIONS<br />

6. RELEVANCE OF THE CODE OF CONDUCT<br />

6.1 Respect for the Ecosystem<br />

6.2 Account of the Environment<br />

6.3 Biodiversity and Endangered Species<br />

6.4 Species Inter<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nce<br />

6.5 General Impact from Fisheries<br />

6.6 Selectivity, Ghost Fishing, Bycatch, Discards<br />

and Waste<br />

6.7 Impact from Other Activities<br />

6.8 Improved Governance<br />

6.9 Uncertainty, Risk and Precaution<br />

6.10 Integrated Management<br />

7. EAF PRINCIPLES<br />

7.1 Human and Ecosystem Well-being<br />

7.2 Resource Scarcity<br />

7.3 Maximum Acceptable Fishing Level<br />

7.4 Maximum Biological Productivity<br />

7.5 Impact Reversibility<br />

7.6 Impact Minimization<br />

7.7 Rebuilding of Resources<br />

7.8 Ecosystem Integrity<br />

7.9 Species Inter<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nce<br />

7.10 Institutional Integration<br />

7.11 Uncertainty, Risk and Precaution<br />

7.12 Compatibility of Management Measures<br />

7.13 The Polluter Pays Principle (PPP)<br />

7.14 The User Pays Principle (UPP)<br />

7.15 The Precautionary Principle and<br />

Precautionary Approach<br />

7.16 Subsidiarity, Decentralization and<br />

Participation<br />

7.17 Equity<br />

8. OPERATIONAL OBJECTIVES AND<br />

MEASURES<br />

8.1 Targets, Constraints, Indicators and<br />

Reference Points<br />

8.2 Priority Setting<br />

8.3 Improving Conventional Management<br />

8.4 Improving Ecosystem Well-being<br />

8.5 Rebuilding Ecosystems<br />

8.6 Maintaining Reproductive Capacity of Target<br />

Resources<br />

8.7 Maintaining Biological Diversity<br />

8.8 Protecting and Enhancing Habitats<br />

8.9 Protecting Selected <strong>Mar</strong>ine Areas<br />

8.10 Reducing Bycatch and Discards<br />

8.11 Reducing Ghost Fishing<br />

8.12 Reducing Uncertainty and Risk<br />

8.13 Improving the Institutional Set-up<br />

8.14 Matching Jurisdictional and EAF<br />

Boundaries<br />

8.15 Improving the Decision-making Framework<br />

8.16 Improving Statistics and Inventories<br />

8.17 Monitoring and Indicators<br />

8.18 Improving Research Capacity<br />

8.19 Management Planning<br />

8.20 Certification<br />

9. IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES<br />

9.1 EAF: Hurdle or Opportunity?<br />

9.2 Rhetoric Versus Commitment<br />

28


9.3 Capacity, Pragmatism and Stepwise<br />

Implementation<br />

9.4 The Need for Subsectoral Approaches<br />

9.5 Role of NGOs<br />

DISCUSSION: FUSION OR COLLISION?<br />

BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Annex 1: Malawi Principles for the Ecosystem<br />

Approach<br />

Annex 2: Key Events in the Evolution of<br />

Fisheries and Ecosystem Management<br />

Annex 3: Glossary<br />

Back cover<br />

FISHERIES:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 9, September 2003.<br />

FISHERIES MANAGEMENT<br />

Toward Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management Strategies for Multispecies Mo<strong>de</strong>ling and Associated<br />

Data Requirements<br />

A variety of multispecies mo<strong>de</strong>ling techniques now exist that will facilitate the move, in conjunction with the<br />

required data, towards ecosystem-based fisheries management.<br />

Robert J. Latour, <strong>Mar</strong>k J. Brush, and Christopher F. Bonzek<br />

ESSAY<br />

EDUCATION<br />

Advocacy, Critical Thinking, and the Classroom<br />

How do we as educators approach the subject of advocacy in the classroom? Our graduates will have to<br />

Jim Berkson<br />

OPINION<br />

face the issue, so shouldn't we?<br />

FISHERIES FORUM<br />

Why Fisheries Management Professionals Should Go Fishing<br />

Take a step back and focus on how recreational fishing management professionals can be a valuable tool<br />

to aid in managing recreational fisheries.<br />

Spencer Dumont and Chip Long<br />

COLUMN<br />

PRESIDENT'S HOOK<br />

Science to Influence Outcomes<br />

Presi<strong>de</strong>nt A<strong>de</strong>lman outlines the major goals of his plan of work for 2003-2004, and how these goals fit into<br />

the overall AFS Strategic Plan.<br />

Fred A. Harris<br />

COLUMN<br />

GUEST DIRECTOR'S LINE<br />

Pew Oceans Commission In-Depth Reports on Ocean Status<br />

The final Pew Commission report entitled "America's Living Oceans: Charting a Course for Sea Change."<br />

29


J. Brooke Shipley<br />

FISHERIES:<br />

Vol. 29, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

Fisheries Research<br />

Atlantic Cod Stock Structure in the Gulf of Maine<br />

Restoring and maintaining robust Atlantic cod population components to achieve sustainability is ma<strong>de</strong><br />

difficult when their distribution and character is unknown. This study uses GIS to clarify the structure<br />

of the Gulf of Maine cod grouping by <strong>de</strong>riving the distribution, movements, and behavior of<br />

population components from 1920s data and surveys of retired fishermen.<br />

Edward P. Ames<br />

COLUMN<br />

Presi<strong>de</strong>nt's Hook<br />

The Cost of AFS Annual Meetings<br />

Would you pay a $1.85 for one small meatball, a wiener, or a cheese puff? Or, to put it another way, how<br />

much is the latest and best fisheries science and management information worth to you?<br />

Ira R. A<strong>de</strong>lman<br />

COLUMN<br />

Guest Director's Line<br />

Volunteers: The Doers and Fixers<br />

Like other non-profit organizations such as friends of wildlife refuges, AFS relies on volunteers for its<br />

lifeblood. The Fisheries Conservation Foundation, offers new opportunities to get involved in<br />

spreading the word about fisheries and their importance to humans, the ecosystem, and our quality<br />

of life.<br />

Jessica Geubtner and Gus Rassam<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY. A JOURNAL OF MACROECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

ECOLOGICAL SOUNDING<br />

1-5 Macroecology and the hierarchical expansion of evolutionary theory<br />

José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho<br />

RESEARCH PAPER<br />

7-14 Bergmann's rule does not apply to geometrid moths along an elevational gradient in an An<strong>de</strong>an<br />

montane rain forest<br />

Gunnar Brehm, Konrad Fiedler<br />

15-21 Local-regional relationships and the geographical distribution of species<br />

Héctor T. Arita, Pilar Rodríguez<br />

30


23-35 From sampling stations to archipelagos: investigating aspects of the assemblage of insular biota<br />

Spyros Sfenthourakis, Sinos Giokas, Evangelos Tzanatos<br />

37-45 Local and regional abundance of exotic plant species on Mediterranean islands: are species traits<br />

important?<br />

Francisco Lloret, Fré<strong>de</strong>ric Médail, Giuseppe Brundu, Philip E. Hulme<br />

47-53 Measuring floristic homogenization by non-native plants in North America<br />

Michael L. McKinney<br />

55-64 Geographic gradients of <strong>de</strong>forestation and mammalian communities in a fragmented, temperate<br />

rain forest landscape<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k V. Lomolino, David R. Perault<br />

65-73 Acute salt marsh dieback in the Mississippi River <strong>de</strong>ltaic plain: a drought-induced phenomenon?<br />

Karen L. McKee, Irving A. Men<strong>de</strong>lssohn, Michael D. Materne<br />

75-84 Latitudinal gradient in species richness of the New World Triatominae (Reduviidae)<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>cela S. Rodriguero, David E. Gorla<br />

85-92 Areas of en<strong>de</strong>mism for passerine birds in the Atlantic forest, South America<br />

José <strong>Mar</strong>ia Cardoso da Silva, <strong>Mar</strong>celo Cardoso <strong>de</strong> Sousa, Carlos H. M. Castelletti<br />

93-96 Library Letters<br />

GLOBAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM:<br />

GOOS Report No. 129, 2003. : IOC-WMO-UNEP-ICSU Steering Committee of the<br />

Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS).<br />

1. OPENING AND WELCOME.....................................................................................................................1<br />

1.1 WELCOME, INTRODUCTIONS, SPONSOR ORGANIZATION’S COMMENTS ......................................1<br />

1.2 LOGISTICS 1<br />

1.3 FORMATION OF SESSIONAL WORKING GROUPS DEALING WITH STRATEGIC<br />

PLANNING, CAPACITY BUILDING, AND WORK PROGRAMME AND BUDGET ........................................1<br />

2. OVERVIEWS OF GOOS DEVELOPMENTS.............................................................................................1<br />

2.1 STRATEGIC OVERVIEW.......................................................................................................................1<br />

2.2 THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PERSPECTIVE......................................................................................2<br />

2.3 REPORT AND PERSPECTIVE OF THE GOOS PROJECT OFFICE ......................................................2<br />

2.4 CHARGE TO SESSIONAL WORKING GROUP ON WORK PROGRAMME AND BUDGET ...................3<br />

3. THE GOOS REVIEW ...............................................................................................................................3<br />

3.1 THE EXTERNAL REVIEW OF GOOS ...................................................................................................3<br />

3.2 OPEN DISCUSSION OF ISSUES ..........................................................................................................5<br />

3.3 CHARGE TO SESSIONAL WORKING GROUP ON STRATEGIC PLANNING .......................................6<br />

4. GOOS CAPACITY BUILDING..................................................................................................................6<br />

4.1 GOOS CAPACITY BUILDING PANEL AND RELATION TO JCOMM......................................................6<br />

4.2 RELATED ACTIVITIES (POGO, IOCCG, ETC) ......................................................................................8<br />

31


4.3 CHARGE TO SESSIONAL WORKING GROUP ON CAPACITY BUILDING ...........................................9<br />

5. STATUS OF GOOS DESIGN PLANS AND PILOT PROJECTS ...............................................................9<br />

5.1 COASTAL OCEAN OBSERVATIONS.....................................................................................................9<br />

5.1.1 Membership of the COOP....................................................................................................................9<br />

5.1.2 The Integrated Design Plan for the Coastal Module of GOOS .............................................................9<br />

5.1.3 COOP-OOPC ...................................................................................................................................10<br />

5.1.4 COOP-IOGOOS ...............................................................................................................................10<br />

5.1.5 COOP and Integrated Coastal Area Management..............................................................................10<br />

5.1.6 COOP-ICES-EuroGOOS...................................................................................................................10<br />

5.2 OPEN OCEAN OBSERVATIONS.........................................................................................................11<br />

6. IMPLEMENTATION OF GLOBAL GOOS DESIGNS...............................................................................14<br />

6.1 IN SITU OBSERVATIONS....................................................................................................................14<br />

6.2 THE OCEAN THEME—ROLLING REVIEW PROCESS FOR SATELLITE............................................15<br />

6.3 DATA AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT........................................................................................16<br />

6.3.1 JCOMM.............................................................................................................................................16<br />

6.3.2 GOSIC..............................................................................................................................................17<br />

6.3.3 The Ocean Information Technology Project.......................................................................................18<br />

6.3.4 The GOOS Data and Information Management Plan..........................................................................19<br />

6.4 INDICATORS ......................................................................................................................................19<br />

7. REGIONAL/NATIONAL GOOS DEVELOPMENTS.................................................................................21<br />

7.1 REGIONAL GOOS ALLIANCES – REPORT ON FIRST REGIONAL GOOS FORUM............................21<br />

7.2 COORDINATION WITH OTHER REGIONAL ACTIVITIES (UNEP, FAO, LME) ....................................22<br />

7.3 IOC-GOOS REGIONAL OFFICES .......................................................................................................22<br />

7.4 NATIONAL GOOS DEVELOPMENTS ................................................................................................ 22<br />

8. COMMITTEE BUSINESS - A .................................................................................................................23<br />

8.1 REPORT OF SESSIONAL WORKING GROUP ON PROGRAMME AND BUDGET, AND APPROVAL<br />

OF WORK PROGRAMME AND BUDGET........................................................................................23<br />

8.2 REPORT OF SESSIONAL WORKING GROUP ON CAPACITY BUILDING, AND<br />

AGREEMENT ON ACTIONS REQUIRED IN CAPACITY BUILDING .........................................................24<br />

8.3 SUGGESTIONS FOR OUTREACH AND COMMUNICATIONS.............................................................25<br />

9. STRATEGIC REVIEW ...........................................................................................................................29<br />

9.1 REPORT OF THE GSC SESSIONAL WORKING GROUP ON STRATEGY (INCLUDING THE GOOS<br />

REVIEW)..........................................................................................................................................29<br />

9.2 REFINING THE GOOS STRUCTURE..................................................................................................32<br />

10. COMMITTEE BUSINESS - B ...............................................................................................................36<br />

10.1 MEMBERSHIP OF GSC AND ITS ADVISORY PANELS ....................................................................36<br />

10.2 REVIEW AND AGREEMENT ON ACTION ITEMS..............................................................................36<br />

10.3 DATE AND VENUE OF GSC-VII........................................................................................................37<br />

32


11. CLOSURE ...........................................................................................................................................37<br />

12. LIST OF ACTIONS...............................................................................................................................37<br />

ANNEXES<br />

I. AGENDA<br />

II. LIST OF PARTICIPANTS<br />

III. LIST OF DOCUMENTS<br />

IV. GOOS CAPACITY BUILDING ACTION PLAN<br />

V. TERMS OF REFERENCE OF JCOMM SERVICES COORDINATION GROUP TASK<br />

TEAM ON DEVELOPMENT OF OCEAN SERVICES<br />

VI. LIST OF ACRONYMS<br />

HIDROBIOLOGICA:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 2, 2003.<br />

Pérez Moreno. F.. F. Prieto García. A. Rojas Hernán<strong>de</strong>z. C. A. Galán Vidal. Y. <strong>Mar</strong>molejo<br />

Santillán. C. Romo Gómez, A. Castañeda Ovando, J. A. Rodríguez Ávila y E. Barrado Esteban<br />

Caracterización química <strong>de</strong> aguas subterráneas en pozos y un distribuidor <strong>de</strong> agua <strong>de</strong> Zimapán,<br />

estado <strong>de</strong> Hidalgo, México.........................................................................................................95-102<br />

Reyes-Salinas, A. R. Cervantes-Duarte, R. A. Morales-Pérez y J. E. Val<strong>de</strong>z-Holguín<br />

Variabilidad estacional <strong>de</strong> la productividad primaria y su relación con la estratificación vertical en la Bahía<br />

<strong>de</strong> la Paz, B. C. S.<br />

García Macías, J. A.. F. Alfredo Núñez González. O. Chacó n Pineda. R. H. Alfaro Rodríguezy<br />

M. R. Espinosa Hernán<strong>de</strong>z................................................................................................................ 103-110<br />

Estudio microbiológico <strong>de</strong> tejido superficial <strong>de</strong> trucha arco iris (Oncorhynchus mykissJ y <strong>de</strong>l agua<br />

circundante.............................................................................................................................. 111-118<br />

Mendoza-Carranza, M.<br />

The feeding habits of gafftopsail catfish Bagre marinus (Ariidae) in Paraiso Coast, Tabasco, Mexico. 119-126<br />

Domínguez, J. C., A. J. Sánchez, R. Florido y E. Barba<br />

Distribución <strong>de</strong> macrocrustáceos en Laguna Mecoacán, al sur <strong>de</strong>l Golfo <strong>de</strong> México.......................... 127-136<br />

Juárez Flores, J. y A. L. Ibáñez Aguirre<br />

Abundance and first record of benthic macroinvertebrates in Lake Metztitlan, Hidalgo, Mexico.......... 137-144<br />

Ortíz. E., E. Uría. A. Silva-Olivares, V. Tsutsumi y M. Shibayama<br />

Estudio <strong>de</strong> la ultraestructura <strong>de</strong> la espermatogénesis <strong>de</strong> Anadara tuberculosa (Sowerbi 1833) (Mollusca:<br />

Pelecipoda: Arcidae)............................................................................................................... 145-150<br />

Cortés-Jacinto, E.. H. Villarreal-Colmenaresy M. Rendón-Rumualdo<br />

Efecto <strong>de</strong> la frecuencia alimenticia en el crecimiento y sobrevivencia <strong>de</strong> juveniles <strong>de</strong> langosta <strong>de</strong> agua<br />

dulce Cherax quadricarinatus (von <strong>Mar</strong>tens, 1868) (Decapoda: Parastacidae) ........................ 151-158<br />

Aguilar-Rosas. L. E. y R. Aguilar-Rosas<br />

33


El género Porphyra (Bangiaceae, Rhodophyta) en la costa Pacífico <strong>de</strong> México. H. Porphyra thuretii<br />

Setchell et Dawson.................................................................................................................. 159-164<br />

Notas<br />

Álvarez-Silva. C.. S. Gómez-Aguirre y R. Javier Almeyda-Artigas<br />

Primer registro <strong>de</strong> Mesocyclops brasilianus Kiefer, 1933 (Copepoda: Cyclopidae) en el Estado <strong>de</strong><br />

Tamaulipas, México................................................................................................................. 165-166<br />

Ríos-Jara. E., E. López-Uriarte. M. Pérez-Peña y E. Juárez-Carrillo<br />

Nuevos registros <strong>de</strong> Escafópodos para las costas <strong>de</strong> Jalisco y Colima, México................................. 167-170<br />

HIDROBIOLOGICA:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 3, 2003.<br />

Núñez-Cardona, M. 1.<br />

Aislamiento y caracterización pigmentaria <strong>de</strong> las bacterias rojas <strong>de</strong>l azufre <strong>de</strong> la laguna <strong>de</strong><br />

Tampamachoco, Veracruz........................................................................................................171.176<br />

Varona-Cor<strong>de</strong>ro, F. y F. J. Gutiérrez Mendieta<br />

Estudio multivariado <strong>de</strong> la fluctuación espacio-temporal <strong>de</strong> la comunidad fitoplanctónica en dos lagunas<br />

costeras <strong>de</strong>l estado <strong>de</strong> Chiapas............................................................................................... 177-194<br />

López-Cortés, D. J. 1. Gárate-Lizárraga, J. J. Bustillos-Guzmán, R. Alonso-Rodríguez<br />

e I. Murillo-Murillo.<br />

Variabilidad <strong>de</strong>l estado trófico y la biomasa <strong>de</strong>l fitoplancton <strong>de</strong> Bahía Concepción, Golfo <strong>de</strong> California<br />

(1997-1999)............................................................................................................................. 195-206<br />

Okolodkov, V. B.<br />

A review of Russian plankton research in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea in the 1960-1980s207-221<br />

Mille-Pagaza, S. y J. Carrillo-Laguna<br />

Distribución y abundancia <strong>de</strong> los quetognatos <strong>de</strong> la plataforma Tamaulipeca yocéano adyacente en abril<br />

<strong>de</strong> 1987................................................................................................................................... 223-229<br />

Ordóñez López, U. y M. Ornelas Roa<br />

Variaciones <strong>de</strong> la comunidad <strong>de</strong> copépodos plánticos en el gradiente estuarino-costero <strong>de</strong> Celestún,<br />

Yucatán, México...................................................................................................................... 231-238<br />

Rodríguez-Estrada, J., R. Villaseñor-Córdova y F. <strong>Mar</strong>tínez-Jerónimo<br />

Efecto <strong>de</strong> la temperatura y tipo <strong>de</strong> alimento en el cultivo <strong>de</strong> Moina micrura (Kurz, 1874) (Anomopoda:<br />

Moinidae) en condiciones <strong>de</strong> laboratorio.................................................................................. 239-245<br />

239-245<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

The next few years of the ICES Journal of <strong>Mar</strong>ine Science....................................................................... 1-2<br />

34


Andrew I. L. Payne<br />

A temperature-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt reproductive mo<strong>de</strong>l for spotted seatrout (Cynoscion nebulosus) explaining<br />

spatio-temporal variations in reproduction and young-of-the-year recruitment in Florida estuaries. 3-11<br />

Sven Kupschus<br />

Buffered random sampling: a sequential inhibited spatial point process applied to sampling in a trawl<br />

survey for northern shrimp Pandalus borealis in West Greenland waters..................................... 12-24<br />

M. C. S. Kingsley , P. Kanneworff and D. M. Carlsson<br />

Reliability of a mo<strong>de</strong>l based on a short fishery statistics survey: application to the Northeast Atlantic<br />

monkfish fishery......................................................................................................................... 25-34<br />

Francisco Rocha , Joaquín Gracia , Ángel F. González , Carlos M. Jardón and Ángel Guerra<br />

Testing candidate indicators to support ecosystem-based management: the power of monitoring surveys<br />

to <strong>de</strong>tect temporal trends in fish community metrics.................................................................... 35-42<br />

Mike D. Nicholson and Simon Jennings<br />

A multidisciplinary study of the immediate effects of mechanical clam harvesting in the Venice Lagoon. 43-52<br />

F. Pranovi , F. Da Ponte , S. Raicevich and O. Giovanardi<br />

RoxAnn bottom classification system, si<strong>de</strong>scan sonar and vi<strong>de</strong>o-sledge: spatial resolution and their use in<br />

assessing trawling impacts......................................................................................................... 53-63<br />

Odd-Børre Humborstad , Leif Nøttestad , Svein Løkkeborg and Hans Tore Rapp<br />

The relationship between fish condition and the probability of being mature in American plaice<br />

(Hippoglossoi<strong>de</strong>s platessoi<strong>de</strong>s). ................................................................................................. 64-70<br />

M. Joanne Morgan<br />

Quantification of annual variations in fishing power due to vessel characteristics: an application to the<br />

bottom-trawlers of South-Brittany targeting anglerfish (Lophius bu<strong>de</strong>gassa and Lophius piscatorius). 71-83<br />

S. Mahévas , Y. Sandon and A. Biseau<br />

Estimating uncertainty associated with acoustic surveys of spawning hoki (Macruronus novaezelandiae) in<br />

Cook Strait, New Zealand........................................................................................................... 84-97<br />

Richard L. O'Driscoll<br />

Variability in maturity and growth in a heavily exploited stock: cod (Gadus morhua L.) in the Irish Sea. 98-112<br />

M. J. Armstrong , H. D. Gerritsen , M. Allen , W. J. McCurdy and J. A. D. Peel<br />

Stock structure of Sebastes mentella in the North Atlantic revealed by chemometry of the fatty acid profile<br />

in heart tissue......................................................................................................................... 113-126<br />

Hóraldur Joensen and Otto Grahl-Nielsen<br />

Discarding Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus L.) through low salinity layers – mortality and damage<br />

seen in simulation experiments............................................................................................... 127-139<br />

R. R. Harris and M. Ulmestrand<br />

Comparison of shortest sailing distance through random and regular sampling points....................... 140-147<br />

Alf Harbitz and Michael Pennington<br />

35


Seabird distribution on the Humboldt Current in northern Chile in relation to hydrography, productivity, and<br />

fisheries.................................................................................................................................. 148-154<br />

Tanja Weichler , Stefan Garthe , Guillermo Luna-Jorquera and Julio Moraga<br />

Validation of the stochastic distorted-wave Born approximation mo<strong>de</strong>l with broad bandwidth total target<br />

strength measurements of Antarctic krill.................................................................................. 155-156<br />

David A. Demer and Stéphane G. Conti<br />

Reconciling theoretical versus empirical target strengths of krill: effects of phase variability on the<br />

distorted-wave Born approximation......................................................................................... 157-158<br />

David A. Demer and Stéphane G. Conti<br />

INGENIERÍA HIDRÁULICA EN MÉXICO:<br />

Vol. XIX, No. 1, enero-marzo <strong>de</strong> 2004.<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lo <strong>de</strong> perfil <strong>de</strong> playa en presencia <strong>de</strong> estructuras sumergidas <strong>de</strong> protección.<br />

Edgar Gerardo Mendoza Baldwin<br />

Rodolfo Silva Casarín<br />

Costo unitario <strong>de</strong>l agua producida a través <strong>de</strong>l sembrado higroscópico <strong>de</strong> tormentas.<br />

Michel Rosengaus Moshinsky<br />

Juan José Cal<strong>de</strong>rón García<br />

Flujo crítico en canales trapeciales <strong>de</strong> fondo curvo<br />

Gilberto Sotelo Ávila<br />

Decaimiento <strong>de</strong>l cloro por reacción con el agua en re<strong>de</strong>s <strong>de</strong> distribución<br />

Velitchko Tzatchkov<br />

Víctor Hugo Alcocer Yamanaka.<br />

Felipe Ignacio Arreguín Cortés<br />

Determinación en laboratorio <strong>de</strong> la dispersividad en la zona no saturada <strong>de</strong> Mérida, Yucatán.<br />

Eduardo Granil Castro.<br />

Joel Carrillo Rivera<br />

Daisy Escobar Castillejos<br />

Estimación <strong>de</strong> pérdidas locales <strong>de</strong> energ{ia en tomas domiciliarias <strong>de</strong> agua potable<br />

Óscar Arturo Fuentes <strong>Mar</strong>iles<br />

Ismene Libertad Rosales Plascencia<br />

Análisis <strong>de</strong> flujos turbulentos en cuerpos <strong>de</strong> agua somera<br />

José Isidro Gómes López<br />

Evaluación <strong>de</strong> fuerzas inducidas por oleaje en sistemas <strong>de</strong> pilas cilíndicas<br />

Alberto Ávila Armellao<br />

Rodolfo Silva Casarín<br />

Georges Andre Govaere Vicarioli<br />

36


INTERCIENCIA: Revista <strong>de</strong> Ciencia y Tecnología <strong>de</strong> América:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 6, June 2003.<br />

CONTENIDO<br />

Editorial<br />

Hebe Vessuri<br />

EL NUEVO PORTAL LATINOAMERICANO DE SciDev.Net.....................................................................313<br />

Artículos<br />

Sergei N. Bulgakov y Ángel R. Meulenert Peña<br />

DINÁMICA DE LA CORRIENTE DE LAZO EN EXPERIMENTOS DE LABORATORIO (en inglés)...........316<br />

Ascención Capistrán-Barradas, Omar Defeo y Patricia Moreno-Casasola<br />

DENSIDAD Y ESTRUCTURA POBLACIONAL DEL CANGREJO Gecarcinus lateralis<br />

EN UN BOSQUE TROPICAL SUBCADUCIFOLIO EN VERACRUZ, MÉXICO (en inglés).........................323<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ía Elena Carranco, Concepción Calvo, Laura Arellano, Fernando Pérez-Gil, Ernesto Ávila y Benjamín<br />

Fuente<br />

INCLUSIÓN DE LA HARINA DE CABEZAS DE CAMARÓN Penaeus sp. EN RACIONES PARA<br />

GALLINAS PONEDORAS. EFECTO SOBRE LA CONCENTRACIÓN DE PIGMENTO ROJO DE<br />

YEMA Y CALIDAD DE HUEVO (en español)..................................................................................328<br />

Comunicaciones<br />

David López-Merlín, Lorena Soto-Pinto, Guillermo Jiménez-Ferrer y Salvador Hernán<strong>de</strong>z-Daumás<br />

RELACIONES ALOMÉTRICAS PARA LA PREDICCIÓN DE BIOMASA FORRAJERA Y LEÑA DE Acacia<br />

pennatula Y Guazuma ulmifolia EN DOS COMUNIDADES DEL NORTE DE CHIAPAS, MÉXICO<br />

(en español)...................................................................................................................................334<br />

Andrés E. Seijas, Hilda Cuevas L. y Néstor González<br />

ADAPTACIÓN AL MEDIO NATURAL DE BABAS (Caiman crocodilus) CRIADAS EN CAUTIVERIO (en<br />

español).........................................................................................................................................340<br />

Gabriel Sánchez Vera, José J. Obrador Olan, David J. Palma-López y Sergio Salgado García<br />

DENSIDAD APARENTE EN UN VERTISOL CON DIFERENTES AGROSISTEMAS (en español)............347<br />

Mauro Nirchio, Hernán Cequea y Bruce J. Turner<br />

CARACTERIZACIÓN CARIOTÍPICA Y REGIONES ORGANIZADORAS DEL NUCLEOLO DE Cyprinodon<br />

Ensayos<br />

<strong>de</strong>arborni (MEEK, 1909) DE VENEZUELA) (en inglés) 352<br />

Jesús Peña Cedillo<br />

LA INNOVACIÓN COMO UN FENÓMENO EVOLUTIVO: IMPLICACIONES PARA LA ECONOMÍA Y LAS<br />

POLÍTICAS PÚBLICAS ASOCIADAS (en español).........................................................................355<br />

Reuniones Veni<strong>de</strong>ras...............................................................................................................................362<br />

Resumen <strong>de</strong> los Artículos.........................................................................................................................363<br />

37


INTERCIENCIA: Revista <strong>de</strong> Ciencia y Tecnología <strong>de</strong> América:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 7, July 2003.<br />

CONTENIDO<br />

Editorial<br />

Manuel Bemporad<br />

LA CONCIENCIA DEL DATO...................................................................................................................369<br />

Artículos<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>isela Granito, Alexia Torres y <strong>Mar</strong>isa Guerra<br />

DESARROLLO Y EVALUACIÓN DE UNA PASTA A BASE DE TRIGO, MAÍZ, YUCA Y FRIJOL (en<br />

español).........................................................................................................................................372<br />

M. Esther Ortega Cerrilla y Germán Mendoza <strong>Mar</strong>tínez<br />

DIGESTIÓN DE ALMIDÓN Y METABOLISMO DE GLUCOSA EN RUMIANTES: UNA REVISIÓN (en<br />

inglés)............................................................................................................................................380<br />

Irama Núñez, Édgar González-Gaudiano y Ana Barahona<br />

LA BIODIVERSIDAD: HISTORIA Y CONTEXTO DE UN CONCEPTO (en español)<br />

Miguel F. Acevedo, Michele Ataroff, Susan Monteleone y Carlos A. Estrada<br />

HETEROGENEIDAD ESTRUCTURAL Y LUMÍNICA DEL SOTOBOSQUE DE UNA SELVA NUBLADA<br />

ANDINA DE VENEZUELA (en español)..........................................................................................387<br />

Comunicaciones<br />

Rufo Sánchez Hernán<strong>de</strong>z, David Jesús Palma López, José Jesús Obrador Olán y Ulises López Noverola<br />

EFECTO DE LOS RASTROJOS SOBRE LAS PROPIEDADES FÍSICAS Y QUÍMICAS DE UN SUELO<br />

VERTISOL Y RENDIMIENTOS DE CAÑA DE AZÚCAR (Saccharum officinarum L.) EN TABASCO,<br />

MÉXICO (en español) 394<br />

Rafael Ramírez-Orduña, Roque G. Ramírez-Lozano, <strong>Mar</strong>co V. Gómez-Meza, Juan A. Armenta-Quintana,<br />

Juan M. Ramírez-Orduña, Ramón Cepeda-Palacios y Juan M. Ávila-Sandoval<br />

DINÁMICA ESTACIONAL DE LA DIGESTIÓN RUMINAL DE LA PROTEÍNA CRUDA DE ESPECIES<br />

ARBUSTIVAS DE BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR, MÉXICO (en inglés)..................................................404<br />

José Guadalupe Loya-Ramírez, José Luis García-Hernán<strong>de</strong>z, John J. Ellington y David V. Thompson<br />

IMPACTO DE LA ASOCIACIÓN DE CULTIVOS EN LA DENSIDAD DE INSECTOS HEMÍPTEROS<br />

Ensayos<br />

ENTOMÓFAGOS (en español).......................................................................................................415<br />

Leonardo Maltchik<br />

TRES NUEVOS INVENTARIOS DE HUMEDALES EN BRASIL (en inglés)..............................................421<br />

Reuniones Veni<strong>de</strong>ras...............................................................................................................................408<br />

Resumen <strong>de</strong> los Artículos.........................................................................................................................425<br />

38


INTERCIENCIA: Revista <strong>de</strong> Ciencia y Tecnología <strong>de</strong> América:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 8, August 2003.<br />

CONTENIDO<br />

Editorial<br />

Miguel Laufer<br />

EL PREMIO SULTÁN QABOOS 2003 433<br />

Artículos<br />

Liliana M. Alzate-Gaviria, Antonino Pérez-Hernán<strong>de</strong>z, Virginia G. Nevárez-Moorillón,<br />

Noemí Rin<strong>de</strong>rknecht-Seijas y Héctor M. Poggi-Varaldo<br />

COMPARACIÓN DE DOS SISTEMAS ANAEROBIOS ACOPLADOS PARA LA BIOMETANIZACIÓN DE<br />

LA FRACCIÓN ORGÁNICA DE RESIDUOS SÓLIDOS URBANOS (en español)............................436<br />

Jorge Ignacio Del Valle-Arango<br />

CANTIDAD, CALIDAD Y NUTRIENTES RECICLADOS POR LA HOJARASCA FINA EN BOSQUES<br />

PANTANOSOS DEL PACÍFICO SUR COLOMBIANO (en español) 443<br />

Coral Contreras-Flores, Julián <strong>Mar</strong>io Peña-Castro, Luis Bernardo Flores-Cotera y Rosa Olivia Cañizares-<br />

Villanueva<br />

AVANCES EN EL DISEÑO CONCEPTUAL DE FOTOBIORREACTORES PARA EL CULTIVO DE<br />

MICROALGAS (en español)...........................................................................................................450<br />

Comunicaciones<br />

Leonor Chacín-Bonilla, Yulaicy Sánchez-Chávez, Jesús Estévez, Yraima Larreal y Emelyn Molero<br />

PREVALENCIA DE LA TOXOPLASMOSIS EN LA ISLA DE SAN CARLOS, VENEZUELA (en inglés)......457<br />

José Luis Fuentes Zambrano, César Silva Rojas e Yraiza Reyes León<br />

PARÁSITOS EN JUVENILES DE Lutjanus griseus (PISCES: LUTJANIDAE) DE LA LAGUNA DE LA<br />

RESTINGA, ISLA DE MARGARITA, VENEZUELA (en español) 463<br />

Natalia Ceresoli y Ana <strong>Mar</strong>ía Gagneten<br />

EFECTOS DEL EFLUENTE DE CURTIEMBRE SOBRE Ceriodaphnia dubia (CRUSTACEA,<br />

CLADOCERA) EN CONDICIONES EXPERIMENTALES (en español) 469<br />

Willem C. Sauer, Miguel Cervantes, Jinming M. He y Hagen Schulze<br />

EFECTO DE LA SUPLEMENTACIÓN DE FITASA A DIETAS CEBADA-PASTA DE CANOLA O<br />

Ensayos<br />

CEBADA–PASTA DE SOYA EN EL BALANCE DE FÓSFORO Y CALCIO DE CERDOS EN<br />

CRECIMIENTO (en inglés).............................................................................................................476<br />

Ernesto C. Curiel Carías<br />

EL DISEÑO EN LA INTEGRACIÓN DE LOS SISTEMAS NATURALES Y ARTIFICIALES (en español)....463<br />

Reuniones Veni<strong>de</strong>ras...............................................................................................................................487<br />

Resumen <strong>de</strong> los Artículos.........................................................................................................................482<br />

39


INTERCIENCIA: Revista <strong>de</strong> Ciencia y Tecnología <strong>de</strong> América:<br />

Vol. 28, No. 10, October 2003.<br />

CONTENIDO<br />

Editorial<br />

Carlos R. Abeledo<br />

INVESTIGACIÓN ORIENTADA A LA SOLUCIÓN DE PROBLEMAS: RELEVANCIA Y DESAFÍOS PARA<br />

Artículos<br />

PAÍSES EN DESARROLLO 565<br />

José Rafael Lozada, Jhofran Moreno y Ramón Suescun<br />

PLANTACIONES EN FAJAS DE ENRIQUECIMIENTO. EXPERIENCIAS EN 4 UNIDADES DE MANEJO<br />

FORESTAL DE LA GUAYANA VENEZOLANA (en español)...........................................................568<br />

Sergio Salgado, Roberto Núñez, Juan J. Peña, Jorge D. Etchevers, David J. Palma y R. <strong>Mar</strong>cos Soto<br />

MANEJO DE LA FERTILIZACIÓN EN EL RENDIMIENTO, CALIDAD DEL JUGO Y ACTIVIDAD DE<br />

Paula Meli<br />

INVERTASAS EN CAÑA DE AZÚCAR (en español).......................................................................576<br />

RESTAURACIÓN ECOLÓGICA DE BOSQUES TROPICALES. VEINTE AÑOS DE INVESTIGACIÓN<br />

ACADÉMICA (en español)..............................................................................................................581<br />

Comunicaciones<br />

Luis Ce<strong>de</strong>ño, Chrystian Carrero y Ramón Jaimez<br />

PUDRICIÓN BASAL DEL AJÍ DULCE POR Haematonectria haematococca EN EL ESTADO MÉRIDA,<br />

VENEZUELA (en español)..............................................................................................................590<br />

Merce<strong>de</strong>s Angueira, Aleida J. Sandoval y José A. Barreiro<br />

TASAS DE RESPIRACIÓN EN CUATRO HÍBRIDOS DE PIMENTÓN (Capsicum annum L.) (en español) 593<br />

Adriana B. Sánchez-Urdaneta, Cecilia B. Peña-Valdivia, Carlos Trejo, J. Rogelio Aguirre R., Elizabeth<br />

Cár<strong>de</strong>nas<br />

y Ana B. Galicia Jiménez<br />

PERMEABILIDAD DE LAS MEMBRANAS RADICALES DE PLÁNTULAS DE FRIJOL (Phaseolus vulgaris<br />

L.) SILVESTRE Y DOMESTICADO BAJO DÉFICIT DE HUMEDAD (en español)...........................597<br />

Omaira Sequera y Ricardo Ramírez<br />

FÓSFORO, CALCIO Y AZUFRE DISPONIBLES DE LA ROCA FOSFÓRICA ACIDULADA CON ÁCIDO<br />

604<br />

Ensayos<br />

SULFÚRICO Y TIOSULFATO DE AMONIO (en español)<br />

Edgar González Gaudiano<br />

EDUCACIÓN PARA LA CIUDADANÍA AMBIENTAL (en español).............................................................611<br />

Andréia Aparecida <strong>Mar</strong>in, Haydée Torres Oliveira y Vito Comar<br />

40


LA EDUCACIÓN AMBIENTAL EN UN CONTEXTO DE COMPLEJIDAD DEL CAMPO TEÓRICO DE LA<br />

PERCEPCIÓN (en portugués)........................................................................................................616<br />

Reuniones Veni<strong>de</strong>ras...............................................................................................................................620<br />

Resumen <strong>de</strong> los Artículos 622<br />

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. XV, No. 4, 2003.<br />

REVIEW<br />

Furosine and Other Heat-Treatment Indictors for Detecting Fraud in Milk and Milk Products<br />

P. Resmini, L. Pellegrino, S. Cattaneo.................................................................................................. 4: 473<br />

PAPERS<br />

Quality of Milk and Caciocavallo Cheese from Farms Rearing Podolica and Italian Friesian Cows<br />

M. Quinto, A. Sevi, R. Di Caterina, M. Albenzzio, A. Muscio, T. Rotunno............................................... 4: 485<br />

Stability and Recovery of Maize DNA During Food Processing<br />

A. Rizzi, L. Panebianco, D. Giaccu, C. Sorlini and D. Daffonchio.......................................................... 4: 499<br />

Medium Polarity Lipids from Fried Oils Promote LDL Oxidation in vitro<br />

A.C. Kaliora, N.K. Andrikopoulos, G.V.Z. Dedoussis, A. Chiou, A. Mylona............................................ 4: 511<br />

The Role of Buffers on the Kinetics of L-Ascorbic Acid Oxidation Catalyzed by Copper (II)<br />

F. Imer, I.C. Sonmezoglu and M. Kozcaz.............................................................................................. 4: 521<br />

Physico-Chemical Properties of Almond Seed Protein Concentrate<br />

A.A. Yusuf............................................................................................................................................ 4: 531<br />

Monitoring of Pyrethroid Residues in Sardinian Honey by Solid Phase Extraction and High-Performance<br />

Liquid Chromatography<br />

M. Cossu, M.C. Alamanni..................................................................................................................... 4: 541<br />

Quality of Film Wrapped ‘Miyagawa’ Satsumas Stored at 20°-22°C<br />

S. D’Aquino, A. Palma.......................................................................................................................... 4: 553<br />

Effect of Long-Term Controlled Atmosphere Storage on the Sensory Quality of Tomatoes<br />

A. Batu................................................................................................................................................. 4: 569<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATIONS<br />

Quality Control of a Typical ‘Pasta Filata’ Cheese by FT-IR<br />

C. Giardina, T.M.P. Cattaneo, R. Giangiacomo..................................................................................... 4: 579<br />

Influence of Diet and Age of Kids on Enzymatic Activities of Kid Rennet Pastes<br />

R. Rossano, A. D’Ambrosio, V. Ferrara, A. D’Elia, M. Pizzillo, P. Riccio................................................ 4: 585<br />

Preliminary Study on Acrylami<strong>de</strong> in Baby Foods on the Italian <strong>Mar</strong>ket<br />

F. Tateo, M. Bononi.............................................................................................................................. 4: 593<br />

DEPARTMENTS<br />

FLAIR FLOW ....................................................................................................................................... 4: 600<br />

41


NEWS ............................................................................................................................................... 4: 606<br />

PRESENTATION - NEW IJFS CONTRIBUTOR.................................................................................... 4: 609<br />

BOOKS............................................................................................................................................... 4: 611<br />

AUTHOR INDEX................................................................................................................................. 4: 614<br />

SUBJECT INDEX................................................................................................................................. 4: 616<br />

CONTENTS OF VOLUME XV.............................................................................................................. 4: 636<br />

GUIDE FOR AUTHORS....................................................................................................................... 4: 641<br />

JOIDES JOURNAL:<br />

Volume 28, No. 1. Special Issue. Spring 2002.: Achievements and Opportunities of<br />

Scientific Ocean Drilling. The Legacy of the Ocean Drilling Program.<br />

CONTENTS<br />

FOREWORD AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS...............................................................................................3<br />

DYNAMICS OF EARTH’S ENVIRONMENT<br />

Earth’s Changing Environment ( Editor: L.C. Peterson Peterson)..................................................................5<br />

RAPID CLIMATE CHANGE: OCEAN RESPONSES TO EARTH SYSTEM<br />

INSTABILITY IN THE LATE QUATERNARY<br />

J.P. Kennett and L.C. Peterson ..................................................................................................................11<br />

EXCEPTIONAL GLOBAL WARMTH AND CLIMATIC TRANSIENTS<br />

RECORDED IN OCEANIC SEDIMENTS<br />

D. Kroon, R.D. Norris, and P. Wilson..........................................................................................................17<br />

MILANKOVITCH AND CLIMATE: THE ORBITAL CODE OF CLIMATE<br />

CHANGE R. Zahn..................................................................................................................................... 23<br />

THE ROLE OF ODP IN UNDERSTANDING THE CAUSES AND<br />

EFFECTS OF GLOBAL SEA LEVEL CHANGE K.G. Miller.........................................................................29<br />

BIOTIC EFFECTS OF ABRUPT PALEOCENE AND CRETACEOUS<br />

CLIMATE EVENTS T.J. Bralower, D.C. Kelly, and R.M. Leckie...................................................................35<br />

Sediments, Fluids and Bacteria as Agents of Change ( Editor: H. El<strong>de</strong>rfield El<strong>de</strong>rfield)<br />

SEDIMENTATION PROCESSES ON TERRIGENOUS CONTINENTAL<br />

MARGINS D.J.W. Piper and S. Migeon......................................................................................................35<br />

THE DYNAMICS AND SIGNIFICANCE OF FLUIDS WITHIN THE<br />

SEAFLOOR A.F. Fisher .............................................................................................................................39<br />

THE EVOLUTION OF AN IDEA: FROM AVOIDING GAS HYDRATES<br />

TO ACTIVELY DRILLING FOR THEM E. Suess.........................................................................................45<br />

EXPLORATION OF THE MARINE SUBSURFACE BIOSPHERE<br />

S. D’Hondt, D.C. Smith, and A.J. Spivack...................................................................................................51<br />

DYNAMICS OF EARTH’S INTERIOR<br />

Transfer of Heat and Material from Earth’s Interior ( Editor: C. Mevel Mevel)<br />

42


ILLUMINATING EARTH’S MANTLE AND CORE: A NEW<br />

CHALLENGE FOR ODP K. Suyehiro..........................................................................................................55<br />

THE OCEANIC LITHOSPHERE J. Pearce.................................................................................................61<br />

ALTERED ROCKS AND SEAFLOOR MASSIVE SULFIDE DEPOSITS:<br />

THE RECORD OF HYDROTHERMAL PROCESSES S.E. Humphris..........................................................67<br />

SUBDUCTION FACTORY INPUT AND OUTPUT T. Plank.........................................................................73<br />

OCEANIC PLATEAUS AS WINDOWS TO THE EARTH’S INTERIOR:<br />

AN ODP SUCCESS STORY N. Arndt and D. Weis.....................................................................................79<br />

Lithosphere Deformation and Earthquake Processes ( Editor: J. Tarduno Tarduno)<br />

INVESTIGATIONS OF RIFTED MARGINS H.C. Larsen.............................................................................85<br />

FLUID FLOW IN ACCRETING AND ERODING CONVERGENT<br />

MARGINS C. Moore and E. Silver..............................................................................................................91<br />

JOURNAL OF AQUATIC ANIMAL HEALTH:<br />

Vol. 15, No. 2, June 2003.<br />

Retrospective Analysis of Antigen Prevalences of Renibacterium salmoninarum (Rs) Detected by<br />

Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay in Alaskan Pacific Salmon and Trout from 1988 to 2000 and<br />

Management of Rs in Hatchery Chinook and Coho Salmon. T. R. Meyers, D. Korn, K. Glass, T.<br />

Burton, S. Short, K. Lipson, and N. Starkey........................................................................... 101–110.<br />

Trauma to Juvenile Pinfish and Spot Inflicted by Submarine Detonations. John Jeffrey Govoni, Lawrence<br />

R. Settle, and Melissa A. West............................................................................................... 111–119.<br />

Ulcerative Mycosis Caused by Aphanomyces invadans in Channel Catfish, Black Bullhead, and Bluegill<br />

from Southeastern Louisiana. John P. Hawke, Amy M. Grooters, and Alvin C. Camus........... 120–127.<br />

The Effect of In Vitro Passage of Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis Virus (IPNV) on Virulence and Sensitivity<br />

of the Virus to Rainbow Trout Serum. Kyoung C. Park and Paul W. Reno.............................. 128–135.<br />

Age-Depen<strong>de</strong>nt Susceptibility of Chinook Salmon to Myxobolus cerebralis and Effects of Sustained<br />

Parasite Challenges. Sarah A. Sollid, Harriet V. Lorz, Donald G. Stevens, and Jerri L. Bartholomew. 136–146.<br />

Electroshocking-Induced Injuries in Newly Transformed Juvenile Fish. Theodore B. Henry and John M.<br />

Grizzle................................................................................................................................... 147–157.<br />

Distribution of Myxobolus cerebralis within a Free-Flowing River System during the Migration Period for<br />

Juvenile Anadromous Salmonids in Idaho. Wa<strong>de</strong> P. Caven<strong>de</strong>r, Keith A. Johnson, and Kenneth D.<br />

Cain...................................................................................................................................... 158–166.<br />

Invasion and Replication of Photobacterium damselae subsp. piscicida in Fish Cell Lines. Ahmad A.<br />

Elkamel and Ronald L. Thune................................................................................................ 167–174.<br />

Photobacterium damselae subsp. piscicida Is Capable of Replicating in Hybrid Striped Bass<br />

Macrophages. Ahmad A. Elkamel, John P. Hawke, William G. Henk, and Ronald L. Thune.... 175–183.<br />

43


California Gol<strong>de</strong>n Trout Oncorhynchus mykiss aguabonita Are Susceptible to Proliferative Kidney<br />

Disease. D. J. Morris, M. Longshaw, and A. Adams............................................................... 184–187.<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 30, No. 11, November 2003.<br />

Volume 30: Issue 11, November 2003<br />

Contents:<br />

1629-1657 Species–area relationships in Mediterranean-climate plant communities<br />

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

1659-1668 Phytogeographical relations of the An<strong>de</strong>an dry valleys of Bolivia<br />

Ramiro Pablo López<br />

1669-1688 Relationships of phytogeography and diversity of tropical tree species with limestone<br />

topography in southern Belize<br />

Steven W. Brewer, <strong>Mar</strong>cel Rejmánek, Molly A. H. Webb, Paul V. A. Fine<br />

1689-1707 Patterns in species richness and distribution of vascular epiphytes in Chiapas, Mexico<br />

Jan H. D. Wolf, Flamenco-S Alejandro<br />

1709-1718 The northern limit of Pinus banksiana Lamb. in Canada: explaining the<br />

difference between the eastern and western distributions<br />

Hugo Asselin, Serge Payette, <strong>Mar</strong>ie-Josée Fortin, Sheila Vallée<br />

1719-1727 Geographical sampling bias and its implications for conservation priorities in Africa<br />

Sushma Reddy, Liliana M. Dávalos<br />

1729-1736 Biogeography of temperate Australasian Polystichum ferns as inferred from chloroplast<br />

sequence and AFLP<br />

Leon R. Perrie, Patrick J. Brownsey, Peter J. Lockhart, Elizabeth A. Brown, <strong>Mar</strong>k F. Large<br />

1737-1749 Phylogeny, biogeography and adaptive radiation of Pachycladon (Brassicaceae) in the<br />

mountains of South Island, New Zealand<br />

P. B. Heenan, A. D. Mitchell<br />

1751-1761 Correlates of geographic range size in New Zealand Chionochloa (Poaceae) species<br />

Kelvin M. Lloyd, J. Bastow Wilson, William G. Lee<br />

1763-1777 Conundrums in mixed woody–herbaceous plant systems<br />

Joanna I. House, Steve Archer, David D. Breshears, Robert J. Scholes<br />

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

1779-1780 Dispersal, cladistics and the nature of biogeography<br />

David M. Wilkinson<br />

Book Reviews<br />

1781-1781 Pacem in maribus in our time?<br />

Sarah Cornell<br />

44


1781-1782 Local scope, global challenge<br />

Erica Fleishman<br />

1782-1783 A synthesis of primary succession<br />

John A. Matthews, 1785-1785 Notice<br />

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 31, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

1-4 The parable of Green Mountain: Ascension Island, ecosystem construction and ecological fitting<br />

David M. Wilkinson<br />

ORIGINAL ARTICLE<br />

5-18 Effects of climate and local aridity on the latitudinal and habitat distribution of Arvicanthis niloticus<br />

and Arvicanthis ansorgei (Ro<strong>de</strong>ntia, Murinae) in Mali<br />

S. Ag'Atteynine, D. Abdoulaye, J. Britton-Davidian, B. Sicard, J. Catalan<br />

19-31 The mid-domain effect applied to elevational gradients: species richness of small mammals in<br />

Costa Rica<br />

Christy M. McCain<br />

33-45 Ecological zoogeography of the bats of Paraguay<br />

Celia López-González<br />

47-55 Biogeography of lemurs in the humid forests of Madagascar: the role of elevational distribution and<br />

rivers<br />

Steven M. Goodman, Jörg U. Ganzhorn<br />

57-61 Are rare primate taxa specialists or simply less studied?<br />

D. A. Doherty, A. H. Harcourt<br />

63-77 Historical biogeography of olive domestication (Olea europaea L.) as revealed by geometrical<br />

morphometry applied to biological and archaeological <strong>material</strong><br />

Ramon Buxó i Cap<strong>de</strong>vila, Noureddine Chatti, Laurent Fabre, Bénédicte Pradat, Núria Rovira, Paul Alibert,<br />

Jean-Frédéric Terral, Natalia Alonso, Girolamo Fiorentino, Philippe <strong>Mar</strong>inval, Guillem Pérez Jordá<br />

79-92 Animal species diversity driven by habitat heterogeneity/diversity: the importance of keystone<br />

structures<br />

J. Tews, V. Grimm, F. Jeltsch, U. Brose, K. Tielbörger, M. C. Wichmann, M. Schwager<br />

93-102 How does the taxonomic status of allopatric populations influence species richness within African<br />

cichlid fish assemblages?<br />

Ole Seehausen, Mairi E. Knight, Ellinor Michel, George F. Turner, <strong>Mar</strong>tin J. Genner, Daniel F.R. Cleary<br />

103-121 The distribution of South American galaxiid fishes: the role of biological traits and post-glacial<br />

history<br />

Silvia Ortubay, Daniela Milano, Juan P. Barriga, Miguel Gross, Víctor Cussac, Gustavo Iglesias, <strong>Mar</strong>ía E.<br />

Lattuca, Miguel Battini<br />

45


123-136 Distribution, en<strong>de</strong>mism and threat status of freshwater fishes in the Western Ghats of India<br />

Neelesh Dahanukar, Rupesh Raut, Anuradha Bhat<br />

137-144 Low diversity but high differentiation: the population genetics of Aglaope infausta (Zygaenidae:<br />

Lepidoptera)<br />

Alfred Seitz, Thomas Schmitt<br />

145-157 The role of landscape history and persistent biogeographical patterns in shaping the responses<br />

of Mediterranean land snail communities to recent fire disturbances<br />

Frédéric Magnin, Franck Torre, Laurence Kiss<br />

159-171 From Europe to Africa and vice versa: evi<strong>de</strong>nce for multiple intercontinental dispersal in ribbed<br />

salaman<strong>de</strong>rs (Genus Pleuro<strong>de</strong>les)<br />

Michael Veith, Boudjema Samraoui, Serge Bogaerts, Christian Mayer, David Donaire Barroso<br />

BOOK REVIEWS<br />

173-174 Making the Gentry data more accessible<br />

Richard Field<br />

174-175 Consequences of being a plant<br />

Paul M. Ramsay<br />

176-176 Corrigendum<br />

JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH:<br />

Special Issue, No. 8, Fall, 2003: Shoreline Mapping and Change Analysis:<br />

Technical Consi<strong>de</strong>rations and Management Implications.<br />

CONTENTS<br />

Preface: Issues in Shoreline Mapping and Change Analysis – <strong>Mar</strong>k R. Byrnes, <strong>Mar</strong>k Crowell, and Cindy<br />

Fowler............................................................................................................................................001<br />

Shoreline Change Mapping and Management Along the U.S. East Coast – Stephen P. Leatherman........005<br />

National Ocean Service Shoreline-Past, Present, and Future – Douglas Graham, <strong>Mar</strong>yellen Sault, and<br />

Captain Jonathan Bailey.................................................................................................................014<br />

Tidal Datums and Ti<strong>de</strong> Coordination – Kurt W. Hess............................................................................... 033<br />

The Difficulties in Measuring a Consistently Defined Shoreline-The Problem of Vertical Referencing –<br />

Bruce B. Parker..............................................................................................................................044<br />

Linking Proxy-Based and Datum-Based Shorelines on a High-Energy Coastline: Implications for Shoreline<br />

Change Analyses – Peter Ruggiero, George M. Kaminsky, and Guy Gelfenbaum...........................057<br />

Shoreline Variability on the High-Energy Oregon Coast and its Usefulness in Erosion-Hazard<br />

Assessments – Jonathan C. Allan, Paul D. Komar, and George R. Priest 083<br />

Mapping Shoreline Change Using Digital Orthophotogrammetry on Maui, Hawaii – Charles Fletcher, John<br />

Rooney, Mathew Barbee, Siang-Chyn Lim and Bruce Richmond 106<br />

Spatial and Temporal Consi<strong>de</strong>rations for Calculating Shoreline Change Rates in the Great Lakes Basin –<br />

Peter J. Zuzek, Robert B. Nairn, and Scott J. Thieme.....................................................................125<br />

46


Influence of the Geologic Framework on Spatial Variability in Long-Term Shoreline Change, Cape<br />

Henlopen to Rehoboth Beach, Delaware – <strong>Mar</strong>ia C. Honeycutt and David E. Krantz.......................147<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>rnizing Shoreline Change Analysis in Georgia Using Topographic Survey Sheets in a GIS<br />

Environment – S.K. Langley, C.R. Alexan<strong>de</strong>r, D. M. Bush, and C. W. Jackson .............................168<br />

The Use of Shoreline Change Mapping in Coastal Engineering Project Assessment – Donald K. Stauble.178<br />

SHOALS Airborne Coastal Mapping: Past, Present, and Future – Jennifer M. Wozencraft and W. Jeff<br />

Lillycrop..........................................................................................................................................207<br />

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 24, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

REDESCRIPTION OF HAPLOSTOMA BANYULENSIS (COPEPODA: CYCLOPOIDA: ASCIDICOLIDAE)<br />

LIVING IN THE COMPOUND ASCIDIAN TRIDIDEMNUM TENERUM FROM STRANGFORD<br />

LOUGH, NORTHERN IRELAND. Shigeko Ooishi......................................................................... 1–8.<br />

REDESCRIPTION OF HAPLOSTOMA ERUCA (COPEPODA: CYCLOPOIDA: ASCIDICOLIDAE) LIVING<br />

IN THE INTESTINE OF CIONA INTESTINALIS FROM THE CLYDE ESTUARY, SCOTLAND.<br />

Shigeko Ooishi and Myles G. O'Reilly......................................................................................... 9–16.<br />

SYSTEMATICS AND PHYLOGENY OF THE ANCORABOLIDAE (COPEPODA: HARPACTICOIDA). V.<br />

DESCRIPTION OF LOBOPLEURA, NEW GENUS, WITH NOTES ON PROBOSCIPHONTODES<br />

FIERS. Sophie Conroy-Dalton................................................................................................... 17–36.<br />

THE ISMARDIIDAE LEIGH-SHARPE (COPEPODA, HARPACTICOIDA INCERTAE SEDIS): ENIGMATIC<br />

AS EVER?. Rony Huys and Sung Joon Song............................................................................ 37–53.<br />

MORPHOLOGY AND MUSCULATURE OF A NEW SPECIES OF THAUMATOCYPRIS (OSTRACODA,<br />

HALOCYPRIDA, THAUMATOCYPRIDOIDEA). Louis S. Kornicker............................................ 54–71.<br />

STRUCTURE OF OVARY AND OOGENESIS IN THE HALOCYPRID OSTRACOD CONCHOECIA<br />

IMBRICATA. Kyosuke Ikuta and Toshiki Makioka...................................................................... 72–80.<br />

THE EFFECT OF GLUTAMIC ACID (GLU) AND KYNURENIC ACID (KYN) ON THE METABOLISM OF<br />

THE ANTARCTIC AMPHIPOD ABYSSORCHOMENE PLEBS. T. Janecki and S. Rakusa-<br />

Suszczewski.............................................................................................................................. 81–83.<br />

AUSTROCUMA KORNFIELDI, A NEW BODOTRIID FROM INDIA: PLEOPOD NUMBER IN<br />

CUMACEANS AND THE PLACEMENT OF CORICUMA. Pilar A. Haye..................................... 84–92.<br />

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY AND GROWTH OF THE SHIBA SHRIMP, METAPENAEUS JOYNERI<br />

(DECAPODA: PENAEIDAE), ON THE WESTERN COAST OF KOREA. Hyung Kee Cha, Jung Hwa<br />

Choi, and Chul Woong Oh....................................................................................................... 93–100.<br />

GENETIC DIVERSITY IN THE MTDNA CONTROL REGION AND POPULATION STRUCTURE IN THE<br />

PINK SHRIMP FARFANTEPENAEUS DUORARUM. Anne L. McMillen-Jackson and Theresa M.<br />

Bert....................................................................................................................................... 101–109.<br />

47


ZOEAL STAGES OF CONCHODYTES NIPPONENSIS (DECAPODA: PALAEMONIDAE) REARED IN<br />

THE LABORATORY. Hoi Jeong Yang and Hyun Sook Ko..................................................... 110–120.<br />

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY OF PALAEMON GRAVIERI (DECAPODA: CARIDEA: PALAEMONIDAE).<br />

Sunghan Kim and Sungyun Hong.......................................................................................... 121–130.<br />

PROTANDRIC SIMULTANEOUS HERMAPHRODITISM IN THE MARINE SHRIMP LYSMATA<br />

CALIFORNICA (CARIDEA: HIPPOLYTIDAE). Raymond T. Bauer and William A. Newman... 131–139.<br />

COMBINED EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND DIET ON GROWTH AND SURVIVAL OF YOUNG-OF-<br />

YEAR CRAYFISH: A COMPARISON BETWEEN INDIGENOUS AND INVASIVE SPECIES.<br />

Annalisa Paglianti and Francesca Gherardi ........................................................................... 140–148.<br />

A NEW SQUAT LOBSTER OF THE GENUS RAYMUNIDA (DECAPODA: GALATHEIDAE) FROM<br />

TAIWAN. Chia-Wei Lin, Tin-Yam Chan, and Ka Hou Chu...................................................... 149–156.<br />

BONINPAGURUS ACANTHOCHELES, A NEW GENUS AND SPECIES OF HERMIT CRAB<br />

(DECAPODA: ANOMURA: PAGURIDAE) FROM SHALLOW WATERS OF THE OGASAWARA<br />

(BONIN) ISLANDS, JAPAN. Akira Asakura and Hiroyuki Tachikawa...................................... 157–167.<br />

AGGREGATING BEHAVIOUR OF THE SPIDER CRAB MAJA SQUINADO IN SHALLOW WATERS.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ía-Paz Sampedro and Eduardo González-Gurriarán........................................................ 168–177.<br />

SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF SHORE CRABS CARCINUS MAENAS IN A SMALL<br />

TIDAL ESTUARY(LOOE ESTUARY, CORNWALL, ENGLAND). Kim Rewitz, Bjarne Styrishave,<br />

Michael H. Depledge, and Ole An<strong>de</strong>rsen............................................................................... 178–187.<br />

THE FIRST ZOEA, MEGALOPA, AND FIRST CRAB STAGE OF THE HYDROTHERMAL VENT CRAB<br />

XENOGRAPSUS TESTUDINATUS (DECAPODA: BRACHYURA: GRAPSOIDEA) AND THE<br />

SYSTEMATIC IMPLICATIONS FOR THE VARUNIDAE. Ming-Shiou Jeng, Paul F. Clark, and Peter<br />

K. L. Ng................................................................................................................................. 188–212.<br />

REPRODUCTIVE PERFORMANCE IN CYRTOGRAPSUS ANGULATUS AND CYRTOGRAPSUS<br />

ALTIMANUS (BRACHYURA, VARUNIDAE) FROM JABALÍ ISLAND, ARGENTINA. Laura S. López<br />

Greco and Enrique M. Rodríguez........................................................................................... 213–216.<br />

Obituary: Michèle <strong>de</strong> Saint Laurent. Jacques Forest........................................................................ 217–223.<br />

JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 92, No. 1, February 2004.<br />

Volume 92: Issue 1, February 2004<br />

Contents:<br />

1-4 Journal of Ecology News<br />

Lindsay Haddon, Anthony Davy, David Gibson, Michael Hutchings<br />

5-14 Reduced reproductive success in small populations of the self-incompatible Primula vulgaris<br />

Rein Brys, Hans Jacquemyn, Patrick En<strong>de</strong>ls, Fabienne van Rossum, <strong>Mar</strong>tin Hermy, Ludwig Triest, Luc De<br />

Bruyn, Geert D. E. Blust<br />

48


15-23 Temporal variation in sex allocation in hermaphrodites of gynodioecious Thymus vulgaris L.<br />

Bodil K. Ehlers, John D. Thompson<br />

24-31 Flowering and fruiting phenology of a Philippine submontane rain forest: climatic factors as<br />

proximate and ultimate causes<br />

Andreas Hamann<br />

32-44 Phenotypic plasticity of vegetative and reproductive traits in monoecious and dioecious populations<br />

of Sagittaria latifolia (Alismataceae): a clonal aquatic plant<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>cel E. Dorken, Spencer C. H. Barrett<br />

45-56 Multiple genetic contributions to plant performance in Thymus vulgaris<br />

John D. Thompson, Michele Tarayre, Perrine Gauthier, Isabelle Litrico, Yan B. Linhart<br />

57-71 Divergence and variation of quantitative traits between allozyme genotypes of Avena barbata from<br />

contrasting habitats<br />

Robert G. Latta, Joanna L. MacKenzie, Angel Vats, Daniel J. Schoen<br />

72-85 Structure and organization of a northern New England salt marsh plant community<br />

Patrick J. Ewanchuk, <strong>Mar</strong>k D. Bertness<br />

86-96 Gap dynamics in perennial subalpine grasslands: trends and processes change during secondary<br />

succession<br />

Vigdis Vandvik<br />

97-109 Seed mass and the competition/colonization tra<strong>de</strong>-off: competitive interactions and spatial patterns<br />

in a guild of annual plants<br />

Lindsay A. Turnbull, David Coomes, Andy Hector, <strong>Mar</strong>k Rees<br />

110-121 Demography and population dynamics of Drosera anglica and D. rotundifolia<br />

J.-F. Nordbakken, K. Rydgren, R. H. Økland<br />

122-131 Temporal changes in local spatial structure of late-successional species: establishment of an<br />

An<strong>de</strong>an caulescent rosette plant<br />

Luis D. Llambi, Richard Law, Angela Hodge<br />

132-141 Optimal <strong>de</strong>fence theory and flower petal colour predict variation in the secondary chemistry of<br />

wild radish<br />

Sharon Y. Strauss, Rebecca E. Irwin, Virginia M. Lambrix<br />

142-155 Population dynamics across a parapatric range boundary: Ulex gallii and Ulex minor<br />

K. E. Stokes, J. M. Bullock, A. R. Watkinson<br />

156-167 Antagonistic interactions between competition and insect herbivory on plant growth<br />

Joshua J. Haag, Malcolm D. Coupe, James F. Cahill<br />

FORUM<br />

168-173 The ghost of competition past in the phylogeny of island en<strong>de</strong>mic plants<br />

Jonathan Silvertown<br />

BIOLOGICAL FLORA OF THE BRITISH ISLES*No. 232 List Br. Vasc. Pl. (1958) 642, 4<br />

174-184 Orchis ustulata L.<br />

49


Kadri Tali, Michael J. Y. Foley, Tiiu Kull<br />

185-186 Referees used in 2003<br />

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 108, No. C11, 15 November, 2003.<br />

Atsushi abata and Yoshiteru Kitamura<br />

Interannual variability ofthe sea-air exchange ofC02 from 1961 to 1998 simulated with a global ocean<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ina Lévy<br />

circulation biogeochemistry mo<strong>de</strong>l......................................................................................................1<br />

Mesoscale variability of phytoplankton and of new production: Impact of the large-scale nutrient<br />

distribution .......................................................................................................................................22<br />

A. P. <strong>Mar</strong>tin and P. Pondaven<br />

On estimates for the vertical ni trate flux due to eddy pumping ...................................................................23<br />

Christina L. Holland and Gary T. Mitchum<br />

Interannual volume variability in the tropical Pacific ....................................................................................33<br />

Hemantha W Wijesekera, Clayton A. Paulson, and Eric D. Skyllingstad<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling the evolution of a fresh sea surface anomaly produced by tropical rainfall .....................................2<br />

M Lengaigne, G. Ma<strong>de</strong>c, C. Menkes, and G. Alory<br />

Impact of isopycnal mixing on the tropical ocean circulation .........................................................................9<br />

Ame Melsom, E. Joseph Metzger, and Harley E. Hurlburt<br />

Impact of remote oceanic forcing on Gulf of Alaska sea levels and mesoscale ...........................................10<br />

circulationGuillermo Auad, James P. Kennett, and Arthur J Miller<br />

North Pacific Intermediate Water response to a mo<strong>de</strong>m climate warming shift ...........................................13<br />

Hiromichi Ueno and Ichiro Yasuda<br />

Intermediate water circulation in the North Pacific subarctic and northern subtropical regions ....................12<br />

Masashi Itou, Tsuneo ano, and Shinichiro Noriki<br />

Provenance ofintermediate waters in the western North Pacific <strong>de</strong>duced from thermodynamic imprint on ..11<br />

Hirohiko Nakamura, Hiroshi Ichikawa, Ayako Nishina, and Heung-Jae Lie<br />

Kuroshio path mean<strong>de</strong>r between the continental slope and the Tokara Strait in the East China Sea ..........24<br />

Richard E. Thomson and Howard J Freeland<br />

Topographic steering of a mid-<strong>de</strong>pth drifter in an eddy-like circulation region south and east ofthe<br />

Hawaiian Ridge .................................................................................................................................5<br />

T. M Shaun Johnston, <strong>Mar</strong>k A. Merrifield, and Peter E. Holloway<br />

Internal ti<strong>de</strong> scattering at the Line Islands Ridge ........................................................................................29<br />

Ming Feng, Gary Meyers, Alan Pearce, and Susan Wijffels<br />

Annual and interannual variations ofthe Leeuwin Current at 32°S ..............................................................19<br />

Kumiko Azetsu-Scott, E. Peter Jones, Igor Yashayaev, and Robert M Gershey<br />

50


Time series study of CFC concentrations in the Labrador Sea during <strong>de</strong>ep and shallow convection<br />

regimes (1991-2000)........................................................................................................................18<br />

H. E. <strong>Mar</strong>kus Meier and Frank Kauker<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling <strong>de</strong>cadal variability ofthe Baltic Sea: 2. Role offreshwater inflow and large-scale atmospheric<br />

circulation for salinity .......................................................................................................................32<br />

Melchor González-Dávila, J Magdalena Santana-Casiano, and Evgeny V Dafner<br />

Winter mesoscale variations of carbonate system parameters and estimates of CO, fluxes in the Gulf of<br />

Cadiz, northeast Atlantic Ocean (February 1998)................................................................................8<br />

Richard Sempéré, Evgeny Dafner, France Van Wambeke, Dominique Lefivre, Cédric Magen, Sophie<br />

Allegre, Flavienne Bruyant, Micheline Bianchi, and Louis Prieur<br />

Distribution and cycling oftotal organic carbon across the Almeria-Oran Front in the Mediterranean Sea:<br />

Implications for carbon cycling in the westem basin .........................................................................25<br />

Matil<strong>de</strong> M Rusticucci, Silvia A. Venegas, and Walter M Vargas<br />

Warm and cold events in Argentina and their relationship with South Atlantic and South Pacific Sea<br />

surface temperatures........................................................................................................................20<br />

Kim Partington, Tom Flynn, Doug Lamb, Cheryl Bertoia, and Kyle Dedrick<br />

Late twentieth century Northern Hemisphere sea-ice record from U.S. National Ice Center ice charts ..........7<br />

R. Kwok, G. F. Cunningham, and S. V Nghiem<br />

A study ofthe onset ofmelt over the Arctic Ocean in RADARSAT synthetic aperture radar data ..................27<br />

C. Souto, M Gilcoto, L. Fariña-Busto, and Fiz. F. Pérez<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling the residual circulation of a coastal embayment affected by wind-driven upwelling: Circulation of<br />

the Ria <strong>de</strong> Vigo (NW Spain) ...............................................................................................................4<br />

Jianyu Y Hu, Hiroshi Kawamura, and Danling L. Tang<br />

Tidal front around the Hainan Island, northwest ofthe South China Sea .......................................................6<br />

D. S. Ko, R. H Preller, G. A. Jacobs, T. Y Tang, and S. F. Lin<br />

Transport reversals at Taiwan Strait during October and November 1999 .................................................34<br />

Kristofer R. Roljhus, Carl H. Lamborg, William F. Fitzgerald, and Prentiss H Balcom<br />

Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for enhanced mercury reactivity in response to estuarine mixing .................................................17<br />

J A. Puleo, K. T. Holland, N. G. Plant, D. N. Slinn, and D. M Hanes<br />

Fluid acceleration effects on suspen<strong>de</strong>d sediment transport in the swash zone ..........................................14<br />

A. Sheremet and G. W. Stone<br />

Observations ofnearshore wave dissipation over muddy sea beds .............................................................21<br />

Qin Chen, James T. Kirby, Robert A. Dalrymple, Fengyan Shi, and Edward B. Thornton Boussinesq<br />

mo<strong>de</strong>ling oflongshore currents .........................................................................................................26<br />

Jane McKee Smith and Charles L. Vincent<br />

Equilibrium ranges in surf zone wave spectra ............................................................................................30<br />

R. Pedreros, G. Dardier, H Dupuis, H C. Graber, W. M Drennan, A. Weill, C. Guérin, and P. Nacass<br />

Momentum and heat fluxes via the eddy correlation method on the R/V L 'A talante and an ASIS buoy ........3<br />

51


Raj Kumar, Detlef Stammer, W. Kendall Melville, and Peter Janssen<br />

Eh:ctromagnetic bias estimates based on TOPEX, buoy, and wave mo<strong>de</strong>l data .........................................15<br />

H. Dankert, J Horstmann, and W. Rosenthal<br />

Ocean wind fields retrieved from radar-image sequences ..........................................................................16<br />

C. C. Chicka<strong>de</strong>l, R. A. Holman, and M H Freilich<br />

An optical technique for the measurement of longshore currents ...............................................................28<br />

Ann.Soji Smedman, Xiaoli Guo Larsén, Ulf H6gstr6m, Kimmo K. Kahma, and Heidi Pettersson<br />

Effect of sea state on the momentum exchange over the sea during neutral conditions<br />

Special Section: U.S. GLOBEC: Physical Processes on Georges Bank (GLOBEC)<br />

Robert C. Beardsley, Peter C. Smith, and Craig M Lee<br />

Introduction to special section: U.S. GLOBEC: Physical processes on Georges Bank (GLOBEC)<br />

K. H. Brink, R. Limeburner, and R. C. Beardsley<br />

Properties of flow and pressure over Georges Bank as observed with near-surface drifters<br />

Charles N. Flagg and Maureen Dunn<br />

Characterization of the mean and seasonal flow regime on Georges Bank from shipboard acoustic<br />

Doppler current profiler data<br />

Changsheng Chen, Robert C. Beardsley, Peter J. S. Franks, and J. Van Keuren<br />

Influence of diurnal heating on stratification and residual circulation of Georges Bank<br />

James H. Churchill, James P. Manning, and Robert C. Beardsley<br />

Slope water intrusions onto Georges Bank<br />

Changsheng Chen, Ronald J. Schlitz, R. Gregory Lough, Keston W. Smith, Robert Beardsley, and James<br />

P. Manning<br />

Wind-induced, cross-frontal exchange on Georges Bank: A mechanism for early summer on-bank<br />

biological particle transport<br />

Steven J. Lentz, Robert C. Beardsley, James D. 1rish, James Manning, Peter C. Smith, and Robert A.<br />

Weller<br />

Temperature and salt balances on Georges Bank February-August 1995<br />

Andrew C. Dale, David S. Ullman, John A. Barth, and Dave Hebert<br />

The ftont on the N orthern Flank of Georges Bank in spring: 1. Tidal and subtidal variability<br />

David S. Ullman, Andrew C. Dale, Dave Hebert, and John A. Barth<br />

The front on the Northern Flank of Georges Bank in spring: 2. Cross-frontal flux es and mixing<br />

Sandra R. Werner, Robert C. Beardsley, and Albert J. Williams<br />

Bottom frictionand bed forrns on the southern flank of Georges Bank<br />

Sandra R. Werner, Robert C. Beardsley, Steven J. Lentz, David 1. Hebert, and Neil S. Oakey<br />

Observations and mo<strong>de</strong>ling of the tidal bottom boundary layer on the southern flank of Georges Bank<br />

Robert C. Beardsley, Steven J. Lentz, Robert A. Weller, Richard Limeburner, James D. 1rish, and James<br />

B. Edson<br />

Surface forcing on the southern flank ofGeorges Bank, February-August 1995<br />

52


John W. Lo<strong>de</strong>r, Charles G. Hannah, Brian D. Petrie, and Elizabeth A. Gonzalez<br />

Hydrographic and transport variability on the Halifax section<br />

Peter C. Smith, Charles N. Flagg, Richard Limeburner, César Fuentes-Yaco, Charles Hannah, Robert C.<br />

Beardsley, and<br />

James D. Irish<br />

Scotian Shelf crossovers during winter/spring 1999<br />

Karen F. Wishner, Dian J. Gifford, Barbara K. Sullivan, James J. Bisagni, Dawn M Outram, and Donna E.<br />

Van Keuren<br />

Biological signature of Scotian Shelf Water crossovers on Georges Bank during spring 1997<br />

J. J. Bisagni<br />

Seasonal variability of nitrate supply and potential new production in the Gulf of Maine and Georges Bank<br />

regions<br />

Bruno. A. Zakardjian, Jinyu Sheng, Jeffrey A. Runge, Jan McLaren, Stéphane Plour<strong>de</strong>, Keith R.<br />

Thompson, and Yves Gratton<br />

Effects of temperature and circulation on the population dynamics of Calanus finmarchicus in the Gulf of<br />

St. Lawrence and Scotian Shelf: Study with a coupled, three-dimensional hydrodynamic, stagebased<br />

life history mo<strong>de</strong>l<br />

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 108, No. C12, 15 December 2003.<br />

Corinne Le Quéré, Olivier Aumont, Patrick Monfray, and James Orr<br />

Propagation of climatic events on ocean stratification, marine biology, and COz: Case studies over the<br />

1979-1999 period ..............................................................................................................................5<br />

Josefino C. Comiso, Jiayan Yang, Susumo Honjo, and Richard A. Krishfield<br />

Detection of change in the Arctic using satellite and in situ data .................................................................14<br />

John Ryan Taylor, Kelly Kenison Falkner, Ursula Schauer, and Mike Meredith<br />

Quantitative consi<strong>de</strong>rations of dissolved barium as a tracer in the Arctic Ocean ...........................................4<br />

Alexan<strong>de</strong>r Ostrovskii and Jordi Font<br />

Advection and dissipation rates in the upper ocean mixed layer heat anomaly budget over the North<br />

Atlantic in surnmer .............................................................................................................................6<br />

Beatriz Mouriño, Emilio Fernán<strong>de</strong>z, Helene Etienne, Fabrice Hernán<strong>de</strong>z, and Sylvie Giraud<br />

Significance of cyc10nic SubTropical Oceanic Rings ofMagnitu<strong>de</strong> (STORM) eddies for the carbon budget<br />

of the euphotic layer in the subtropical northeast Atlantic .................................................................13<br />

L. P. Pezzi and K. J. Richards<br />

Effects oflateral mixing on the mean state and eddy activity of an equatorial ocean .....................................1<br />

P. S. Polito and O. T Sato<br />

Pattems of sea surface height and heat storage associated to intraseasonal Rossby waves in the tropics ...3<br />

53


Victor H. <strong>Mar</strong>in, Luisa E. Delgado, pnd Guillermo Luna-Jorquera<br />

S-chlorophyll squirts at 300S offthe Chilean coast (eastem South Pacific): Feature-tracking analysis............8<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>y-Elena Carr<br />

Simulation of carbon pathways in the planktonic ecosystem off Perú during the 1997-1998 El Niño and La<br />

Niña.................................................................................................................................................10<br />

A. J. Abascal, J. Sheinbaum, J. Can<strong>de</strong>la, J. Ochoa, and A. Badan<br />

Analysis offlow variability in the Yucatan Channel ......................................................................................11<br />

Julio Can<strong>de</strong>la, Sorayda Tanahara, Michel Crepon, Bernard Barnier, and Julio Sheinbaum<br />

Yucatan Channel flow: Observations versus CLIPPER A TL6 and MERCA TOR P AM mo<strong>de</strong>ls ..................15<br />

Jorge Zavala-Hidalgo, Steven L. Morey, and James J. O'Brien .<br />

Seasonal circulation on the westem shelf ofthe Gulf ofMexico using a high-resolution numerical mo<strong>de</strong>l .....19<br />

W E. Johns, F. Yao, D. B. Olson, S. A. Josey, J. P. Grist, and D. A. Smeed<br />

Observations of seasonal exchange through the Straits of Hormuz and the inferred heat and fteshwater<br />

budgets of the Persian Gulf..............................................................................................................21<br />

Yukiharu Hisaki and Tatsunori Naruke<br />

Horizontal variability ofnear-inertial oscillations associated with the passage of a typhoon .........................12<br />

Abdirahman Ornar, Truls Johannessen, Staffan Kaltin, and Are Olsen<br />

Anthropogenic increase of oceanic pCO, in the Barents Sea surface water ................................................18<br />

Eric D. Skyllingstad, Clayton A. Paulson, W. Scott Pegau, Miles G. McPhee, and Timothy Stanton Effects<br />

ofkeels on ice bottom turbulence exchange ......................................................................................17<br />

y. Yu and R. W. Lindsay<br />

Comparison of thin ice thickness distributions <strong>de</strong>rived from RADARSA T Geophysical Processor System<br />

and advanced very high resolution radiometer data sets ..................................................................20<br />

G. 1. Shapiro, J. M Huthnance, and V V Ivanov<br />

Dense water cascading offthe continental shelf.............................................................................................7<br />

S. L. Castro, G. A. Wick, and W. J. Emery<br />

Further refinements to mo<strong>de</strong>ls for the bulk-skin sea surface temperature difference ...................................16<br />

Frank E. Hoge, Paul E. Lyon, Curtis D. Mobley, and Lydia K. Sundman<br />

Radiative transfer equation inversion: Theory and shape factor mo<strong>de</strong>ls for retrieval of oceanic inherent<br />

optical properties ...............................................................................................................................9<br />

Corrections<br />

J. Y. Hu, H. Kawamura, and D. L. Tang<br />

Correction to "Tidal front around the Hainan Island, northwest ofthe South China Sea"<br />

Special Section: A JGOFS investigation of plankton variability and tropbic interactions in tbe central<br />

equatorial Pacific (EBENE)<br />

Robert Le Borgne and Michael R. Landry<br />

EBENE: A JGOFS investigation ofplankton variability and trophic interactions in the equatorial Pacific<br />

(180°)<br />

54


Gérard Eldin and <strong>Mar</strong>tine Rodier<br />

Ocean physics and nutrient fields along 180° during an El Niño-Southem Oscillation cold phase Cécile<br />

Dupouy, Hubert Loisel, Jacques Neveux, Susan L. Brown, Cyril Moulin, Jean Blanchot, Aubert Le<br />

Bouteiller, and Michael R. Landry<br />

Microbial absorption and backscattering coefficients from in situ and POLDER satellite data during an El<br />

Niño¬Southem Oscillation cold phase in the equatorial Pacific (180°)<br />

Susan L. Brown, Michael R. Landry, Jacques Neveux, and Cécile Dupouy<br />

Microbial community abundance and biomass along a 180° transect in the equatorial Pacific during an El<br />

Niño-Southem Oscillation cold phase<br />

Jacques Neveux, Cécile Dupouy, Jean Blanchot, Aubert Le Bouteiller, Michael R. Landry, and Susan L.<br />

Brown<br />

Diel dynamics of chlorophylls in high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll waters ofthe equatorial Pacific (180°):<br />

Interactions of growth, grazing, physiological responses, and mixing<br />

Aubert Le Bouteiller, Au<strong>de</strong> Leynaert, Michael R. Landry, Robert Le Borgne, Jacques Neveux, <strong>Mar</strong>tine<br />

Rodier, Jean Blanchot, and Susan L. Brown<br />

Primary production, new production, and growth rate in the equatorial Pacific: Changes from mesotrophic<br />

to oligotrophic re gime <strong>Mar</strong>ine snow latitudinal distribution in the equatorial Pacific along 180°<br />

Michael R. Landry, Susan L. Brown, Jacques Neveux, Cécile Dupouy, Jean Blanchot, Stephanie<br />

Christensen, and Robert R. Bidigare<br />

Phytoplankton growth and microzooplankton grazing in high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll waters of the<br />

equatorial Pacific: Community and taxon-specific rate assessments from pigment and flow<br />

cytometric analyses<br />

Robert Le Borgne, Gisele Champalbert, and Raymond Gaudy<br />

Mesozooplankton biomass and composition in the equatorial Pacific along 180°<br />

Raymond Gaudy, Gisele Champalbert, and Robert Le Borgne<br />

Feeding and metabolism ofmesozooplankton in the equatorial Pacific high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll zone<br />

along 180°<br />

Gisele Champalbert, Jacques Neveux, Raymond Gaudy, and Robert Le Borgne<br />

Diel variations of copepod feeding and grazing impact in the high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll zone ofthe<br />

equatorial Pacific Ocean (0°; 3°S, 180°)<br />

Gabriel Gorsky, Robert Le Borgne, <strong>Mar</strong>c Picheral, and Lars Stemmann<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 2, February 2004.<br />

D. Weetman and D. Atkinson<br />

Evaluation of alternative hypotheses to explain temperature-induced life history shifts in Daphnia ..... 107-116<br />

Celine Ellien, Eric Thiébaut, Franck Dumas, Jean-Clau<strong>de</strong> Salomon, and Paul Nival<br />

55


A mo<strong>de</strong>lling study of the respective role of hydrodynamic processes and larval mortality on larval dispersal<br />

and recruitment of benthic invertebrates: example of Pectinaria koreni (Annelida: Polychaeta) in the<br />

Bay of Seine (English Channel) .............................................................................................. 117-132<br />

Micky L. M. Tackx, Nathalie <strong>de</strong> Pauw, Riet van Mieghem, F. Azémar, Ab<strong>de</strong>lhacq Hannouti, Stefan van<br />

Damme, Frank Fiers, Nanette Daro, and Patrick Meire<br />

Zooplankton in the Schel<strong>de</strong> estuary, Belgium and The Netherlands. Spatial and temporal patterns ... 133-141<br />

Rudi H. Regel, Justin D. Brookes, and George G. Ganf<br />

Vertical migration, entrainment and photosynthesis of the freshwater dinoflagellate Peridinium cinctum in a<br />

shallow urban lake .................................................................................................................. 143-157<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ia Lotocka, Ewa Styczynska-Jurewicz, and Leszek A. Bledzki<br />

Changes in carotenoid composition in different <strong>de</strong>velopmental stages of copepods: Pseudocalanus<br />

acuspes Giesbrecht and Acartia spp. ...................................................................................... 159-166<br />

Virginia E. Villafañe, Elena S. Barbieri, and E. Walter Helbling<br />

Annual patterns of ultraviolet radiation effects on temperate marine phytoplankton off Patagonia, Argentina<br />

............................................................................................................................................... 167-174<br />

Eun Seob Cho and Eduardo Costas<br />

Rapid monitoring for the potentially ichthyotoxic dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoi<strong>de</strong>s in Korean<br />

coastal waters using fluorescent probe tools ........................................................................... 175-180<br />

Mónica S. Hoffmeyer<br />

Decadal change in zooplankton seasonal succession in the Bahía Blanca estuary, Argentina, following<br />

introduction of two zooplankton species .................................................................................. 181-189<br />

Robert D. Vaillancourt, Christopher W. Brown, Robert R. L. Guillard, and William M. Balch<br />

Light backscattering properties of marine phytoplankton: relationships to cell size, chemical composition<br />

and taxonomy ......................................................................................................................... 191-212<br />

Lothar D. J. Kuijper, Thomas R. An<strong>de</strong>rson, and Sebastiaan A. L. M. Kooijman<br />

C and N gross growth efficiencies of copepod egg production studied using a Dynamic Energy Budget<br />

mo<strong>de</strong>l ..................................................................................................................................... 213-226<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATIONS:<br />

Janna Peters, Kirsten Tuschling, and Angelika Brandt<br />

Zooplankton in the arctic Laptev Sea—feeding ecology as indicated by fatty acid composition ........ : 227-234<br />

J. A. Lindley, F. Hernán<strong>de</strong>z, E. Tejera, and S. M. Correia<br />

Phyllosoma larvae (Decapoda: Palinuri<strong>de</strong>a) of the Cape Ver<strong>de</strong> Islands ........................................... 235-240<br />

Eva S. Lindström, Katarina Vre<strong>de</strong>, and Elina Leskinen<br />

Response of a member of the Verrucomicrobia, among the dominating bacteria in a hypolimnion, to<br />

increased phosphorus availability ........................................................................................... 241-246<br />

Yan Yan, Benny K. K. Chan, and Gray A. Williams<br />

An improved and simplified trap for quantifying the distribution and supply of planktonic larvae to rocky<br />

shores ................................................................................................................................... 247-253<br />

56


BOOK REVIEWS:<br />

Bopi Biddanda<br />

UV Effects in Aquatic Organisms and Ecosystems. Edited by Helbling, E. W. and Zagarese, H. J. ... 255-256<br />

JOURNAL OF SHELLFISH RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 22, No. 3, December 2003.<br />

J. Evan Ward<br />

Honored Life Member: Melbourne Romaine Carriker, ............................................................................. 611<br />

John N. Kraeuter and <strong>Mar</strong>k W. Luckenbach<br />

Honored Life Member: Michael Castagna, .............................................................................................. 615<br />

William H. Hargis, Jr.<br />

Honored Life Member: Dexter Stearns Haven, ........................................................................................ 619<br />

C. E. Carver, A. Chisholm, and A. L. Mallet<br />

Strategies to mitigate the impact of Ciona intestinalis (L.) biofouling on shellfish production, ................... 621<br />

A. R. LeBlanc, T. Landry, and G. Miron<br />

Fouling organisms of the blue mussel Mytilus edulis: Their effect on nutrient uptake and release, ........... 633<br />

Melita Peharda, Alen Soldo, Armin Pallaoro, Sanja Matic, and Perica Cetinic<br />

Age and growth of the Mediterranean scallop Pecten jacobaeus (Linnaeus 1758) in the northern Adriatic<br />

Sea, ............................................................................................................................................. 639<br />

Omar Defeo and Nicolas Gutierrez<br />

Geographical patterns in growth estimates of the scallop, Zygochlamys patagonica, with emphasis on<br />

Uruguayan waters, ....................................................................................................................... 643<br />

G. Roman, A. Lauro, and J. P. <strong>de</strong> la Roche<br />

Intermediate culture of king scallop (Pecten maximus) in suspension in cages: Effect of stocking <strong>de</strong>nsity<br />

and <strong>de</strong>pth, .................................................................................................................................... 647<br />

Xiaoyu Kong, Ziniu Yu, Yajun Liu, and Linlin Chen<br />

Intraspecific genetic variation in mitochondrial 16S ribosomal gene of zhikong scallop Chlamys farreri, .. 655<br />

Ralph A. Elston, Christopher F. Dungan, Theodore R. Meyers, and Kimberly S. Reece<br />

Perkinsus sp. infection risk for Manila clams, Venerupis philippinarum (A. Adams and Reeve, 1850) on the<br />

Pacific coast of North and Central America, .................................................................................. 661<br />

Ralph A. Elston, Daniel P. Cheney, Brian F. MacDonald, and Andrew D. Suhrbier<br />

Tolerance and response of Manila clams, Venerupis philippinarum (A. Adams and Reeve, 1850) to low<br />

salinity, ......................................................................................................................................... 667<br />

Olga L. Aracena, Irene M. Lepez, Javier Sanchez, Angelica M. Carmona, Lucila Medina, and Alejandra<br />

Saavedra<br />

On two new macroscopic in<strong>de</strong>xes to evaluate the reproductive cycle of Ensis macha (Molina, 1782), ..... 675<br />

Micaela Schnitzler Parker, Peter A. Jumars, and Larry L. LeClair<br />

57


Population genetics of two bivalve species (Protothaca staminea and Macoma balthica) in Puget Sound,<br />

Washington, ................................................................................................................................. 681<br />

Richard R. Alexan<strong>de</strong>r and Robert M. Baron<br />

Shell repair of mechanically induced fractures in Mercenaria mercenaria un<strong>de</strong>r experimentally<br />

suboptimum conditions, ................................................................................................................ 689<br />

Jonathan H. Grabowski, Sean P. Powers, and <strong>Mar</strong>k Hooper<br />

I<strong>de</strong>ntification and incorporation of growth and survival bottlenecks in economic mo<strong>de</strong>ls of northern quahog<br />

(Hard clam), Mercenaria mercenaria mariculture, .......................................................................... 697<br />

Melita Peharda, Jaksa Bolotin, Nedo Vrgoc, Nenad Jasprica, Ana Bratos, and Bosko Skaramuca<br />

A study of the Noah's ark shell (Arca noae Linnaeus 1758) in Mali Ston Bay, Adriatic Sea, ..................... 705<br />

Jorge Caceres-<strong>Mar</strong>tinez and Rebeca Vasquez-Yeomans<br />

Presence of giant polymorphic cells in Crassostrea gigas cultured in Bahia Falsa, Baja California, NW<br />

Mexico, ......................................................................................................................................... 711<br />

Clothil<strong>de</strong> Heu<strong>de</strong> Berthelin, Bruno Fievet, Gael Leclerc, Pierre Germain, Kristell Kellner, and Michel<br />

Mathieu<br />

In vivo and in vitro approaches to the analysis of glycogen metabolism in the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea<br />

gigas, ........................................................................................................................................... 715<br />

Jorge Chavez- Villalba, Jean-Clau<strong>de</strong> Cochard, <strong>Mar</strong>celle Pennec, Jean Barret, <strong>Mar</strong>tha Enriquez-Diaz, and<br />

Carlos Caceres-<strong>Mar</strong>tinez<br />

Effects of temperature and feeding regimes on gametogenesis and larval production in the oyster,<br />

Crassostrea gigas, ........................................................................................................................ 721<br />

Patrick Baker<br />

Two species of oyster larvae show different <strong>de</strong>pth distributions in a shallow, well-mixed estuary, ............ 733<br />

M. L. Wintermyer and K. R. Cooper<br />

Dioxin/Furan and polychlorinated biphenyl concentrations in eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica,<br />

Gmelin) tissues and the effects of EGG fertilization and <strong>de</strong>velopment, .......................................... 737<br />

George R. Abbe and Brian W. Albright<br />

An improvement to the <strong>de</strong>termination of meat condition in<strong>de</strong>x for the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica<br />

(Gmelin 1791), .............................................................................................................................. 747<br />

Kimberly A. Cressman, <strong>Mar</strong>tin H. Posey, Michael A. Mallin, Lynn A. Leonard, and Troy D. Alphin<br />

Effects of oyster reefs on water quality in a tidal creek estuary, ............................................................... 753<br />

Isabelle Boutet, Arnaud Tanguy, Michel Auffret, Nedzad Mujdzic, and Dario Moraga<br />

Expression of HSP 70 in experimentally metal-exposed European flat oysters Ostrea edulis, ................. 763<br />

John Brake, Ford Evans, and Chris Langdon<br />

Is beauty in the eye of the behol<strong>de</strong>r? Development of a simple method to <strong>de</strong>scribe <strong>de</strong>sirable shell shape<br />

for the Pacific oyster industry, ....................................................................................................... 767<br />

Josiah H. Pit and Paul C. Southgate<br />

Should slow growing pearl oyster (Pinctada margaritifera) Spat ("Runts") be discar<strong>de</strong>d?, ........................ 773<br />

58


Takeshi Handa and Ken-ichi Yamamoto<br />

Corrosion casting of the digestive diverticula of the pearl oyster, Pinctada fucata martensi (Mollusca:<br />

Bivalvia), ...................................................................................................................................... 777<br />

John A. H. Benzie, Carolyn Smith, and Ketut Sugama<br />

Mitochondrial DNA reveals genetic differentiation between Australian and Indonesian pearl oyster<br />

Pinctada maxima (Jameson 1901) populations, ............................................................................ 781<br />

Alexan<strong>de</strong>r Tewfik and Hector M. Guzman<br />

Shallow-water distribution and population characteristics of Strombus gigas and S. costatus (Gastropoda:<br />

Strombidae) in Bocas <strong>de</strong>l Toro, Panama, ...................................................................................... 789<br />

Hi<strong>de</strong>ki Takami, Daisuke Muraoka, Tomohiko Kawamura, and Yoh Yamashita<br />

When is the abalone Haliotis discus hannai Ino 1953 first able to use brown macroalgae? 795<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF WORKSHOP ON REBUILDING TECHNIQUES FOR ABALONE IN BRITISH<br />

COLUMBIA<br />

Preface, ................................................................................................................................................. 803<br />

Susan M. Bower<br />

Update on emerging abalone diseases and techniques for health assessment, ...................................... 805<br />

A. Campbell, J. Lessard, and G. S. Jamieson<br />

Fecundity and seasonal reproduction of northern abalone,Haliotis kamtschatkana, in Barkley Sound;<br />

Canada, ....................................................................................................................................... 811<br />

Bart Defreitas<br />

Estimating juvenile northern abalone (Haliotis kamtschatkana) abundance using artificial habitats, ......... 819<br />

Thomas B. McCormick and Jennifer L. Brogan<br />

Early reproduction in hatchery-raised white abalone, Haliotis sorenseni, Bartsch, 1940, .......................... 825<br />

T. Tomascik and H. Holmes<br />

Distribution and abundance of Haliotis kamtschatkana in relation to habitat, competitors and predators in<br />

the Broken Group Islands, Pacific Rim National Park Reserve of Canada, .................................... 831<br />

Ruth E. Withler, Alan Campbell, Shaorong Li, Doug Brouwer, K. Janine Supernault, and Kristina M. Miller<br />

Implications of high levels of genetic diversity and weak population structure for the rebuilding of northern<br />

abalone in British Columbia,Canada, ............................................................................................ 839<br />

Status of Stewardship Projects, .............................................................................................................. 849<br />

Susan A. Little and Winsor H. Watson, III<br />

Size at maturity of female American lobsters from an estuarine and coastal population, .......................... 857<br />

Kelly C. Palacios and Steven P. FelTaro<br />

Green crab (Carcinus maenas Linnaeus) consumption rates on and prey preferences among four bivalve<br />

prey species, ................................................................................................................................ 865<br />

Michael Sheppard, Anna Walker, <strong>Mar</strong>c E. Frischer, and Richard F. Lee<br />

59


Histopathology and prevalence of the parasitic dinoflagellate, Hematodinium sp, in crabs (Cailinectes<br />

sapidus, Callinectes similis, Neopanope sayi, Libinia emarginata, Menippe mercenaria) from a<br />

Georgia estuary, ........................................................................................................................... 873<br />

Charles E. Epifanio, Ana I. Dittel, Raymond A. Rodriguez, and Timothy E. Targett<br />

The role of macroalgal beds as nursery habitat for juvenile blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus, .................. 881.<br />

Celia Vazquez-Boucard, Humberto Mejia-Ruiz, Fernando Zamudio, Vania Serrano-Pinto, and Hector<br />

Nolasco-Soria<br />

Isolation and molecular characterization of vitellin from the mature ovaries of the prawn Litopenaeus<br />

vannamei, .................................................................................................................................... 887<br />

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION:<br />

Vol. 20, No. 12, December 2003.<br />

Stéphane Aris-Brosou and Ziheng Yang<br />

Bayesian Mo<strong>de</strong>ls of Episodic Evolution Support a Late Precambrian Explosive Diversification of the<br />

Metazoa ............................................................................................................................ 1947-1954.<br />

Nicolás Frankel, Esteban Hasson, Norberto D. Iusem, and <strong>Mar</strong>ía Susana Rossi<br />

Adaptive Evolution of the Water Stress-Induced Gene Asr2 in Lycopersicon Species Dwelling in Arid<br />

Habitats ............................................................................................................................. 1955-1962.<br />

Rumiko Kofuji, Naomi Sumikawa, Misuzu Yamasaki, Kimihiko Kondo, Kunihiko Ueda, Motomi Ito, and<br />

Mitsuyasu Hasebe<br />

Evolution and Divergence of the MADS-Box Gene Family Based on Genome-Wi<strong>de</strong> Expression Analyses 1963-1977.<br />

Yonglong Zhuang, Fei Ma, Jesse Li-Ling, Xiaofeng Xu, and Yanda Li<br />

Comparative Analysis of Amino Acid Usage and Protein Length Distribution Between Alternatively and<br />

Non-alternatively Spliced Genes Across Six Eukaryotic Genomes ..................................... 1978-1985.<br />

D. Paraskevis, P. Lemey, M. Salemi, M. Suchard, Y. Van <strong>de</strong> Peer, and A.-M. Vandamme<br />

Analysis of the Evolutionary Relationships of HIV-1 and SIVcpz Sequences Using Bayesian Inference:<br />

Implications for the Origin of HIV-1 .................................................................................... 1986-1996.<br />

Patrick A. Reeves and Richard G. Olmstead<br />

Evolution of the TCP Gene Family in Asteridae: Cladistic and Network Approaches to Un<strong>de</strong>rstanding<br />

Regulatory Gene Family Diversification and Its Impact on Morphological Evolution ............ 1997-2009.<br />

Allen G. Rodrigo, Matthew Goo<strong>de</strong>, Roald Forsberg, Howard A. Ross, and Alexei Drummond<br />

Inferring Evolutionary Rates Using Serially Sampled Sequences from Several Populations .......... 2010-2018.<br />

Stephan Schmitz, Christoph J. Schankin, Heino Prinz, Rachel S. Curwen, Peter D. Ashton, Leo S. D.<br />

Caves, Rainer H. A. Fink, John C. Sparrow, Peter J. Mayhew, and Claudia Veigel<br />

Molecular Evolutionary Convergence of the Flight Muscle Protein Arthrin in Diptera and Hemiptera 2019-2003.<br />

Barbara Cardazzo, Luca Bargelloni, Luisa Toffolatti, and Tomaso Patarnello<br />

60


Intervening Sequences in Paralogous Genes: A Comparative Genomic Approach to Study the Evolution of<br />

X Chromosome Introns ...................................................................................................... 2034-2041.<br />

Bárbara Negre, José <strong>Mar</strong>ía Ranz, Ferran Casals, <strong>Mar</strong>io Cáceres, and Alfredo Ruiz<br />

A New Split of the Hox Gene Complex in Drosophila: Relocation and Evolution of the Gene labial 2042-2054.<br />

Sémi Souames, Clau<strong>de</strong> Bazin, Eric Bonnivard, and Dominique Higuet<br />

Behavior of the hobo Transposable Element with Regard to TPE Repeats in Transgenic Lines of<br />

Drosophila melanogaster ................................................................................................... 2055-2066.<br />

Alexan<strong>de</strong>r V. Vershinin, Theodore R. Allnutt, Maggie R. Knox, Mike J. Ambrose, and T. H. Noel Ellis<br />

Transposable Elements Reveal the Impact of Introgression, Rather than Transposition, in Pisum Diversity,<br />

Evolution, and Domestication ............................................................................................. 2067-2075.<br />

Helga Westers, Ronald Dorenbos, Jan Maarten van Dijl, Jorrit Kabel, Tony Flanagan, Kevin M. Devine,<br />

Florence Ju<strong>de</strong>, Simone J. Séror, Aäron C. Beekman, Elise Darmon, Caroline Eschevins, Anne <strong>de</strong><br />

Jong, Sierd Bron, Oscar P. Kuipers, Alessandra M. Albertini, Haike Antelmann, Michael Hecker,<br />

Nicola Zamboni, Uwe Sauer, Clau<strong>de</strong> Bruand, Dusko S. Ehrlich, Juan C. Alonso, <strong>Mar</strong>garita Salas,<br />

and Wim J. Quax<br />

Genome Engineering Reveals Large Dispensable Regions in Bacillus subtilis ............................. 2076-2090.<br />

Howard Ochman<br />

Neutral Mutations and Neutral Substitutions in Bacterial Genomes .............................................. 2091-2096.<br />

Kwang-Zin Lee and Ralf J. Sommer<br />

Operon Structure and Trans-Splicing in the Nemato<strong>de</strong> Pristionchus pacificus .............................. 2097-2103.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>io Ali Fares, Daniela Bezemer, Andrés Moya, and Ignacio <strong>Mar</strong>ín<br />

Selection on Coding Regions Determined Hox7 Genes Evolution ................................................ 2104-2112.<br />

Cynthia L. Cleto, Amanda E. Van<strong>de</strong>nberghe, Darren W. MacLean, Pierre Pannunzio, Christine Tortorelli,<br />

Thomas H. Mee<strong>de</strong>l, Yutaka Satou, Nori Satoh, and Kenneth E. M. Hastings<br />

Ascidian Larva Reveals Ancient Origin of Vertebrate-Skeletal-Muscle Troponin I Characteristics in<br />

Chordate Locomotory Muscle ............................................................................................ 2113-2122.<br />

Yinglei Lai and Fengzhu Sun<br />

The Relationship Between Microsatellite Slippage Mutation Rate and the Number of Repeat Units 2123-2131.<br />

Jukka S. Moilanen, Saara Finnilä, and Kari Majamaa<br />

Lineage-Specific Selection in Human mtDNA: Lack of Polymorphisms in a Segment of MTND5 Gene in<br />

Haplogroup J ..................................................................................................................... 2132-2142.<br />

Jay R. Reichman, Thomas P. Wilcox, and Peter D. Vize<br />

PCP Gene Family in Symbiodinium from Hippopus hippopus: Low Levels of Concerted Evolution, Isoform<br />

Diversity, and Spectral Tuning of Chromophores ............................................................... 2143-2154.<br />

PACIFIC SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 58, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

61


Harvesting Impacts and Invasion by an Alien Species Decrease Estimates of Black Coral Yield off Maui,<br />

Hawai‘i<br />

Richard W. Grigg..................................................................................................................................... 1–6<br />

Macrofauna of Laufuti Stream, Taú, American Samoa, and the Role of Physiography in Its Zonation<br />

Robert P. Cook...................................................................................................................................... 7–21<br />

Hormophysa cuneiformis (Phaeophyta: Fucales) in Micronesia<br />

Roy T. Tsuda ....................................................................................................................................... 23–26<br />

Topographic History of the Maui Nui Complex, Hawai‘i, and Its Implications for Biogeography<br />

Jonathan Paul Price and Deborah Elliott-Fisk....................................................................................... 27–45<br />

Mineralogical Variation in Shells of the Blackfoot Abalone, Haliotis iris (Mollusca: Gastropoda: Haliotidae),<br />

in Southern New Zealand<br />

Blair E. Gray and Abigail M. Smith........................................................................................................ 47–64<br />

Annotated Checklist of the Fishes of Wake Atoll<br />

Phillip S. Lobel and Lisa Kerr Lobel...................................................................................................... 65–90<br />

Survey and Estimates of Commercially Viable Populations of the Sea Cucumber Actinopyga mauritiana<br />

(Echino<strong>de</strong>rmata: Holothuroi<strong>de</strong>a), on Tinian Island, Commonwealth of the Northern <strong>Mar</strong>iana Islands<br />

Michael S. Trianni and Patrick G. Bryan................................................................................................ 91–98<br />

Temporal Variation in Forest Bird Survey Data from Tutuila Island, American Samoa<br />

Holly B. Freifeld, Chris Solek, and Ailao Tualaulelei............................................................................ 99–117<br />

Abstracts of Papers from the Twenty-eighth Annual Albert L. Tester Memorial Symposium, 16–17 April<br />

2003....................................................................................................................................... 119–137<br />

Association Affairs<br />

Pacific Science Association.............................................................................................................. 139–141<br />

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 1, January 2004.<br />

Hippopotamyrus ansorgii species complex in the Upper Zambezi River System with a <strong>de</strong>scription of a new<br />

species, H. szaboi (Mormyridae)<br />

Kramer, Bernd - Van Der Bank, Herman - Wink, Michael............................................................................. 1<br />

Systematics, phylogeny and biogeography of Anterastes (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae, Tettigoniinae):<br />

evolution within a refugium<br />

Çiplak, Battal............................................................................................................................................. 19<br />

Delimitation of morphologically similar sponge crab species of the genus Pseudodromia (Crustacea,<br />

Decapoda, Dromiidae) from South Africa<br />

Stewart, Barbara A. - Gouws, Gavin - Daniels, Savel R. - Matthee, Conrad A............................................ 45<br />

Anatomy and relationships of the Early Cambrian worm Myoscolex<br />

Dzik, Jerzy................................................................................................................................................ 57<br />

62


Evolution of the nervous system in Paraphanostoma (Acoela)<br />

Raikova, Olga I. - Reuter, <strong>Mar</strong>ia - Gustafsson, <strong>Mar</strong>garetha K. S. - Maule, Aaron G. - Halton, David W. -<br />

Jon<strong>de</strong>lius, Ulf................................................................................................................................... 71<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling phylogenetic relationships using reticulated networks<br />

Makarenkov, Vladimir - Legendre, Pierre - Des<strong>de</strong>vises, Yves.................................................................... 89<br />

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 2, <strong>Mar</strong>ch 2004.<br />

A new species of the genus Microbunodon (Anthracotheriidae, Artiodactyla) from the Miocene of Pakistan:<br />

genus revision, phylogenetic relationships and palaeobiogeography<br />

Lihoreau, Fabrice - Blon<strong>de</strong>l, Cécile - Barry, John - Brunet, Michel.............................................................. 97<br />

First molecular evi<strong>de</strong>nce for reassessing phylogenetic affinities between genets (Genetta) and the<br />

enigmatic genet-like taxa Osbornictis, Poiana and Prionodon (Carnivora, Viverridae)<br />

Gaubert, Philippe - Tranier, Michel - Delmas, Anne-Sophie - Colyn, <strong>Mar</strong>c - veron,<br />

Geraldine................................................................................................................................................ 117<br />

A revision of the Afrotropical genus Dhatrichia (Trichoptera, Hydroptilidae)<br />

Kjærandsen, Jostein................................................................................................................................ 131<br />

18S rDNA phylogeny of Clitellata (Annelida)<br />

Erséus, Christer - Källersjö, <strong>Mar</strong>i............................................................................................................. 187<br />

63

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