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BOLETIN187-DICIEMBRE DE 2004 - Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y ...

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INTRODUCCIÓN<br />

De acuerdo a los principales objetivos <strong>de</strong> la biblioteca “Dra. Ma. Elena Caso Muñoz”,<br />

Unidad Académica Mazatlán <strong>de</strong>l ICML, U.N.A.M. <strong>de</strong> apoyar la investigación y docencia a<br />

nivel regional y nacional en las áreas <strong>de</strong> ciencias <strong>de</strong>l mar y limnología el poner a<br />

disposición <strong>de</strong> todos lo usuarios la información <strong>de</strong>l acervo <strong>de</strong> la Biblioteca, se ha visto la<br />

necesidad <strong>de</strong> dar mayor difusión a nuestro acervo a través <strong>de</strong> la elaboración <strong>de</strong>l Boletín<br />

Electrónico <strong>de</strong> Material Reciente <strong>de</strong> la Biblioteca.<br />

Este boletín preten<strong>de</strong> dar la información <strong>de</strong>l acervo <strong>de</strong> reciente ingreso, ya sea por compra,<br />

donación y/o canje, a través <strong>de</strong> la referencia bibliográfica y tabla <strong>de</strong> contenido en forma<br />

más eficiente, ya que este formato <strong>de</strong> documento nos permite a<strong>de</strong>más realizar búsquedas<br />

<strong>de</strong>ntro <strong>de</strong>l mismo boletín (botón arriba, FIND). Asimismo <strong>de</strong>l lado izquierdo <strong>de</strong> la<br />

referencia bibliográfica po<strong>de</strong>mos dar un clic y nos lleva directamente a la tabla <strong>de</strong><br />

contenido <strong>de</strong> esta.<br />

Estamos seguros que teniendo este boletín en forma electrónica, el cual se enviara por<br />

correo electrónico a las instituciones a nivel nacional, será colocado en nuestra pagina web<br />

<strong>de</strong> la biblioteca: http://ola.icmyl.unam.mx/biblio para que a través <strong>de</strong> internet, todos los<br />

usuarios puedan consultarlo y buscar en él los temas <strong>de</strong> su interés. De esta forma la difusión<br />

<strong>de</strong> nuestro acervo ira en constante aumento.<br />

Para cualquier consulta, dudas o comentarios, favor <strong>de</strong> enviarnos un correo a la cuenta <strong>de</strong><br />

biblio@ola.icmyl.unam.mx, don<strong>de</strong> con mucho gusto aten<strong>de</strong>remos su solicitud. Estamos en<br />

la mejor disposición <strong>de</strong> enviar a todo usuario que solicite esta información a las cuentas <strong>de</strong><br />

correo respectivas.<br />

Se les recuerda que nuestra biblioteca tiene los catálogos <strong>de</strong> libros, tesis, revistas,<br />

memorias, informes y <strong>de</strong> reimpresos en nuestra página web.<br />

Compilación: Ma. Clara Ramírez Jáuregui<br />

Edición: Mat. Germán Ramírez Reséndiz.


LIBROS<br />

HANSKI, ILKKA AND OSCAR E. GAGGIOTTI, <strong>2004</strong>. Ecology, Genetics, and<br />

Evolution of Metapopulations.—Amsterdam: Elsevier Aca<strong>de</strong>mic Press, 696 p.<br />

TESIS<br />

PÉREZ VIVAR, TITO LIVIO, 2003. Dinámica población <strong>de</strong>l camarón blanco<br />

Litopenaeus vannamei (Boone, 1931) en la plataforma continental <strong>de</strong><br />

Sinaloa y Nayarit. Tesis <strong>de</strong> Maestría. U.N.A..M., Posgrado en <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l<br />

<strong>Mar</strong> y Limnología, 86 p.<br />

SERRANO HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z, DAVID ERNESTO, <strong>2004</strong>. Procesos termodinámicos<br />

en el lago volcánico <strong>de</strong> Santa <strong>Mar</strong>ía <strong>de</strong>l Oro, Nayarit. Tesis <strong>de</strong> Doctorado.<br />

U.N.A.M., Posgrado en <strong>Ciencias</strong> <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Mar</strong> y Limnología, 94 p.<br />

ZAZUETA PADILLA, HÉCTOR MANUEL, <strong>2004</strong>. Distribución <strong>de</strong> plaguicidas<br />

organofosforados en sedimentos y suelos adyacentes <strong>de</strong>l sistema lagunar<br />

Altata-Ensenada <strong>de</strong>l Pabellón, Sinaloa. Tesis <strong>de</strong> Maestría. Universidad<br />

Autónoma <strong>de</strong> Nayarit. Posgrado Interinstitucional en <strong>Ciencias</strong> Pecuarias,<br />

92 p.<br />

PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

BOLETÍN ARAGÓN, U.N.A.M.:<br />

No. 186, 16 al 31 <strong>de</strong> octubre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 75, No. 2, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 73, No. 5, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

¿CÓMO VES?:<br />

No. 72, noviembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

CIENCIA. Revista <strong>de</strong> la Aca<strong>de</strong>mia Mexicana <strong>de</strong> <strong>Ciencias</strong>:<br />

Vol. 55, No. 4, octubre-diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 10, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

CUA<strong>DE</strong>RNOS <strong>DE</strong> PLANEACIÓN UNIVERSITARIA, U.N.A.M.:<br />

5ª. Epoca, año <strong>2004</strong>.: Perfil <strong>de</strong> los alumnos egresados <strong>de</strong>l Nivel<br />

Licenciatura <strong>de</strong> la UNAM. 16º. Reporte (octubre 2002-septiembre 2003).<br />

3


ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 46, No. 6-7, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 133, No. 2, January 2005.<br />

ESTUARIES:<br />

Vol. 27, No. 5, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 463, <strong>2004</strong>. Advances in sea cucumber aquaculture and management.<br />

FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 6, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

FISHERY BULLETIN:<br />

Vol. 102, No. 4, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GACETA BIOMÉDICAS:<br />

No. 10, octubre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GACETA U.N.A.M.:<br />

No. 3766, 25 <strong>de</strong> noviembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 3767, 29 <strong>de</strong> noviembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 3768, 2 <strong>de</strong> diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 3769, 6 <strong>de</strong> diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 3770, 9 <strong>de</strong> diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GEONOTICIAS. <strong>Instituto</strong> <strong>de</strong> Geofísica, U.N.A.M.:<br />

No. 91, julio <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 6, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

HUMANIDA<strong>DE</strong>S:<br />

No. 280, 3 <strong>de</strong> noviembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 281, 17 <strong>de</strong> noviembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 282, 1 <strong>de</strong> diciembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 7, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ICES <strong>Mar</strong>ine Symposia, Vol. 221: The Second ICES Symposium on Fish<br />

Behaviour held in Bergen, Norway. 23-26 June 2003.<br />

INDUSTRIA ACUÍCOLA:<br />

Vol. 1, No. 1, octubre-noviembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

4


JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 6, November-December <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 62, No. 5, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 11, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 52, No. 3, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Vol. 52, No. 4, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 280, October 14, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

NOVEDA<strong>DE</strong>S MARINAS:<br />

No. 83, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 47, No. 7-8, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

PACIFIC SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 58, No. 4, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM. SCIENTIFIC<br />

RESULTS.:<br />

Vol. 189, <strong>2004</strong>.: The Tasmanian Gateway: Cenozoic Climatic and<br />

Oceanographic Development. Sites 1168-1172. 11 <strong>Mar</strong>ch-11 May 2000.<br />

REVISTA <strong>DE</strong> BIOLOGÍA TROPICAL:<br />

Vol. 52, Supl. 1, septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>: Proliferaciones <strong>de</strong> Algas Nocivas<br />

en el Caribe ANCA-IOCARIBE: Programa internacional <strong>de</strong> investigación<br />

cooperativa para la evaluación, predicción y mitigación <strong>de</strong> eventos algales<br />

nocivos. Sierra-Beltrán, A.P., R. Cortés-Altamirano, A. La Barbera-<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tínez, F. Gavidia Medina, Eds., <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLÓGICA:<br />

Vol. 83, No. 2, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 6, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

U2000. Crónica <strong>de</strong> la Educación Superior:<br />

No. 437, 25 <strong>de</strong> octubre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

No. 440, 15 <strong>de</strong> noviembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

5


REIMPRESOS<br />

CARBALLO, J.L., J.A. CRUZ-BARRAZA and P. GÓMEZ, <strong>2004</strong>. Taxonomy and<br />

<strong>de</strong>scription of clionaid sponges (Hadromerida, Clionaidae) from the Pacific<br />

Ocean of México. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 141: 353-<br />

397.<br />

GÓMEZ, S. Y P. MARTÍNEZ-ARBIZU, <strong>2004</strong>. First record of the genus Cyclopina<br />

(Copepoda: Cyclopoida), and fully illustrated re<strong>de</strong>scription of Cyclopina<br />

caissara from northwestern México. Anales <strong>de</strong>l <strong>Instituto</strong> <strong>de</strong> Biología,<br />

Serie Zoología, 75(1): 121-134.<br />

TROCCOLI GHINAGLIA, L., J.A. HERRERA-SILVEIRA & F.A. COMÍN, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Structural variations of phytoplankton in the coastal seas of Yucatán,<br />

México. Hydrobiologia, 519: 85-102.<br />

6


PUBLICACIONES PERIÓDICAS<br />

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 75, No. 2, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Back reef systems: important but overlooked components of tropical marine ecosystems.... 145-152(8)<br />

Craig Dahlgren; John <strong>Mar</strong>r<br />

Processes influencing recruitment inferred from distributions of coral reef fishes ................ 153-174(22)<br />

Aaron J. Adams; John P. Ebersole<br />

Fish <strong>de</strong>nsity, diversity, and size-structure within multiple back reef habitats of Key West National<br />

Wildlife Refuge....................................................................................................................... 175-204(30)<br />

David B. Eggleston; Craig P. Dahlgren; Eric G. Johnson<br />

Habitat associations of adult queen conch (Strombus gigas L.) in an unfished Florida Keys back<br />

reef: applications to essential fish habitat.............................................................................. 205-224(20)<br />

Robert A. Glazer; James A. Kidney<br />

The seascape approach to coral ecosystem mapping: an integral component of un<strong>de</strong>rstanding the<br />

habitat utilization patterns of reef fish.................................................................................... 225-237(13)<br />

Matthew S. Kendall; Ken R. Buja; John D. Christensen; Curtis R. Kruer; <strong>Mar</strong>k E. Monaco<br />

The impact of Hurricane Georges on soft-bottom, back reef communities: site- and speciesspecific<br />

effects in south Florida seagrass beds..................................................................... 239-257(19)<br />

James W. Fourqurean; Leanne M. Rutten<br />

Coral Reef Watch 2002.......................................................................................................... 259-268(10)<br />

Alan E. Strong; Gang Liu; Jill Meyer; James C. Hen<strong>de</strong>e; Desiree Sasko<br />

Transport processes linking shelf and back reef ecosystems in the Exuma Cays, Bahamas269-279(11)<br />

Ned P. Smith<br />

Wind-mediated diel variation in flow speed in a Jamaican back reef environment: effects on<br />

ecological processes.............................................................................................................. 281-293(13)<br />

Salvatore J. Genovese; Jon D. Witman<br />

Large-scale ecological impacts of <strong>de</strong>velopment on tropical islands systems: comparison of<br />

<strong>de</strong>veloped and un<strong>de</strong>veloped islands in the central Bahamas............................................... 295-320(26)<br />

Kathleen Sullivan Sealey<br />

Linking habitat protection and marine protected area programs to conserve coral reefs and<br />

associated back reef habitats................................................................................................ 321-334(14)<br />

Michelle A. Duval; Douglas N. Ra<strong>de</strong>r; Kenyon C. Lin<strong>de</strong>man<br />

BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 73, No. 5, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Wi<strong>de</strong> Use of Merthiolate May Cause Mercury Poisoning in Mexico...........................................777 - 780<br />

H. Ohno, R. Doi, Y. Kashima, et al.<br />

Whole Blood Vanadium in Taiwanese College Stu<strong>de</strong>nts ...........................................................781 - 786<br />

T.-S. Lin, C.-L. Chang, F.-M. Shen<br />

Contamination Levels of Organochlorine Pestici<strong>de</strong>s and Farmers’ Knowledge, Perception,<br />

Practices in Rural India: A Case Study.......................................................................................787 - 793<br />

M. Bhanti, G. Shukla, A. Taneja<br />

Bioci<strong>de</strong>s in Sewage Sludge: Quantitative Determination in Some Swiss Wastewater Treatment<br />

Plants..........................................................................................................................................794 - 801<br />

C. Plagellat, T. Kupper, L. F. <strong>de</strong> Alencastro, et al.<br />

Pestici<strong>de</strong> Residues in Water, Sediment, and Fish at the Sparta, IL, USA, National Guard<br />

Armory.........................................................................................................................................802 - 809<br />

D. R. Ownby, T. A. Trimble, K. A. Cole, et al.<br />

Polychlorinated Biphenyls in Sediments from Bizerte Lagoon, Tunisia .....................................810 - 817<br />

A. Derouiche, Y. G. Sanda, M. R. Driss<br />

Determination of 2-Mercaptobenzothiazole (MBT) in Tannery Wastewater by High Performance<br />

Liquid Chromatography with Amperometric Detection...............................................................818 - 824<br />

7


D. M. Rodríguez, K. Wrobel, M. G. G. Jiménez, et al.<br />

Distribution and Dissipation of Phenthoate Insectici<strong>de</strong> Following Aerial Application.................825 - 831<br />

M. A. Al-Omar, R. H. Al-Suhaily, Y. Kamel<br />

Monitoring of DDT Residues in Bovine Milk in Punjab, India .....................................................832 - 837<br />

H. K. Cheema, B. K. Kang, B. Singh<br />

Distribution of Arsenic in Chemically Variant Dipping Vat Site Soils..........................................838 - 845<br />

D. Sarkar, M. Parra-Noonan, R. Datta<br />

Distribution of Methylmercury in an Area Polluted by Mercury Containing Wastewater from an<br />

Organic Chemical Factory in China............................................................................................846 - 852<br />

A. Matsuyama, Q. Liya, A. Yasutake, et al.<br />

Level of Heavy Metals in Some Edible and Poisonous Macrofungi of Diyarbakir Region<br />

in Turkey.....................................................................................................................................853 - 861<br />

Ö. F. Yeşl, A. Yildiz, Ö. Yavuz<br />

Heavy Metal Contamination of Agricultural Soils and Stream Sediments Near a Copper Mine in<br />

Tongling, People’s Republic of China.........................................................................................862 - 869<br />

C. Wang, Z. Shen, X. Li, et al.<br />

Influence of Salinity in Hemolymph Vitellogenin of the Shore Crab Carcinus maenas, to be Used<br />

as a Biomarker of Contamination ...............................................................................................870 - 877<br />

M. L. <strong>Mar</strong>tín-Díaz, D. Sales, T. Á. Del Valls Casillas<br />

Evaluation of Daphnia similis as a Test Species in Ecotoxicological Assays.............................878 - 882<br />

S. V. Buratini, E. Bertoletti, P. A. Zagatto<br />

Algal Bioassay for Evaluating the Role of Algae in Bioremediation of Cru<strong>de</strong> Oil: I-Isolated<br />

Strains.........................................................................................................................................883 - 889<br />

H. A. Gamila and M. B. M. Ibrahim<br />

Differential Response of Four Cyanobacterial and Green Algal Species to Triazophos, Fentin<br />

Acetate, and Ethephon ...............................................................................................................890 - 897<br />

J. Ma, F. Lin, W. Qin, et al.<br />

Elevated DNA-Protein Cross-Links in Red Blood Cells of German Carp, Cyprinus carpio, from the<br />

Lower Passaic River, New Jersey, USA.....................................................................................898 - 902<br />

J. R. Kuykendall, S. J. O’Neil, E. J. Jarvi<br />

Detoxification of Distillery Effluent through Bacillus thuringiensis(MTCC 4714) Enhanced<br />

Phytoremediation Potential of Spiro<strong>de</strong>la polyrrhiza (L.) Schli<strong>de</strong>n...............................................903 - 910<br />

P. Kumar and R. Chandra<br />

Hematological Parameters of Tench ( Tinca tinca L.) after Acute and Chronic Exposure to Lethal<br />

and Sublethal Mercury Treatments.............................................................................................911 - 918<br />

S. L. Shah and A. Altindag<br />

In Vivo Alteration in Protein Metabolism by Subacute Carbofuran Intoxication in the Freshwater<br />

Teleost, Clarias batrachus..........................................................................................................919 - 926<br />

R. K. Singh and B. Sharma<br />

Impacts of Cage-Culture of Oreochromis niloticus on Organic Matter Content, Fractionation and<br />

Sorption of Phosphorus, and Alkaline Phosphatase Activity in a Hypereutrophic Lake, People’s<br />

Republic of China........................................................................................................................927 - 932<br />

M. Zhang, Y. Zhou, P. Xie, et al.<br />

Toxicity and Bioaccumulation of Chlorpyrifos in Indian Carp Catla catla(Hamilton), Labeo rohita<br />

(Hamilton), and Cirrhinus mrigala (Hamilton).............................................................................933 - 941<br />

K. S. Tilak, K. Veeraiah, D. K. Rao<br />

Disruption of Endocrine Regulation of Glycemia Levels by Cadmium and Copper in the Estuarine<br />

Crab Chasmagnathus granulata.................................................................................................942 - 946<br />

D. A. Me<strong>de</strong>sani, L. S. López Greco, E. M. Rodríguez<br />

CLIMATE DIAGNOSTICS BULLETIN:<br />

No. 10, October <strong>2004</strong>.<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 />

8


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 />

Precipitable Water T28<br />

Mean and Anomalous RH and<br />

Divergent Circulation (Pacific sector) T29<br />

Mean and Anomalous RH and<br />

Divergent Circulation (Atlantic sector) T30<br />

Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />

and Divergent Circulation (Western Pacific<br />

sector) T31<br />

Mean and Anomalous Zonal Wind<br />

and Divergent Circulation (Eastern Pacific sector)<br />

T32<br />

Appendix 1: Outsi<strong>de</strong> Contributions<br />

Tropical Drifting Buoys A1.1<br />

Thermistor Chain Data A1.2<br />

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

Pacific Wind Stress and Anomalies A1.6<br />

Satellite-Derived Surface Currents - Pacific A1.7<br />

Satellite-Derived Surface Currents -<br />

Atlantic/Indian A1.8<br />

FORECAST FORUM<br />

Discussion<br />

Canonical Correlation Analysis Forecasts<br />

Canonical Correlation Analysis SST 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 />

L<strong>DE</strong>O 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 />

Mean and Anomalous SLP E8<br />

Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E9<br />

Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E10<br />

500-mb Persistence E11<br />

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

Anomalies E12<br />

700-mb Storm Track E13<br />

Southern Hemisphere<br />

9


Troposphere<br />

Mean and Anomalous SLP E14<br />

Mean and Anomalous 500-mb heights E15<br />

Mean and Anomalous 300-mb Wind Vectors E16<br />

500-mb Persistence E17<br />

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

Anomalies E18<br />

Stratosphere<br />

Height Anomalies at selected levels S1<br />

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

50-hPa Temperature Anomalies S3<br />

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

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

Hemispheric Ozone Anomalies (Map) S6<br />

Daily vertical component of EP flux S7<br />

Ozone Hole S8<br />

Appendix 2: Additional Figures<br />

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

Northern Hemisphere Snow Cover A2.2<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY:<br />

Vol. 46, No. 6-7, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

B. G. Katz<br />

Sources of nitrate contamination and age of water in large karstic springs of Florida...............689 - 706<br />

Sarah E. Gasda, Stefan Bachu, Michael A. Celia<br />

Spatial characterization of the location of potentially leaky wells penetrating a <strong>de</strong>ep saline aquifer<br />

in a mature sedimentary basin....................................................................................................707 - 720<br />

J. Ramírez-Hernán<strong>de</strong>z, S. G. García<br />

Chemical evolution of disposal brine of the Cerro Prieto geothermal field during its transport<br />

toward surrounding soils, Mexico ...............................................................................................721 - 726<br />

Chan Hee Lee, Hyun Koo Lee,<br />

Environmental impact and geochemistry of old tailing pile from the Sanggok mine creek, Republic<br />

of Korea,......................................................................................................................................727 - 740<br />

Ali M. Subyani,<br />

Use of chlori<strong>de</strong>-mass balance and environmental isotopes for evaluation of groundwater recharge<br />

in the alluvial aquifer, Wadi Tharad, western Saudi Arabia........................................................741 - 749<br />

Michael P. Labare, Michael A. Butkus, Dawn Riegner, Nick Schommer, Jason Atkinson,<br />

Evaluation of lead movement from the abiotic to biotic at a small-arms firing range,................750 - 754<br />

W. Bal<strong>de</strong>rer, H. A. Synal, J. Deak<br />

Application of the chlorine-36 method for the <strong>de</strong>lineation of groundwater infiltration of large river<br />

systems: example of the Danube River in western Hungary (Szigetköz area) ..........................755 - 762<br />

Kangjoo Kim, Natarajan Rajmohan, Hyun Jung Kim, Gab-Soo Hwang, Min Joe Cho<br />

Assessment of groundwater chemistry in a coastal region (Kunsan, Korea) having complex<br />

contaminant sources: a stoichiometric approach........................................................................763 - 774<br />

David M. Kargbo, Jiren He<br />

A simple accelerated rock weathering method to predict acid generation kinetics....................775 - 783<br />

Yih Jeng, Ming-Juin Lin, Chih-Sung Chen, A very low frequency-electromagnetic study of the geoenvironmental<br />

hazardous areas in Taiwan,................................................................................784 - 795<br />

Soroush Modabberi, Farid Moore<br />

Environmental geochemistry of Zarshuran Au-As <strong>de</strong>posit, NW Iran..........................................796 - 807<br />

Pra<strong>de</strong>ep Raj<br />

Classification and interpretation of piezometer well hydrographs in parts of southeastern<br />

peninsular India...........................................................................................................................808 - 819<br />

Andrei Matoshko, Dmitry Bugai, Lionel Dewiere, Alexan<strong>de</strong>r Skalskyy<br />

Sedimentological study of the Chernobyl NPP site to schematise radionucli<strong>de</strong> migration<br />

conditions....................................................................................................................................820 - 830<br />

X. Zhou, L. Wan, B. Fang, W. B. Cao, S. J. Wu, F. S. Hu, W. D. Feng<br />

Soil moisture potential and water content in the unsaturated zone within the arid Ejina Oasis in<br />

Northwest China .........................................................................................................................831 - 839<br />

Mowen Xie, Tetsuro Esaki, Meifeng Cai<br />

A time-space based approach for mapping rainfall-induced shallow landsli<strong>de</strong> hazard..............840 - 850<br />

H. A. El-Nakhal<br />

Alternatives to tap water: a case study of the Gaza Strip, Palestine..........................................851 - 856<br />

Meng Yang, Ray Kostaschuk, Zhongyuan Chen<br />

Historical changes in heavy metals in the Yangtze Estuary, China............................................857 - 864<br />

10


K. M. Ibrahim, T. Akashah<br />

Lead removal from wastewater using faujasite tuff ....................................................................865 - 870<br />

R. D. Kaplay, H. S. Pato<strong>de</strong><br />

Groundwater pollution due to industrial effluent at Tuppa, New Nan<strong>de</strong>d, Maharashtra, India...871 - 882<br />

Kenneth Y. Lee, Jeong-Yub Lee, James J. Mellett, Transport of dissolved methoxynonafluorobutane<br />

through a saturated column,..........................................................................883 - 889<br />

Aysenur Ugurlu<br />

Leaching characteristics of fly ash..............................................................................................890 - 895<br />

Frank Dethlefsen, Rainer Meckenstock, Malte K. Veehmayer, Andreas Dahmke<br />

Determination of bioavailable Fe(III) content in column experiments with the reactive tracer<br />

phosphate...................................................................................................................................896 - 904<br />

T. Topal, O. Acir<br />

Quality assessment of armourstone for a rubble mound breakwater (Sinop, Turkey)...............905 - 913<br />

Omran Frihy, Deborah Lawrence<br />

Evolution of the mo<strong>de</strong>rn Nile <strong>de</strong>lta promontories: <strong>de</strong>velopment of accretional features during<br />

shoreline retreat..........................................................................................................................914 - 931<br />

Oya Algan, Nuray Balkıs, M. Namık Çağatay, Erol Sari<br />

The sources of metal contents in the shelf sediments from the <strong>Mar</strong>mara Sea, Turkey.............932 - 950<br />

Luk Peeters, Bruno Haerens, Jan Van <strong>de</strong>r Sluys, Alain Dassargues<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling seasonal variations in nitrate and sulphate concentrations in a vulnerable alluvial<br />

aquifer,........................................................................................................................................951 - 961<br />

Jae Gon Kim, Chul-Min Chon, Jin-Soo Lee, Effect of structure and texture on infiltration flow<br />

pattern during flood irrigation......................................................................................................962 - 969<br />

L. F. Khilyuk, G. V. Chilingar<br />

Global warming and long-term climatic changes: a progress report..........................................970 - 979<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION:<br />

Vol. 133, No. 2, January 2005.<br />

Environmental applications for biosurfactants..............................................................................183-198<br />

Catherine N. Mulligan<br />

Establishing principal soil quality parameters influencing earthworms in urban soils using<br />

bioassays......................................................................................................................................199-211<br />

Peter K. Hankard, Jacob G. Bundy, David J. Spurgeon, Jason M. Weeks, Julian Wright, Claire<br />

Weinberg and Claus Svendsen<br />

The use of the barbell cluster ANOVA <strong>de</strong>sign for the assessment of environmental pollution: a<br />

case study, Wigierski National Park, NE Poland..........................................................................213-223<br />

Zdzisław M. Migaszewski, Agnieszka Gałuszka and Piotr Pasławski<br />

Recycling EDTA solutions used to remediate metal-polluted soils...............................................225-231<br />

Q.R. Zeng, S. Sauvé, H.E. Allen and W.H. Hen<strong>de</strong>rshot<br />

Zn, Cd and Pb accumulation and arbuscular mycorrhizal colonisation of pennycress Thlaspi<br />

praecox Wulf. (Brassicaceae) from the vicinity of a lead mine and smelter in Slovenia..............233-242<br />

Katarina Vogel-Mikuš, Damjana Drobne and <strong>Mar</strong>jana Regvar<br />

Effects of golf course construction and operation on water chemistry of headwater streams on the<br />

Precambrian Shield.......................................................................................................................243-253<br />

Jennifer G. Winter and Peter J. Dillon<br />

Priority volatile organic compounds in surface waters of the southern North Sea •....................255-264<br />

Tom Huybrechts, Jo Dewulf and Herman Van Langenhove<br />

Influence of temperature and salinity on heavy metal uptake by submersed plants....................265-274<br />

Å. Fritioff, L. Kautsky and M. Greger<br />

Effects of some environmental parameters on catalase activity measured in the mussel (Mytilus<br />

galloprovincialis) exposed to lindane •.........................................................................................275-281<br />

Asma Khessiba, Michèle Roméo and Patricia Aïssa<br />

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons storage by Fusarium solani in intracellular lipid vesicles.......283-291<br />

Anthony Verdin, Anissa Lounès-Hadj Sahraoui, Ray Newsam, Gary Robinson and Roger Durand<br />

Pinus nigra and Pinus pinaster needles as passive samplers of polycyclic aromatic<br />

hydrocarbons •.............................................................................................................................293-301<br />

11


<strong>Mar</strong>ia Teresa Piccardo, Mauro Pala, Bruna Bonaccurso, Anna Stella, Anna Redaelli, Gau<strong>de</strong>nzio<br />

Paola and Fe<strong>de</strong>rico Valerio<br />

UV-absorbing compounds in subarctic herbarium bryophytes •..................................................303-314<br />

S. Huttunen, N.M. Lappalainen and J. Turunen<br />

Environmental specimen bank samples of Pleurozium schreberi and Hylocomium splen<strong>de</strong>ns as<br />

indicators of the radiation environment at the surface •...............................................................315-326<br />

S. Huttunen, T. Taipale, N.M. Lappalainen, E. Kubin, K. Lakkala and J. Kaurola<br />

Uptake of radionucli<strong>de</strong>s by vegetation at a High Arctic location •................................................327-332<br />

M. Dowdall, J.P. Gwynn, C. Moran, J. O'Dea, C. Davids and B. Lind<br />

The significance of water ionic strength on aluminium toxicity in brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) •333-342<br />

Nina E.W. Alstad, Birgitte M. Kjelsberg, L. Asbjørn Vøllestad, Espen Ly<strong>de</strong>rsen and Antonio B.S.<br />

Poléo<br />

Age <strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nce of the accumulation of organochlorine pollutants in brown trout (Salmo trutta)<br />

from a remote high mountain lake (Redó, Pyrenees) •................................................................343-350<br />

I. Vives, J.O. Grimalt, M. Ventura, J. Catalan and B.O. Rosseland<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the transport of suspen<strong>de</strong>d particulate matter by the Rhone River plume (France).<br />

Implications for pollutant dispersion •..........................................................................................351-364<br />

R. Periáñez<br />

A comparative study of cadmium phytoextraction by accumulator and weed species •.............365-371<br />

Moyukh Ghosh and S.P. Singh<br />

Heavy metal accumulation, heat shock protein expression and cytogenetic changes in Tetrix<br />

tenuicornis (L.) (Tetrigidae, Orthoptera) from polluted areas •....................................................373-381<br />

E. Warchałowska-Śliwa, M. Niklińska, A. Görlich, P. Michailova and E. Pyza<br />

Study of PAH emission from the solid fuels combustion in resi<strong>de</strong>ntial furnaces •.......................383-387<br />

Sergey V. Kakareka, Tamara I. Kukharchyk and Valery S. Khomich<br />

ESTUARIES:<br />

Vol. 27, No. 5, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

MARTIN ZIMMER, S1EVEN c. PENNINGS, l'RACY L. BUCK, AND THOMAS H. CAREFOOT.<br />

Salt <strong>Mar</strong>sh Litter and Detritivores: A Closer LookAt Redundancy.......................................................753<br />

B. OLESEN, N. MAREA, C. M. DUARTE, R. S. SAVELA, AND M. D. FORTES. Recolonization<br />

Dynamics in a Mixed Seagrass Meadow: The Role ofClonal Versus Sexual Processes....................770<br />

P. SHERIDAN<br />

Comparison ofRestored and Natural Seagrass Beds Near Corpus Christi, Texas.............................781<br />

ROGER I. E. NEWELL AND EVAMARIA W. KOCH.<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>ling Seagrass Density and Distribution in Response to Changes to Turbidity<br />

Stemming from Bivalve Filtration and Seagrass Sediment Stabilization ...........................................793<br />

MARTIN T. O'CONNELL, ROBERT C. CASHNER, AND CHRISTOPHER S. SCHIEBLE.<br />

Fish Assemblage Stability Over Fifty Years in the Lake Pontchartrain Estuary; Comparisons<br />

Among Habitats Using Canonical Correspon<strong>de</strong>nce Analysis...........................................................807<br />

JoAo P. SALGADO, HENRIQUE N. CABRAL, MARIA JosÉ COSTA, AND LINDA <strong>DE</strong>EGAN.<br />

Nekton Use of Salt <strong>Mar</strong>sh Creeks in the UpperTejo Estuary..............................................................818<br />

SARAH B. GRISCOM AND NICHOLAS S. FISHER.<br />

Bioavailability ofSediment-bound Metals to <strong>Mar</strong>ine Bivalve Molluscs: An Overview...........................826<br />

V. G. KOUITI'ONSKY, T. GUYON<strong>DE</strong>T, A. ST-HILAIRE, S. C. COURTENAY, AND A. BOHGEN.<br />

Water Renewal Estimates for Aquaculture Developments in the Richibucto Estuary, Canada..........839<br />

J. L. DILORENZO, R. 1. FILA<strong>DE</strong>LFO, C. R. SURAK, H. S. LITWACK, V. K. GUNAWARDANA,<br />

AND T. O. NAJARIAN.<br />

Tidal Variability in the Water Quality ofan Urbanized Estuary.............................................................851<br />

H. Q. CHENG, R. KaSTASCHUK, AND Z. SHI.<br />

Tidal Currents, Bed Sediments, and Bedforms at the South Branch and the South Channel ofthe<br />

Changjiang (Yangtze) Estuary, China: Implications for the Ripple-dune Transition............................861<br />

HELENA L. FILIPSSON AND KJELL NORDBERG.<br />

Climate Variations, an Overlooked Factor Influencing the Recent <strong>Mar</strong>ine Environment. An<br />

Example from Gullmar Fjord. Swe<strong>de</strong>n, nIustrated by Benthic Foraminifera and Hydrographic Data.867<br />

TROMAS P. CHAPIN, JANE M. CAFFREY, HANS W. JANNASCH, LUKE 1. COLETIl, JOHN C.<br />

HAsKINS, AND KENNE'IH S. JOHNSON.<br />

12


Nitrate Sources and Sinks in Elkhorn Slough, California: Results from Long-term Continuous in<br />

situ Nitrate Analyzers...........................................................................................................................882<br />

FAO FISHERIES TECHNICAL PAPER:<br />

No. 463, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Advances in sea cucumber aquaculture and management.<br />

FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 6, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Influence of mesoscale physical forcing on trophic pathways and fish larvae retention in the<br />

central Cantabrian Sea........................................................................................................................351<br />

R. Gonza´lez-Quiro´s, A. Pascual, D. Gomis and R. Anado´n<br />

An individual-based mo<strong>de</strong>l of the early life history of mackerel (Scomber scombrus) in the eastern<br />

North Atlantic, simulating transport, growth and mortality...................................................................365<br />

J. Bartsch and S. H. Coombs<br />

Simulation of mackerel (Scomber scombrus) recruitment with an individual-based mo<strong>de</strong>l and<br />

comparison with field data...................................................................................................................380<br />

J. Bartsch, D. Reid and S. H. Coombs<br />

The vertical distribution of juvenile salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) and associated fishes in the<br />

Columbia River plume..........................................................................................................................392<br />

R. L. Emmett, R. D. Bro<strong>de</strong>ur and P. M. Orton<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the advection and diffusion of eggs and larvae of Greenland halibut (Reinhardtius<br />

hippoglossoi<strong>de</strong>s) in the north-east Arctic.............................................................................................403<br />

B. A ° dlandsvik, A. C. Gun<strong>de</strong>rsen, K. H. Nedreaas, A. Stene and O. T. Albert<br />

FISHERY BULLETIN:<br />

Vol. 102, No. 4, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Calambokidis, John, Gretchen H. Steiger, David K. Ellifrit, Barry L. Troutman, and C. Edward<br />

Bowlby<br />

Distribution and abundance of humpback whales ( Megaptera novaeangliae) and other marine<br />

mammals off the northern Washington coast......................................................................................563<br />

Danilewicz, Daniel, Juan A. Claver, Alejo L. Pérez Carrera, Eduardo R. Secchi, and Nelson F.<br />

Fontoura<br />

Reproductive biology of male franciscanas (Pontoporia blainvillei ) (Mammalia: Cetacea) from Rio<br />

Gran<strong>de</strong> do Sul, southern Brazil............................................................................................................581<br />

Fischer, Andrew J., M. Scott Baker Jr., and Charles A. Wilson<br />

Red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus) <strong>de</strong>mographic structure in the northern Gulf of Mexico<br />

based on spatial patterns in growth rates and morphometrics............................................................593<br />

FitzGerald, Jennifer L., Simon R. Thorrold, Kevin M. Bailey, Annette L. Brown, and Kenneth P.<br />

Severin<br />

Elemental signatures in otoliths of larval walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) from the<br />

northeast Pacific Ocean.......................................................................................................................604<br />

Gaughan, Daniel J., Timothy I. Leary, Ronald W. Mitchell, and Ian W. Wright<br />

A sud<strong>de</strong>n collapse in distribution of Pacific sardine (Sardinops sagax) off southwestern Australia<br />

enables an objective re-assessment of biomass estimates................................................................617<br />

Griffiths, Shane P., Ron J. West , Andy R. Davis, and Ken G. Russell<br />

Fish recolonization in temperate Australian rockpools: a quantitative experimental approach...........634<br />

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY:<br />

Vol. 13, No. 6, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

A mélange of curves further dialogue about speciesarea relationships.............................................479<br />

Samuel M. Scheiner<br />

The carrying capacity of ecosystems...................................................................................................485<br />

Pablo <strong>de</strong>l Monte-Luna, Barry W. Brook, Manuel J. Zetina-Rejón, Victor H. Cruz-Escalona<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the distribution and interaction of introduced ro<strong>de</strong>nts on New Zealand offshore islands....497<br />

James C. Russell, Mick N. Clout<br />

13


Extinction and en<strong>de</strong>mism in the New Zealand avifauna......................................................................509<br />

Richard P. Duncan, Tim M. Blackburn<br />

An exten<strong>de</strong>d probabilistic approach of plant vital attributes: an application to European pollen<br />

records at 0 and 6 ka...........................................................................................................................519<br />

E. S. Gritti, S. Gachet, M. T. Sykes, J. Guiot<br />

Rarity, commonness, and patterns of species richness: the mammals of Mexico..............................535<br />

Luis-Bernardo Vázquez, Kevin J. Gaston<br />

Patterns of diversity, altitudinal range and body size among freshwater fishes in the Yangtze River<br />

basin, China.........................................................................................................................................543<br />

Cuizhang Fu, Jihua Wu, Xinyi Wang, Guangchun Lei, Jiakuan Chen<br />

The impact of global climate change on tropical forest biodiversity in Amazonia ...............................553<br />

Lera Miles, Alan Grainger, Oliver Phillips<br />

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 61, No. 7, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

ICES <strong>Mar</strong>ine Symposia, Vol. 221: The Second ICES Symposium on Fish Behaviour held in<br />

Bergen, Norway. 23-26 June 2003.<br />

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 6, November-December <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

REVIEWS AND ANALYSES:<br />

Murray R. Hart, Bert F. Quin, and M. Long Nguyen<br />

Phosphorus Runoff from Agricultural Land and Direct Fertilizer Effects: A Review.................1954-1972<br />

Warwick J. Dougherty, Nigel K. Fleming, Jim W. Cox, and David J. Chittleborough<br />

Phosphorus Transfer in Surface Runoff from Intensive Pasture Systems at Various Scales: A<br />

Review......................................................................................................................................1973-1988<br />

ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES:<br />

Laurence Day<br />

Septic Systems as Potential Pollution Sources in the Cannonsville Reservoir Watershed, New<br />

York...........................................................................................................................................1989-1996<br />

Ernest F. Bazen and Ronald A. Fleming<br />

An Economic Evaluation of Livestock Odor Regulation Distances...........................................1997-2006<br />

TECHNICAL REPORTS:<br />

Atmospheric Pollutants and Trace Gases:<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>k E. Fenn and <strong>Mar</strong>k A. Poth<br />

Monitoring Nitrogen Deposition in Throughfall Using Ion Exchange Resin Columns: A Field Test in<br />

the San Bernardino Mountains.................................................................................................2007-2014<br />

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

Jonathan W. C. Wong, Min Fang, Zhenyong Zhao, and Baoshan Xing<br />

Effect of Surfactants on Solubilization and Degradation of Phenanthrene un<strong>de</strong>r Thermophilic<br />

Conditions.................................................................................................................................2015-2025<br />

A. G. M. Kroon and C. G. van Ginkel<br />

Biological Reduction of Chlorate in a Gas-Lift Reactor Using Hydrogen as an Energy Source2026-2029<br />

Ecosystem Restoration:<br />

Theresa M. Wynn, Saied Mostaghimi, James A. Burger, Adrian A. Harpold, <strong>Mar</strong>c B. Hen<strong>de</strong>rson,<br />

and Leigh-Anne Henry<br />

Variation in Root Density along Stream Banks.........................................................................2030-2039<br />

Alan Steinman, Rick Rediske, and K. Ramesh Reddy<br />

The Reduction of Internal Phosphorus Loading Using Alum in Spring Lake, Michigan...........2040-2048<br />

Heavy Metals in the Environment:<br />

Scott Fendorf, Matthew J. La Force, and Guangchao Li<br />

Temporal Changes in Soil Partitioning and Bioaccessibility of Arsenic, Chromium, and<br />

Lead..........................................................................................................................................2049-2055<br />

Grzegorz Siebielec, Gregory W. McCarty, Tomasz I. Stuczynski, and James B. Reeves, III<br />

Near- and Mid-Infrared Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy for Measuring Soil Metal<br />

Content......................................................................................................................................2056-2069<br />

14


A. J. Bednar, D. B. Gent, J. R. Gilmore, T. C. Sturgis, and S. L. Larson<br />

Mechanisms of Thorium Migration in a Semiarid Soil...............................................................2070-2077<br />

Thomas C. Granato, Richard I. Pietz, George J. Knafl, Carl R. Carlson, Jr., Prakasam Tata, and<br />

Cecil Lue-Hing<br />

Trace Element Concentrations in Soil, Corn Leaves, and Grain after Cessation of Biosolids<br />

Applications...............................................................................................................................2078-2089<br />

Urszula Kukier, Carinne A. Peters, Rufus L. Chaney, J. Scott Angle, and Richard J. Roseberg<br />

The Effect of pH on Metal Accumulation in Two Alyssum Species..........................................2090-2102<br />

M. L. Andra<strong>de</strong>, E. F. Covelo, F. A. Vega, and P. <strong>Mar</strong>cet<br />

Effect of the Prestige Oil Spill on Salt <strong>Mar</strong>sh Soils on the Coast of Galicia (Northwestern<br />

Spain)........................................................................................................................................2103-2110<br />

Landscape and Watershed Processes:<br />

R. W. McDowell and R. J. Wilcock<br />

Particulate Phosphorus Transport within Stream Flow of an Agricultural Catchment..............2111-2121<br />

Organic Compounds in the Environment:<br />

Thomas L. Potter, Clint C. Truman, David D. Bosch, and Craig Bednarz<br />

Fluometuron and Pendimethalin Runoff from Strip and Conventionally Tilled Cotton in the<br />

Southern Atlantic Coastal Plain................................................................................................2122-2131<br />

Christopher H. <strong>Mar</strong>vin, Gary G. Leppard, M. <strong>Mar</strong>cia West, Gary A. Stern, Adrienne R. Bo<strong>de</strong>n, and<br />

Brian E. McCarry<br />

Refined Tunable Methodology for Characterization of Contaminant–Particle Relationships in<br />

Surface Water...........................................................................................................................2132-2140<br />

R. W. Malone, M. J. Shipitalo, R. D. Wauchope, and H. Sumner<br />

Residual and Contact Herbici<strong>de</strong> Transport through Field Lysimeters via Preferential Flow....2141-2148<br />

Mingxin Guo, Wei Zheng, Sharon K. Papiernik, and Scott R. Yates<br />

Distribution and Leaching of Methyl Iodi<strong>de</strong> in Soil following Emulated Shank and Drip<br />

Application.................................................................................................................................2149-2156<br />

Wei Zheng, Scott R. Yates, Sharon K. Papiernik, and Mingxin Guo<br />

Effect of Combined Application of Methyl Isothiocyanate and Chloropicrin on Their<br />

Transformation..........................................................................................................................2157-2164<br />

M. L. Adam, S. D. Comfort, M. C. Morley, and D. D. Snow<br />

Remediating RDX-Contaminated Ground Water with Permanganate: Laboratory Investigations for<br />

the Pantex Perched Aquifer......................................................................................................2165-2173<br />

Surface Water Quality:<br />

Fen-Li Zheng, Chi-Hua Huang, and L. Darrell Norton<br />

Effects of Near-Surface Hydraulic Gradients on Nitrate and Phosphorus Losses in Surface<br />

Runoff........................................................................................................................................2174-2182<br />

Paul B. DeLaune, Philip A. Moore, Jr., Dennis K. Carman, Andrew N. Sharpley, Brian E. Haggard,<br />

and Tommy C. Daniel<br />

Development of a Phosphorus In<strong>de</strong>x for Pastures Fertilized with Poultry Litter—Factors Affecting<br />

Phosphorus Runoff...................................................................................................................2183-2191<br />

P. B. DeLaune, P. A. Moore, Jr., D. K. Carman, A. N. Sharpley, B. E. Haggard, and T. C. Daniel<br />

Evaluation of the Phosphorus Source Component in the Phosphorus In<strong>de</strong>x for Pastures......2192-2200<br />

P. D. Schroe<strong>de</strong>r, D. E. Radcliffe, and M. L. Cabrera<br />

Rainfall Timing and Poultry Litter Application Rate Effects on Phosphorus Loss in Surface<br />

Runoff........................................................................................................................................2201-2209<br />

Douglas R. Smith, P. A. Moore, Jr., D. M. Miles, B. E. Haggard, and T. C. Daniel<br />

Decreasing Phosphorus Runoff Losses from Land-Applied Poultry Litter with Dietary Modifications<br />

and Alum Addition.....................................................................................................................2210-2216<br />

Zewei Miao, <strong>Mar</strong>co Trevisan, Ettore Capri, Laura Padovani, and Attilio A. M. Del Re<br />

Uncertainty Assessment of the Mo<strong>de</strong>l RICEWQ in Northern Italy............................................2217-2228<br />

R. D. Harmel, H. A. Torbert, B. E. Haggard, R. Haney, and M. Dozier<br />

Water Quality Impacts of Converting to a Poultry Litter Fertilization Strategy..........................2229-2242<br />

Kenneth W. Tate, <strong>Mar</strong>ia Das Gracas C. Pereira, and Edward R. Atwill<br />

Efficacy of Vegetated Buffer Strips for Retaining Cryptosporidium parvum.............................2243-2251<br />

A. Bedard-Haughn, K. W. Tate, and C. van Kessel<br />

15


Using Nitrogen-15 to Quantify Vegetative Buffer Effectiveness for Sequestering Nitrogen<br />

in Runoff....................................................................................................................................2252-2262<br />

Vadose Zone Processes and Chemical Transport:<br />

Birgitte Gjettermann, Hans Christian B. Hansen, Henry E. Jensen, and Søren Hansen<br />

Transport of Phosphate through Artificial Macropores during Film and Pulse Flow.................2263-2271<br />

G. Shaw, P. Wa<strong>de</strong>y, and J. N. B. Bell<br />

Radionucli<strong>de</strong> Transport Above a Near-Surface Water Table: IV. Soil Migration and Crop Uptake of<br />

Chlorine-36 and Technetium-99, 1990 to 1993........................................................................2272-2280<br />

Garey A. Fox, Rob Malone, George J. Sabbagh, and Ken Rojas<br />

Interrelationship of Macropores and Subsurface Drainage for Conservative Tracer and Pestici<strong>de</strong><br />

Transport...................................................................................................................................2281-2289<br />

Waste Management:<br />

A. Daudén, D. Quílez, and M. V. Vera<br />

Pig Slurry Application and Irrigation Effects on Nitrate Leaching in Mediterranean Soil<br />

Lysimeters.................................................................................................................................2290-2295<br />

M. Kalbasi and K. G. Karthikeyan<br />

Phosphorus Dynamics in Soils Receiving Chemically Treated Dairy Manure .........................2296-2305<br />

R. O. Maguire, J. T. Sims, W. W. Saylor, B. L. Turner, R. Angel, and T. J. Applegate<br />

Influence of Phytase Addition to Poultry Diets on Phosphorus Forms and Solubility in Litters and<br />

Amen<strong>de</strong>d Soils..........................................................................................................................2306-2316<br />

William H. Albright, Craig H. Benson, Glendon W. Gee, Arthur C. Roesler, Tarek Abichou,<br />

Preecha Apiwantragoon, Bradley F. Lyles, and Steven A. Rock<br />

Field Water Balance of Landfill Final Covers............................................................................2317-2332<br />

Benoît Gabrielle, Jeanne Da-Silveira, Sabine Houot, and Cédric Francou<br />

Simulating Urban Waste Compost Effects on Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics Using a Biochemical<br />

In<strong>de</strong>x .........................................................................................................................................2333-2342<br />

Qiquan Wang and Ann T. Lemley<br />

Kinetic Effect of Humic Acid on Alachlor Degradation by Anodic Fenton Treatment...............2343-2352<br />

Wetlands and Aquatic Processes:<br />

Jing Song, Yongming Luo, Qiguo Zhao, and Peter Christie<br />

Microcosm Studies on Anaerobic Phosphate Flux and Mineralization of Lake Sediment Organic<br />

Carbon ......................................................................................................................................2353-2356<br />

R. Corstanje and K. R. Reddy<br />

Response of Biogeochemical Indicators to a Drawdown and Subsequent Reflood.................2357-2366<br />

P. G. Hunt, T. A. Matheny, and K. C. Stone<br />

Denitrification in a Coastal Plain Riparian Zone Contiguous to a Heavily Loa<strong>de</strong>d Swine<br />

Wastewater Spray Field............................................................................................................2367-2374<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATIONS:<br />

Carrie C. Wafer, J. Barrett Richards, and Deanna L. Osmond<br />

Construction of Platinum-Tipped Redox Probes for Determining Soil Redox Potential...........2375-2379<br />

April B. Leytem, Benjamin L. Turner, and P. A. Thacker<br />

Phosphorus Composition of Manure from Swine Fed Low-Phytate Grains: Evi<strong>de</strong>nce for Hydrolysis<br />

in the Animal.............................................................................................................................2380-2383<br />

BOOK REVIEWS:<br />

James K. McCarron<br />

Invasion Biology: Critique of a Pseudoscience........................................................................2384-2385.<br />

Tracy M. Turner<br />

The Measurement of Environmental and Resource Values: Theory and Methods..........................2385.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>shall D. Sundberg<br />

Flowering Plant Embryology.............................................................................................................2386.<br />

M.S. Coyne<br />

Soil Mineral-Organic Matter-Microorganism Interactions and Ecosystem Health: Ecological<br />

Significance of the Interactions among Clay Minerals, Organic Matter and Soil Biota ....................2386.<br />

T.L. <strong>Mar</strong>sh<br />

Battling Resistance to Antibiotics and Pestici<strong>de</strong>s: An Economic Approach.....................................2387.<br />

Robert L. Glicksman<br />

16


Environmental Law and Policy..........................................................................................................2387.<br />

William S. Curran<br />

Weed-Crop Competition—A Review, Second Edition.............................................................2387-2388.<br />

Larry E. Erickson<br />

Chemistry in Alternative Reaction Media..........................................................................................2388.<br />

James Samman<br />

Restoration of Inland Valley Ecosystems in West Africa.........................................................2388-2389.<br />

W. D. Shuster<br />

Handbook of Ecological Restoration, Volume 2: Restoration in Practice.........................................2389.<br />

J.M. Kimble<br />

The Global Carbon Cycle: Integrating Humans, Climate, and the Natural World...................2389-2390.<br />

Wayne A. Geyer<br />

North American Temperate Deciduous Forest Responses to Changing Precipitation Regimes.....2390.<br />

R. Kocyigit<br />

Soil Degradation in the United States: Extent, Severity, and Trends...............................................2390.<br />

Ashok Pandit<br />

Coastal Aquifer Management: Monitoring, Mo<strong>de</strong>ling, and Case Studies................................2390-2391.<br />

JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 62, No. 5, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

An experimental study of a mesoscale vortex colliding with topography of varying geometry in a<br />

rotating fluid..........................................................................................................................................611<br />

Claudia Adduce; Claudia Cene<strong>de</strong>se<br />

Linear instabilities of a two-layer geostrophic surface front near a wall..............................................639<br />

Angelique C. Haza; Nathan Paldor; Arthur J. <strong>Mar</strong>iano<br />

Oxygen variability in the near-surface waters of the northern North Atlantic: Observations and a<br />

mo<strong>de</strong>l...................................................................................................................................................663<br />

Peter Lazarevich; Tom Rossby; Craig Mcneil<br />

Regimes of low-frequency variability in a three-layer quasi-geostrophic ocean mo<strong>de</strong>l.......................684<br />

Janine J. Nauw; Henk A. Dijkstra; Eric Simonnet<br />

Observations of wind influence on exchange flows in a strait of the Chilean Inland Sea ...................720<br />

Arnoldo Valle-Levinson; José Luis Blanco<br />

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 26, No. 11, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>ina Manca, Antonio Carnovale, and Paolo Alemani<br />

Exotopic protrusions and ellobiopsid infection in zooplanktonic copepods of a large, <strong>de</strong>ep<br />

subalpine lake, Lago Maggiore, in northern Italy......................................................................1257-1263<br />

Frank J. Jochem, <strong>Mar</strong>k J. McCarthy, and Wayne S. Gardner<br />

Microbial ammonium cycling in the Mississippi River plume during the drought spring of<br />

2000..........................................................................................................................................1265-1275<br />

Jean-Christophe Joyeux, Bruno Bicalho Pereira, and Hilton Gomes <strong>de</strong> Almeida<br />

The flood-ti<strong>de</strong> ichthyoplanktonic community at the entrance into a Brazilian tropical estuary.1277-1287<br />

Célia Joaquim-Justo, Cédric Detry, Fabrice Caufman, and Jean-Pierre Thomé<br />

Feeding of planktonic rotifers on ciliates: a method using natural ciliate assemblages labelled with<br />

fluorescent microparticles.........................................................................................................1289-1299<br />

José Alejandro Isla, <strong>Mar</strong>cos Llope, and Ricardo Anadón<br />

Size-fractionated mesozooplankton biomass, metabolism and grazing along a 50°N–30°S transect<br />

of the Atlantic Ocean.................................................................................................................1301-1313<br />

Mufti P. Patria and Konrad Wiese<br />

Swimming in formation in krill (Euphausiacea), a hypothesis: dynamics of the flow field, properties<br />

of antennular sensor systems and a sensory–motor link .........................................................1315-1325<br />

Andréa Bialetzki, Keshiyu Nakatani, Paulo Van<strong>de</strong>rlei Sanches, and Gilmar Baumgartner<br />

Eggs and larvae of the ‘curvina’ Plagioscion squamosissimus (Heckel, 1840) (Osteichthyes,<br />

Sciaenidae) in the Baía River, Mato Grosso do Sul State, Brazil.............................................1327-1336<br />

T. J. Smyth, K. L. Pemberton, J. Aiken, and R. J. Gei<strong>de</strong>r<br />

17


A methodology to <strong>de</strong>termine primary production and phytoplankton photosynthetic parameters<br />

from Fast Repetition Rate Fluorometry.....................................................................................1337-1350<br />

Christof Engelhardt, Angela Krüger, Alexan<strong>de</strong>r Sukhodolov, and Andreas Nicklisch<br />

A study of phytoplankton spatial distributions, flow structure and characteristics of mixing in a river<br />

reach with groynes....................................................................................................................1351-1366<br />

ERRATA:<br />

Ruth Böttger-Schnack<br />

Taxonomy of Oncaeidae (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida) from the Red Sea. VI. Morphology and<br />

zoogeography of Oncaea bispinosa sp. nov., a sistertaxon of O. zernovi Shmeleva.......................1367<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 52, No. 3, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the impact of the Scheldt and Rhine/Meuse plumes on the salinity distribution in Belgian<br />

waters (southern North Sea).........................................................................................................149-163<br />

Geneviève Lacroix, Kevin Ruddick, José Ozer and Christiane Lancelot<br />

19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin may not be the appropriate pigment to trace occurrence and fate of<br />

Phaeocystis: the case of P. globosa in Belgian coastal waters....................................................165-177<br />

E. Antajan, M. -J. Chrétiennot-Dinet, C. Leblanc, M. -H. Daro and C. Lancelot<br />

Advective transport and <strong>de</strong>composition of chain-forming planktonic diatoms in permeable<br />

sediments......................................................................................................................................179-197<br />

Sandra Ehrenhauss and <strong>Mar</strong>kus Huettel<br />

Macrofaunal reworking activities and hydrocarbon redistribution in an experimental sediment<br />

system...........................................................................................................................................199-210<br />

S. Cara<strong>de</strong>c, V. Grossi, S. Hulth, G. Stora and F. Gilbert<br />

Horizontal zonation patterns and feeding structure of marine nemato<strong>de</strong> assemblages on a<br />

macrotidal, ultra-dissipative sandy beach (De Panne, Belgium) •...............................................211-226<br />

Tom Gheskiere, Eveline Hoste, Jan Vanaverbeke, Magda Vincx and Steven Degraer<br />

Mo<strong>de</strong>lling the distribution of shorebirds in estuarine areas using generalised additive mo<strong>de</strong>ls •227-240<br />

José P. Grana<strong>de</strong>iro, Joana Andra<strong>de</strong> and Jorge M. Palmeirim<br />

JOURNAL OF SEA RESEARCH:<br />

Vol. 52, No. 4, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Benthic contribution to pelagic microalgal communities in two semi-enclosed, European-type<br />

littoral ecosystems (<strong>Mar</strong>ennes-Oléron Bay and Aiguillon Bay, France) •....................................241-258<br />

Jean-<strong>Mar</strong>c Guarini, Philippe Gros, Gérard Blanchard, Pierre Richard and Alain Fillon<br />

Allelopathic interactions between the macroalga Ulva pertusa and eight microalgal species •..259-268<br />

Chunrong Nan, Haizhi Zhang and Guangqiang Zhao<br />

Existence of a <strong>de</strong>ep subtidal stock of drifting Ulva in relation to intertidal algal mat<br />

<strong>de</strong>velopments •............................................................................................................................269-280<br />

M. Merceron and P. Morand<br />

Changes in structural and functional diversity of nemato<strong>de</strong> communities during a spring<br />

phytoplankton bloom in the southern North Sea •.......................................................................281-292<br />

Jan Vanaverbeke, Maaike Steyaert, Karline Soetaert, Véronique Rousseau, Dirk Van Gansbeke,<br />

Jean-Yves Parent and Magda Vincx<br />

Population dynamics of the venerid bivalve Callista chione (L.) in a coastal area of the eastern<br />

Mediterranean •............................................................................................................................293-305<br />

Angelina Metaxatos<br />

Exploring interactions among intertidal macrozoobenthos of the Dutch Wad<strong>de</strong>n Sea using<br />

population growth mo<strong>de</strong>ls •..........................................................................................................307-319<br />

I. D. Williams, J. van <strong>de</strong>r Meer, R. Dekker, J. J. Beukema and S. P. Holmes<br />

Meadow fragmentation and reproductive output of the SE Asian seagrass Enhalus acoroi<strong>de</strong>s •<br />

SHORT COMMUNICATION<br />

Pages 321-328<br />

Jan E. Vermaat, Rene N. Rollon, Cristina Day A. Lacap, Claire Billot, Filipe Alberto, Hildie M.E.<br />

Nacorda, Frank Wiegman and Jorge Terrados<br />

18


MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES:<br />

Vol. 280, October 14, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Thornton DCO<br />

Formation of transparent exopolymeric particles (TEP) from macroalgal <strong>de</strong>tritus .............................1-12<br />

Kröncke I, Stoeck T, Wieking G, Palojärvi A<br />

Relationship between structural and functional aspects of microbial and macrofaunal communities<br />

in different areas of the North Sea....................................................................................................13-31<br />

Herlory O, Guarini JM, Richard P, Blanchard GF<br />

Microstructure of microphytobenthic biofilm and its spatio-temporal dynamics in an intertidal<br />

mudflat (Aiguillon Bay, France).........................................................................................................33-44<br />

Cerco CF, Noel MR<br />

Process-based primary production mo<strong>de</strong>ling in Chesapeake Bay...................................................45-58<br />

Stabenau ER, Zepp RG, Bartels E, Zika RG<br />

Role of the seagrass Thalassia testudinum as a source of chromophoric dissolved organic matter<br />

in coastal south Florida.....................................................................................................................59-72<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tí R, Uriz MJ, Turon X<br />

Seasonal and spatial variation of species toxicity in Mediterranean seaweed communities:<br />

correlation to biotic and abiotic factors .............................................................................................73-85<br />

Hughes AR, Bando KJ, Rodriguez LF, Williams SL<br />

Relative effects of grazers and nutrients on seagrasses: a meta-analysis approach......................87-99<br />

Bricelj VM, MacQuarrie SP, Smolowitz R<br />

Concentration-<strong>de</strong>pen<strong>de</strong>nt effects of toxic and non-toxic isolates of the brown ti<strong>de</strong> alga<br />

Aureococcus anophagefferens on growth of juvenile bivalves.....................................................101-114<br />

Roberson LM, Coyer JA<br />

Variation in bla<strong>de</strong> morphology of the kelp Eisenia arborea: incipient speciation due to local water<br />

motion?.........................................................................................................................................115-128<br />

Ohtsuka S, Hora M, Suzaki T, Arikawa M, Omura G, Yamada K<br />

Morphology and host-specificity of the apostome ciliate Vampyrophrya pelagica infecting pelagic<br />

copepods in the Seto Inland Sea, Japan......................................................................................129-142<br />

Buckley BA, Szmant AM<br />

RNA/dnA ratios as indicators of metabolic activity in four species of Caribbean reef-building<br />

corals.............................................................................................................................................143-149<br />

Houlbrèque F, Tambutté E, Richard C, Ferrier-Pagès C<br />

Importance of a micro-diet for scleractinian corals.......................................................................151-160<br />

Lapid ED, Wielgus J, Chadwick-Furman NE<br />

Sweeper tentacles of the brain coral Platygyra daedalea: induced <strong>de</strong>velopment and effects on<br />

competitors....................................................................................................................................161-171<br />

Tomas F, Romero J, Turon X<br />

Settlement and recruitment of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus in two contrasting habitats in<br />

the Mediterranean.........................................................................................................................173-184<br />

Smith J, Shackley SE<br />

Effects of a commercial mussel Mytilus edulis lay on a sublittoral, soft sediment benthic<br />

community.....................................................................................................................................185-191<br />

Rilov G, Benayahu Y, Gasith A<br />

Life on the edge: do biomechanical and behavioral adaptations to wave-exposure correlate with<br />

habitat partitioning in predatory whelks? ......................................................................................193-204<br />

Giles H, Pilditch CA<br />

Effects of diet on sinking rates and erosion thresholds of mussel Perna canaliculus bio<strong>de</strong>posits205-219<br />

Robbins BD, Bell SS<br />

Relationships between a hermit crab and its shell resource: spatial patterns within a seagrassdominated<br />

landscape....................................................................................................................221-227<br />

O'Connor NJ, Judge ML<br />

Molting of fiddler crab Uca minax megalopae: stimulatory cues are specific to salt marshes .....229-236<br />

Hernan<strong>de</strong>z-Llamas A, Ratkowsky DA<br />

Growth of fishes, crustaceans and molluscs: -estimation of the von Bertalanffy, Logistic, Gompertz<br />

and Richards curves and a new growth mo<strong>de</strong>l.............................................................................237-244<br />

19


Arrizabalaga H, Costas E, Juste J, González-Garcés A, Nieto B, López-Rodas V<br />

Population structure of albacore Thunnus alalunga inferred from blood groups and tag-recapture<br />

analyses........................................................................................................................................245-252<br />

Takahashi M, Watanabe Y<br />

Developmental and growth rates of Japanese anchovy Engraulis japonicus during metamorphosis<br />

in the Kuroshio-Oyashio transitional waters.................................................................................253-260<br />

E<strong>de</strong>line E, Dufour S, Briand C, Fatin D, Elie P<br />

Thyroid status is related to migratory behavior in Anguilla anguilla glass eels ............................261-270<br />

Richardson <strong>DE</strong>, Cowen RK<br />

Diversity of leptocephalus larvae around the island of Barbados (West Indies): relevance to<br />

regional distributions.....................................................................................................................271-284<br />

Hückstädt LA, Krautz MC<br />

Interaction between southern sea lions Otaria flavescens and jack mackerel Trachurus<br />

symmetricus commercial fishery off Central Chile: a geostatistical approach..............................285-294<br />

Reeves RR, Josephson E, Smith TD<br />

Putative historical occurrence of North Atlantic right whales in mid-latitu<strong>de</strong> offshore waters:<br />

'Maury's Smear' is likely apocryphal.............................................................................................295-305<br />

AS I SEE IT<br />

Ruiz JM<br />

Oil spills versus shifting baselines................................................................................................307-309<br />

OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT:<br />

Vol. 47, No. 7-8, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Human dimensions of coastal management in the Western Indian Ocean region •...................299-307<br />

Julius Francis and Elin Torell<br />

Collaborative coastal management improves coral reefs and fisheries in Tanga, Tanzania.......309-320<br />

Eric Verheij, Solomon Makoloweka and Hassan Kalombo<br />

Evaluating a marine protected area in a <strong>de</strong>veloping country: Mafia Island <strong>Mar</strong>ine Park,<br />

Tanzania.......................................................................................................................................321-337<br />

Albogast T. Kamukuru, Yunus D. Mgaya and <strong>Mar</strong>cus C. Öhman<br />

Building enabling conditions for integrated coastal management at the national scale in Tanzania<br />

•.....................................................................................................................................................339-359<br />

Elin C. Torell, <strong>Mar</strong>k Amaral, Thomas G. Bayer, Jeremiah Daffa, Gratian Luhikula and Lynne Z.<br />

Hale<br />

Links between humans and seagrasses—an example from tropical East Africa.........................361-387<br />

M. <strong>de</strong> la Torre-Castro and P. Rönnbäck<br />

Changing fisheries practices and their socioeconomic implications in South Coast Kenya.........389-408<br />

Jacob Ochiewo<br />

Costs of ecosystem restoration on islands in Seychelles.............................................................409-428<br />

Kerstin Henri, Grant R. Milne and Nirmal J. Shah<br />

PACIFIC SCIENCE:<br />

Vol. 58, No. 4, October <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Tropical Transpacific Shore Fishes<br />

D. Ross Robertson, Jack S. Grove, and John E. McCosker........................................................507-565<br />

Spatial Distribution of Fish Larvae in a Bay of the Gulf of California (June and November 1997)<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>tha Peguero-Icaza and Laura Sánchez-Velasco....................................................................567-578<br />

A Pygmy Blue Whale (Cetacea: Balaenopteridae) in the Inshore Waters of New Caledonia<br />

Philipe Borsa and Galice Hoarau..................................................................................................579-584<br />

Population Size and Natural History of <strong>Mar</strong>iana Fruit Bats (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) on Sarigan,<br />

<strong>Mar</strong>iana Islands<br />

Gary J. Wiles and Nathan C. Johnson..........................................................................................585-596<br />

New Hyocrinid Crinoids (Echino<strong>de</strong>rmata) from Submersible Investigations in the Pacific Ocean<br />

Michel Roux..................................................................................................................................597-613<br />

A Prehistoric, Noncultural Vertebrate Assemblage from Tutuila, American Samoa<br />

David W. Steadman and Gregory K. Pregill.................................................................................615-624<br />

20


Distribution of the Chuuk Islands Giant Millipe<strong>de</strong>, Acladocricus setigerus (Spirobolida:<br />

Rhinocricidae), and I<strong>de</strong>ntification of Its Defensive Compounds<br />

Donald W. Bu<strong>de</strong>n, Athula Attygale, and Xiaogang Wu.................................................................625-636<br />

PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCEAN DRILLING PROGRAM. SCIENTIFIC RESULTS.:<br />

Vol. 189, <strong>2004</strong>.:<br />

The Tasmanian Gateway: Cenozoic Climatic and Oceanographic Development. Sites 1168-1172.<br />

11 <strong>Mar</strong>ch-11 May 2000.<br />

REVISTA <strong>DE</strong> BIOLOGÍA TROPICAL:<br />

Vol. 52, Supl. 1, septiembre <strong>de</strong> <strong>2004</strong>:<br />

Proliferaciones <strong>de</strong> Algas Nocivas en el Caribe ANCA-IOCARIBE: Programa internacional <strong>de</strong><br />

investigación cooperativa para la evaluación, predicción y mitigación <strong>de</strong> eventos algales nocivos.<br />

Sierra-Beltrán, A.P., R. Cortés-Altamirano, A. La Barbera-<strong>Mar</strong>tínez, F. Gavidia Medina, Eds.,<br />

<strong>2004</strong>.<br />

JOSÉ ENRIQUE BARRAZA, JULIO ALBERTO ARMERO-GUARDADO & ZoBEYDA MARiSOL<br />

VALENCIA <strong>DE</strong> TOLEDO<br />

The red ti<strong>de</strong> event in El Salvador.............................................................................................................1<br />

ERNESTO BRAVO-SIERRA<br />

Potentially toxic and hannful phytoflagellates ITom the Mexican Pacific coasts.....................................5<br />

J, BUSTlLLOS-GUZMÁN, I. GÁRATE-LIZÁRRAGA, D. LóPEZ-CORTÉS & F. HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z-<br />

SANDOVAL<br />

The use of pigment "fingerprints" in the study of hannful algal blooms.................................................17<br />

ROBERTO CORTÉS-ALTAMIRANO & SERGIO LICEA-DURÁN<br />

Discoloration of microalgal blooms as a bioindicating parameter at Bahía <strong>de</strong> Mazatlán, México.........27<br />

MARlA <strong>DE</strong>L CARMEN CORTÉS LARA, ROBERTO CORTÉS ALTAMIRANO & ARTURO P.<br />

SIERRA-BELTRÁN<br />

Presence of Cochlodinium catenatum (Gymnodiniales: Gymnodiniaceae) in red ti<strong>de</strong>s of Bahía <strong>de</strong><br />

Ban<strong>de</strong>ras, Mexican Pacific.....................................................................................................................35<br />

I. GÁRATE-LIZÁRRAGA, D.J. LóPEZ-CORTES, 1.1. BUSTlLLOS-GUZMÁN & F. HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z-<br />

SANDOVAL<br />

Blooms of Cochlodinium polykrikoi<strong>de</strong>s (Gymnodiniaceae) in the Gulf of California, Mexico................51<br />

INGRID GARCÍA-HANSEN, ROBERTO CORTÉS-ALTAMlRANO & ARTURO P. SIERRA-<br />

BELTRÁN<br />

The red ti<strong>de</strong> caused by the dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamarense in the Colombian Pacific coast<br />

(2001).....................................................................................................................................................59<br />

SAMUEL GÓMEZ-AGUlRRE, SERGIO LICEA & SAMUEL GÓMEZ<br />

Blooms of Pseudo-nitzschia spp. (Bacillariophyceae) and other phytoplankton species at Bahía <strong>de</strong><br />

Mazatlán, México...................................................................................................................................69<br />

D.U. HERNÁN<strong>DE</strong>Z-BECERRlL & A. ALMAZÁN BECERRlL<br />

Species of dinoflagellates of the genus Gambierdiscus (Dinophyceae) in the Mexicail Caribbean<br />

Sea.........................................................................................................................................................77<br />

AMELIA LA BARBERA-SÁNCHEZ, JOSE FRANCO SOLER, LUISA ROJAS <strong>DE</strong> AsTI/DILLO &<br />

IVAN CHANG- YEN Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP) in <strong>Mar</strong>garita Island, Venezuela ...................89<br />

A.P. SIERRA-BELTRÁN, D.B. LWCH-COTA, S.E. LWCH-COTA, R. CORTÉs-ALTAMIRANO,<br />

M.C. CORTÉS-LARA, M. CASTILLO-CHÁ VEZ, L. CARRILLO, L. PACAS, R. ViQUEZ & I.<br />

GARCiA-HANSEN<br />

Spatial-temporal dynamics of red ti<strong>de</strong> precursor organisms at the Pacific coast ofNorth and<br />

Central America.....................................................................................................................................99<br />

T.R. TOSTESON<br />

Caribbean ciguatera: a changing paradigm ........................................................................................109<br />

MARlBELLE VARGAS-MONTERO & ENRIQUE FREER<br />

Presence ofthe dinoflagellates Ceratium <strong>de</strong>ns, C.fusus and c.ji.trca (Gonyaulacales: Ceratiaceae)<br />

in<br />

Golfo <strong>de</strong> Nicoya, Costa Rica................................................................................................................115<br />

MARlBELLE VARGAS-MoNTERO & ENRIQUE FREER<br />

21


Hannful blooms of cyanobacteria (Oscillatoriaceae) and dinoflagellates (Gymnodiniaceae) in the<br />

Golfo <strong>de</strong> Nicoya, Costa Rica [In Spanish, with English abstract]........................................................121<br />

MARIBELLE VARGAS-MoNTERO & ENRIQUE FREER<br />

AIgal blooms ofthe toxigenic diatom Pseudo-Nitzschia (Bacillariophyceae) in the Golfo <strong>de</strong> Nicoya,<br />

Costa Rica............................................................................................................................................127<br />

I. GÁRATE-LIZÁRRAGA, J.J. BUSTlLLOS-GUZMÁN, K. ERLER, M.S. MUÑETóN-GóMEZ, B.<br />

LUCKAS<br />

& A. TRIPP-QUEZADA<br />

Paralytic shellfish toxins in the chocolata clam, Megapitaria squalida (Bivalvia: Veneridae), in<br />

Bahía <strong>de</strong> La Paz, Gulf of California .....................................................................................................133<br />

SENCKENBERGIANA BIOLÓGICA:<br />

Vol. 83, No. 2, September <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Petkovski, T. K., & Karanovic, I.<br />

Eucandonia svetozari sp. n., a freshwater ostracod from Macedonia (SE Europe) (Crustacea,<br />

Ostracoda, Candoninae).............................................................................................................103–111.<br />

Goldschmidt, T.<br />

Untersuchungen über Wassermilben <strong>de</strong>r Familie Anisitsiellidae Koenike 1910 aus <strong>de</strong>r Neotropis<br />

(Araneae, Acari, Actinedida, Hydrachnidia)................................................................................113–150.<br />

Haupt, J.<br />

A new species whipscorpion from Laos (Arachnida, Uropygi, Thelyphonidae)..........................151–155.<br />

Haupt, J.<br />

Mastigoproctus transoceanicus a synonym of Typopeltis cantonensis (Arachnida, Uropygi,<br />

Thelyphonidae)...........................................................................................................................157–162.<br />

Fartyal, R. S., & Singh, B. K.<br />

A new species of the genus Paraleucophenga from the Kumaon region, India (Insecta, Diptera,<br />

Drosophilidae).............................................................................................................................163–166.<br />

Singh, B. K., Dash, S., & Fartyal, R. S.<br />

Revision of the species of the subgenus Drosophila (Drosophila) of the Kumaon region, India, with<br />

the <strong>de</strong>scription of eight new species (Insecta, Diptera, Drosophilidae)......................................167–180.<br />

Prokofiev, A. M.<br />

Revision of the species-complex of Triplophysa labiata with <strong>de</strong>scription of a new species, T.<br />

kaznakowi sp. n. (Osteichthyes, Balitoridae, Nemacheilinae)....................................................181–208.<br />

Pohl, G., & Lenski, I.<br />

Zur Verbreitung und Vergesellschaftung von Pennisetum orientale Rich. in Nor<strong>de</strong>uböa<br />

(Griechenland) (Poaceae, Paniceae). ........................................................................................209–233.<br />

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA:<br />

Vol. 33, No. 6, November <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Phylogeny, evolutionary history and taxonomy of the Mustelidae based on sequences of the<br />

cytochrome b gene and a complex repetitive flanking region..............................................................481<br />

Josep <strong>Mar</strong>mi, Juan Francisco López-Girál<strong>de</strong>z, Xavier Domingo-Roura<br />

Non-monophyly of the avian genus Seicercus (Aves: Sylviidae) revealed by mitochondrial DNA .....501<br />

Urban Olsson, Per Alström, Per Sundberg<br />

Phylogenetic relationships of basal hexapods among the mandibulate arthropods: a cladistic<br />

analysis based on comparative morphological characters..................................................................511<br />

Colette Bitsch, Jacques Bitsch<br />

Cladistic revision of talitroi<strong>de</strong>an amphipods (Crustacea, Gammari<strong>de</strong>a), with a proposal of a new<br />

classification.........................................................................................................................................551<br />

Cristiana S. Serejo<br />

Phylogenetic nomenclature is compatible with diverse philosophical perspectives............................587<br />

Fredrik Pleijel, Mikael Härlin<br />

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